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Podcasts

Dr. Rob Cooley: Listen and Save the World

Episode #4
September 19, 2023
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Dr. Rob Cooley, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Environmental Science at Pennsylvania College of Technology, views the world through an anthropological lens. After chatting with him in this episode, we can easily see the clarity in this approach. We dive into his journey to Penn College, his quest to save the world, and his advice for reducing your carbon footprint. Rob also talks about the global experience course he co-led to the Dominican Republic, the monumental impact of living and working alongside a different culture, and the abundance of life-changing takeaways.

References:

Global Experience Water Filter Fundraiser

Ocean Conservancy

Penn College Global Experiences

Williamsport Grower's Market

A Sand County Almanac: And Other Essays on Conservation from Round River

Google Meets Aldo Leopold

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Welcome to Tomorrow Makers, where we explore how we learn, live, work and play now and

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in the future.

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I am Sumer Beatty.

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And I'm Carlos Ramos.

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Hi.

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Hello.

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We're back.

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We are.

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Thanks for, thanks for coming back, everybody.

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Well, I'm just going to thank you for coming back.

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Oh yeah, of course I'd be here.

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I love this.

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We have Rob Cooley today.

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Dr. Rob Cooley.

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Dr. Rob Cooley.

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Dr. Rob Cooley.

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Dr. Rob Cooley.

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Dr. Rob Cooley.

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Dr. Rob Cooley.

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Dr. Rob Cooley, associate professor of anthropology and environmental science at Penn College.

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We've, we were just talking about, if we go back to that, that first episode when we're

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talking about Nate and we're like the length of these titles and like, it seemed like his

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was long, but I'm like, this is, I think syllable per word, Rob's got them.

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He does.

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Is there a cap here?

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Should we initiate?

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For purposes of our podcast, can we initiate a cap on syllables?

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Oh my goodness.

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These titles are long.

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I mean, in a nutshell, Rob's just awesome.

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He is.

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That's, that's awesome.

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So us Rob, like that's all.

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Yeah.

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If you've had Rob, you know how awesome he is.

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If you haven't had Rob, you need to, you need to take one of Rob's classes.

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And if you're not a Penn College student to take one of Rob's classes, then you need to

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become a Penn College student.

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Yeah.

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So even if you're like not college age, just come in, you know, do your one class.

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Yeah.

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So there's the pitch.

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That's all.

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Yeah.

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So what makes Rob so awesome?

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Oh my goodness.

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I think Rob cares.

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I think he's, he just cares and he understands and he listens.

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Rob listens.

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I mean, I think that's what anthropologists do, right?

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Yeah.

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There was a lot of, a lot of listening in this, that you're going to find some, some

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points where we do have to think a little bit.

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Yeah.

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And you know, I had to think a lot and you know, Rob definitely helped make us think.

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Yeah.

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So, and we, we talk a little bit about bikes on this one.

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So I think, I mean, you'll, you'll learn probably a little bit about this.

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I like the bike.

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I love the bike too.

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Yeah.

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Sorry.

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I'm going to try to one up you by saying love after like, but you know, you went right,

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you went right for it.

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I, there's no, there's no word I can pick.

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That's the best.

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But yeah, I mean, we joke, we're like, okay.

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And then that shop bikes are going to save the world.

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That's, that's the, that's our proclamation today.

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So I'm expecting this is a part one.

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We're going to have Rob back to talk about bikes.

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Cause we, we had a really great conversation for like 15 minutes after this, where we're

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talking about just, you know, what that means, but we'll save that for episode two with Rob

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or part two with Rob.

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Yeah.

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Stay tuned on that.

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Yeah.

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But for right now was, we won't even talk about what we've talked about.

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Let's let Rob get into it.

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So here it is tomorrow makers.

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Enjoy Rob.

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Hey, how y'all doing?

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How you doing?

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Doing good.

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Good.

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You want to let the listeners know who you are and, you know, what you do here at Penn

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college?

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I would say that's a really good question.

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Yeah.

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I'm Rob Cooley.

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I teach here at Penn college.

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I've been here since 2003.

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So it's been quite a bit.

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I teach anthropology, sociology, environmental science, introduction to research methods

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for social sciences, diversity inclusive practice for human service practitioners, service learning

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and sociology.

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I lead study abroad trips and my probably the most unique class that I teach is called

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outdoor recreation as a therapeutic tool for human service students.

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And that involves leadership, outdoor education, the challenge course project and stuff like

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that.

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So I kind of joke and say I teach the kitchen sink, but I teach a lot of different stuff.

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Great.

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Did that last one always exist or is that something you dreamed up?

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Believe it or not, it actually predates me quite a bit.

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Okay.

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My first student was a faculty in human services, his name was LaRue Reese.

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He developed a course years and years ago and when he retired, there wasn't really anybody

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in that program at the time who was interested or had the background to teach it.

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And they all kind of looked at me and said, Hey Cooley, you want to do it?

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I said, sure.

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Yeah, that sounds like right up your alley.

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It took me down a whole different route that I hadn't initially planned, but it's been

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a really good fit.

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So it's been a nice addition to the stuff that I do.

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Yeah.

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Cool.

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So I'm curious about your background in ecological anthropology.

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We're really excited.

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So you know, doing a little research about you that came up and I'm like, what is that?

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That's also a really good question.

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Yeah.

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Is it just me or I'm thinking our audience might need a little background on that.

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Can you tell us about that?

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Sure.

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So anthropology has always been kind of hard to pin down just as a field itself.

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You know, it's got biological anthropology, looking at the human as a biological species,

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archaeology and looking at the physical remains of past groups, linguistic anthropology, looking

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at the cognition, biology and cultural dimensions of speech and then cultural anthropology.

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There's also applied anthropology, which sort of evolved in the past couple of decades,

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looking at problem oriented anthropology, helping groups of people solve challenges

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that they face.

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And excuse me, when I went to, when I was thinking about grad school, I'd gone to college

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for biology.

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I had my undergraduate degrees in biology with a minor in literature.

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And I developed an interest in conservation and in sustainability and really was interested

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in saving the world.

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And obviously, you know, at the college age, you can sort of think that way.

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And I found this program, well, I'd taken two courses in anthropology in college, kind

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of like a lot of my students.

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I took it because it checked the box and looked interesting.

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I said, I'll give it a shot.

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Well, it completely spun me on my head.

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And I was like, oh my gosh, you're not managing the trout.

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You're managing the people that harvest the trout.

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You're not managing the trees.

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You're managing the industries and stakeholder interests that need the trees.

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And then I was kind of like, well, why don't people want to conserve everything?

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People do weird things.

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And I was joking with students.

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I said, people are weird.

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You know, we do things that are, that don't make sense on the outside.

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So I was like, how do I get at that?

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And I took these couple of anthropology courses and went, oh my gosh, looking at why people

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do the things they do, why their value systems are what they are, why they make the decisions

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that they do, even though the decisions seem to be contradictory to what makes sense.

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I was like, ah, cultural anthropology is what I really want to get into.

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So I looked around for some anthropology programs that were applied in nature that weren't sort

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of the traditional four field approach.

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And I found University of Georgia, and pretty much all of the faculty and the students in

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the program were doing projects that related to sustainability in one way or another, whether

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it was preservation of traditional ecological knowledge of indigenous groups or helping

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contemporary groups in industrialized countries like fisheries in North America, work with

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managers and biologists and policymakers to achieve more sustainable approaches.

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So having somebody, being somebody that grew up on the coast, I've always liked being on

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the water.

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So I was like, no, let's see if I can find a way to mix this with fishing.

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So I wound up doing my dissertation work with commercial blue crab fishermen in Georgia.

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And basically, the point that I had started, the time when I was looking to start my research,

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the Georgia blue crab fishery was actually declining significantly.

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And the state regulators had actually closed it temporarily and put a block on licenses,

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saying, nope, it's overfished, it's declining, we got to figure this out.

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And the fishermen are all going, it's declining, but it's not declining because of us.

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And I was like, ooh, this is interesting.

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The biologists saying one thing, the fishermen saying the other.

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From a cultural standpoint, you have the people with official degrees on the one side.

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You have the people with bureaucratic legitimacy on the one side.

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And then you have the fishermen who are kind of viewed as cowboys.

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And there's big stereotypes, which I don't agree with, but being uneducated or they don't

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understand biology or the fancy stuff.

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So when the biologists and the fishermen would sit across the table, there was a complete

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wall to communication.

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And that's where anthropology comes in.

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It's kind of like, how do you be a translator between different groups and see where they're

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coming at, where they're going?

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So I worked with the fishermen and I interviewed, I think, 25 different fishermen up and down

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the coast of Georgia who didn't really work with each other, but all worked the same resource,

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the same ecosystem and had been at about the same amount of time.

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And I found that in their stories or their descriptions of environmental change, they

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had the same basic models.

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And the models were things like, well, ditching and draining the coastal swamps for pine trees

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for the paper plantations has reduced the ability of the swamp to hold fresh water,

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piece it into the estuaries and buffer the salines that crabs can reproduce.

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That's science.

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But the way that they described it wasn't in the scientific jargon.

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But 25 people to independently, more or less, come up with the same explanation and same

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observation based on decades of observation, combining that with the survey, I was able

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to show that there was a structure to their knowledge and an understanding of environmental

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problems beyond overfishing.

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And then we slid that back across the table to the managers and they said, well, that's

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kind of interesting.

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Not sure if a whole lot of progress has been made because, again, that's an enormous industry.

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And there's, I don't even know how many hundreds of thousands of acres planted in pine trees

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down there.

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But that's the kind of thing that I've always been interested in, is getting in between

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different groups and helping groups see each other's point from different angles towards

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a common goal of sustainability.

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So that's kind of a long, circuitous answer.

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Most of anthropology is long and twisted like that.

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But ecological anthropology is interesting to me because it's a very broad-based way

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of saying, hey, how do we look at the interface between humans and the environment?

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And what factors drive decision making?

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And what cultural systems create patterns of behavior?

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So why do people do the things that they do and why they say the things that they say,

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even though the science says otherwise?

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So the information, well, if we see this, why are you doing that?

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Right?

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So, yeah, so ecological anthropology is sort of a whole combination of different approaches

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to understanding the human environment interface.

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It's really interesting.

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As you're talking, I'm thinking, how does he navigate everyday life?

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Because as you just walk through life, things are happening over here and they're happening

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over here and you have this background knowledge of how do you not get involved in every little

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project around town?

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It's hard not to.

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Yeah, because you just, I feel like you have that unique insight to step in and almost

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offer a solution.

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Yeah, it is kind of funny.

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My wife would be the first to say whenever we're driving somewhere, it's, hey, look at

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that.

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Hey, look at that.

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Hey, do you see that?

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Do you know what that is?

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Oh, yeah.

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Of course you did.

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I can't help myself.

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But yeah, it's also, it's been really beneficial because what is an anthropologist doing here

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at Penn College?

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You know, an applied technology institution, you got a traditional social scientist who

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is doing research with fishermen here, but you can take that perspective and kind of

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lock in on just about anything.

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Right.

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You know, I've worked with, I did a team taught a course in, I did the cultural side of things

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in mathematics with Kurt Van de Veer for a long time.

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It was a study abroad course, we went to the Yucatan and looked at the ancient Maya and

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math systems.

