Category:Earth Day

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The First "Earth Day", April 22, 1970


SJS/GreenPolicy360 Siterunner:

The following Earth Day page retraces footsteps of a Pro-peace, Anti-war movement that led to the first "Earth Day"
A US Senator (Gaylord Nelson), a US Congressmen (George E. Brown) step up in support of our student organizing and calls-to-action
An historic oil spill in January 1969 hits the California coastline and escalates environmental awareness in California and across the U.S.


Union Oil Spill On the Calif Coast - January 1969.png


Nelson, the oil spill and the student anti-war movement.png


On the 2023 Earth Day, the Story Continues as We Recall 50+ Years of Environmental Organizing


Earth day 2016.jpg

Remembering Earth's Day inspiration -- 'Earthrise', Apollo 8, December 1968


April 22, 2023


Mainstream Media Covers Earth Day Events in 2023

Eco-Politics in the News, Links, Support and Resistance
1970 - 2023 as Environmental Protection Moves On and On ...




And... in Washington DC, threats to historic climate legislation

* https://www.politico.com/news/2023/04/20/house-gop-debt-limit-plan-inflation-reduction-act-00092891


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Every Day Is Earth Day.png


Planet Citizens

Celebrating Earth's Beauty

 

DYK? Yes, we do, we remember the beginnings !
Beginnings of the Modern Environmental Movement
Christina Korp Earth Day and Apollo 8.jpg


Earth Day Memories on the 50th Anniversary
Earth Day 50th Golden Anniversary.gif


Earth Day 2020
50th Anniversary of first Earth Day "Teach-In" / April 22, 1970
Art by Olivia Schmidt / BY-NC
Creative Commons / Use w/ Attribution + Non-commercial


 

On the 50th Anniversary

Memories on the Road to the First Earth Day


The Vietnam Moratorium and how it led to the First Earth Day


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Vietnam Moratorium Committee-Documentary Intro.jpg

Looking Back: @USC organizing the California anti-war movement/a USC Cinema Dept. film of the Moratorium

https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/File:Moratorium_October_15_1969.jpg


A Personal Story, Your GreenPolicy360 Siterunner, Reflections of Olden Days - 1969/70/71

By Steven Schmidt / GreenPolicy360 Siterunner


Vietnam Moratorium Organizing 1969-70

https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/File:Vietnam_Moratorium_Committee-Documentary_Intro.jpg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9wLCWEU-6qA&t=32s

https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/File:Moratorium_October_15_1969.jpg

https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/File:Doomsday_Machine-Daniel_Ellsberg-Recalling_the_Vietnam_Moratorium_Oct-Nov_1969.jpg

https://www.greenpolicy360.net/w/File:Moratorium_memory,_Dan-Steve,_Doomsday_Machine_inscription.jpg

https://www.strategicdemands.com/doomsday-machine/


Attempting to Turn from War to Peace

An Environmental Movement in the Making
#PlanetCitizen | #PlanetCitizens | #PlanetCitizensPlanetScientists


October 15, 1969 - In Memory

Senator Nelson, founder of Earth Day at USC

Congressman George E. Brown, East LA, with an environmental agenda

Looking back at the beginning of the modern environmental movement


SJS/GreenPolicy360 Siterunner: On the first Earth Day, April 22, 1970, a beginning of green ideals and ideas emerged in a serious way... Today Earth Day continues on as a movement and a political cause. Now we are a diverse mix, across the globe, employing the Internet with many voices, colors, ages, especially young people joining in. We continue on year after year, decade after decade.... We are strongly confronting and working to solve our generation's existential challenges. Reaching across our home planet, touching and interacting with planet citizens, looking to share solutions to pressing problems and challenges.


~


Environmentalism took on new forms and shapes with ideas that became a legal platform, a first generation of environmental laws that would go worldwide. A new "counterculture" with youthful vision and organizing added their voices and stood up to create the beginnings of a global environmental movement.

