Why I Left Greenpeace|5 Minute Video
Patrick Moore discusses why he assisted to produce Greenpeace, and why he chose to leave it. What began as an objective to enhance the environment for the sake of humanity became a political motion in which humanity became the villain and difficult science a non-issue.
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Script:
In 1971 I assisted discovered an ecological group in the basement of a Unitarian church in Vancouver, Canada. We were making headlines every month.
The objective, when honorable, had actually ended up being damaged– political agendas and fear mongering trumped science and reality. Here’s how it happened.
When I was studying for my PhD in ecology at the University of British Columbia, I joined a little activist group called the Don’t Make a Wave Committee. It was the height of the Cold War; the Vietnam War was raging. I became radicalized by these realities and by the emerging awareness of the environment.
The objective of the Don’t Make a Wave Committee was to introduce an ocean-going campaign against United States hydrogen bomb testing in Alaska, a sign of our opposition to nuclear war. As one of our early meetings was separating, someone said, “Peace,” A reply came, “Why don’t we make it a green peace,” and a brand-new movement was born.
Green was for the environment and peace was for the people. We named our boat “The Greenpeace” and I signed up with the 12-person team for a trip of demonstration.
We didn’t stop that H-bomb test however it was the last hydrogen bomb the United States ever detonated. We had won a major victory.
In 1975, Greenpeace took a sharp turn away from our anti-nuclear efforts and set out to Save the Whales, sailing the high seas to challenge Russian and Japanese whalers. By the early 1980s we were campaigning versus hazardous waste, air contamination, trophy hunting, and the live capture of orca whales.
I began to feel uneasy with the course my fellow directors were taking. I discovered myself the just one of six global directors with a formal science background. We were now dealing with subjects that involved complex concerns of toxicology, chemistry, and human health. You do not need a PhD in marine biology to understand it’s a good idea to conserve whales from extinction. When you’re analyzing which chemicals to prohibit, you require to understand some science. And the first lesson of ecology is that we are all interconnected. Humans belong to nature, not separate from it. Many other species, illness agents and their providers, for example, are our opponents and we have the ethical obligation to safeguard human beings from these enemies. Biodiversity is not always our good friend.
The “peace” in Greenpeace had faded away. Putting an end to commercial growth and prohibiting numerous beneficial innovations and chemicals became typical styles of the motion. Science and reasoning no longer held sway.
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Patrick Moore explains why he helped to create Greenpeace, and why he chose to leave it. What began as a mission to improve the environment for the sake of humankind ended up being a political motion in which mankind became the villain and hard science a non-issue.
When I was studying for my PhD in ecology at the University of British Columbia, I signed up with a small activist group called the Don’t Make a Wave Committee. In 1975, Greenpeace took a sharp turn away from our anti-nuclear efforts and set out to Save the Whales, cruising the high seas to confront Russian and Japanese whalers. The “peace” in Greenpeace had faded away.