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Been working with Wayne Sheppard in construction on this Dominican Republic service learning

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experience and I was looking at the, helping the students understand the social political

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history of the country and why it led to the economic and environmental situation that

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they see when they put their feet on the ground there.

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Understanding anthropology to industrial design students and understanding the human function

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or the value system and design or the way we go about securing materials and resources

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from the environment or logging or not logging, but forestry students or automotive students,

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why we need emissions controls.

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Right.

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But like, it's everywhere.

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It plugs into everything and it's been kind of fun to find that niche or many niches,

257
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I guess.

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That's really cool.

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Yeah.

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As I'm sitting here and thinking about it, you asked the question, why is a program like

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that here at Penn College where we're doing applied technologies and before you got to

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that, I'm like, why isn't this like some of the other programming that we have that's

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required that lends a not necessarily liberal arts flair to an applied technology program,

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but a hint of it, why isn't that specific course just required across board because

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I can see that connection that would be at least at the bachelor level.

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Interestingly enough, I think it winds up being a piece of a lot of students' experience

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here because I teach it every semester, sometimes multiple sections a semester and they generally

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fill up pretty well.

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But I know it's either required or suggested elective in industrial design, but also in

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emergency management.

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Those are two programs that I've worked pretty closely with.

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But yeah, I mean, students having their choice of elective is important, but I definitely

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think the social science and the humanities electives that we do have, sociology and anthropology

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tend to be pretty solid, frequently picked courses.

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And the students that go through them, I think, yeah, get that component in their time here.

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Have you, similar to your experience where you said you are taking an anthropology class

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and it just kind of flipped you, do you have that experience in class where there's a student

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that you just kind of see it in their eyes like, I'm really getting to them.

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They're really impacted by this message.

280
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For sure.

281
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And it's funny, I've probably got a dozen or so students that I'm still in touch with

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and they're the students that have had those moments, who've had those really tight conversations

283
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about things.

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And none of them have gone to become anthropologists, but a lot of them have, all of them have really

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incorporated that perspective into their work.

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Students that are working in construction, students that are going into emergency management,

287
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students that are in industrial design and architecture in particular, those are students

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that I've gotten really closely connected with.

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It's been cool to see.

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When I got out of grad school, I was sort of faced with that choice.

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Do I pursue a teaching and research based career or do I pursue an applied teaching

292
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career?

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And I prefer teaching, but I also realized that, and my sister is a climate change researcher

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and she writes a lot and does a lot of research.

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But I was like, if I work with students at a place like this and just introduce them

296
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to these concepts, the carbon footprint, if you will, of sharing that information, ideas

297
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and collaboration is going to be huge and much more direct.

298
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In terms of, I got building automation students or power generation students or construction

299
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students.

300
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Well, here's why we employ these conservation oriented technologies or techniques.

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If I have a student that sat in on my class and realizes, at least thinks about low carbon

302
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living, or the low carbon lifestyle and then goes, all right, well, we're going to build

303
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this multi hundred thousand square foot building with these techniques.

304
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The energy savings or the environmental benefit of that is massive, more than an article that

305
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is in a journal, obscure journal somewhere.

306
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Right.

307
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And the person that's going to read it is already in tune to that.

308
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And that's not at odds with economic gains either.

309
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The economy industry gains throughout when you start to bring in those conservation and

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sustainability techniques.

311
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Absolutely.

312
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Yeah.

313
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It's kind of fun to say, all right, rather than make my, because a lot of my colleagues

314
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that I went to grad school with are very accomplished people at doing research, traveling the world,

315
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presenting at national conferences and doing some really amazing stuff.

316
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And sometimes I'm kind of, but I really like working with students and I really like seeing

317
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them take the ideas, which the ideas that I share in my classes are nothing earth shattering.

318
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It's just basic perspectives about the environment, sustainability, cultural values, who you are,

319
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why you think the way you do and looking towards the future and seeing them come back and say,

320
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hey, check out what I did.

321
00:18:25,880 --> 00:18:26,880
All right.

322
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It's cool.

323
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Yeah.

324
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It's fun to watch.

325
00:18:29,880 --> 00:18:31,520
That's really cool.

326
00:18:31,520 --> 00:18:36,660
So we've talked a lot about how students are influencing as graduates and their careers

327
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and taking these perspectives.

328
00:18:38,560 --> 00:18:45,400
But even if we can broaden it out to just in general, just as a consumer, because I

329
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do think from a sustainability standpoint, many of us are making these decisions in our

330
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everyday lives and not really thinking too much about what the trickle down effect is

331
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to this particular action.

332
00:19:01,000 --> 00:19:10,000
So yeah, I was thinking about, are there any examples or things that takeaways?

333
00:19:10,000 --> 00:19:14,240
Is there something as consumers we can, I love what you're saying.

334
00:19:14,240 --> 00:19:18,880
Is there something I can leave here today and put into practice or anyone listening

335
00:19:18,880 --> 00:19:20,240
for that matter?

336
00:19:20,240 --> 00:19:26,840
The biggest thing that the typical American can do is reduce your energy use.

337
00:19:26,840 --> 00:19:30,200
And I point the finger right at me.

338
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My house is not as small as it could be.

339
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And I drive a full size pickup truck.

340
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So I'm part of the thing too.

341
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But I also live five miles from my job and I ride my bike half the time, at least.

342
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And I'm not a vegetarian, but sometimes I think I should be.

343
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But there's, in my opinion, the things that the top couple of things Americans can do

344
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to be more sustainable, to reduce their energy use, and this is drive less, eat less meat

345
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because I can get that in a second.

346
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Drive less, eat less meat, pick an electric electricity source that is carbon free, like

347
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wind or solar if you can, and think about where your purchases come from.

348
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So if you're getting on Amazon and ordering that one object and having it FedExed to your

349
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house overnight versus waiting and ordering five or six things and having them shipped

350
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more slowly.

351
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Or just running out to the store to get one thing all the time instead of making one concerted

352
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trip.

353
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Or just making one big loop in errands instead of making a whole bunch.

354
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Now it's also difficult.

355
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I have teenage sons and the past year and a half we've been here, there, and everywhere

356
00:20:48,200 --> 00:20:51,820
for this practice, that practice, this event, that.

357
00:20:51,820 --> 00:20:58,040
So I don't necessarily always practice what I preach, but for my house we've picked a

358
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wind powered electrical supplier.

359
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So all the electricity from my house is carbon free.

360
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And I drive a big truck, but I also ride my bike half the time.

361
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So the number of miles that I drive as a commute are lower than the average person for that.

362
00:21:16,080 --> 00:21:19,680
We try to buy local produce and meat instead of stuff that was produced thousands of miles

363
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away.

364
00:21:21,000 --> 00:21:27,240
So I'm by no means perfect, but if we all made steps to do that or buy local groceries

365
00:21:27,240 --> 00:21:32,680
at the farmers market, things like that, that would really put a big dent in your environmental

366
00:21:32,680 --> 00:21:34,600
footprint so to speak.

367
00:21:34,600 --> 00:21:36,600
And it would support the local community.

368
00:21:36,600 --> 00:21:40,160
The other thing that people can get involved with is stuff in the community, supporting

369
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your local parks, investing in bike and pedestrian infrastructure.

370
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Because if we make our communities more bike and walking friendly, more people will do

371
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that.

372
00:21:49,800 --> 00:21:54,400
That's something I've been trying to do lately myself in the local township and the city

373
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and the county level.

374
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So I guess just be aware of your consumption.

375
00:22:00,560 --> 00:22:02,360
It's probably the most important thing you can do.

376
00:22:02,360 --> 00:22:04,920
Be aware of what you're buying and what it represents.

377
00:22:04,920 --> 00:22:09,680
When I said eat less meat, the reason why I say that is this comes from environmental

378
00:22:09,680 --> 00:22:11,560
science.

379
00:22:11,560 --> 00:22:16,000
When you transform energy from one form to another, there's always some waste.

380
00:22:16,000 --> 00:22:22,520
So sunlight comes to the earth, plants absorb it and use it to create biomass, leaves, fruits,

381
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the stuff that we eat.

382
00:22:23,880 --> 00:22:29,720
But if you then take that plant matter and feed it to an animal like a cow, obviously

383
00:22:29,720 --> 00:22:35,600
the cow grows and we eat meat and I'm the first person I do enjoy a steak, but there's

384
00:22:35,600 --> 00:22:36,600
energy wasted.

385
00:22:36,600 --> 00:22:41,240
You could feed a lot more people with that biomass than you can feed people from the

386
00:22:41,240 --> 00:22:44,200
cows that eat that biomass.

387
00:22:44,200 --> 00:22:50,240
So if you ate a vegetarian meal twice a week instead of eating meat, hit every single meal.

388
00:22:50,240 --> 00:22:53,400
There's a lot of really interesting things that you can eat if you're not familiar with

389
00:22:53,400 --> 00:22:54,960
that kind of a diet.

390
00:22:54,960 --> 00:23:00,120
But just doing that would cut your carbon footprint because the amount of energy that

391
00:23:00,120 --> 00:23:07,400
is used to feed cattle, especially in the sort of the industrial meat production model

392
00:23:07,400 --> 00:23:14,080
with big, huge facilities out west and then transporting it, the water and the feed and

393
00:23:14,080 --> 00:23:18,480
the diesel fuel and all the things that are required to do that.

394
00:23:18,480 --> 00:23:20,560
Yeah, do I like a hamburger?

395
00:23:20,560 --> 00:23:21,560
Sure.

396
00:23:21,560 --> 00:23:24,400
But that hamburger is a lot more expensive than you really think.

397
00:23:24,400 --> 00:23:27,080
And then we can even get into agricultural subsidies and all that stuff, but that's a

398
00:23:27,080 --> 00:23:28,080
different conversation.

399
00:23:28,080 --> 00:23:29,080
Yeah, sure.

400
00:23:29,080 --> 00:23:33,400
And I don't know if Carlos will be willing to share or not, but he is a vegetarian, right?

401
00:23:33,400 --> 00:23:37,680
So I'm sure there's some insight there that he might be able to share.

402
00:23:37,680 --> 00:23:44,400
Yeah, because even beyond the direct chain of that food to the end consumer, in this

403
00:23:44,400 --> 00:23:51,280
case us as humans, you have the byproduct of the cow eating that in the form of methane

404
00:23:51,280 --> 00:23:57,280
production because there's literal megatons of methane produced, which becomes a carbon

405
00:23:57,280 --> 00:24:01,200
gas which then floats up to the atmosphere and is really hard to extract.

406
00:24:01,200 --> 00:24:05,280
So that just amplifies a negative cycle.

407
00:24:05,280 --> 00:24:08,520
Methane emissions from cows are a lot more than people think.

408
00:24:08,520 --> 00:24:10,000
And they're often mocked.

409
00:24:10,000 --> 00:24:14,640
It's like, well, we're talking about cow burps and cow gas, but how bad can that be?

410
00:24:14,640 --> 00:24:18,520
But a methane molecule is many times more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

411
00:24:18,520 --> 00:24:21,080
Yeah, and all we talk about is CO2.

412
00:24:21,080 --> 00:24:26,160
That's the molecule that we use, but yeah, that's really not the...

413
00:24:26,160 --> 00:24:28,880
It is a danger, but it's not the big one.

414
00:24:28,880 --> 00:24:32,160
Now, there's an interesting technology that's coming out of...

