Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Sustainability Fest is this week!

This year's Sustainability Fest is in memory of Justin Valdez, environmental studies student at SF State, who was killed on September 23, 2013. 

Sustainability Fest 2013 is Wednesday October 23rd and Thursday the 24th. The event is in partnership with groups on campus and includes environmental student organizations. Wednesday is focused on campus sustainability and Thursday is Food Day! We have several events happening each day, so check out the flyer for some fun ways to learn more about sustainability and meet our campus's environmental advocates.



Sustainable Initiatives is hosting a Food Justice Panel Discussion on Food Day. Come listen to Bryan Jersky of Healthy Planet USA, Professor of Geography Jennifer Blecha, and Lisa Roach of Real Food Challenge at SF State. Free cupcakes will be provided by Kingdom Cake! Note: the location is now in Rosa Parks D.



We hope to see you at some of our events this week!

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Being a Superperson


This week I went and saw the latest, greatest, action packed, CGI, multimillion dollar superman movie: Man of Steel.  I have to say I was pretty impressed. I could practically feel my nerdy self shiver with excitement as superman flew through the sky at what seemed to be mach ten speeds (terribly forgetting the laws of physics).  One of the scenes in the movie that most stuck to me, was when Russell Crowe’s character (Superman’s Father) explains to Superman where he came from and the fate of his home planet Krypton. As Russell Crowe explains Kryptonians were once a glorious race that created and accomplished much.  But abandoned their age of exploration and slowly stripped their planet bare, ultimately resulting in the planets destruction and the destruction of their race.
In a bluntly overt sense, the film draws striking parallels with the real world. We have abandoned our space program; stripping NASA of its funding and absorbing it into the US air force.  We are consuming our planet’s resources and polluting the planet at alarming rates as CO2 levels are at their highest in the last 10,000 years.  We are increasingly becoming more and more obsessed with “stuff “ and consumerism. We allow targeted commercials and ads convince us we cannot be happy unless we have more “stuff “ and money. We concern ourselves not with the direction our world is veering toward, but analyze whether or not Kim Kardashian really has butt implants. We spend all day behind screens socializing with people we’ve never met in person, but don’t find it strange that when we sit next to people on buses we do so in perfect silence.


Biodiversity has dropped 50% in the last 100 years, the biggest drop since the last great extinction and we have cut down over 75% of the worlds forests.  Nevermind the slew of social problems ranging world hunger to holocausts.  In the midst of these problems we find our representatives in government (the people whose jobs are to solve these problems) in deadlock, unable to compromise or understand the other, as their positions and opinions are bought out by corporate lobbyists and greed. The truth is no law or policy will change us, only we can change us.

But what do we do?
What can one person actually do about this?

See that pale blue dot, that’s us from over 3.7 billion miles away.  All of those things I listed above that seemed so insurmountable, in fact everything that has ever happened in all of human history has happened on that small speck, in an ocean of darkness.  Looking at it it’s hard to imagine the universe and all that inhabit it are made for that one speck of blue.  Or further yet for a certain shade of one of the millions of creatures that inhabit that small speck of blue.   Our world and our problems can seem so big when only perceived through our own eyes, but in the perspective of the universe they are as insignificant as a speck of sand.
From here you have two options.
1.You can feel tiny and insignificant. You can forget everything you’ve just read and continue on with your life.  With luck you’ll find a job most likely in some corporate office, pushing papers and using your talents to make the person at the top richer and be paid yourself a small fraction of what you make for the company.  You can carry on turning your head away from the truths of our society, by constantly telling yourself "there's nothing I alone can do, I should just focus on what I need to get by" and "eventually someone will do something about."  Just don't be surprised when nothing does.
2. You can set your self a worthy goal.  Imagine if you worked not to make the rich richer but to help others and make the world a better place.  I know it sounds idyllic and nonsensical but imagine if everyone who only cared about themselves suddenly changed their outlook.  If everyone helps each other everyone wins.  You deserve more of an existence than an office job, happiness isn't found in a new car or status symbol, true happiness is found in helping others, in giving back and feeling worth.
We all have hard lives, so instead of just focusing on just getting by, help others get by and then you wont’ have to worry so much about yourself.   Everyone has the potential to do great things just as much as everyone has the potential to do horrible things.  If we align with our potential we can continue doing marvelous things (like curing cancer)

