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Making A Long Term Difference…

February 5th, 2010

One of the reasons that I committed myself to Green.org (as well as our upcoming ventures Solar.com and Wind.com) is that I knew in my heart that people basically want to do good and make the right decisions, but modern life tends to accentuate BIGGER, BETTER, FASTER, MORE and Ready, Fire, Aim over common sense.

This is my first blog post here at Green.org but certainly not my first attempt to change the world around me. I have been working to reduce the footprint of businesses and entice people toward more sustainable forms of commerce for over a decade, since I became the CTO of Whole Life Expo, and earlier, when I helped shape the Web at Digital Equipment Corporate (Creator of Alta Vista.)

Whether it’s was building more efficient systems of doing business for IBM, MasterCart, American Express or Building Virtual Cities in the middle East, I’ve been thinking about how technology can make the world a more pleasant, smaller, more efficient place for years.

Technology, and the Internet are introducing new levels of transparency and awareness to the world. It’s never been easier to connect with what’s going on around the world in places like Haiti, or in our back yard. For the first time in our lives we have an intersection of people wanting to do the right thing and the technology to let us and our actions be felt across the planet.

Of course, people have a hard time changing bad habits when they don’t know what other choices that they have but when those choices are defined for them by people working on behalf of Wall Street, Big Oil or even Big Pharma/Medicine you begin to see how this is all connected! Green.org is in a big way about letting you KNOW MORE. And we think that THE MORE YOU KNOW, THE MORE YOU DO. And doing more is a powerful way to change the world. Sometimes DOING MORE means BUYING LESS, and sometimes it just means BUYING SMARTER.

This one small shift out of the trap of modern scripted consumerism can unleash whole new worlds of choice in your life. Carrying your own water bottle and refilling it at the office or at a friends home, can not only liberate you from contributing to the thousands of tonnes of plastic currently floating in our ocean (watch for a feature on this coming soon) but it can actually unlock a healthy new habit of drinking water without guilt and without cost whenever your body decides that it’s thirsty.

There are dozens of other habits that you can introduce in your life (check our Heather’s Healthy Habits section) which will leave you and the planet feeling a whole lot better off. And since even the longest journey starts with one small step, you’ll soon be making a huge difference on behalf of all of us!

“My first blog on Green.org”

February 5th, 2010

Welcome to Green.org. I’m Dr. Alexander Tabibi the founder of Green.org.

At the most basic level we hope that we can provide a one-stop resource for all green news and information and as such, in our own small way make the world a better place. Green.org – is a site whose mission is to create an open forum where we can put science and humanity side by side so that people can be informed and participate in the discussion. Our goal is to be non-partisan and as non-political in nature as possible.

In order to make the experience a good one we have gone to great lengths to create the web infrastructure to allow this to occur. We will over time offer blogs, forums, social networking, green job posts and a slew of other capabilities will be added together with excellent content  We have reached out to friends and partners to help us make this dream and vision a reality and there are many people who have been more than forthcoming in this effort and I would like to sincerely thank everybody involved. A host of great bloggers and content providers is being brought together to help the endeavour further.

I was asked to write a blog welcoming everybody to the site and explaining why we wanted to create such a site – and while I love my own voice (be it written or spoken) it has not been an easy task. So many thoughts, ideas and plans. So much one could cover.  I kept coming back to one thing.

Responsibility

I am one of the lucky human beings co-habiting this earth. We grew up vaccinated, with clean drinking water, sewage systems and were fortunate enough to be educated and this makes me more culpable than most in having responsibility for the current state of our ecosystem.

In the past few days – this reality has been that much more brought to life by the tragic occurrence and the aftermath in Haiti. I would be remiss if I did not at least mention the devastation. While the earthquake itself is unrelated to the question of global climate change – it is clear that poverty and lack of resources plagues even our closest neighbors. Of note, a similar sized earthquake in the Bay Area accounted for less that one thousandth the mortality of this disaster.

It therefore – at least in my mind – accentuates the fact that even with a relatively small proportion of the earth living at the high standards to which we are accustomed – we have already been able to rapidly and dramatically affect our ecosystem – and are indeed worsening the situation every day as we pump billions of tons of waste and pollutants into the atmosphere, deplete already dwindling resources and poison and decimate our oceans and other water reserves and systems.

Science – a double-edged sword

Having been trained as a physician and an oncologist – science is an important part of the way I see the world. I have a great regard for how humans have adapted and overall have improved their lot. Like anything this has come with its benefits and its costs.

During my lifetime hundreds of  millions of people have escaped poverty, have improved sanitation, health and longevity. Concurrently there needs to be an understanding that great advances in science are in some regards to ‘blame’ for our current situation. In the year 1800 – the world population is estimated to have been approx 1 billion. Today with seven times that figure – and growing – not only in number – but more importantly in CO2 production, and resource utilization we have come to the end of a period of great abundance (albeit – shared only by a few).

I believe that it is science and education that are our only tools to escape the current trend towards continued destruction. Indeed it is my understanding that we already have the means to significantly alter the trends rapidly if we modify our behavior and use technologies available to us today.

Thank you for taking the time to read my first blog – and I hope that you will come back and read more (if not mine – I won’t be too hurt) – or preferably join in on the discussion, invite friends and colleagues to do the same, such that together we can nudge humanity into more sustainable habits and methodologies. In my next blog – I will discuss this illusion of abundance with which we live. Till then – live greener and be well. Hope to see you around the site soon.

Alex

The Beginning… Paper or Plastic

February 5th, 2010

“Paper or Plastic?” It’s a question we are all familiar with and to anyone who aspires to make a smaller impact on the planet it sometimes can sound like a bad joke or an obsolete cultural artifact from the 20th century. Kill a tree or further diminish an already scarce (and growing scarcer) resource? Is that any sort of real choice? Of course, some of the more socially responsible markets use recycled or post-consumer sourced paper (watch for an upcoming article on what this really means!) in their paper bags, but honestly most don’t. One begins to wonder if this seemingly innocent question represents a false choice from the get go. Or maybe it points to something deeper in our own culture which desperately needs changing.

It should really be no surprise that modern day consumerism is mostly based upon false choices,. Or at least choices defined by people who’s real agenda is manipulating our agenda. “Leaded or unleaded?”; “Fries with that?”; “Credit or Debit?” So many of the rituals of our consumer-centric culture are based upon these “choices”. But too many choices like these can lead to a sick life and a sick society. I know a few things about sick versus healthy choices.

I believe that a major key to changing our planet’s fate is wrapped up in starting to correct some of the bad habits that we picked up over the last few hundred years. When someone asks you that same old question “Paper or plastic” you can be the crack in the dam that unleashes a flood of new choices and new results in your life and in your community around you…. just by bringing our own sacks or carts to the local market and saying:

“Neither, thank you for asking!”

Happy, IBM-Edison-Green-Metal-Tiger New Year! No, really!

February 5th, 2010

Welcome to Greenscan.org. This site has been a labor of love, and so it seems fitting that we unveil it’s newest incarnation on Valentine’s Day, 2010!

Many people may not realize that Feb. 14, 2010 also marks the date that Alexander Graham Bell and electrical engineer Elisha Gray each filed a patent for the telephone, starting a controversy on who invented the telecommunications device first (1876); marks the founding of the International Business Machines Corporation (1924); and also marks the Chinese New Year (2010Year of the Tiger)!

So we think it’s virtually a done del that you’ll love all the new bells and whistles, which this official launch of Green.org has in store for you!


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