This post is a little different from the rest of my blog. I'm very proud to say that in October, my school (Oklahoma Christian University), was honored to have a visit from a noted author, Bill McKibben. McKibben isn't a poet, but his writing has been very influential in trying to heal the environmental crisis that America has had a hand in creating. Read on for more information.
Oklahoma Christian University—The Oklahoma Christian University campus got a timely wake-up call from author Bill McKibben, a noted environmentalist writer and activist whose Oct. 3 visit changed the way OC students think about the environment. Each year, the McBride Lectureship Series invites a prominent author to the OC Campus to give a speech, answer questions and sign books. This year’s keynote speaker was Bill McKibben, the author of the 2007 bestseller Deep Economy. McKibben’s speech served to educate and motivate the audience about the current environmental crisis. Topics of concern included global warming, the fuel crisis and the decline of local economies. McKibben encouraged his listeners to fight for change on a national level.
Jaclyn Kaissling, a 20-year-old English major, found McKibben’s discussion of local economy especially relevant.
“I think what Bill McKibben said that spoke to me the most was how we’re losing our sense of community,” she said. “Technology has really come in and taken over so that we don’t have that anymore.”
McKibben’s speech advocated a return to farmer’s markets to avoid the high gas usage associated with flying in produce from all over the world. He suggested that a focus on the local economy would lead to a more closely-knit sense of community.
Since then, OC students have expressed greater interest in farmer’s markets. McKibben brought up the idea of OC implementing a vegetable garden, which OC students could use to connect with Tealridge residents through a sense of common accomplishment. Asked about the possibility, SGA secretary Abigail Townsend said “Right now we’re trying to find a good place we could put the garden, since there’s going to be something else built in the spot Bill McKibben mentioned. We hope to make it happen.”
Another key feature of McKibben’s speech was his emphasis on the fact that global warming is happening sooner than scientists expected, and it is important that the United States act now. McKibben provided frightening examples of a world in turmoil to illustrate his point, and he reminded his audience that no other country is responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions than the United States. When asked by concerned audience members what each person could do to stop global warming, McKibben emphasized the importance of symbolic action as a way to spread awareness and let the leaders of the country know that its people demand change.
McKibben’s message had a great impact on senior English/Writing major Whitney Lenevue. “I bought two of his books,” she said. “I knew global warming was a big deal, and I knew it was approaching, but I didn’t know any of the statistics and I didn’t know any of the facts. I’ve actually told my whole family, and I’ve started being more conscious of things.” Lenevue is one of many students who are becoming more environmentally proactive after McKibben’s speech.
John Barker, another English major with plans for law school, felt similarly affected: “It made me reevaluate my personal responsibility to the environment as well as my responsibility as a participant in the democratic process.”
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