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Jon Coifman's Blog

Seeing is Believing

July 20, 2007

Posted by Jon Coifman in Living Sustainably

Tags:
energy, publicopinion

I am sitting at Chicago O’Hare International Airport for the second time in two weeks. Our own David Goldstein’s book is in the airport shops, displayed right next to the latest offering from Donald Trump. No word from the clerks on which is selling better, or to whom.

Another thing on display here is the massive cooling plant that keeps the second busiest airport on earth from melting down. True to Chicago architecture form, the facility is in a block-long glass front building that could easily have been designed by Mies van der Rohe. This, of course, in a city where the oldest and most celebrated building is the water tower that survived the famous fire. These folks like their civic hardware.

I can’t help but wonder if more of our energy infrastructure was on such glorious display whether the average person might connect more readily with the conversation about how to make it better, cleaner and more efficient.

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Comments

John BaeverstadJul 22 2007 03:46 PM

Awareness and transparency in public & political action is key to community understanding and involvement in energy efficiency.

As an energy efficient provider in Colorado for 14 years, our clients have included IBM, Lockheed Martin, Qwest, City of Denver and many property management companies.

I was surprized when the new Colorado government reduced energy efficient opportunities, while increasing spending.

Since August 2006 I have been trying to meet with the Governor, the legistlature and the Public Utilities Commission without success.

We should remember that the founding fathers were suspicious of large government and when the people no longer have access to the government then whether its is energy efficiency or any other matter, we no longer have a government by the people and for the people.

Dan PRoftJul 23 2007 11:37 PM

Instead of catching Duran Duran at a local ribfest or bat mitzvah, I decided to flip on Al Gore's "Live Earth" concert on Saturday for Simon LeBon and the other musical artists with a social conscience, as self-advertised.

About two hours after stapling my eyelids to my forehead to ensure that I didn't miss single epiphanous second, I got bothered.

It was not the noise pollution from climatologists like Kayne West and the Pussycat Dolls. No, that didn't bother me.

The fact that there was more reasoned reflection at Jonestown than there was on the NBC set manned by Today Show host Ann Curry, that didn't bother me.

Enduring the sanctimony of Alicia Keys calling out the "hate skeptics" for their intolerance of non-peer reviewed scientific findings and spiteful distinctions between hypotheses and conclusions, that didn't bother me.

The delicious irony of watching the Dave Matthews Band, the same eco-friendly Dave Matthews Band that dumped 800 pounds of human waste from their tour bus into the Chicago River during their stop through three years ago (well, maybe the irony wasn't exactly delicious), that also didn't bother me.

Reminiscing about a 1975 Newsweek cover story entitled "The Cooling World" in which the scientific community was then allegedly predicting the next Ice Age and suggesting that, among the options, we consider purposely melting the Artic ice cap, and now 30 years later we're to believe that after 3.5 billion years of life (and 1 million years of human life) on this planet, we are collectively on the verge of going up like a Roman candle because of the amount of Aqua Net consumed by Bon Jovi groupies--no, the fickle nature of the global alarmists didn't bother me either.

What bothered me, what truly bothered me was three words uttered by Al Gore, "Thank you, Leo." "Leo" as in Leonardo DiCaprio who introduced Gore to the global audience.

I'll sign Gore's 7-point pledge. I'll install CFL light bulbs in my home. I'll buy a car that runs entirely on switchgrass. I'll even stop clubbing baby seals. I'll do anything they want me to do as long as Al Gore stops his "hep cat" routine.

Watching Gore keep it real with his Hollywood friends is kind of like watching your dad shake his groove thing at a wedding.

Global cooling, global warming, sign me up for whatever. Just make him stop.

As featured in Human Events
email me at dan@urqmedia.com

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