Tag Archives: environment

Living On Borrowed Time

CF: Living On Borrowed Time

“And as the summer unfolded, it became evident that it’s not just smoke, and not just Canada. This has been the summer from climate hell all across the Earth, when it ceased being possible to escape or deny what we have done to our planet and ourselves” says Professor Michael Flannigan, of Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, British Columbia, who has been studying the interaction of fire and climate for over 35 years. “Temperatures are rising at the rate we thought they would, but the effects are more severe, more frequent, more critical. It’s crazy and getting crazier.” NYT August 23, ’23

Following the most bizarre climatic summer on record, Cambridge Forum starts its new season by considering what our uncertain future holds, in a new series: Living on Borrowed Time.

The forum features Jeff Goodell, NYT bestselling author and contributing editor at Rolling Stone and Mike Flannigan, Research Chair for Predictive Services, Emergency Management and Fire Science at Thompson Rivers University and the Scientific Director of the Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science.

Goodell’s latest book, The Heat will Kill You First presents a searing examination of the impact that rising temperatures will have on our lives and on our planet. Flannigan has been studying fire and weather/climate interactions including the potential impact of climatic change and lightning-ignited forest fires for over 40 years.

CF Borrowed Time1
CF Borrowed Time 2

Jeff Goodell is the author of six previous books, including The Water Will Come: Rising Seas, Sinking Cities, and the Remaking of the Civilized World, which was a New York Times CriticsTop Book of 2017.  He has covered climate change for more than two decades at Rolling Stone and is a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow.

Mike Flannigan is the Research Chair in Predictive Services, Emergency Management and Fire Science at Thompson Rivers University as well as the Science Director of the Canadian Partnership for Wildland Fire Science located at the University of Alberta.

Support our mission to provide free an open discussions about the pertinent issues and ideas confronting us, in the world today. Express your appreciation for our work  – just hit the button below.

Fragile But Resilient

Daily we hear more dire news about the future of the planet and the grim survival prospects for animal populations.  Wildlife numbers have declined 20 percent over the last century with hundreds of species now extinct and there is much evidence of insect “apocalypses”, all exacerbated by climate change. Christopher Preston believes that all is not lost; there are some fragments of good news to note.

Preston, who teaches environmental philosophy at the University of Montana, has just written Tenacious Beasts, which looks at wildlife that are both defying the odds but also teaching us important lessons about how to share the planet. He is not sugar-coating the truth, he says, but highlighting recovery to provide hope not to provide soothing reassurances.  “Amid growing mountains of loss, some species have shown the tenacity to bounce back.”  Animal populations are still endangered of course but the evidence shows that wildlife are remarkably creative and adaptable.  Preston urges humans to reconsider animals in new ways that lets them live but acknowledges that we humans must change how we think, which is often harder than changing what wo do.  But changes in attitude are essential if we are to enable true recovery; the cost of doing nothing, will be the end for many species.  Preston hopes the book will provide a roadmap for a future in which humans and animals can once again coexist.

Christopher Preston’s essays have appeared in the Atlantic, Smithsonian and on the BBC website.  In addition to teaching at the University of Montana he is author of The Synthetic Age: Outdesigning Evolution; Resurrecting Species, and Reengineering Our World.

Recorded 3/15/2023

CF Fierce & Resilient 1

Support our mission to provide free an open discussions about the pertinent issues and ideas confronting us, in the world today. Express your appreciation for our work  – just hit the button below.

Farming for the Future

This forum features three uniquely different farmers who are all equally passionate about smart and sustainable ways of growing our food.

Recorded June 26, 2020

Future Farming 1
Future Farming 2

Addy Shreffler is a young but savvy farmer, who was an executive chef for several years before migrating into farming.  She is committed to spreading her farming knowledge so that people can learn how to grow their own food and eat seasonally. Also through teaching canning and preserving skills, Addy wants to aid consumers to self-sufficiency. 

Michael Chuisano is the owner of the Naked Farm in Marion, New York.  Several years ago, he morphed from a Brooklyn businessman into a successful bio-intensive farmer, raising micro-greens for local and restaurant consumption. 

Ronnie Cummings is an organic farming guru and member of the Regeneration International movement.

He is director of the Organic Consumers Association and runs a farming school in Mexico where he teaches bio-dynamics; Ronnie is also author of GRASSROOTS RISING.

The Rise of Environmental illness

Freelance journalist Oliver Broudy explores environmental toxicity and the community of The Sensitives — people with powerful, puzzling symptoms resulting from exposure to chemicals, fragrances, and cell phone signals, that have no effect on “normals.”

Recorded June 12, 2020
Press Release

Over fifty million Americans endure environmental illnesses that render them allergic to chemicals. Innocuous staples from deodorant to garbage bags wreak havoc on sensitives. With over 85,000 chemicals in the environment, danger lurks around every corner.



THE SENSITIVES: The Rise of Environmental Illness and the Search for America’s Last Pure Place is available for sale at this bookstore.

Dr. Ann McCampbel, ([email protected])(website) a Santa Fe, New Mexico based environmental illness medical advocate joins the conversation.