415
00:24:32,160 --> 00:24:37,040
That's being developed in the agricultural industry, especially the livestock industry,

416
00:24:37,040 --> 00:24:38,920
is methane digesters.

417
00:24:38,920 --> 00:24:43,440
They actually take the cow waste, not the gases that the cows emit, but the actual waste,

418
00:24:43,440 --> 00:24:46,920
and put it in methane digesters.

419
00:24:46,920 --> 00:24:51,160
Bacteria anaerobically digest the organic material and release methane.

420
00:24:51,160 --> 00:24:55,120
The methane is then collected and used to generate electricity, which is kind of cool,

421
00:24:55,120 --> 00:24:56,400
but it's also really expensive.

422
00:24:56,400 --> 00:24:58,520
You don't want to see it in really the big operations.

423
00:24:58,520 --> 00:25:02,040
But that's one way to kind of offset it, but it's still...

424
00:25:02,040 --> 00:25:08,400
If you ate a vegetarian meal a couple of days a week or took the path that you've taken,

425
00:25:08,400 --> 00:25:14,640
that's probably next to transportation, that's your second biggest chunk of energy usage.

426
00:25:14,640 --> 00:25:20,320
So we not only have the personal impacts and the personal choices that we can make, but

427
00:25:20,320 --> 00:25:28,720
we can also take part in systems that have a positive impact on where we want to go,

428
00:25:28,720 --> 00:25:33,000
which is ultimately, regardless of where anyone sits on the spectrum on any one individual

429
00:25:33,000 --> 00:25:35,240
issue, I think we could all be in agreement.

430
00:25:35,240 --> 00:25:40,120
We kind of want the human race to be around for a while and be healthy and be part of

431
00:25:40,120 --> 00:25:42,200
a healthy ecosystem.

432
00:25:42,200 --> 00:25:43,200
Correct.

433
00:25:43,200 --> 00:25:49,320
You mentioned Amazon earlier and buying that one product to ship overnight.

434
00:25:49,320 --> 00:25:56,120
Well, even they, if you think about when you get to your cart, they've built in incentives

435
00:25:56,120 --> 00:26:02,320
to help you decide, oh, wait a minute, maybe I want my prime day because everything will...

436
00:26:02,320 --> 00:26:05,040
You'll collect your orders and then we'll ship it out on that one day.

437
00:26:05,040 --> 00:26:11,760
Oh, and we'll give you $3 as a digital reward to select that prime day if you've done that.

438
00:26:11,760 --> 00:26:14,120
So anyone's making those orders, you can pay attention.

439
00:26:14,120 --> 00:26:16,520
There are those patterns there.

440
00:26:16,520 --> 00:26:25,600
How do we in our organizations, whether for us Penn College or any of the other organizations

441
00:26:25,600 --> 00:26:33,960
we belong to or community support groups or whatever, how do we be more intentional about

442
00:26:33,960 --> 00:26:38,080
being part of developing positive systems?

443
00:26:38,080 --> 00:26:41,040
That's a really difficult question, but it's interesting.

444
00:26:41,040 --> 00:26:42,280
Yeah, it is interesting.

445
00:26:42,280 --> 00:26:47,200
When I was thinking about the bike to work, what incentive we're giving back, we bike

446
00:26:47,200 --> 00:26:48,800
to work, that's great.

447
00:26:48,800 --> 00:26:50,560
We know that's a positive thing to do.

448
00:26:50,560 --> 00:26:57,840
But I also think, is there a way to incentivize people to do such things?

449
00:26:57,840 --> 00:26:58,840
We should be self-incentive.

450
00:26:58,840 --> 00:26:59,840
I don't know if that's a thing.

451
00:26:59,840 --> 00:27:03,240
We should just do it because that's the right thing to do.

452
00:27:03,240 --> 00:27:06,360
But there could be programs too where there's an incentive to do that.

453
00:27:06,360 --> 00:27:10,560
Put a little one of those little Apple tags and it tracks you when you park your bike

454
00:27:10,560 --> 00:27:15,920
and then gives you a discount on your car parking when you use that or if you use car

455
00:27:15,920 --> 00:27:16,920
park sharing.

456
00:27:16,920 --> 00:27:17,920
Yeah.

457
00:27:17,920 --> 00:27:18,920
There's so many things involved with this.

458
00:27:18,920 --> 00:27:21,040
I'm trying to figure out where to start.

459
00:27:21,040 --> 00:27:30,680
I think the simple fact is our economy right now values speed, convenience, and price.

460
00:27:30,680 --> 00:27:32,140
Most people want that.

461
00:27:32,140 --> 00:27:38,120
Thinking in terms of slow, thinking in terms of local, and thinking in terms of, I don't

462
00:27:38,120 --> 00:27:43,400
want to say cost sharing, but you think about some of these buy nothing groups.

463
00:27:43,400 --> 00:27:46,480
It's not as active here, but down in Northern Virginia where my sister lives, there's these

464
00:27:46,480 --> 00:27:48,400
Facebook groups called buy nothing.

465
00:27:48,400 --> 00:27:52,000
If you're done with something that's still useful like a chair or a wood stove or something,

466
00:27:52,000 --> 00:27:55,720
you just put it on there and people send you messages and you just pick who you want to

467
00:27:55,720 --> 00:27:57,520
give it to.

468
00:27:57,520 --> 00:28:00,240
These aren't like some ratty t-shirts.

469
00:28:00,240 --> 00:28:06,160
It's like an appliance or tools or things like that that are useful.

470
00:28:06,160 --> 00:28:08,920
It's a way to have a bartering economy.

471
00:28:08,920 --> 00:28:12,840
There's a reward because you actually can get some really cool stuff that way, but it

472
00:28:12,840 --> 00:28:15,200
takes a little more effort and a little bit more time.

473
00:28:15,200 --> 00:28:18,280
My parents have been downsizing and they've been actually doing that where they live,

474
00:28:18,280 --> 00:28:22,700
posting things that they don't want that I don't need or my sister doesn't need.

475
00:28:22,700 --> 00:28:24,880
They're giving it to somebody who needs it.

476
00:28:24,880 --> 00:28:25,880
There's ways to do that.

477
00:28:25,880 --> 00:28:30,920
I think, Sumer, I think your point about incentivizing biking to work.

478
00:28:30,920 --> 00:28:35,720
We're a very car-centric landscape in the United States.

479
00:28:35,720 --> 00:28:40,480
We're a landscape developed with the automobile in mind, especially since the turn of the

480
00:28:40,480 --> 00:28:41,480
century.

481
00:28:41,480 --> 00:28:47,400
What that does is it creates a landscape that's not very friendly to cyclists.

482
00:28:47,400 --> 00:28:55,040
The three of us are very familiar with that, but getting communities to, as they redo roads,

483
00:28:55,040 --> 00:29:01,560
as they redevelop and Williamsport itself with the Old City Project, with Basin Street,

484
00:29:01,560 --> 00:29:08,280
Pace Lift, with Maynard Street getting some changes, the proposed Riverwalk extension

485
00:29:08,280 --> 00:29:10,320
towards Susquehanna State Park.

486
00:29:10,320 --> 00:29:17,800
If we can show that the cities that have adopted bike lanes and bike-friendly infrastructure

487
00:29:17,800 --> 00:29:21,920
or pedestrian-friendly infrastructure have actually created a renaissance in their downtowns,

488
00:29:21,920 --> 00:29:25,640
because when people walk through a place, they ride their bike through a place, it's

489
00:29:25,640 --> 00:29:29,120
easy to stop and get out and go in and look at something rather than, I got to go find

490
00:29:29,120 --> 00:29:30,120
a parking spot.

491
00:29:30,120 --> 00:29:32,120
If I do, I might get a ticket.

492
00:29:32,120 --> 00:29:34,160
It was ironic.

493
00:29:34,160 --> 00:29:38,760
I went to have a meeting about some bike infrastructure downtown and I came out and had a ticket on

494
00:29:38,760 --> 00:29:42,680
my truck because I was in too long talking about that.

495
00:29:42,680 --> 00:29:48,040
But incentivizing, you don't get a ticket if you have a bike, but if you create some

496
00:29:48,040 --> 00:29:52,760
amenities or some things to encourage people to do that, they will.

497
00:29:52,760 --> 00:29:59,400
It takes me 20 minutes to ride my bike from my house to my office, and it takes me about

498
00:29:59,400 --> 00:30:00,400
15 to drive.

499
00:30:00,400 --> 00:30:06,160
Clearly, one is harder than the other, but the incentive for me is simply I enjoy it.

500
00:30:06,160 --> 00:30:11,800
But if it was bike lanes and a really pleasant experience, more people would do it and you

501
00:30:11,800 --> 00:30:17,880
would probably see people that you know and it creates a sense of community.

502
00:30:17,880 --> 00:30:22,680
I was riding the bike path the other day and right underneath the Market Street Bridge,

503
00:30:22,680 --> 00:30:25,520
I see a neighbor of mine jogging the other way that I hadn't seen in a while.

504
00:30:25,520 --> 00:30:27,560
I gave him a high five as we went by.

505
00:30:27,560 --> 00:30:30,680
You can't do that when you're driving.

506
00:30:30,680 --> 00:30:36,680
It's really silly, but that simple bit of human connection goes a long way for creating

507
00:30:36,680 --> 00:30:41,440
community and helping communities solve bigger problems in the long run.

508
00:30:41,440 --> 00:30:48,320
As far as other incentives, things like selecting green energy sources, I'll be the first to

509
00:30:48,320 --> 00:30:54,880
admit, I selected a wind turbine company that sources its electricity from wind turbines.

510
00:30:54,880 --> 00:31:00,440
I pay more for that and it would be nice if all electricity is the same price and we just

511
00:31:00,440 --> 00:31:02,480
sort of factored in that.

512
00:31:02,480 --> 00:31:06,280
Or if we said, hey, you get a rebate if you choose a green energy source.

513
00:31:06,280 --> 00:31:11,000
Because if we're trying to reduce carbon emissions by X, Y, Z date, then the people that make

514
00:31:11,000 --> 00:31:15,280
that switch should be rewarded for that or at least be able to afford that as opposed

515
00:31:15,280 --> 00:31:16,280
to not.

516
00:31:16,280 --> 00:31:19,400
There's a lot of people that don't have the luxury to be able to do that.

517
00:31:19,400 --> 00:31:22,440
And I even joke with some of my construction students.

518
00:31:22,440 --> 00:31:26,600
I'm like, why don't we tweak the building code and say that we should, and I know this

519
00:31:26,600 --> 00:31:30,960
is one of those wild-eyed ideas, but it's like, why don't we make building code say

520
00:31:30,960 --> 00:31:36,280
all roofs have to be X percent solar by X date and work that into it.

521
00:31:36,280 --> 00:31:39,760
It's easier to work that into a mortgage than to take an existing homeowner and say, well,

522
00:31:39,760 --> 00:31:45,840
here, you need to take out 30 to 50,000 more dollars to put a solar array on your roof.

523
00:31:45,840 --> 00:31:51,320
Or have PPL or the existing electric utility work that into their long-term plan.

524
00:31:51,320 --> 00:31:56,200
So it's like thinking outside the box, creating those bigger incentives that are the big hard

525
00:31:56,200 --> 00:31:57,200
hitters.