Like Gandhi once said: "Be the change you want to see in world"
So how can you make a difference? here's a start:
Volunteer: There are few better ways to find happiness and appreciate life than volunteering.  When you really see those who truly have nothing, it puts your life into perspective.
SF Environment
California Student Sustainability Coalition (CSSC)
FarmGram
Earth911
Project Open Hand
St. Anthony's Foundation
Read the news: Knowing what's going on in the world couldn't be more important. In America our news stations stay away from things going on elsewhere in the world.  There is more going on in the world then just us, and reading the news is a way to stay better connected to others.
Reading the news I know can sometimes be boring, if you are the type of person who bores easy or just likes to laugh you might like the The Daily Show or The Colbert Report
Advocate sustainability
In the world of Capitalism, talks about sustaining our planet fall wayside to talks of profit and high yields.  If we continue down this path we will undoubtedly face bigger problems in the future.  Making a sustainable world for future generations isnt just a choice, its a necessity.
SF State has a ton of sustainably and environmentally conscious programs:
To read about each one click the links below:
Enjoy life With the average work week increasing along with the average retirement age we are working more than ever before.  With that we don’t spend as much time doing what we want to do whether that be spending time with family, playing or singing to music, or just enjoying the gift of life.  Find time in your day to day just to have fun.
I feel like this quote applies well: The most dangerous risk of all The risk of spending your life not doing what you want on the bet you can buy yourself the freedom to do it later
Fun reads and Views

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

From Nightmares to Day Dreams

 I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal." - Martin Luther King

This speech delivered to over 250,000 civil rights supporters on August 28th 1963 became a calling card for a massive civil rights movement.  What may seem shocking is that King's prepared speech never included the words "I have a dream" and was largely a negative outlook of the segregated America of the time.  The dream part of King's speech is largely considered improvised on the spot and is  possibly prompted by Mahalia Jackson's cry: "Tell them about the dream."

So what if King never spoke about his dream and only spoke of the nightmares of the time?  Without the vision and hope King instilled with those 4 famous words it can be questionable whether the civil rights movement would have succeeded in changing public policy or at the very least prolonged it's success.

If you're an avid reader of this blog you may be asking, what in the world does this have to do with the environment?  One of the largest critiques of the environmentalist movement is the doomsday esk rhetoric spoken by a majority of it's contributors.   There are major systematic problems in our society including (but not limited to) corporate influence on policy and the electoral process, dangers of unregulated capitalism, western culture's obsession with stuff and it's relation to the exploitation of developing countries, the dangers that nationalism imposes on  equality and universal cultural acceptance, and the continued development of nuclear and biological weapons that not only pose a threat to our continued existence but to the future of the planet.  As famous physicist and environmentalist Carl Sagan once said "The trap door beneath our feet swings open and we find ourselves in bottomless free fall."

Our world is in need of great people like Martin Luther King Jr to make the unpopular stands, to stand up for liberty and inspire millions to follow in their footsteps.  But preaching about nightmares is not the  way to do it.  How can we possibly expect people to start caring about the world around them when most of them have enough troubles in just getting by?

Instead of talking about all the things that plague are world and how we aren't doing enough, lets talk about our dreams of a better world.  Let's craft actual solutions to real world problems.  Imagine a world in which we didn't define ourselves by our different colors, cultures or opinions but instead focused on the sometimes forgotten fact that we are all human beings and inhabitants of Earth.  Think of what we could achieve, what we could become!

So I ask you, what's your dream?


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

The Case for Safer Phones


We all know someone who has a cracked screen, and some of us have broken phones ourselves.

People will spend hundreds of dollars fixing their broken phones or buying cases that protect our phones-- but what about a case for us?

Last Wednesday, the Environmental Health Trust came to our campus to discuss the impacts of cell phone radiation on our bodies and brains. President of EHT, Devra Davis, pleaded that the audience come to City Hall the following day to talk to our District Representatives and explain the importance of having warning labels on the front of our cell phone packaging.

Currently the manufacturers have a page deep within the phone's "Settings" that explains how people should handle their phones. 
Quote from iPhone 4 Legal RF Exposure page


To get to this page on your iPhone, you have to go to Settings --> General --> About --> Legal --> RF Exposure. It takes five different pages before a person can actually access the information that tells you that your phone exposes you to radiation. Additionally, it is impossible to actually copy and paste the information from this page. 

Many of us feel uncomfortable without our phones-- we release dopamine whenever we receive notifications, and get grumpy or upset when we don't have our phones on us.

But before you stick your phone in your pocket for the next twenty four hours, think about this:

A cellphone is essentially a microwave that you're putting up to your body every time you use it. Cellphones are constantly seeking a signal-- half of the waves that are emitted from the towers to your phone will travel through your body to get to your phone. 

