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Gore's 'Truth' spurs Mainers to action
Portland (Maine) Press Herald (BARF) ^ | 25 February, 2007 | John Richardson

Posted on 02/25/2007 5:45:10 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo

A year and a half ago, Ray Sirois simply did not believe there was any truth to global warming.

Last winter's mild weather and a lot of Internet research started changing his mind. By the time the film "An Inconvenient Truth" came out last summer, he was eager to go. And then there was no going back.

Sirois, a Republican who voted for George Bush in 2000, traveled to Nashville, Tenn., in January at his own expense and became one of 1,000 people trained by former Vice President Al Gore, the Democrat who Bush defeated, to spread the word about climate change. "An Inconvenient Truth," a documentary about global warming and Gore's sometimes lonely mission to sound the alarm, could win an Academy Award tonight. But a better measure of its success may be the impact it has had on ordinary people like Sirois and other Mainers motivated to learn more, adjust their lifestyles or push for change.

For Sirois, a 48-year-old Boy Scout leader from Harrison, it's a matter of raising global-warming awareness, one slide show at a time. "Those of us who are in the know have a big job ahead of us to get everybody else in the know," he said.

The film lays out the science of how carbon dioxide released into the air by power plants, cars and other sources is trapping heat around the Earth, threatening to shift weather patterns, melt vast ice sheets and raise sea levels. A panel of international scientists said earlier this month that global warming is unequivocal and there is at least a 90 percent probability that humans are driving it.

Sirois was among the first wave of Mainers who saw the movie in a limited number of theaters last summer. Another 3,000 to 4,000 Maine people saw the film last fall when 70 churches around the state held special pre-release showings.

The DVD release brought the film not only into living rooms but also into science classrooms and school auditoriums. Teachers around the state ordered complimentary copies of the DVD to show to middle school and high school groups, usually followed by a question-and-answer session with an expert on the science.

It's not known how many Maine teachers have shown the movie, said Tad Johnson, science specialist with the Maine Department of Education. While school showings have created public controversies in some places, such as Seattle, Johnston has not heard of any in Maine. The movie clearly had an impact on some teens. A couple of Yarmouth High School students saw the movie and began a campaign that led to the Yarmouth Town Council taking a formal stand against global warming.

Amrit "Ami" Robbins, an 18-year-old senior in Yarmouth, saw the movie in Portland's Old Port with his parents and then convinced his friend to go.

"He had the same response as I did. He knew that there was a crisis at hand and knew there was something we could do at the local level," Robbins said. "People who are in power now, they don't care necessarily because it's not going to affect them directly. It's definitely going to affect us, in our lifetimes, and our children." Robbins and his friend, Ned Jones, helped generate interest at their school, where students had a recent showing of the film. And they set out to make Yarmouth a leader in a national, town-by-town effort to reduce global warming pollution. They achieved their goal this month when the Town Council voted to sign the U.S. Mayors Agreement on Climate Change, becoming the fifth Maine community to promise to reduce its carbon dioxide emissions through energy conservation.

They're not done yet. This summer, for example, Robbins and Jones hope to give out free energy-efficient compact fluorescent light bulbs at the Yarmouth Clam Festival.

Dick Enright, a 59-year-old retired water district manager who lives in Naples, was moved by the film, too. Enright now reads as much as he can about the science and the solutions. He turned down his hot water heater, switched to fluorescent bulbs. He also turns his lights off more often and drives his car less. He also talks about global warming to anyone he can. "I've e-mailed all of those people or businesses or organizations in my orbit. I've established relationships with different politicians, whatever vehicle I can think of," he said.

Enright is convinced the movie emerged at the right time. "It's awakened the consciousness. People sensed that something was going wrong," he said.

And, he said, Gore was "exactly the right person" to present the message. "The irony of this entire thing to me is he lost the election but he picked himself up and became an advocate for a cause that has global consequences."

Not everyone sees it that way, of course. Whether because of the film's message or because of the messenger, its audience has its limits.

"Frankly, I have no desire to go see the movie," said Joseph Bruno, a former state lawmaker and chairman of the Maine Republican Party.

Bruno said he recognizes that global warming is happening and that humans are "more than likely" causing it. But, he said, Gore is politically motivated to blame Republicans for the problem.

"Al Gore politicized the issue. He lost credibility," Bruno said. "I think the movie is a political Michael Moore-type of movie that gives a certain viewpoint." The fact that some won't see the movie is partly what continues to motivate Ray Sirois.