526
00:31:57,200 --> 00:32:02,880
Transportation and energy requires, to an extent, a top-down and a bottom-up approach,

527
00:32:02,880 --> 00:32:09,200
not just me flipping through my Amazon, oh, that looks good, or going to the farmer's

528
00:32:09,200 --> 00:32:11,480
market and buying a hamburger there.

529
00:32:11,480 --> 00:32:16,360
But incentivizing sustainable consumption I think is probably one of the biggest ways

530
00:32:16,360 --> 00:32:21,600
that we can steer things in the right direction, because we all want our stuff.

531
00:32:21,600 --> 00:32:27,120
We all got to get from point A to point B. So if we can find a way to incentivize green

532
00:32:27,120 --> 00:32:31,800
choices in that matter that doesn't require people to step too far out of their box or

533
00:32:31,800 --> 00:32:36,040
their lane, that's where I think we'll see the most progress.

534
00:32:36,040 --> 00:32:39,520
Little changes, a bunch of little changes.

535
00:32:39,520 --> 00:32:47,680
So from the anthropologist perspective, what's keeping us from getting there?

536
00:32:47,680 --> 00:32:50,620
This could be really...

537
00:32:50,620 --> 00:32:52,320
We are, ourselves.

538
00:32:52,320 --> 00:32:59,440
I mean, I think Western society has always had a perspective on the environment, that

539
00:32:59,440 --> 00:33:00,760
it was...

540
00:33:00,760 --> 00:33:06,920
The environment is there for us to use as we see fit, for us to manage to be prosperous,

541
00:33:06,920 --> 00:33:10,200
to meet our needs, and to succeed and to grow.

542
00:33:10,200 --> 00:33:15,920
The problem is we've always viewed our activities as, well, if we have a problem, we can invent

543
00:33:15,920 --> 00:33:17,520
something to fix it.

544
00:33:17,520 --> 00:33:21,240
If we generate an environmental problem, there's a remedy.

545
00:33:21,240 --> 00:33:27,680
The problem now that we're facing is with the atmospheric changes that have led us to

546
00:33:27,680 --> 00:33:33,440
understand that the climate is changing and it's being driven by anthropogenic or human-caused

547
00:33:33,440 --> 00:33:38,840
sources of carbon, carbon dioxide, methane, CFCs.

548
00:33:38,840 --> 00:33:40,320
I don't know how to solve that.

549
00:33:40,320 --> 00:33:45,000
I mean, there's seven billion plus people on the planet.

550
00:33:45,000 --> 00:33:50,640
Everybody wants food, everybody wants shelter, everybody wants power, everybody wants to

551
00:33:50,640 --> 00:33:56,320
get from point A to point B. And fossil fuels are the simplest solution to make that happen.

552
00:33:56,320 --> 00:34:03,160
And the quickest, most readily available, most energy dense, most portable.

553
00:34:03,160 --> 00:34:08,080
And I have the luxury of saying, I'm going to leave my truck in the driveway today and

554
00:34:08,080 --> 00:34:11,840
ride my bike to work and pat myself on the back for that.

555
00:34:11,840 --> 00:34:15,840
But there's people all over the planet that need a motorcycle to get to their work because

556
00:34:15,840 --> 00:34:22,360
it's far away or need to cook food or need kerosene to do a light because they don't

557
00:34:22,360 --> 00:34:23,740
have electricity.

558
00:34:23,740 --> 00:34:28,360
And they can't afford a solar panel and a battery and a light setup.

559
00:34:28,360 --> 00:34:33,120
Do you think part of the problem is, I mean, sometimes I think, OK, you make these changes.

560
00:34:33,120 --> 00:34:36,560
There's really no repercussion if you don't.

561
00:34:36,560 --> 00:34:39,680
So I think somebody could say, oh, yeah, I know I need to do this.

562
00:34:39,680 --> 00:34:44,320
But in the course of, you know, you're 30 years old, however old you are, did your life

563
00:34:44,320 --> 00:34:47,680
really change at all by making a different choice?

564
00:34:47,680 --> 00:34:53,160
You know, like they're not seeing direct impacts by making these other decisions that maybe

565
00:34:53,160 --> 00:34:54,520
they shouldn't be making.

566
00:34:54,520 --> 00:34:55,520
Yeah.

567
00:34:55,520 --> 00:34:58,240
And I think, sorry, I kind of went sideways on that last question.

568
00:34:58,240 --> 00:35:07,000
I think putting those two together, our problem is the Western world, you know, the post-colonial

569
00:35:07,000 --> 00:35:12,520
industrial world has always viewed the environment as sort of like the lows.

570
00:35:12,520 --> 00:35:17,380
It's the storehouse for the things that we need so we can have the things that we want.

571
00:35:17,380 --> 00:35:24,080
And if I want something and I can buy it, then I should have it.

572
00:35:24,080 --> 00:35:28,960
And that's dangerous because this is where we get into the idea of the individual versus

573
00:35:28,960 --> 00:35:30,320
the collective.

574
00:35:30,320 --> 00:35:36,440
It's like the greater good sometimes involves the individual not having one or two things.

575
00:35:36,440 --> 00:35:42,240
The greater good sometimes involves like if everybody on the planet achieved a lifestyle

576
00:35:42,240 --> 00:35:48,240
like mine, you know, using some of these global footprint, these ecological footprint calculators,

577
00:35:48,240 --> 00:35:53,280
we would need two to four planets of resources to make that happen.

578
00:35:53,280 --> 00:35:56,160
And I don't travel like some people I know do.

579
00:35:56,160 --> 00:35:58,160
You know, my house isn't as big as some people's.

580
00:35:58,160 --> 00:35:59,160
I don't have as much land.

581
00:35:59,160 --> 00:36:03,040
You know, I don't have four, five, six cars in the driveway and things like that.

582
00:36:03,040 --> 00:36:07,240
But at the same time, like most Americans or many Americans, I have air conditioning,

583
00:36:07,240 --> 00:36:09,600
I have electricity and other things.

584
00:36:09,600 --> 00:36:18,900
So we as this is sort of the anthropologist, he says, well, Western society may need to

585
00:36:18,900 --> 00:36:24,200
have that point of reckoning, where we go, how much can we have?

586
00:36:24,200 --> 00:36:26,680
Because there's only so much to go around.

587
00:36:26,680 --> 00:36:33,880
And we're seeing that the consumption of resources and energy due to industrialization has now

588
00:36:33,880 --> 00:36:39,760
steered the planet down a pathway, you know, when you think of a global climate change

589
00:36:39,760 --> 00:36:43,120
that may be damaging to everybody.

590
00:36:43,120 --> 00:36:48,760
And some groups are going to face more or disproportionate effects than others.

591
00:36:48,760 --> 00:36:56,000
But I think at the end of the day, it's like letting the market, you sort of like that

592
00:36:56,000 --> 00:37:00,400
laissez faire approach, letting people make their own choices, you know, based on good

593
00:37:00,400 --> 00:37:02,780
information is one strategy.

594
00:37:02,780 --> 00:37:07,820
But on the other hand, it's to an extent, some degree of government policy is creating

595
00:37:07,820 --> 00:37:13,600
some barriers saying, you know, we need to stay as a society, we need to stay within this zone

596
00:37:13,600 --> 00:37:15,160
in order to hit our target.

597
00:37:15,160 --> 00:37:21,600
Yeah, like I remember as a kid, I lived in North Jersey in the late 70s and early 80s.

598
00:37:21,600 --> 00:37:26,120
And I remember driving up to turnpike to New York City and the air was brown, you know,

599
00:37:26,120 --> 00:37:27,120
smog.

600
00:37:27,120 --> 00:37:30,800
And I just sort of assumed that was normal.

601
00:37:30,800 --> 00:37:32,440
That's just the way it was.

602
00:37:32,440 --> 00:37:36,520
And I'd sit on the I'd go to the beach and you could actually see the brown air kind

603
00:37:36,520 --> 00:37:39,000
of rolling out to sea.

604
00:37:39,000 --> 00:37:42,920
And you know, go to New York City and it's like, you kind of see sometimes you can see

605
00:37:42,920 --> 00:37:45,240
the tops of the buildings.

606
00:37:45,240 --> 00:37:51,120
And the beach that I went to, this is up by Sandy Hook, the very top of the beaches.

607
00:37:51,120 --> 00:37:55,960
And there was all kinds of stuff that you could use to put on your sandcastles, you

608
00:37:55,960 --> 00:37:58,840
know, little plastic bits and pieces and things.

609
00:37:58,840 --> 00:38:04,080
Then one day I put this little oblong object on the top of my sandcastles, a flagpole.

610
00:38:04,080 --> 00:38:06,200
My mom says, don't touch that.

611
00:38:06,200 --> 00:38:09,760
It was a personal hygiene product.

612
00:38:09,760 --> 00:38:12,280
And you know, the stuff was washing up on the beach all the time.

613
00:38:12,280 --> 00:38:16,440
I thought it was normal to walk on the beach and get tar stuck to your foot.

614
00:38:16,440 --> 00:38:20,560
The tar was in the sand from shipwrecks and oil spills and things because that area has

615
00:38:20,560 --> 00:38:24,000
just been industrialized for, you know, over 100 years.

616
00:38:24,000 --> 00:38:28,880
At night, on a cloudy day like this, when it's cloudy at night, the sky would glow orange

617
00:38:28,880 --> 00:38:30,880
at night from all the light pollution.

618
00:38:30,880 --> 00:38:38,440
It wasn't until I went to Bucknell in the early 90s that I saw real stars and saw moonlight

619
00:38:38,440 --> 00:38:44,120
on the floor in a room because it wasn't drowned out by the light pollution.

620
00:38:44,120 --> 00:38:50,680
So the reason why I told that story is the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, the Superfund

621
00:38:50,680 --> 00:38:56,760
Act, federal laws implemented in the late 70s, early 80s in response to things like

622
00:38:56,760 --> 00:39:00,800
the Cuyahoga River in Ohio catching on fire a couple of times, a river catching on fire.

623
00:39:00,800 --> 00:39:05,520
And so, you know, the water was just like a

624
00:39:05,520 --> 00:39:09,760
municipal and medical waste being dumped offshore in New York City at night, five miles offshore,

625
00:39:09,760 --> 00:39:13,000
instead of the required 20 or 30 miles offshore, and they're washing back on the beach.

626
00:39:13,000 --> 00:39:17,000
You know, we all heard the jokes about, you know, medical waste on the beaches.

627
00:39:17,000 --> 00:39:18,000
Well, it was legit.

628
00:39:18,000 --> 00:39:19,520
It was real.

629
00:39:19,520 --> 00:39:24,160
So I've seen, that's where I feel like I'm, you know, crawling out of the woods.

630
00:39:24,160 --> 00:39:27,160
I've seen the future.

631
00:39:27,160 --> 00:39:32,760
I've seen the change that 40 years of federal environmental protection has created.

632
00:39:32,760 --> 00:39:36,760
And getting back to the smog thing, thinking about automotive technology, when I was a

633
00:39:36,760 --> 00:39:40,480
kid, and I don't know if you all remember this, but you could buy a car with regular

634
00:39:40,480 --> 00:39:42,600
emissions or California emissions.

635
00:39:42,600 --> 00:39:48,800
And the California emissions were these new, super restrictive, you know, environmental

636
00:39:48,800 --> 00:39:52,360
and people who couldn't, oh, California, those crazy environmentalists and stuff.

