My writings - and those of others.

Norah Bolton Norah Bolton

Real News

We’ve been so immersed in Fake News - and my schadenfreude has been operating overtime as I read about how the National Enquirer, beloved of the supermarket checkouts a couple of decades ago, helped to provide some to get “You Know Who” elected in 2016. Who knew who the originators of such Fake News really were? It’s surprising that the instigator didn’t take the credit.

Last evening a few of us online in a climate centered group asked how we best engage others to attention to the climate crisis. I an watching a local seniors advocacy group become angry at banks and oil companies, and we are all watching the young follow the tradition of sixties protests because, like us, they can’t help reacting to the never-ending bad news around us on TV and social media. The issues are long-standing and complicated. The response of the young can’t be nuanced; they are not looking through the eyes of times they did not live through. I admire can their courage even when protesting involves misunderstanding and recklessness. But the perspective of my more than eight decades, I’m not sure that it is the only approach - or that of the seniors who imitate them. For now, I choose to look at positive things that are happening and put my support there.

One such is from Solved, referenced in the previous post. Here’s a quote:

“City-led climate action, because it is real, effective, and timely, can offer hope that we can address climate change. Why? Because taking proven solutions underway somewhere. and using them everywhere is the best - and increasingly the only- way to act with the urgency that science shows we must.” p.16. Solved, Paperback edition

See the book under resources here and get a copy. You will be encouraged and find ways to act.

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Ecology, Environment, Leadership Norah Bolton Ecology, Environment, Leadership Norah Bolton

Influence

This past Monday I participated in a conversation with a friend over a summary of Thomas Homer-Dixon’s thoughtful book, Commanding Hope. It was a good way to celebrate Earth Day and it was pleasing to hear that several participants were involved in local initiatives. We talked about the challenges of where to enter the climate conversation without becoming completely discouraged about the lack of inaction.

So it was worthwhile to stop by my local independent book store - it is their day tomorrow on April 27th by the way - and I try to patronize them when I can. It was good to find a book by Toronto’s former mayor, David Miller, who moved on to work with several major cities in the world and tell a positive story of what cities are doing. He reminds me of what a former colleague used to say about the arts. It’s important to act locally where the action is.

After all, these things are the local government responsibilities: planning and development, clean water, parks and recreation, housing, public transit and public health - and more. They affect our lives directly every single day. Miller also looks at how city concerns and responsibilities connect with the major environmental issues; official plans, energy and electricity, existing buildings and new ones, and management of waste. Miller provides lots of evidence of how cities worldwide are dealing with these matters in a positive way. Since these are places that most people in the world live, they matter. The book is called Solved and an earlier edition has just been reissued. It’s a worthwhile read.

I know my local city councilor through his excellent monthly newsletter and I have met him in person. He has my support. A friend remarked that another one never answers calls or responds to questions. There is a solution to that one. VOTE!

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Reflection, Story, Transformation Norah Bolton Reflection, Story, Transformation Norah Bolton

The Power of Words

We are seeing how words can mislead, wound, charm and heal these days. A phrase that some use to seek justice make others feel threatened. Words can suggest a context that excludes. Historians have pointed out that the first characters that some children met in books caused the readers of Dick and Jane to feel excluded, because their lives were not like those of middle class suburbia Nearly all such books were boring. There wasn’t much to observe except to see Dick run. Jane and Sally apparently didn’t.

But one author changed everything. Instead of green lawns with no weeds we were catapulted into the world of an invasive cat who made a mess of the house when a mother left for the afternoon – and not even a fish in a bowl could save it.  It didn’t take a ton of words to tell an interesting story for us and a different Sally – and rhymes made The Cat in the Hat memorable using only 222 different words. In a later triumph, the legendary Dr. Suess won a bet of fifty dollars when Bennett Cerf challenged him to write a book using only 50 words.  He did even better by using only one word of more than one syllable – anywhere.  Remember Green Eggs and Ham?

The Beginner Books were fun – both for parents to read and children to listen to at first -and then recite. It changed the children’s book publishing in terms of illusrations and it made reading fun. I notice that many Suess books can be downloaded and listened to on a tablet rather than being read by absent mothers and fathers. That’s rather too bad when those early readings created family bonds and bouts of laughter and maybe the Cat should point that out.  The Suess texts later became much more sophisticated and handled topics like disarmament and the environment.

They still come back to me with a line or two from Too Many Daves whose mother lacked imagination in giving her twenty-three sons the same name – which meant they never came when she called them. Some more interesting alternative names were suggested . . .

“And one of them Shadrack. And one of them Blinkey.

And one of them Stuffy. And one of them Stinkey.”

The last word here was always well received – but my all-time favourite was – and still is:

“Another one Putt-Putt. Another one Moon Face.

Another one Marvin O'Gravel Balloon Face.”

 It was good to imagine calling people funny names - even insulting ones in a story, even though you weren’t supposed to do that in real life.. Maybe the other lesson was that Mothers didn’t always get it right,

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Norah Bolton Norah Bolton

Breaking Down Walls

Decades ago when I was an undergraduate, Professor Philip Child used to depart from his lecture topic to recommend a particular book, which might or might not have related to the subject of the lecture. I wish I had kept those suggestions.

But the principle of passing on good recommendations remains. We are engrossed with suggestions about how to treat the war in Gaza without a complete context of why things have happened. I was fortunate enough to be in a meeting recently where there was a recommendation of a recent book, published just before the events of October 7th which provides both context and wisdom in dealing with our friends and neighbours.. Reading it - and engaging in the suggestions of its authors would help us all.

.The Subtitle is important - What Jews and Palestinians Don’t Want to Know About each other. There is also a very good YouTube video of these authors presenting their important thesis of a way forward.

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Environment, Learning Norah Bolton Environment, Learning Norah Bolton

Recycling?

Living in a big building and looking out on five huge bins for pick on the street below, I’m well aware of how much stuff I and my fellow apartment dwellers are throwing out in god faith that it matters. Yale Climate Connections recently exposed a few myths:

  • Just putting stuff in the recyling bin - even when following local guidelines - does not guarantee that recycling happens. Much of it still ends up in the garbage. To make it worse, the triangular symbol for recycling isn’t trademarked and anyone can use it.

  • Recycling is not the best thing we can do. Three things that would be better are: not driving a car, not flying somewhere, and not eating red meat. It also wouldn’t hurt to vote for the party that cares the most about the environment. The last one here probably hurts the least and matters the most.

  • Reduce, re-using and recycling are not equally beneficial. The first two are much more valuable.

  • Not everyone can recycle - and some have bigger priorities - for example indigenous communities trying to keep oil rigs or coal plants off their land

  • Education is weak about the impacts. There is very different experiences for those who have to live near land fill sites. We all need to be educated re greenwashing and call it when it happens.

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