Sirois, who respected Gore despite voting for Bush in 2000, applied to become part of The Climate Project, an organization Gore set up to build on the momentum created by the film.

An information technology manager at Wright-Pierce engineering company in Topsham, he was selected to spend 2‡ days last month with Gore and about 300 other Americans, including actress Cameron Diaz and Theodore Roosevelt IV, a Wall Street investment banker and great-grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt.

Sirois is now one of a handful of Mainers trained to present their own versions of Gore's now-famous slide show, always at no cost. He is quick to point out that his presentation, like the issue of global warming, is nonpartisan. "This is a look at the science of climate change and the solutions to climate change," he said. Maine's two senators, Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins, are both examples of Republicans focusing on the issue, he points out. And, he said, some of those who have seen his presentation are conservative Republicans. Sirois and others are examples of how the movie is having impacts that transcend politics, according to Anne "Andy" Burt, environmental justice coordinator for the Maine Council of Churches.

"You've got so many people that have been motivated by this movie. I feel like there's no stopping them," Burt said.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Maine
KEYWORDS: climate; globalwarming; gore; maine
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To: NewHampshireDuo

I was waiting on someone to mention the mercury. I have heard that you can not just throw these bulbs out with your normal trash because of the mercury. They have to be taken to special sites that are prepared to handle the mercury-or so I've heard.


41 posted on 02/25/2007 7:19:15 AM PST by crude77
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To: NewHampshireDuo
Sirois is now one of a handful of Mainers Moonbats trained to present their own versions of ... global warming, is nonpartisan. "This is a look at the science of climate change and the solutions to climate change"

Yo, Sirois take a looky at these thingys...



Hint; THEY are what affects 'climate change'

42 posted on 02/25/2007 7:21:56 AM PST by Condor51 (Rudy makes John Kerry look like a 'Right Wing Extremist'.)
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To: NewHampshireDuo

Looks like I'll have to increase my carbon footprint again!

When the PETA vegans raise a ruckus, I eat more meat.

So when these idiots raise their ruckus, I'll idle my SUV in the driveway with the AC rolling on high.


43 posted on 02/25/2007 7:35:33 AM PST by Eagle Eye (There oughta be a law against excess legislation.)
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To: NewHampshireDuo

http://www.john-daly.com/stations/farmingt.gif

I wonder if he has seen this trend data for Farmington, Maine. Seems that Maine, like the rest of the United States, is not trending Al Gore's way. Still, like liberals in general, why should he worry about the facts when there is some hand-wringing to do and koolaid to drink.

By the way, I turn off the lights, turn down the thermostat and avoid joy riding too - but that is because it is stupid to waste money. I still take a shower everyday: perhaps I should go back to the Saturday night bath routine and save the planet!

P.S. The Daly site is great for actual raw temperature data, as opposed to the massaged data that appears in the IPCC charts.


44 posted on 02/25/2007 7:39:41 AM PST by bjc (Check the data!!)
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To: pallmallman

45 posted on 02/25/2007 7:47:06 AM PST by mirkwood (good gun control is a sharp eye and a steady hand)
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To: xcamel

Latest Weather Channel Headine: 02-25-07
SIROIS IS CAUGHT IN THE BUBBLE OF GORE'S GLOBAL FLATULENCE!


46 posted on 02/25/2007 7:49:19 AM PST by rusureitflies? (OSAMA BIN LADEN IS DEAD! There, I said it. Prove me wrong.)
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To: bjc
I still take a shower everyday: perhaps I should go back to the Saturday night bath routine and save the planet!

Nahhh, you can still take a shower every day, you just have to turn the water off while you are soaping yourself up, then turn it back on just long enough to rinse off the soap.

47 posted on 02/25/2007 8:02:05 AM PST by Elyse (I refuse to feed the crocodile.)
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To: crude77
Our dump recycling center requires that fluorescents be put in a special container. In the case of long tubes it's pretty hard to sneak them into the trash dumpster so compliance is probably high. However, with these little bulbs, I'm sure that a lot are going to end up in the BFI dumpster just because people are going to chuck them into their wastebaskets.
48 posted on 02/25/2007 8:05:11 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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To: bjc

Obviously the trend for Farmington, ME is upward (if you disregard anything before 1980).