637
00:39:52,360 --> 00:39:56,680
But they had to do that because the geology and ecology of their area created these massive

638
00:39:56,680 --> 00:39:58,640
inversions and massive smog.

639
00:39:58,640 --> 00:40:03,160
Well, the EPA saw that and went, we could all use that.

640
00:40:03,160 --> 00:40:05,860
And so it went nationwide.

641
00:40:05,860 --> 00:40:07,860
But it's interesting.

642
00:40:07,860 --> 00:40:14,920
Yeah, so like adopting that nationwide, we actually affected a national nationwide reduction

643
00:40:14,920 --> 00:40:21,520
in smog, particulate matter, nitrous oxide, sulfur dioxide emissions, unburnt hydrocarbons.

644
00:40:21,520 --> 00:40:26,120
And the irony is, I remember, again, this brings it back to bikes.

645
00:40:26,120 --> 00:40:29,360
When I was in second grade, I lived in a neighborhood where I could ride my bike to the elementary

646
00:40:29,360 --> 00:40:30,360
school.

647
00:40:30,360 --> 00:40:34,600
So that big, you know, ape hanger, banana seat dirt bike in the 70s.

648
00:40:34,600 --> 00:40:38,760
And I remember at stop signs being behind cars and going like, my eyes would water and

649
00:40:38,760 --> 00:40:39,760
it would smell.

650
00:40:39,760 --> 00:40:41,320
The exhaust is horrible.

651
00:40:41,320 --> 00:40:46,200
And now, if you're behind a like a brand new car, you can't even smell it.

652
00:40:46,200 --> 00:40:51,460
And like, that's probably even like a brand new Volkswagen turbo diesel, you can hardly

653
00:40:51,460 --> 00:40:52,520
even smell it.

654
00:40:52,520 --> 00:40:56,680
And that's because the emissions controls that the technology that we developed made

655
00:40:56,680 --> 00:40:57,880
a difference.

656
00:40:57,880 --> 00:41:01,160
And now when people go to New York City, it's clear.

657
00:41:01,160 --> 00:41:02,440
And you don't see that anymore.

658
00:41:02,440 --> 00:41:07,420
But the problem is, a lot of people today haven't been around long enough to see what

659
00:41:07,420 --> 00:41:08,420
it was before.

660
00:41:08,420 --> 00:41:11,400
And they go, well, what do we need all these regulations for?

661
00:41:11,400 --> 00:41:13,720
Everything's fine.

662
00:41:13,720 --> 00:41:18,960
So it's kind of like, and that's, again, the idea of culture and values and behavior.

663
00:41:18,960 --> 00:41:21,760
You know, people make decisions based on the information that they have.

664
00:41:21,760 --> 00:41:27,220
If they don't understand where we were and how we got here, then even a good friend of

665
00:41:27,220 --> 00:41:28,720
mine lives in town here.

666
00:41:28,720 --> 00:41:29,720
He's lived here his whole life.

667
00:41:29,720 --> 00:41:33,000
And he said, when he was a kid, he's about, I'm 50.

668
00:41:33,000 --> 00:41:35,120
So he's about 10, 12 years older than me.

669
00:41:35,120 --> 00:41:39,080
He was like, man, when I was a little kid, we used to play under what's now the Market

670
00:41:39,080 --> 00:41:40,080
Street Bridge.

671
00:41:40,080 --> 00:41:46,320
And you could tell what, this is a story he told me, I don't have any actual validation

672
00:41:46,320 --> 00:41:47,320
for it.

673
00:41:47,320 --> 00:41:51,000
But he said, you could tell what the paper plant in Lock Haven was doing, because the

674
00:41:51,000 --> 00:41:54,000
river would be different colors.

675
00:41:54,000 --> 00:41:58,200
And before good sewage treatment was built, he said you could see human waste going down

676
00:41:58,200 --> 00:41:59,200
the river.

677
00:41:59,200 --> 00:42:01,640
I think about now, you go there and fish.

678
00:42:01,640 --> 00:42:06,040
I mean, President Reid's son hauled out a huge muskie the other day from the river.

679
00:42:06,040 --> 00:42:11,800
And to me, that's, again, it all points to good stewardship of the environment, through

680
00:42:11,800 --> 00:42:17,120
technology and through good decisions, but also, to an extent, some top down regulation

681
00:42:17,120 --> 00:42:19,360
saying, look, we can't do that anymore.

682
00:42:19,360 --> 00:42:21,120
We just can't.

683
00:42:21,120 --> 00:42:24,800
You look at pictures of Niagara Falls back in the late 19th century, you see the buildings

684
00:42:24,800 --> 00:42:26,880
lined up, they're just pumping their waste right into the river.

685
00:42:26,880 --> 00:42:30,800
And we look at that today, we go, oh my gosh, how could you do that?

686
00:42:30,800 --> 00:42:36,100
But there's still places here in the county that use motor oil for their furnaces.

687
00:42:36,100 --> 00:42:38,500
We have a long way to go.

688
00:42:38,500 --> 00:42:45,880
And it's a balance between regulation, which a lot of people resist.

689
00:42:45,880 --> 00:42:49,880
My own free individual let me have my freedom, let me do my own thing.

690
00:42:49,880 --> 00:42:55,000
But at the same time, each one of us does things that adds to pollution or environmental

691
00:42:55,000 --> 00:42:57,280
problems or carbon in the atmosphere.

692
00:42:57,280 --> 00:43:02,420
Eventually, we have what some refer to as the tragedy of the commons.

693
00:43:02,420 --> 00:43:08,440
There's no incentive to conserve if nobody creates the conditions where what I do harms

694
00:43:08,440 --> 00:43:09,440
you.

695
00:43:09,440 --> 00:43:15,600
But just showing people these ideas and talking about it, I think, in my classes, is the first

696
00:43:15,600 --> 00:43:19,760
way to say, well, you know, it's a balance.

697
00:43:19,760 --> 00:43:22,880
I don't like being told what to do by anybody else.

698
00:43:22,880 --> 00:43:26,200
But at the same time, if the government says, no, you got to have a catalytic converter

699
00:43:26,200 --> 00:43:27,200
on your truck.

700
00:43:27,200 --> 00:43:29,240
Okay, I get it.

701
00:43:29,240 --> 00:43:33,440
Because there's so many times I'm riding around here, somebody goes by me with a fairly

702
00:43:33,440 --> 00:43:36,200
modern car that clearly has no emissions controls on it.

703
00:43:36,200 --> 00:43:38,480
It's like, oh, man.

704
00:43:38,480 --> 00:43:43,000
And that's because our county, because it's a fairly rural county, doesn't have very restrictive

705
00:43:43,000 --> 00:43:44,000
emissions laws.

706
00:43:44,000 --> 00:43:50,200
Pennsylvania's state has different laws or different, like the urban areas have much

707
00:43:50,200 --> 00:43:53,320
stricter rules than the rural areas.

708
00:43:53,320 --> 00:43:58,040
Like here, you have to have a gas cap that holds pressure and visibly, you know, a catalytic

709
00:43:58,040 --> 00:43:59,040
converter.

710
00:43:59,040 --> 00:44:02,400
Whereas in Harrisburg or Philly, they actually have to plug the computer in and see if your

711
00:44:02,400 --> 00:44:04,920
car is operating up to code.

712
00:44:04,920 --> 00:44:09,480
And seems such a little thing to say, you know, let's just do that.

713
00:44:09,480 --> 00:44:12,920
But then, you know, there'd be a huge outcry saying, I don't want to do that.

714
00:44:12,920 --> 00:44:14,320
It costs more money.

715
00:44:14,320 --> 00:44:16,960
I think there is actually a movement.

716
00:44:16,960 --> 00:44:24,520
I saw someone is making a call to try to even roll back the visual inspection we have now.

717
00:44:24,520 --> 00:44:30,800
But it's so complicated, because you can see how science drives regulation.

718
00:44:30,800 --> 00:44:36,920
But human perspectives on the environment drive their response to regulation, which

719
00:44:36,920 --> 00:44:41,640
shapes votes, shapes elections, shapes polarization in communities.

720
00:44:41,640 --> 00:44:46,840
And it just becomes this really massive, complicated web of forces.

721
00:44:46,840 --> 00:44:50,800
So I mean, as an anthropologist, it's kind of fascinating, but it's also kind of demoralizing

722
00:44:50,800 --> 00:44:52,160
too.

723
00:44:52,160 --> 00:44:58,320
But that's kind of why I get into these classes, you know, showing that sustainability and

724
00:44:58,320 --> 00:45:04,120
conservation is a multilayered approach that requires a lot of perspective on different

725
00:45:04,120 --> 00:45:05,120
sides of things.

726
00:45:05,120 --> 00:45:12,760
Now, at the top, you talked about how, you know, having the scientists and the lay person

727
00:45:12,760 --> 00:45:19,560
connecting them, having an anthropologist in the middle to kind of help translate that.

728
00:45:19,560 --> 00:45:24,320
Do we have that same problem where maybe we need someone with an anthropologist perspective

729
00:45:24,320 --> 00:45:31,600
on the PR teams for these, you know, when we're talking about regulations and explaining

730
00:45:31,600 --> 00:45:36,880
why we have these regulations as opposed to, oh, go read this bill that, you know, it's

731
00:45:36,880 --> 00:45:38,680
going to be tucked in?

732
00:45:38,680 --> 00:45:46,400
Yeah, I think it's if you have somebody that understands sort of what I say, the culturally

733
00:45:46,400 --> 00:45:53,600
appropriate way of seeing something, you know, every group has their way of looking at something

734
00:45:53,600 --> 00:46:01,000
and being able to see it from both sides is something that's kind of, I don't know, I

735
00:46:01,000 --> 00:46:06,440
sometimes I look at anthropologists or like translators or brokers between different groups,

736
00:46:06,440 --> 00:46:08,800
stakeholder groups or a go between.

737
00:46:08,800 --> 00:46:10,640
Like I see your point and I see your point.

738
00:46:10,640 --> 00:46:12,000
You both see it.

739
00:46:12,000 --> 00:46:15,760
You both have the same end goal, but you're coming at it from two very different ways.

740
00:46:15,760 --> 00:46:18,640
So let's shift the bar a little bit.

741
00:46:18,640 --> 00:46:23,780
I think you don't have to be an anthropologist to be able to understand different groups

742
00:46:23,780 --> 00:46:24,780
of people.

743
00:46:24,780 --> 00:46:30,560
But like having somebody with that perspective in a team or project like that is definitely

744
00:46:30,560 --> 00:46:31,560
important.

745
00:46:31,560 --> 00:46:35,560
It's kind of funny, my sister kind of does work like that.

746
00:46:35,560 --> 00:46:37,760
She's a climate scientist.

747
00:46:37,760 --> 00:46:45,320
She's a I believe she's a PhD in oceanography or marine science and chemistry in particular.

748
00:46:45,320 --> 00:46:49,440
But she works for a group called the Ocean Conservancy in DC.

749
00:46:49,440 --> 00:46:58,200
And her her task has been to take climate change research and in particular, the climate

750
00:46:58,200 --> 00:47:04,320
change research that looks at ocean acidification, which serve in a nutshell is when increased

751
00:47:04,320 --> 00:47:07,720
levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere dissolve into the ocean, they create carbonic

752
00:47:07,720 --> 00:47:13,000
acid and and drive the pH of the ocean water down, which stresses corals and crustaceans

753
00:47:13,000 --> 00:47:17,840
and and mollusks and stuff like that.

