2024 Life Logs, Day 113: Earth Day Number 54
Date: Monday, April 22, 2024
Weather: Sunny with a Cold North Wind; High Temp 54, Low 38 degrees F
Location: At Home on Lakeview Avenue, Falmouth, MA

Where were you for the first Earth Day, Wednesday, April 22, 1970? I was teaching American History at an inner-city high school in Cleveland, Ohio, probably not focused on the environment. But millions of Americans, an estimated 20 million, attended events that day. Elementary and secondary schools, universities, and communities all over the country hosted events. Tens of thousands of people marched in Washington, DC, that day in support of a cleaner planet. Who started this movement? I had to look that up. It was a Democratic senator from Wisconsin named Gaylord Nelson. He was in Denver attending their Earth Day celebration and he said the following in his speech:
“Ecology is a big science, a big concept—not a copout. It is concerned with the total ecosystem—not just with how we dispose of our tin cans, bottles, and sewage. Environment is all of America and its problems. It is rats in the ghetto. It is a hungry child in a land of affluence. It is housing that is not worthy of the name, neighborhoods not fit to inhabit.
Environment is a problem perpetuated by the expenditure of billions a year on the Vietnam War instead of on our decaying, crowded, congested, polluted urban areas that are inhuman traps for millions of people. If our cities don’t work, America won’t work. And the battle to save them and end the divisiveness that still splits this country won’t be won in Vietnam. Winning the environmental war is a whole lot tougher challenge by far than winning any other war in the history of Man. It will take $20 to $25 billion more a year in Federal money than we are spending or asking for now.
Our goal is not just an environment of clean air and water and scenic beauty. The objective is an environment of decency, quality, and mutual respect for all other human beings and all other living creatures. Our goal is a new American ethic that sets new standards for progress, emphasizing human dignity and well-being rather than an endless parade of technology that produces more gadgets, more waste, more pollution. Are we able to meet the challenge? Yes. We have the technology and resources.”

But have we met the challenge? I’ll let you answer that. Tonight, I celebrated Earth Day 2024 by attending a showing of the 2023 film, Common Ground, at the Waquoit Congregational Church. I could have watched the film on YouTube, but I wanted to be with like minded folks while I watched it. It is an exploration of how to fix our broken planetary food production system. Farmers are interviewed that are implementing regenerative agricultural practices that they believe could save the world. It is worth a watch. Thanks to Falmouth Farming and the Falmouth Climate Action Network.