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By Anne Paine
The Tennessean
Monday 08 January 2007
Hundreds at Hilton Hotel receive tools for training others.
Hundreds
of volunteers from across the country have flocked to Nashville this
fall and winter and more are here today as part of a grass-roots
training effort to spread the word on global warming.
They are taking part in Al Gore's The Climate Project, which mushroomed from his documentary, An Inconvenient Truth.
The
goal had been to train 1,000 "presenters" to show slides of melting
glaciers and charts of climbing temperatures, but many more have wanted
in.
Those
selected to gather at the Hilton Nashville Downtown last week included
teachers, doctors, a meteorologist, ministers, Wal-Mart employees,
actress Cameron Diaz, architects, retirees, veterans and financiers.
Gore
held their attention for hours on end as he flashed the slides that
would be their toolkit, beginning with a Christmas Eve 1968 photo of
the Earth as seen from the Apollo 8 spacecraft.
"This
image exploded in the human consciousness," Gore told the more than 200
participants seated at row after row of tables in a Hilton ballroom.
That's
when the environmental movement took off, the former vice president
said, and laws that included the Clean Air and Clean Water acts
followed.
He
glanced back behind him at the shot of the distant blue Earth with
swirls of white clouds behind a dull, gray moon, and he paused.
"It's Humanity's Problem"
Those listening could have been at a weekend seminar on how to grow rich buying foreclosed homes.
Neither
their clothing, which was casual but not counterculture, nor their
ethnicity or age, which varied, gave a clue to the common denominator:
a desire to slow global warming and climate change.
Near the front sat Alex Budd, 14, from Boulder, Colo.
"It's really good to be here and know that so many people want to be here," he said during a break.
"This is a problem for all people. It's humanity's problem."
Budd said he plans to take the slide show to people his own age, through school groups.
Elsewhere
in the audience, David Robinson, 45, a marketing director for an
industrial adhesive company, had been too excited the night before
about the growing grass-roots project to get much shut-eye.
"I only slept maybe four hours," the Columbus, Ohio, man said in the lobby later.
"All
of Nashville, Tennessee, has abundant reason to be proud of their
native son who is providing a great service to our nation and the
world," he said.
Critics Call Gore Alarmist
One
group taking an opposite view is the conservative/libertarian
Competitive Enterprise Institute, where a critic called Gore an
alarmist and The Climate Project "odd."
"It
can only be compared to the missionaries sent out to Christianize the
world in the 19th century," Myron Ebell, director of energy and global
warming policy, said in a telephone interview last week.
"The former vice president is so convinced that he is the chosen one to save the world."
Marlo
Lewis, CEI senior fellow, political philosopher and author of A
Skeptic's Guide to An Inconvenient Truth, said the proselytizing, which
includes suggestions for reducing pollution to cut global warming, is a
waste.
"What does that mean - buying a smaller car than you need if you're a soccer mom?" he said.
"If
global warming were really a problem, and I don't think it is, the idea
that you can save the planet by carpooling or eating less meat is
really silly.
"That all falls into the category of feel-goodism or a surrogate religious ritual."
While global warming is occurring, it is minor and no catastrophe is pending, he said.
Time to Act, Gore Says
Gore counseled the group at the Hilton on Tuesday about how to deal with hecklers and skeptics.
If anyone is bent on arguing, he said, say: "We can talk about that afterward."
"It's
not a town hall meeting. You're there to present.... This used to be
controversial, but the science is in and it's overwhelming."
He cited Scientific American and sources that called for solutions.
The
band of atmosphere around the Earth is thickening as coal and other
fossil fuels are burned, trapping heat, he said. The changing climate
is bringing drought in some areas and longer, more intense storms and
hurricanes in others.
It's time for the country to regain "moral authority" and act before it's too late, he said.
The
country won a war against fascism that it fought in the Atlantic and
Pacific simultaneously, he said. Under President Reagan, the U.S.
banned CFCs, chemical gases that had been eating a hole in the Earth's
ozone layer.
For
anyone who has seen An Inconvenient Truth, parts of the training were
déjà vu, right down to a quote from Winston Churchill and a cartoon of
a frog in a pan of hot water.
Added, however, were tips for the volunteers.
Gore talked about the need to have a time budget - "not too long" - a complexity budget and a "hope" budget.
Those listening should not "fall into despair," he said, then smiled. "That's not your objective here."
Volunteers Already Busy
Each
volunteer is required to give at least 10 presentations within a year
of the training. Bobbie Nicholson, 65, a retired college chemistry
teacher, already had seven scheduled.
"I'm trying to find ways to do what I can to improve my world," she said.
The Penrose, N.C., woman said her pre-booked presentations include three colleges and her Baptist church.
Global warming had dropped off the country's radar screen after being an issue in the 1970s and 1980s, she said.
"Thanks to Mr. Gore and many others it's a high priority again."
Leander
McLane, 68, of Jacksonville, Fla., a former research physicist and
businessman who teaches high school math and physics, said he found the
project "satisfying" after years of concern.
"This
is the first opportunity to be an activist in it," he said. "The issue
should never have been the political football it has been."
Lee
Smith, an African-American with an alumni newsletter at the University
of Mississippi in Oxford, said he plans to talk to university officials
about using solar panels and also to take the message to "people of
color."
"I've
got a 4-month-old daughter," he said. "That's why I'm here. I want to
be able to look at her in 10 to 15 years and say, 'I did my part.'"
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