754
00:47:17,840 --> 00:47:21,320
But ocean acidification is something that could collapse the world's fisheries.

755
00:47:21,320 --> 00:47:25,940
It's like, oh, you know, too bad those those shrimp or those clams, but these are things

756
00:47:25,940 --> 00:47:31,320
that billions of people depend on and trillions of dollars of economic benefit and just the

757
00:47:31,320 --> 00:47:34,280
function of our global ecosystems.

758
00:47:34,280 --> 00:47:37,080
But you can you know, you can hold a poster up and say this is bad all you want.

759
00:47:37,080 --> 00:47:38,320
You're not going to get very far.

760
00:47:38,320 --> 00:47:44,040
But what she does is she and her group actually take the state of the science, so to speak,

761
00:47:44,040 --> 00:47:49,360
and distill it into approachable chunks that they can then pass on to support legislation

762
00:47:49,360 --> 00:47:55,440
and pass on to policymakers and say, distill the science down into something understandable

763
00:47:55,440 --> 00:48:00,280
and pass on the policymakers say, hey, here's why we need to do this.

764
00:48:00,280 --> 00:48:06,360
You think about it, our students in every one of our programs, they're the specialists,

765
00:48:06,360 --> 00:48:07,360
right?

766
00:48:07,360 --> 00:48:10,000
They're the ones that are the content experts.

767
00:48:10,000 --> 00:48:15,360
And if they're interested in doing things sustainably, they say, here's how we could

768
00:48:15,360 --> 00:48:16,360
do it.

769
00:48:16,360 --> 00:48:17,640
And they can do the same thing she does.

770
00:48:17,640 --> 00:48:21,120
They could pass on to the policymakers or pass them on to the industry and say, hey,

771
00:48:21,120 --> 00:48:22,740
let's try this.

772
00:48:22,740 --> 00:48:25,080
Or you know, the the we're going to build this new building.

773
00:48:25,080 --> 00:48:27,040
Hey, we should build it this way.

774
00:48:27,040 --> 00:48:28,640
Or we're going to build a highway.

775
00:48:28,640 --> 00:48:33,720
Well, let's try this this different construction approach that reduces erosion or maximizes

776
00:48:33,720 --> 00:48:34,720
habitat again.

777
00:48:34,720 --> 00:48:36,800
I'm stepping way out of my lane on that.

778
00:48:36,800 --> 00:48:41,120
For the professionals in the field, please don't please don't throw things at me.

779
00:48:41,120 --> 00:48:46,200
But just being aware that there's different ways to do things that can generate a long

780
00:48:46,200 --> 00:48:48,200
term net improvement.

781
00:48:48,200 --> 00:48:49,200
Awareness is huge.

782
00:48:49,200 --> 00:48:50,200
That's the theme here.

783
00:48:50,200 --> 00:48:54,160
It's just thinking about our decisions and thinking about how they impact other people

784
00:48:54,160 --> 00:48:56,120
in the long term.

785
00:48:56,120 --> 00:48:57,120
Right.

786
00:48:57,120 --> 00:48:58,120
Right.

787
00:48:58,120 --> 00:48:59,760
You could talk about your trip to the Dominican Republic.

788
00:48:59,760 --> 00:49:00,760
Yeah.

789
00:49:00,760 --> 00:49:01,760
What did you do there?

790
00:49:01,760 --> 00:49:02,760
Tell us about that.

791
00:49:02,760 --> 00:49:03,760
That's also kind of a good question.

792
00:49:03,760 --> 00:49:04,760
Kind of.

793
00:49:04,760 --> 00:49:05,760
No, not kind of.

794
00:49:05,760 --> 00:49:07,760
I was just thinking of the other ones.

795
00:49:07,760 --> 00:49:11,080
It's like there's there's no real easy, neat way to answer that.

796
00:49:11,080 --> 00:49:18,840
So that's it's a great question, because I firmly believe that travel is really an effective

797
00:49:18,840 --> 00:49:25,680
vehicle to get to know yourself better, but also to recognize that there's so many other

798
00:49:25,680 --> 00:49:29,560
people out on the planet that live differently than we do.

799
00:49:29,560 --> 00:49:35,720
And that at the end of the day, we're all human beings that need food, water, shelter,

800
00:49:35,720 --> 00:49:39,640
a home, a community, meaningful relationships.

801
00:49:39,640 --> 00:49:43,420
But how we solve those needs is very different.

802
00:49:43,420 --> 00:49:47,680
So I love taking students to different parts of the world and just just to open their eyes

803
00:49:47,680 --> 00:49:50,200
to places that they've never been and things.

804
00:49:50,200 --> 00:49:55,040
But the Dominican Republic trip was a really great opportunity.

805
00:49:55,040 --> 00:49:57,080
Wayne Shepherd had put the course together.

806
00:49:57,080 --> 00:50:03,680
It was I think it was originally titled Service Learning and Construction Management in the

807
00:50:03,680 --> 00:50:05,440
Dominican Republic or something like that.

808
00:50:05,440 --> 00:50:06,440
OK.

809
00:50:06,440 --> 00:50:11,320
But then the scope of the course got broadened to basically be accessible to anybody on campus

810
00:50:11,320 --> 00:50:13,200
who wanted to take it.

811
00:50:13,200 --> 00:50:19,360
And he approached me at the end of the fall semester and said, hey, you know, would you

812
00:50:19,360 --> 00:50:20,640
want to be a part of this?

813
00:50:20,640 --> 00:50:21,640
And I was like, absolutely.

814
00:50:21,640 --> 00:50:22,640
I'd love to.

815
00:50:22,640 --> 00:50:23,640
I love to travel.

816
00:50:23,640 --> 00:50:26,800
I also have functional Spanish.

817
00:50:26,800 --> 00:50:29,600
And it was a way to be helpful.

818
00:50:29,600 --> 00:50:31,640
So the two of us team taught it.

819
00:50:31,640 --> 00:50:39,240
And the main thrust of the course was that he was connected with a mission down in the

820
00:50:39,240 --> 00:50:47,680
Dominican Republic whose their pillars or the main thrusts of their activity were sustainable

821
00:50:47,680 --> 00:50:55,180
food production, vocational skill training, the establishment of safe, reliable drinking

822
00:50:55,180 --> 00:50:59,600
water sources and good housing.

823
00:50:59,600 --> 00:51:03,800
And so what this mission has been doing is connecting with groups in the United States

824
00:51:03,800 --> 00:51:09,320
who come down and volunteer their time to build homes, to deliver water filter systems

825
00:51:09,320 --> 00:51:15,720
to communities, and sort of engage in any kind of volunteer humanitarian type work that

826
00:51:15,720 --> 00:51:17,120
this group does.

827
00:51:17,120 --> 00:51:24,000
So they're in a little town called Villa Tapia in the very center of the Dominican Republic.

828
00:51:24,000 --> 00:51:31,620
And the activities that we did while we were there for them, we helped build a house completely.

829
00:51:31,620 --> 00:51:33,200
They had built the foundation.

830
00:51:33,200 --> 00:51:35,040
They put the slab and the footers in.

831
00:51:35,040 --> 00:51:38,160
But the students built the house from the ground up.

832
00:51:38,160 --> 00:51:40,600
And when we left, it was finished.

833
00:51:40,600 --> 00:51:42,600
And the family was given the keys.

834
00:51:42,600 --> 00:51:47,360
It's very much a habitat for humanity style where the family participates in the construction

835
00:51:47,360 --> 00:51:48,520
process.

836
00:51:48,520 --> 00:51:53,660
And I'm not sure how the mission decides who, but they have a list of I think 25 or 30 families

837
00:51:53,660 --> 00:51:54,740
that are waiting for a house.

838
00:51:54,740 --> 00:51:56,720
So they've got plenty of work to do.

839
00:51:56,720 --> 00:52:04,040
And they also work with Sawyer water filtration systems, backpacking and trail running, you

840
00:52:04,040 --> 00:52:05,040
know all about those.

841
00:52:05,040 --> 00:52:12,680
But they've adapted their main filtration setup to go on a kitchen faucet with a hose

842
00:52:12,680 --> 00:52:13,680
clamp.

843
00:52:13,680 --> 00:52:20,200
So most of the communities in the DR have freshwater supplies that are piped in, but

844
00:52:20,200 --> 00:52:22,640
the sanitation is spotty.

845
00:52:22,640 --> 00:52:23,760
It's intermittent.

846
00:52:23,760 --> 00:52:28,040
So even though you're getting clear water out the tap, it may still have bacteria, viruses

847
00:52:28,040 --> 00:52:30,560
or things like that that can get you sick.

848
00:52:30,560 --> 00:52:37,800
So by distributing these to communities, these families now have a continual, reliable, reusable

849
00:52:37,800 --> 00:52:40,180
water filtration system, which is great.

850
00:52:40,180 --> 00:52:45,960
I think our students raised $3,000 and we brought many, many, many water filter, duffel

851
00:52:45,960 --> 00:52:47,960
bags of water filters with us to the Dominican Republic.

852
00:52:47,960 --> 00:52:48,960
It was awesome.

853
00:52:48,960 --> 00:52:50,720
And what a lesson that is.

854
00:52:50,720 --> 00:52:56,040
I mean, think about being, you know, thinking about being back, you know, college age, going

855
00:52:56,040 --> 00:53:00,880
somewhere like that and thinking, oh my goodness, I take for granted that I turn the faucet

856
00:53:00,880 --> 00:53:03,040
on in the water safe to drink.

857
00:53:03,040 --> 00:53:04,040
Right.

858
00:53:04,040 --> 00:53:08,720
Or I have a house that's clean, safe for me to live in.

859
00:53:08,720 --> 00:53:09,720
Right.

860
00:53:09,720 --> 00:53:14,160
And did you see those types of, you know, did you see that in your students?

861
00:53:14,160 --> 00:53:19,160
You know, like, oh my goodness, I had no idea this is how it was in certain parts of the

862
00:53:19,160 --> 00:53:20,160
world.

863
00:53:20,160 --> 00:53:21,160
Absolutely.

864
00:53:21,160 --> 00:53:25,760
And that was what was really fun about being a part of the class during the spring because

865
00:53:25,760 --> 00:53:31,360
Wayne and I sort of created a series of lectures over the course of the semester and hit a

866
00:53:31,360 --> 00:53:33,040
lot of different topics.

867
00:53:33,040 --> 00:53:37,480
And I spent the first half of the semester talking about the history of the Dominican

868
00:53:37,480 --> 00:53:38,560
Republic.

869
00:53:38,560 --> 00:53:42,800
And I was learning it myself for the first time, but it was kind of like that.

870
00:53:42,800 --> 00:53:44,940
Here's what it was before colonialism.

871
00:53:44,940 --> 00:53:48,360
And then during the colonialist expansion, here's what happened here.

872
00:53:48,360 --> 00:53:53,480
And then from the 1700s to the 20th century, basically, there was a place of political

873
00:53:53,480 --> 00:53:55,560
and social upheaval.

874
00:53:55,560 --> 00:54:01,160
And the lesson that I wanted to share with students was that the extended period of political

875
00:54:01,160 --> 00:54:08,320
conflict and groups vying for power meant that the economy never really was able to

876
00:54:08,320 --> 00:54:15,520
solidify and meant that the government was never really successful at building infrastructure

877
00:54:15,520 --> 00:54:21,820
like a power grid, like drinking water supplies, or even more importantly, sanitation systems

878
00:54:21,820 --> 00:54:24,160
to deal with sewage.

