"Our goal is not just an environment of clean air and
water and scenic beauty. The objective is an environment of decency,
quality and mutual respect for all other human beings and all other living
creatures."
Gaylord Nelson
I was just out of college when I was
assigned to report on the first Earth Day in 1970. My editor was skeptical that anything might
happen, but it soon became clear that people, especially
young people, were organizing dozens and dozens of projects and I was on the front
line reporting them.
In 1990, I was able to bring
Senator Nelson as a guest speaker on Earth Day to the college campus where I
was working as Director of Public Relations.
He spoke eloquently and passionately about why we must continue to not only carry it forward but expand upon it each
and every year.
Gaylord Nelson
“Earth Day achieved what I had hoped for and then some,” he
told the students. “The purpose of Earth Day was to get a
nationwide demonstration of concern for the environment so large that it would
shake the political establishment out of its lethargy and, finally, force this
issue permanently into the political arena.
“It was truly an astonishing grassroots explosion. For the
first time people were given the opportunity to demonstrate their deep concern
about what was happening in their own communities and across the nation – polluted
air, rivers, lakes and oceans; health threatening hazardous wastes; urban
blight; pesticide and herbicide poisoning of people, plants, birds and animals;
the destruction of scenic beauty and wildlife habitats. All of this swirling
around them and the politicians didn't seem to know, understand or care. But
the people cared and Earth Day became the first opportunity they ever had to
join in a nationwide demonstration to send a big message to the politicians – a
message to tell them to wake up and do something.”
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