49 posted on 02/25/2007 8:07:23 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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To: NewHampshireDuo
An Inconvenient Truth is a convenient lie. Gore and most of the people involved with it know it, too.
50 posted on 02/25/2007 8:07:33 AM PST by TBP
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To: NewHampshireDuo
Sirois, a Republican who voted for George Bush in 2000,...

That crap is getting so old. The old liberals are so ashamed to be communists that they always start out claiming to be "a Republican" who voted for Bush. The only jerks still buying that crap are the morons in the MSM.

51 posted on 02/25/2007 8:10:54 AM PST by FlingWingFlyer (When I was a kid, "global warming" was known as "the weather.")
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To: pallmallman

I tend to agree that Al has something fundamentally wrong with his head. It's interesting how many nets he's cast since 2000 (academia, media, etc.) with most not going anywhere special. He hit the motherload, for the time being anyway, with human-caused GW and this augments his "established credentials" with the environuts. Whenever the GW thing collapses, Al will freak.


52 posted on 02/25/2007 8:14:55 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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To: FlingWingFlyer

I'm sure he's called into C-SPAN on the repub line too!!


53 posted on 02/25/2007 8:16:07 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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To: hgro

Far from it. Mainers are very "make do folks" who live off the land. They hunt for food, chop wood to heat their homes if propane gets to expensive and don't wait for the government to help them if things get rough. Lots of intelligent people have bought into Global Warming nonsense due to people's desire to be good stewards of the Earth, contempt for waste and hyper-consumption and a disdain for industry that has been shoved down our throats for the last 30 years.


54 posted on 02/25/2007 8:27:01 AM PST by ffusco (Maecilius Fuscus,Governor of Longovicium , Manchester, England. 238-244 AD)
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To: NewHampshireDuo

The Farmington thermometer is very poorly sited next to a busy paved road that gets busier every year. They moved it closer to the road in the 1980s and a large parking lot went up not too far away at about the same time. It has other problems as well.


55 posted on 02/25/2007 8:31:08 AM PST by Number_Cruncher
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To: NewHampshireDuo

A couple of months ago, Barry Obama was pimpin' his book in Phoenix. The one person they interviewed at the Obama Love-In was "a republican who voted for Bush" and was only there to see "an honest politician." The MSM sure has a knack for being able to pick out "republicans who voted for Bush" from a crowd. It's probably just a coincidence.


56 posted on 02/25/2007 8:42:36 AM PST by FlingWingFlyer (When I was a kid, "global warming" was known as "the weather.")
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To: pallmallman

I thot that Bush handled him great in the debate when the nutzoid approached him and tried to impose with his nutty presence.


57 posted on 02/25/2007 9:12:16 AM PST by ArtyFO (I love to smoke cigars when I adjust artillery fire at the moonbat loonery.)
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To: Number_Cruncher
The Farmington thermometer is very poorly sited next to a busy paved road that gets busier every year. They moved it closer to the road in the 1980s and a large parking lot went up not too far away at about the same time. It has other problems as well.

So, editing your comment a bit and ignoring the fact that the thermometer got moved closer to the roadway, we could say that "the continuing encroachment of human activity and fossil fuel burning vehicles has even affected the temperature trends in formerly rural Farmington, Maine. All you have to do is look at the past couple of decades of data!"

58 posted on 02/25/2007 9:43:13 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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To: Kimmers

"Inquiring minds want to know....

How is the weather in your neck of the woods this year?"

No "white Christmas" again....Warm until about mid-January. Real cold since with one major snow storm 38 degrees out right now-not bad.
Of couse, Maine is a large state, I'm sorta in the middle...


59 posted on 02/25/2007 9:49:20 AM PST by MrLee
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To: ffusco
Far from it. Mainers are very "make do folks" who live off the land. They hunt for food, chop wood to heat their homes if propane gets to expensive and don't wait for the government to help them if things get rough.

That was certainly my impression when I was growing up in Maine in the 1950s and 60s. And, I'm sure it's the case today in some areas. I see two types that worry me (and it's certainly not limited to Maine): the ignorant who buy into this (case in point with this article) and the out and out rabid eco-socialists who are definitely on the rise in Maine.

I was at one Independence Day parade this past summer (midcoast area) and the peace-at-any-price earth-centric Greens and Code Pink marchers got very warm receptions. It was disgusting.

60 posted on 02/25/2007 9:52:16 AM PST by NewHampshireDuo
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