David Suzuki
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- Don't let downturn get you down
- Citizen advisory group advises police on neighbourhood problems
- Money mystery solved, started as simple act of kindness
- Leaf Czech mates meet their fans old-school style in Stouffville
- Politicians needto put us first for a change
- Nothing could rain on our parade, or the doctor
- Reach out and touch someone through our Santa Fund
- Graduating students need stable government, job prospects
- Playing Santa too much like hide and seek
- Dispel the gloom with music and holiday lights
- Our carriers deliver toys, good will during December
- New principal, SDSS made for each other
- Farewell to my front-row seat on all things Stouffville
- SDSS, new principal perfect fit
- Civic centre debate proves everything old is new again
- Computrs r not so bad 4 kidz after all: study
- My dad’s Christmas presents? Orange and a pair of socks
- In praise of local shopping, Stouffvillites
- Shock treatment for SDSS students
- Express hockey program clearly on right track
- Santa Claus parade brings back fond childhood memories
- ‘Best place on earth’ brand hides biodiversity crisis
- Collecting food items warmed up a cold parade
- Answer to renewable energy, jobs is blowin’ in the wind
- How much for a Stouffville taxi ride?
- Quality not quantity, please, automakers
- Edgy Downie gets fresh start with Lightning
- Life is sweet for chocoholics the whole year through
- I used to have reasons, too, for not donating blood
- Biggest salute of Remembrance Day from a little lad
- Which part of recession do teachers not understand?
- Memories made at student concert
- Warriors, Cardinals put on their game faces
- Bazaars used to be for bargains, meeting old friends
- Let’s speak up for country we want
- Permanent reminders of heroes who built our town
- Hard to get used to accepting equalization handouts
- Modest veteran surprised by presentation of war medals
- Fair president’s recovery capped eventful year
- Growing income gap affects everyone in region
- Lions Hall has a special place in our collective hearts
- Real solution would be complete cellphone ban
- Facility fees catch attention of sports groups
- Hockeyville? We are not worthy, Stouffvillites
- Garden of lingerie on display for all
- Snow is child's great pleasure
- Today’s children have information at fingertips
- Small-town project touching lives in big-time way
- Well-coiffed Harper won by more than a hair
- Growing income gap affects us all
- Aaron’s the star of 16th music night
- We were poor as children, but didn't know it
- Helping students today open eyes to work world of tomorrow
- Early-morning end to dramatic night in our riding
- Election signs were sign of things to come
- Electoral system needs repairs
- Smile, you can make new friends
- New look at A,B,Cs with teen expert
- Shining light on colour mystery
- Friday night Toronto bus trek the way to GO
- Top 10, or so, reasons to vote Conservative
- Markham Fair 2008 lives up to its hype
- Trees, like pets, part of family, missed when gone
- Economy, environment key issues
- It’s a time warp to be back as editor
- Will handwriting some day go the way of Latin?
- Dave Teetzel: Death of a newsman
- Selling our fair to newcomers
- Can’t see the forest for the trees
- Lloyd wows them in national finals
- Dave’s last column
- Funnies only ours after dad was finished
- Whose environmental plan do you trust?
- A community that honours Terry Fox so well
- Sad if language challenges sink Stephane Dion
- Homecoming fit for Olympic medallist
- Fishing big part of family trip
- Where have all bugs gone?
- Elders have more to teach than so-called idols
- Those aren’t cameras, they’re cell boosters
- Public transit on minds of voters
- Thanks for election nobody wanted, Harper
- Harper’s Campaign Nasty already under way
- Cardinals back in nest, 50 years after big win
- Hold mums dear this year
- White, green signs not erected by GO or Roughriders fans
- The small-town adoption of Karen Cockburn
- Canadian politics just like three-down football
- Another world on other side of border
- Winds blow Team Ontario chances off course
- Our perceptual filters, lenses shape the world
- Bar band sounded right to Guess Who, too
- Sponsors make key contribution to youth sports
- Lifetime in Scouting moulded many boys
- Preparing for Gibson bass tournament
- Library column goes beyond Google
- Teenagers’ long showers can take toll on hydro bill
- German politician shows green changes possible
- A little knowledge served up with your madness
- Back-to-school shopping trip not too painful
- Everyone loved Stouffville's Mickey
- Skills gone, not forgotten
- Protecting half of forest may not be enough
- Cindy’s love of figure skating remains strong
- Water, water everywhere, but not to drink (unless it’s bottled)
- Youth anglers fishing for big prizes
- Widespread bullying has disturbing impact
- Act shows what happens with co-operation
- That was very fine Vino served up in Stouffville
- Widespread bullying has disturbing impact
- Mechanic’s handiwork nears perfection
- Storm dodging prominent during July fishing
- Today’s children need to get outdoors more
- Saturday in the park no music town extravaganza
- More than fishing for fishing clubs
- B.C.’s biodiversity important to all of Canada
- Ever play tourist right in your own back yard?
- Some summer job stories you never tell people
- Where public relations isn’t given lip service
- D’oh. Doughnuts worse than tobacco?
