Recently, I
received an e-mail from my favorite California winery. Within this
e-mail was a newsletter covering many interesting wine-related topics.
Then came the politically-correct message, from management, as to
how this winery is "going green." Implicit in the winery’s
announcement is that every person and every company can make a difference
when it comes to protecting the environment. It also was implied
that good/green corporate citizens typically attract enlightened
customers who share similar values. Heck, I was beginning to wonder
if I was worthy enough to buy wine from such a progressive company.
My self-esteem, after all, isn’t high enough to regularly shop at
Whole Foods Market – whose management states
that it has "…a deep commitment to environmental stewardship
that puts us at the forefront of the effort to make the planet whole
and healthy." The few times I have been to a Whole Foods Market,
I couldn’t help but notice the incredible wine and beer selections
– and I found one of my favorite French wines there; thus I must
find the courage to go back. That’s it, if I am going to confidently
patronize these green businesses, then I must elevate my self-worth
by doing my part to make Mother Earth whole and healthy once again.
Accordingly, it is essential that I too "go green."
One way for
me to go green is to reduce my "carbon
footprint." Al Gore, keep in mind, has proven
to us that manmade carbon dioxide is causing global warming; which
is harming our precious planet. Since I refuse to give up my trusty
SUV, I can still feel good about myself by decreasing my carbon
footprint in other ways. This may be accomplished by minimizing
my "secondary carbon footprint" which I have been told
results from my purchasing habits. For example, if I go to the supermarket
and buy foods that are out of season, it is obvious that such foods
will have been either flown or shipped in from far away – all adding
to my carbon footprint. Consequently, the following simple
rules should be embraced in order to shrink one’s secondary carbon
footprint – and I’m not making these up:
Reduce your
consumption of meat
Don't buy
bottled water if your tap water is safe to drink
Buy local
fruits and vegetables, or even try growing your own
Don't buy
fresh fruits and vegetables which are out of season, they may
have been flown in
Try to buy
products made closer to home (look out for and avoid items that
are made in distant lands such as China and India)
Buy organic
produce
Don't buy
over-packaged products
Recycle
as much as possible
Think carefully
about the type of activities you do in your spare time. Do any
of these activities cause an increase in carbon emissions? e.g.,
patronizing saunas, health clubs, restaurants, pubs, and going
go-karting, etc.
In looking
over this list, I can’t help but conclude that my carbon footprint
is still too large. After all, my SUV emits a lot of carbon dioxide.
Maybe I should personally boycott some industries that are big-time
polluters recklessly spewing carbon dioxide into our cherished atmosphere.
Moreover, I will stay away from the retailers who sell such monstrous
products.
So I look in
the refrigerator and the answer is staring me in the face. Not a
single beer or wine in my refrigerator (nor in my wine chiller)
was crafted in Oregon. I see wines and beers from Australia, New
Zealand, Argentina, Spain, France, California, and Washington. How
brutish! Just think how far these delicious beverages have been
transported by ship, plane, and truck. What nerve these retailers
have. By selling me beers and wines from across the globe, I clearly
possess the carbon footprint of a Sasquatch.
After getting
over the shock of my yeti-like carbon footprint, it becomes imperative
that I shrink this footprint by boycotting carbon dioxide-emitting
industries. Sadly, a byproduct of fermentation is carbon dioxide.
With annual worldwide beer production being about 38 billion gallons
and with wine production being around 20 billion liters, it is inescapable
that wineries and breweries are contributing mightily to global
warming. After all, let’s not lose sight of the fact that wine and
beer are produced through the fermentation process. Considering
that annual production of wine and beer amounts to billions of gallons,
then it is a heartbreaking truth that these industries are populated
by pernicious, carbon dioxide-spewing ghouls. Yet, is a personal
boycott strong enough action?
Suddenly, my
self-esteem zooms to the stratosphere. It is the aforementioned
winery and Whole Foods Market that are no longer worthy of me. They
are profiting from the sales of products that cannot possibly
be crafted without producing that most evil greenhouse gas – carbon
dioxide. In a progressively-lucid moment, which would make Al Gore
proud, it strikes me that we can help save Mother Earth – from global
warming – by bringing back prohibition. Just think of the incredible
reduction, in carbon dioxide emissions, that prohibition will beget.
And for those winery, brewery, and other workers displaced by prohibition,
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives will most
certainly have job openings for all of them. It is so simple. Bring
back the 18th Amendment and watch Mother Earth begin
her healing.
Gosh it is
so easy to "think" like a progressive. Merely ban something,
by the force of law, and the intended result will emerge exactly
as planned. Look at the success of America’s gun-free zones. How
in the world did communism fail?
Of course,
the next step will be to integrate alcohol prohibition into the
Kyoto Protocol. Fight global warming with global prohibition!
For
those anthropogenic global-warming believers, I have an early holiday
season tip for you. When cooking your Thanksgiving turkey, make
sure that you rub it with your favorite herbs and spices. Next,
and this is crucial, completely ignore that you even have an oven
(much like ignoring the sun as does your beloved global warming
"science"). Instead, place the turkey onto your garage
floor and then turn on your automobile…and have the necessary faith
that a carbon dioxide buildup can actually cook your turkey. Personally,
I’ll put mine in the oven as I am not foolish enough to completely
ignore the heat source. To be sure, a fine chardonnay will accompany
my Thanksgiving meal. Carbon footprint be damned.
April
25, 2007
Eric
Englund [send him mail], who
has an MBA from Boise State University, lives in the state of Oregon.
He is the publisher of The
Hyperinflation Survival Guide by Dr. Gerald Swanson. You
are invited to visit his website.