Cambridge Forum: The Rise of Environmental Illness

  Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter

 
 

Support our mission to provide free and open discussions about the pertinent issues and ideas confronting us, in the world today.





Join the conversation. Become a member of the Friends of Cambridge Forum to support our ongoing public events and radio series.  Contribute $100 or more and receive our newsletter and invitations to special Cambridge Forum events.

To join,  call the Forum office at 617 495-2727 or make a contribution now online via Paypal.

In Search of Meadowlarks

To mark Earth Day, John Marzluff will outline a personal approach to sustainable agriculture.

Through an ornithologist’s lens, he observes current farming practices to see if we can broker a more harmonious relationship between our birds, farms, food and land.

RECORDED 4/16/2020

Joining the conversation will be  Ronnie Cummings, author of Grassroots Rising and  International Director of OCA, Organic Consumers Association, and Michael Chuisano, owner and farmer of The Naked Farm in New York where he grows a variety of produce, including lettuce, beets, radishes and arugula using a bio-intensive, no-till agricultural method.

  Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter

 
 

Support our mission to provide free and open discussions about the pertinent issues and ideas confronting us, in the world today.





Join the conversation. Become a member of the Friends of Cambridge Forum to support our ongoing public events and radio series.  Contribute $100 or more and receive our newsletter and invitations to special Cambridge Forum events.

To join,  call the Forum office at 617 495-2727 or make a contribution now online via Paypal.

Nature Underfoot: Learning to live with tiny life

RECORDED 3/19/2020

John Hainze, an entomologist, ethicist and former pesticide-developer calls for greater respect and moral consideration for humans and their natural world.

Are creepy crawlers and unwanted plants deserving of empathy as partners dwelling with us on earth?

Fruit flies, dandelions, and crabgrass are the bane of many people and the target of numerous eradication efforts. In his compelling reassessment of the relationship between humans and the natural world, Hainze considers the fascinating and bizarre history of how these so-called invasive or unwanted pests and weeds have coevolved with humanity and highlights the benefits of a greater respect and moral consideration toward these organisms.

Joining the conversation will be James Barilla, author of MY BACKYARD JUNGLE: The Adventures of an Urban Wildlife Lover who turned his Yard into Habitat and Learned to live with It which considers the habitat of a typical urban back yard as a microcosm of burgeoning cities like Rio de Janeiro. He teaches creative non-fiction and environmental literature at the University of South Carolina.

  Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter

 
 

Support our mission to provide free and open discussions about the pertinent issues and ideas confronting us, in the world today.





Join the conversation. Become a member of the Friends of Cambridge Forum to support our ongoing public events and radio series.  Contribute $100 or more and receive our newsletter and invitations to special Cambridge Forum events.

To join,  call the Forum office at 617 495-2727 or make a contribution now online via Paypal.

On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal

Naomi Klein, internationally bestselling author and journalist, describes her latest book, On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal explaining how bold climate action can be a blueprint for a just and thriving society.

Recorded October 10, 2019

She was joined by JULIET B. SCHOR, Professor of Sociology at Boston College. This event is co-sponsored by Harvard Book Store, 350 Mass, The Intercept, The Leap, and Sunrise.

On Fire 1
On Fire 2

With reports spanning from the ghostly Great Barrier Reef, to the annual smoke-choked skies of the Pacific Northwest, to post-hurricane Puerto Rico, to a Vatican attempting an unprecedented “ecological conversion,” Naomi Klein makes the case that we will rise to the existential challenge of climate change only if we are willing to transform the systems that produced this crisis.

An expansive, far-ranging exploration that sees the battle for a greener world as indistinguishable from the fight for our lives, On Fire captures the burning urgency of the climate crisis, as well as the fiery energy of a rising political movement demanding a catalytic Green New Deal.


Normalizing Denial

The climate science debate is heating up

Bill McKibben, author, educator, founder of 350.org
Dr. Gretchen Goldman, Research Director, Center for Science and Democracy
Tim DeChristopher, climate activist
Rev. Mariama White-Hammond, minister and Boston-based activist
Moderated by Wen Stephenson, author and writer, The Nation

Co-sponsored by Cambridge Climate Research Associates

Recorded January 11, 2017

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/CF-CLIMATE-DENIAL-1.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum NORMALIZING DENIAL – Part 1]

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/CF-CLIMATE-DENIAL-2.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum NORMALIZING DENIAL – Part 2]

What’s the Economy For Anyway?

Activist, author, and film-maker John de Graaf  looks beyond the current downturn to explore the assumptions underlying our economy. In an election cycle that is focused on our economic future, his new book What’s the Economy For, Anyway? offers a fresh perspective on quality of life, health, security, work-life balance, leisure, social justice, and perhaps most important, sustainability.

How can we measure economic success?  Nationally?  Individually?  What is the role of growth in a 21st-century economy?  What role can governments play in creating economic success?  What is the individual’s role?

Wednesday, October 10 @7:00 pm

Mass Ave at Church Street (Harvard Square)