- How to avoid exercise in failure
- Full moon leaves this columnist moonstruck
- Ecosystem changes when elements go bad
- Slow ride home hits commuters where they live
- Ers, ites, ians and gonians can tell us where we’re at
- Carbon tax needed as much as other tariffs
- Province cops out on energy crisis
- Get in the dog house where you belong, Stouffville
- Technological strides in 50 years quite amazing
- Plastics were the future, but they may be our past
- New anglers join the ranks in area clubs
- Rainforests could be valuable to our future
- Your guide to life in this small town
- Bullies rule with Unsafe Schools Act
- Yes, I do tend to burst out in song
- Symbiotic relationship among birds, trees
- Going broke still hurts, even one penny at a time
- Big shooter just another player on this team
- Travelling fun, but great to be home
- T-shirt, shorts? Don't mind me, I work from home
- Power monger runs into Georgina chainsaw
- We don't know what it's like to be left out
- Make rendezvous with bilingual swim teachers
- Up to us to improve lake health
- Consider volunteering for CAS
- Sickening how hospital funding delayed
- A little help, here, please, Mr. McGuinty
- Daily catch limit your total possession limit
- Stojko has every right to speak out
- When it comes to cars, we're creatures of habit
- Going downtown, again
- Keep your eyes peeled for tagged perch
- Not all buildings worth saving
- Taking control from Day 1 shows your dog who is boss
- Tiny bugs causing big troubles in forests
- A little idealism can still go a long way
- Early-morning wake-up call for inclusion
- Medication helping YRMG editor
- Muslim doesn't mean terrorist, neighbours hear at seminar
- Sadly, taser means no muss, no fuss, no hassle
- Malls are social network sites
- Grizzly bear protection almost non-existent
- You don't smell like you did last week, Stouffville
- Watch your driving as eye in sky flies above
- When house training puppy routine is Job No. 1 and 2
- Preserve salmon stocks to provide food for tables
- Girl's brown dreadlocks remain grey area
- Overwhelmed by readers’ support
- Females still have tougher time in politics
- Ex-Canuck proud world championships are in the homeland
- Lake trout, whitefish highlight of season
- Artificial a good switch from real
- Frogs are bellwether animal for environment
- Job No. 1 should be keeping sports fun for all
- Can we maintain that loving feeling, Stouffvillians?
- Trout season marks start of big year of fishing
- I miss dad and those old songs
- Fight for environment picks up unusual allies
- 60-year wait for recognition finally over
- Why are we not raging over long wait times?
- Fred C. Cook-book raises money for school
- Winged signs of bad luck
- Your actions were evident during Earth Hour
- Torch protests unfortunate, but necessary
- Lack of applause from arts community on 19 Park?
- Hired hands take on our white grubs
- Sad to think gambling tops in entertainment
- Patience rewarded during bass trip to Mexico
- Dangers of using pesticides in your yard
- If you weren't at the game, you didn't miss the game
- No complaints, just do your homework
- Outing to Africa trip of her lifetime
- Where have all the scarecrows gone?
- Volunteering changes lives
- Scientific information easily accessible
- Got game? Not bowling, Stouffville
- Shouldering pain a bedside disaster
- Right to ban smoking in cars with children
- 15 years and still loves column
Columns
October 11, 2008 11:29 PM
By: David Suzuki
Andrew Weaver’s recently published book, Keeping Our Cool: Canada in a Warming World, is an urgent call to action some of the folks running for the privilege of leading us into the future seem to be ignoring.
Dr. Weaver, a world-class climatologist who is putting the University of Victoria on the global map, was one of the lead authors on papers put out by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. In that role, he shared with other panel members the Nobel Peace Prize last year.
In the book Dr. Weaver argues if we are to stabilize atmospheric levels of carbon at a level that will not result in climate going haywire, we must begin massive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions now with a goal of totally eliminating our output of them.
If we don’t, 80 per cent of all species could become extinct.
That’s an astounding prediction and, if we think we’ll somehow survive such a catastrophic crisis, we should think again.
When I first read about colonies of honeybees dying out, a bolt of fear went through me. Without pollinators, most flowering plants will not survive and that would devastate the makeup of species on the planet.
We have become the dominant animal on the planet and it has been an amazing story.
But in puffing ourselves up with self importance, we have lost sight of how little we know about the way the world works and how utterly dependent we are on the services that nature performs for us, such as removing carbon dioxide from the air and replacing it with oxygen – not a bad service for animals such as us.
Eminent Harvard ecologist and ant expert E.O. Wilson once told me if humans disappeared overnight, only a handful of organisms would also go extinct — creatures that live on our skin, in our armpits and our groins and guts.
The rest of nature would rebound, the planet would green up and animals would increase in abundance.
But if all the ants went extinct overnight, whole terrestrial ecosystems would collapse and the makeup of animals and plants would change catastrophically. Kind of puts humans into perspective.
Today’s youth spend the least amount of time outdoors of any generation in history. And most of us live in cities surrounded mainly by other human beings and a few domesticated plants and animals and pests. So when we hear reports of vanishing glaciers and breaking ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica, even endangered polar bears, it’s hard to relate.
In British Columbia, northern forests have turned red because the mountain pine beetle, an insect the size of a grain of rice, is no longer kept in check because winters aren’t cold enough to kill them.
Yet this $65 billion loss still seems to have little impact on our thinking as British Columbians vent outrage at Premier Gordon Campbell’s puny carbon tax.
I guess we think air is almost infinite, rising to the heavens.
But astronaut Julie Payette described to me the experience of circling the planet in a space capsule: Every time the sun rose or set, which was every hour and a half, she saw a thin layer just above the Earth’s surface.
That’s the atmosphere.
As the late Carl Sagan pointed out, if the Earth were shrunk to the size of a basketball, the atmosphere we all depend on for our very survival would be thinner than a layer of varnish. That’s it, and everything our tailpipes, chimneys, and engines vent goes into that thin layer.
We apparently now put health as one of our top priorities in this election.
Well, when we use air, water, and land as a garbage can, do we think we are somehow immune to the health consequences? We’ve got to see the world as it really is – a complex interaction of air, water, land, and living things, all interconnected and all interdependent. We are rampaging across the planet, treating it as our plaything, as our source of raw materials, as our dumping ground for our waste and emissions. And then we whine like mad when reminded that we have to change and we have to pay for what we do. Why haven’t we heard more about this perspective in the current election campaign?