The radiation that comes from cell phones was never actually tested before; people are now finding that it damages and unravels DNA with the free radical byproducts. Damaging our DNA also means that the cells that build the DNA will be mutated-- leading to cancer or other problems. 

Guys that leave their phones directly against them in their pockets can harm their potential for fertility, and ladies that stick their phones in their bra can cause breast cancer. ALL of us that constantly put phones to our ears multiply our chances of brain cancer by six times.

Don't freak out though! We still can help fight against this by:


                                   Devra Davis presents ways to help reduce radiation intake

BE SMART WHEN YOU USE YOUR SMART PHONE!

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Environmental Student Activism: Panel Discussion

Have you heard of the Divestment campaign? The Green Initaitive Fund? The Real Food Challenge? Did you know SF State has a campus garden?

If you have of if you haven't, find out more at our Environmental Student Activism panel discussion, next Monday, April 15th! The event will be held in Rosa Parks A&B (in Cesar Chavez Student Center) from 2-4pm.

Find out what great initiatives fellow students at SF State are working on and what it means to be an activist on campus!


Our Panelists:
  • Sharon Daraphonhdeth with "Why Student Activism is Important to the Success of Campus Campaigns"
  • Lisa Roach and Tyler Wescott with and update on the Real Food Challenge and our campus community garden
  • Nick Cicchetti with "Divestment/Fossil Free SFSU" 
and guest speaker, Environmental Studies professor, Glenn Fieldman.

We hope to see you there! 

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Vital Vocab: Biodiversity

This is such a beautiful word, and one everyone should make themselves familiar with.  Ozone depletion, climate change, rising sea levels... these are old buzz words.  "Biodiversity" is the next big thing.


Basically this word refers to the variety of species in an area.  You can have areas with low biodiversity, such as your apartment (a moth, two spiders, your roommate's cat, and the mold on that really old orange) or high biodiversity areas, such as the rainforests of Ecuador, where a mere five acres of jungle can hold over a hundred species of bats (compare that to Northern California, where there are twenty-three bat species over fifty million acres).  The planet as a whole has biodiversity encompassing many millions.

But, as you have probably heard, species all over the world are going extinct.  And it's not just tigers and polar bears.  Over 40% of all species on earth are currently at risk of extinction.  It's also not just in distant areas of the world; in the state of California (one of the world's twenty-five biodiversity hotspots) about 29% of species are at risk.  This is a problem that's devastating the environment right in our own back yards.  The natural rate of extinction throughout most of the planet's history has been one per century; today, between one and one hundred species go extinct each day.  That's between one hundred and one thousand times the natural rate, and it actually puts us right in the middle of the sixth mass extinction in the history of earth.  We're going the way of the dinosaurs, man!  But of course this all begs the question: why should we care?


Well, believe it or not, the earth is run by living things.  You can't grow plants in soil devoid of bacteria.  You can't pollinate crops without bees, bats, butterflies, and birds.  You can't have fish in the seas without plankton for them to eat.  And dead bodies don't just disappear, you know.  They need bacteria, fungi, bugs, and carrion eaters to get rid of 'em.  As all these creatures start to disappear, the natural functions of our world decline, and these are all functions that we as humans rely on to survive.  We have to protect our biodiversity in order to keep our lands and waters alive.

Besides, who knows what amazing uses all these creatures could have for us in future?  Ever heard of biopharmaceuticals?

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

And the Winner Is...

The $300 award for Sustainable Community Member of the Semester Fall 2012 has been given to:

Yael Ofer


   When reading Yael's application, it was obvious to us that we found someone who really stands out.  Her commitment to sustainability is, well, prize-worthy!  Here's a quick rundown of the details that blew us away:
  • Organized voter registration drives in high school, where she was also president of the civil rights club;
  • Cleaned beaches and reconstructed homes after Hurricane Ike;
  • Was involved in inspiring student-led campaigns as an undergrad at UC Santa Cruz;
  • Conducted primate ecology research in the Costa Rican rainforest;
  • Has campaigned since Fall '11 for the implementation of The Green Initiative Fund here at SFSU;
  • Works daily on a personal scale to reduce her own impact, and the impacts of the people around her.
   Yael is truly an engine of change, at our school and in the world.  She advocates reforming our school's health programs in the direction of sustainability, and alternative transportation, particularly for her fellow students.  She moves forward with her education with a passionate commitment to catalyzing the spread of a globally sustainable medical paradigm.  It's plain that she's going to continue making changes in the world. Congratulations, Yael!