With a goal of protecting life, a new environmental movement began to grow, a "Whole Earth" vision seen for the first time from space in 1968 with the iconic Apollo 8 Earthrise image and a very real 'sense' of our common responsibility for the future of the planet. Students were 'first-movers' who spoke of the existential threat of nuclear war and environmental disaster, and need to 'become' far-reaching with a new vision. Realizations grew internationally that we had created weapons capable of ending humanity and most all life of earth -- and we needed to change this nuclear doomsday threat. Protests and 'teach ins', led by students, and drawing in politicians, communities, media, news with pamphlets, books, music, art and demonstrations crossed continents with new symbols, peace symbols, environmental and eco-awareness.


The threads of teach-ins led directly to and the first Earth Day in 1970 as students expanded counterculture with action.

Across the U.S., a first Earth Day of teach-ins began as a student-initiated movement on college campuses including your siterunner's college where we proposed an environment and peace action day to Senator Nelson, who we met as we organized the national Moratorium and who worked with us to make an Earth Day a national political event.

We invited Senator Nelson to speak at the University of Southern California for Earth Day and he agreed. Students who organized pro-peace and then pro-environment actions, as the Senator explained, inspired him to propose a national environmental action. The peace activists of the 1969 Vietnam war moratorium shared a positive vision of what was needed and he listened. In California meetings, he listened. Environmental protection, economic and social justice, new priorities added to the nation's agenda. The work spread quickly. A foundation of organizing sprang into action and Earth Day's teach-ins reached out to students and new networks formed globally. A worldwide environmental movement became a real and growing political force...


Senator Nelson, an eco-voyager who watched, met with, and listened to us:

"I am convinced that the same concern the youth of this nation took in changing this nation's priorities on the war in Vietnam and on civil rights can be shown for the problems of the environment. Successful teach-ins on all campuses on the same day will have a dramatic impact on the environmental conscience of the nation. They will be immensely effective as an educational effort in arousing public opinion..."

"If we could tap into the environmental concerns of the general public and infuse student energy into the environmental cause, we could generate a demonstration that would force the issue onto the national political agenda," Senator Bill Nelson (D-WI) said after one of his 1969 trips to California.


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Earth Day -- April 22, 1970

April 22, 2020 -- 50 Years On


Bioneers interview with Hispanic activist Arturo Sandoval:

You were part of Denis Hayes’ team that produced the first Earth Day in 1970. What was that experience like?

ARTURO: It was my first time organizing on a national level. I worked with a very bright team. It was lots of work. It was very exhilarating. It completely exceeded anything we hoped to achieve. It was like holding onto the tail of the tiger. We were basically just trying to stay out of the way of a freight train coming down the tracks because the response to the first Earth Day was so overwhelming. It was huge. It was just unbelievable, and took everything we had to just try to connect the dots and get information out to the people and not get in their way.

 

Earth Day 50 years on.jpg

Via the Los Angeles Times


(LA Times, 2020): On an August day in 1969, Sen. Gaylord Nelson, a Democrat from Wisconsin, was in Santa Barbara inspecting what he later described as “that awful oil spill” and “puzzling about what could be done to bring public opinion to bear on the lethargic political community.” Over the next month he hatched a plan. Teach-ins — sit-ins that offered lessons about specific topics — were the rage in the activist 1960s, and Nelson wondered what might happen if the whole country engaged in a teach-in on how human activity imperiled the natural world. Thus Earth Day was born, and 50 years ago today some 20 million people — a tenth of the U.S. population — gathered at thousands of local events, propelling concerns about the environment onto the national agenda, where it’s been ever since.

 

Earth Right Now

EarthRightNow-2.jpg

 

"To understand and protect our home planet; to explore the universe and search for life; to inspire the next generation of explorers ..." -- NASA Original Mission Statement (1958)

"You can manage only what you can measure." -- NASA, Earth Right Now Science Program

 

EarthDayatNASA 2.jpg


 

Spaceship Earth-Buckminster Fuller.jpg


 

Apollo.jpg


 

Apollo 8, Life Jan10,1969.png


Earthrise to Earth Day


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Subcategories

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Media in category "Earth Day"

The following 143 files are in this category, out of 143 total.