879
00:54:24,160 --> 00:54:29,320
And one of the things that I wanted the students to be able to do, and this is kind of a delicate

880
00:54:29,320 --> 00:54:32,840
thing, this is where the anthropology comes back into play.

881
00:54:32,840 --> 00:54:36,840
Many times people from developed countries go to developing areas and they go, oh, these

882
00:54:36,840 --> 00:54:37,840
poor people.

883
00:54:37,840 --> 00:54:40,320
And oh, how could they live like this?

884
00:54:40,320 --> 00:54:42,600
You know, this is terrible.

885
00:54:42,600 --> 00:54:45,000
Here's some stuff to help.

886
00:54:45,000 --> 00:54:48,280
And that's important and that's kind.

887
00:54:48,280 --> 00:54:54,480
But rather, I wanted the students to say, look, you know, you don't have any choice

888
00:54:54,480 --> 00:54:57,480
where you're born into the world.

889
00:54:57,480 --> 00:55:03,120
And the system that you land in gives you opportunities and challenges.

890
00:55:03,120 --> 00:55:06,680
And you do the best you can within those parameters.

891
00:55:06,680 --> 00:55:10,740
And what this mission was doing that I thought was really cool was instead of just going

892
00:55:10,740 --> 00:55:15,280
and delivering groceries or tanks full of drinking water, they're saying, here's some

893
00:55:15,280 --> 00:55:16,280
tools.

894
00:55:16,280 --> 00:55:17,880
Here's how to use them.

895
00:55:17,880 --> 00:55:20,560
Now you're in charge.

896
00:55:20,560 --> 00:55:23,200
It's empowerment at the human and the family level.

897
00:55:23,200 --> 00:55:28,880
And the people, you know, in these communities, even though by our standards, they didn't

898
00:55:28,880 --> 00:55:35,600
have as much money, or, you know, air conditioners or TV, you know, they had TVs and there was

899
00:55:35,600 --> 00:55:40,520
air conditioners, there were sinks and stoves and people had cars and motorcycles.

900
00:55:40,520 --> 00:55:46,560
But you know, there was dirt floors and there was definitely some people that were better

901
00:55:46,560 --> 00:55:49,380
off and some people that are very not well off.

902
00:55:49,380 --> 00:55:55,960
But I wanted the students to see that no matter how much or how little you have, still as

903
00:55:55,960 --> 00:55:58,720
a human being, you want to have agency.

904
00:55:58,720 --> 00:56:02,380
You want to have the ability to make your own decisions.

905
00:56:02,380 --> 00:56:06,600
And what they were doing is they were being a consultant in a way and going and providing

906
00:56:06,600 --> 00:56:13,200
the tools to the people that we were working for and saying, here, here's how you use this,

907
00:56:13,200 --> 00:56:14,200
here's what you can do.

908
00:56:14,200 --> 00:56:16,240
And now, now you're in charge.

909
00:56:16,240 --> 00:56:18,600
And it was so cool to see.

910
00:56:18,600 --> 00:56:22,360
And the other thing that I was talking about is the cycle of poverty.

911
00:56:22,360 --> 00:56:27,600
So one of the challenges in developing countries, especially is health.

912
00:56:27,600 --> 00:56:31,320
And if you don't have a lot of money, and you live in an area that doesn't have clean

913
00:56:31,320 --> 00:56:34,560
drinking water, you have to buy water.

914
00:56:34,560 --> 00:56:38,760
So there's a burden on your family budget as it is.

915
00:56:38,760 --> 00:56:43,120
But then if you don't have clean drinking water or the water that in the creek next

916
00:56:43,120 --> 00:56:50,600
door is contaminated with poor sanitation, your kids are playing it, then they get sick.

917
00:56:50,600 --> 00:56:54,480
If you don't have a lot of money and your kids get sick, they got to go to the doctor

918
00:56:54,480 --> 00:56:55,760
or they got to get health care.

919
00:56:55,760 --> 00:56:58,080
That's an added financial burden.

920
00:56:58,080 --> 00:57:03,400
Installing a $30 water filter on a kitchen faucet can literally transform a family's

921
00:57:03,400 --> 00:57:10,760
annual finances and eliminate time off from work or eliminate missed school.

922
00:57:10,760 --> 00:57:15,600
So if people can avoid getting sick and continue working, they make more money, they don't

923
00:57:15,600 --> 00:57:19,520
spend the money on health care, they don't spend the money on drinking water.

924
00:57:19,520 --> 00:57:23,160
That automatically puts them up a notch or two financially.

925
00:57:23,160 --> 00:57:30,160
But two, if the kids don't miss school, they finish school, then they like we all say here

926
00:57:30,160 --> 00:57:33,360
at Penn College, they can get a better job.

927
00:57:33,360 --> 00:57:39,480
And the other thing is this could even address to an extent gender gaps.

928
00:57:39,480 --> 00:57:44,840
Because women and girls typically, again, this is a broad-broad generalization, but

929
00:57:44,840 --> 00:57:49,600
in a lot of these areas, women and girls tend to be more associated with the house-related

930
00:57:49,600 --> 00:57:54,960
duties, domestic duties, and are involved in getting water and providing water and purifying

931
00:57:54,960 --> 00:57:56,680
water and all that sort of stuff.

932
00:57:56,680 --> 00:58:00,560
Now if it just comes out of the faucet and the girl doesn't get sick, she can finish

933
00:58:00,560 --> 00:58:04,600
school and if she can finish school, she can get a job.

934
00:58:04,600 --> 00:58:10,280
And then adding to that the establishment of microloan programs in these areas where

935
00:58:10,280 --> 00:58:17,420
a loan of $200 or $500 to start a small washing business or a food business or buy some tools

936
00:58:17,420 --> 00:58:24,560
to go do repair work or better farm equipment, those are the steps that really matter in

937
00:58:24,560 --> 00:58:30,440
terms of helping somebody improve their own standard of living.

938
00:58:30,440 --> 00:58:36,240
And just a simple $30 water filter can literally cause a family's finances to do a U-turn in

939
00:58:36,240 --> 00:58:37,240
that environment.

940
00:58:37,240 --> 00:58:42,840
And that's why I really enjoy being part of this class because it's showing how you can

941
00:58:42,840 --> 00:58:46,760
look at things from a social scientific perspective and say, well, this is how building a house

942
00:58:46,760 --> 00:58:52,120
for somebody or installing a water filter is more than just doing a good turn.

943
00:58:52,120 --> 00:58:57,760
You're actually influencing the development process.

944
00:58:57,760 --> 00:58:59,820
And it was very, very cool.

945
00:58:59,820 --> 00:59:03,880
And the students, and we talked about language, we talked about what students would see and

946
00:59:03,880 --> 00:59:07,560
what they would experience and how they might feel when they see those differences so that

947
00:59:07,560 --> 00:59:12,240
when they saw it, they weren't like deer in headlights, like, wow, they were like, oh,

948
00:59:12,240 --> 00:59:13,720
that's what we talked about.

949
00:59:13,720 --> 00:59:19,120
And again, prepping for the experience was really important in that way.

950
00:59:19,120 --> 00:59:24,300
But I got to give our students credit, more than credit, kudos.

951
00:59:24,300 --> 00:59:29,400
The staff at the mission actually said to Shep and I at the end of the thing, said,

952
00:59:29,400 --> 00:59:32,640
you know, your students were really, really awesome.

953
00:59:32,640 --> 00:59:33,640
They were so engaged.

954
00:59:33,640 --> 00:59:35,480
They were so polite.

955
00:59:35,480 --> 00:59:36,480
They were so appropriate.

956
00:59:36,480 --> 00:59:43,280
You know, they said, we've had some groups that just weren't where we thought they'd

957
00:59:43,280 --> 00:59:46,600
be and your students were just all in.

958
00:59:46,600 --> 00:59:47,600
And I was proud.

959
00:59:47,600 --> 00:59:50,480
I was like, that's kind of who we are and what we do.

960
00:59:50,480 --> 00:59:55,080
But I think the partnership that he and I had put together, a good experience, the students

961
00:59:55,080 --> 00:59:59,480
really were ready to take in what they were going to see.

962
00:59:59,480 --> 01:00:02,200
There was one experience that the mission organized.

963
01:00:02,200 --> 01:00:05,760
We went to what they call the Juvenile Rehabilitation Center.

964
01:00:05,760 --> 01:00:12,680
And it was where young men, I think the youngest was 13 or 14.

965
01:00:12,680 --> 01:00:13,680
There was one that was 17.

966
01:00:13,680 --> 01:00:16,560
That kind of hit me because my sons are 17.

967
01:00:16,560 --> 01:00:19,840
And then there was some in the late 20s.

968
01:00:19,840 --> 01:00:28,720
But these are all young men who had either drug, alcohol, or gambling addictions and

969
01:00:28,720 --> 01:00:30,280
behavioral problems related to that.

970
01:00:30,280 --> 01:00:36,080
This is kind of like an inpatient facility that had some counselors and staff who were

971
01:00:36,080 --> 01:00:38,320
helping them get well.

972
01:00:38,320 --> 01:00:41,600
And the counselors and staff are people that had also experienced that a long time ago.

973
01:00:41,600 --> 01:00:43,760
So it was a really cool experience.

974
01:00:43,760 --> 01:00:47,760
So we went there and a pastor came with us with his accordion.

975
01:00:47,760 --> 01:00:53,120
They played some songs and sang and then through a translator, some of the young men in the

976
01:00:53,120 --> 01:00:55,480
facility shared their stories to the group.

977
01:00:55,480 --> 01:01:01,200
Well, some of the students in the group then stood up and thanked them, but also expressed

978
01:01:01,200 --> 01:01:05,280
that they had some similar experiences in their lives or their families or whatever.

979
01:01:05,280 --> 01:01:07,600
And it was a real moment of equality.

980
01:01:07,600 --> 01:01:13,120
And then they all went out in the back alleyway and played basketball together for a bit.

981
01:01:13,120 --> 01:01:14,120
It was great.

982
01:01:14,120 --> 01:01:21,520
It was just neat to see them really living in the community with these people and seeing

983
01:01:21,520 --> 01:01:22,880
them for who they were.

984
01:01:22,880 --> 01:01:24,840
It was great.

985
01:01:24,840 --> 01:01:28,360
So the students, I guess, have to pull it all back together because there's so many

986
01:01:28,360 --> 01:01:30,880
threads in all these different things that we do.

987
01:01:30,880 --> 01:01:37,400
But I think it's so valuable to be able to be a part of these experiences because the

988
01:01:37,400 --> 01:01:43,480
stuff that I get interested in, the concepts, the relationships of power and economics and

989
01:01:43,480 --> 01:01:51,280
history and cultural identity and ethnicity and race and gender and economics really apply

990
01:01:51,280 --> 01:01:54,920
to helping deconstruct what you see.

991
01:01:54,920 --> 01:02:00,560
And so the students had, I hope, felt that they were, they're, oh, okay, that's what

992
01:02:00,560 --> 01:02:01,560
we were talking about.

993
01:02:01,560 --> 01:02:02,560
And now I see why.

994
01:02:02,560 --> 01:02:05,840
Rather than going, I can't believe people live this way.

