Archive for March 3rd, 2008

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The Declining Environment’s Impact on Humans in Billy Joel Songs

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Billy Joel has written two of the most moving environmental songs ever, but they are not easily recognized as such. That’s because we are used to Environmentalism focusing on the non-human elements, such as the decline of other species and changes to the landscape, but environmentalism is ultimately about maintaining our human quality of life.

Billy Joel’s 1982 song Allentown, takes the first person perspective of a man living in Allentown, PA, where coal mining has peaked, and, as the industry declines, so does the quality of life:

So the graduations hang on the wall
But they never really helped us at all
No they never taught us what was real
Iron and coke
And chromium steel
And were waiting here in Allentown
But they’ve taken all the coal from the ground
And the union people crawled away

Complete lyrics here.

Music video here.

His 1989 song The Downeaster ‘Alexa’ echoes Allentown, addressing the human element in collapsing fish stocks, taking the first-person perspective of a fisherman from the Outer Lands, who’s worked all his life to own his own fishing boat, traveling further and further out to sea, on ever longer trips in order to bring home a catch to support his family:

We took on diesel back in Montauk yesterday
And left this morning from the bell in Gardiner’s Bay
Like all the locals here I’ve had to sell my home
Too proud to leave I worked my fingers to the bone

So I could own my Downeaster Alexa
And I go where the ocean is deep
There are giants out there in the canyons
And a good captain can’t fall asleep

I’ve got bills to pay and children who need clothes
I know there’s fish out there but where God only knows
They say these waters aren’t what they used to be
But I’ve got people back on land who count on me

Complete lyrics here.

Music video here.

Human stories like these are important to consider when special interests insist that environmentalism is bad for business, jobs, and our quality of life.

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Science Etcetera Moonday, 20080303

Monday, March 3rd, 2008
Ayers Rock Waters the Surrounding Desert
Ayers Rock Waters the Surrounding Desert
  • Science Illustrated featured and explained these incredible photos, but since they’re their website isn’t showing them, Popular Science has some amazing Earth From Space photos.
  • 2008 is “Year of the Frog” and Saturday saw many leap-year celebrations at zoos trying to raise awareness of these endangered animals.
  • Award-winning Toxicologist Deborah Rice was dismissed from a panel on chemical safety for coming to conclusions; although, the Chemical Industry lobbyists who demanded her removal spun it as “bias.”
  • Many of these prediction come very close, many are way off, and one, that everyone will spell phonetically, makes me wonder why it doesn’t come about, check out Ladies Home Journal 1900s Prediction for 2000s
  • Researchers have discovered a gene that blocks HIV, preventing the virus from assembling within a cell and spreading to others, stopping it from becoming AIDS.
  • Could Sex Differences in Color Vision explain why women prefer pinks and violets more than men?
  • China May Scrap its One-Child Policy, leaving us to wonder how the country intends to support a population too large for it’s environment to support.
  • Today’s Moment of Science comes from a TED talks on Microsoft’s World-Wide Telescope:


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