995
01:02:05,840 --> 01:02:12,840
And then bringing it all home, we stayed at a resort in Punta Cana at the very end.

996
01:02:12,840 --> 01:02:17,920
This gave the students kind of like a reward because it was five days of very hard work.

997
01:02:17,920 --> 01:02:22,840
I mean, it was a morning shift and an afternoon shift, Monday through Thursday, four or five

998
01:02:22,840 --> 01:02:24,400
hours at a clip.

999
01:02:24,400 --> 01:02:27,720
And it was hot and students worked very hard.

1000
01:02:27,720 --> 01:02:32,400
But we drove all the way from Beatapia to Punta Cana.

1001
01:02:32,400 --> 01:02:34,280
It was like a five hour drive.

1002
01:02:34,280 --> 01:02:37,240
And we're going through all these little communities.

1003
01:02:37,240 --> 01:02:43,080
And some of the students noticed there's some really worn out vehicles that you would see

1004
01:02:43,080 --> 01:02:44,080
on the road.

1005
01:02:44,080 --> 01:02:48,520
And then at one moment there was a Mercedes, I believe it was SUV.

1006
01:02:48,520 --> 01:02:51,400
I looked it up because my son's big into supercars.

1007
01:02:51,400 --> 01:02:55,120
I think the MSRP on that was $150,000.

1008
01:02:55,120 --> 01:02:58,360
So and they were, the students were really very perceptive.

1009
01:02:58,360 --> 01:03:03,000
They noticed that, man, you have these sort of low income villages and then you see this

1010
01:03:03,000 --> 01:03:04,640
mansion.

1011
01:03:04,640 --> 01:03:09,000
And they asked about that and some of the, hey, I don't understand this.

1012
01:03:09,000 --> 01:03:10,000
Why is this?

1013
01:03:10,000 --> 01:03:11,000
And I'm like, cool.

1014
01:03:11,000 --> 01:03:16,360
So the folks that we were with said, well, a lot of families have somebody, not a lot,

1015
01:03:16,360 --> 01:03:20,800
but many families have a relative or a member that has either gone to the States or gone

1016
01:03:20,800 --> 01:03:25,040
to another country or worked in the oil fields and made some money and sent it home.

1017
01:03:25,040 --> 01:03:29,440
And so some families have had more economic benefit than others.

1018
01:03:29,440 --> 01:03:30,440
But you know, stuff like that.

1019
01:03:30,440 --> 01:03:35,080
But when we got to the resort and I don't know if many people have flown to the Caribbean,

1020
01:03:35,080 --> 01:03:38,600
wherever you get to the airport, you get on the bus, you go through some neighborhoods,

1021
01:03:38,600 --> 01:03:40,720
then you're at this beautiful resort.

1022
01:03:40,720 --> 01:03:45,400
And we were sitting at a restaurant by the pool the first, first and a second night.

1023
01:03:45,400 --> 01:03:50,760
I don't remember which, but one of the students kind of looked at some of the tourists, looked

1024
01:03:50,760 --> 01:03:56,920
at some of the tourists and they looked at the staff at the bar and looked at the tourists

1025
01:03:56,920 --> 01:03:59,760
again, looked at the staff again and went.

1026
01:03:59,760 --> 01:04:04,560
I bet they, pointing to the tourists, he says, I bet they have no idea where these people

1027
01:04:04,560 --> 01:04:10,800
live or what their communities are like or that they even care.

1028
01:04:10,800 --> 01:04:14,680
And I was like, I'm done.

1029
01:04:14,680 --> 01:04:15,680
This works.

1030
01:04:15,680 --> 01:04:18,440
It was, it was, it was one of those moments and I kind of elbowed Wayne.

1031
01:04:18,440 --> 01:04:20,240
He was like, yeah, exactly.

1032
01:04:20,240 --> 01:04:21,240
You know, but they got it.

1033
01:04:21,240 --> 01:04:26,960
They got that disconnect and recognizing that people, the guests of that place don't necessarily

1034
01:04:26,960 --> 01:04:28,520
see those people as people.

1035
01:04:28,520 --> 01:04:29,520
Right.

1036
01:04:29,520 --> 01:04:32,600
And recognize them for who they are and where they're from.

1037
01:04:32,600 --> 01:04:37,400
And not even like, oh, they're so rich and these people are so poor, but just like, just

1038
01:04:37,400 --> 01:04:39,680
understanding who they are as human beings.

1039
01:04:39,680 --> 01:04:43,120
And we actually heard a bunch of times mumblings in the staff.

1040
01:04:43,120 --> 01:04:45,960
Those are the people that were in Via Tapia all week.

1041
01:04:45,960 --> 01:04:50,200
Like we didn't just get off a plane and like we had been doing something else in a legit

1042
01:04:50,200 --> 01:04:54,320
Dominican town rather than just, you know, touring around.

1043
01:04:54,320 --> 01:04:56,280
So that's kind of cool.

1044
01:04:56,280 --> 01:04:57,280
That's really cool.

1045
01:04:57,280 --> 01:05:00,280
But yeah, so we're planning on doing it again next spring.

1046
01:05:00,280 --> 01:05:06,040
And the idea is it's developing is we're going to take, it's open to anybody who wants to

1047
01:05:06,040 --> 01:05:11,120
take it, but we're going to definitely have a contingent of construction students, but

1048
01:05:11,120 --> 01:05:15,080
we're also partnering with the nursing program.

1049
01:05:15,080 --> 01:05:18,360
Christine Cavanaugh is interested in coming and we're hoping to bring in contingent of

1050
01:05:18,360 --> 01:05:21,400
nursing students to have a nursing clinic.

1051
01:05:21,400 --> 01:05:26,280
And I'm going to try to bring along contingent of human service students to do a human service

1052
01:05:26,280 --> 01:05:27,280
program.

1053
01:05:27,280 --> 01:05:28,800
So we'll have some parallel projects there as well.

1054
01:05:28,800 --> 01:05:29,800
Very nice.

1055
01:05:29,800 --> 01:05:31,680
So yeah, looking forward to round two.

1056
01:05:31,680 --> 01:05:32,680
Good.

1057
01:05:32,680 --> 01:05:33,680
That's so cool.

1058
01:05:33,680 --> 01:05:34,680
Yeah.

1059
01:05:34,680 --> 01:05:39,640
So when you were preparing for the trip just recently and gathering donations for the water

1060
01:05:39,640 --> 01:05:42,680
filters, how did you go about that?

1061
01:05:42,680 --> 01:05:48,320
And if you're looking for this time around for contributions, how might somebody get

1062
01:05:48,320 --> 01:05:49,480
involved there?

1063
01:05:49,480 --> 01:05:59,520
So we had a table that Wayne had put together with some, I had done some research on facts

1064
01:05:59,520 --> 01:06:04,080
about access to clean water worldwide and the inequity.

1065
01:06:04,080 --> 01:06:07,760
Surinamese have lots of water, Surinamese don't, and the impacts of not having clean

1066
01:06:07,760 --> 01:06:10,280
water.

1067
01:06:10,280 --> 01:06:15,000
So we had some fact sheets and we had some information about the mission that we were

1068
01:06:15,000 --> 01:06:20,480
going to go and contribute to and some information about the water filters themselves.

1069
01:06:20,480 --> 01:06:24,840
And basically we had a QR code and if people wanted they could just, we were basically

1070
01:06:24,840 --> 01:06:29,480
giving bottles of water away with a tag kind of draped on the top that had information

1071
01:06:29,480 --> 01:06:32,880
about global inequality and access to clean water.

1072
01:06:32,880 --> 01:06:35,880
And we just asked for donations and there was a QR code so students could even do a

1073
01:06:35,880 --> 01:06:37,720
Venmo or a Cash App kind of thing.

1074
01:06:37,720 --> 01:06:38,720
Oh nice.

1075
01:06:38,720 --> 01:06:44,040
And it went to an account in corporate relations, I believe it was.

1076
01:06:44,040 --> 01:06:47,240
And we had to get cash donations and we would deposit that.

1077
01:06:47,240 --> 01:06:51,480
But I think they raised almost $3,000.

1078
01:06:51,480 --> 01:06:53,280
So it was very cool.

1079
01:06:53,280 --> 01:06:56,800
And that moves across the campus for the spring semester.

1080
01:06:56,800 --> 01:06:59,920
So you might see it in the ACC, you might see it in the library, you might see it in

1081
01:06:59,920 --> 01:07:04,520
Dauphin Hall or in the Capitol Eatery, something like that.

1082
01:07:04,520 --> 01:07:09,400
We'll get our hands on that URL and that QR code, we'll share that in the podcast.

1083
01:07:09,400 --> 01:07:13,960
So yeah, individuals who want to be able to donate to that, they can.

1084
01:07:13,960 --> 01:07:18,080
Companies that, company reps that are listening to this and want to make a big impact, they

1085
01:07:18,080 --> 01:07:22,960
can do that, maybe even support some students to participate in that global experience.

1086
01:07:22,960 --> 01:07:29,440
And to that end, we had some very generous donations to the college last year for targeting

1087
01:07:29,440 --> 01:07:31,260
global experiences.

1088
01:07:31,260 --> 01:07:36,120
And that I think we had a pretty size, I mean, every group that went last year had a donation

1089
01:07:36,120 --> 01:07:41,020
from that fund and it really helped make the experience accessible to a lot of students.

1090
01:07:41,020 --> 01:07:43,520
So that's very appreciated.

1091
01:07:43,520 --> 01:07:44,520
Absolutely.

1092
01:07:44,520 --> 01:07:47,920
So I think we're coming up to a good natural close here.

1093
01:07:47,920 --> 01:07:53,720
I think we, early on, we laid out a lot of those individual actions that we could take.

1094
01:07:53,720 --> 01:08:00,760
Are there resources that someone who really just wants to know more about the ecological

1095
01:08:00,760 --> 01:08:10,160
effects, the anthropological thinking that goes behind how we approach our living that

1096
01:08:10,160 --> 01:08:12,200
you'd recommend?

1097
01:08:12,200 --> 01:08:13,960
You know, that's a really good question.

1098
01:08:13,960 --> 01:08:18,080
And I was thinking last night about that and looked through my bookcases and all of my

1099
01:08:18,080 --> 01:08:25,680
stuff is so, I won't say nerdy, but it's so specific that I don't, off the top of my head,

1100
01:08:25,680 --> 01:08:29,640
I don't know of any, like just popular sources.

1101
01:08:29,640 --> 01:08:36,800
But what I can say is that if you go to any one of the government websites like the EPA

1102
01:08:36,800 --> 01:08:43,320
or USGS, the United States Geological Survey, there's lots and lots of information on the

1103
01:08:43,320 --> 01:08:48,920
internet about sustainability, about green living, about gardening and composting and

1104
01:08:48,920 --> 01:08:50,780
shopping locally.

1105
01:08:50,780 --> 01:08:56,360
So if you just, I know this is a really generic answer, but if you just, if you have a question

1106
01:08:56,360 --> 01:09:03,080
about how do I reduce my carbon footprint, if you just Google that, there's mountains

1107
01:09:03,080 --> 01:09:05,800
of information on the internet about how to do that.

1108
01:09:05,800 --> 01:09:12,000
But even looking at your local county, the county resources, the Lickome County Resource

1109
01:09:12,000 --> 01:09:17,320
Management Service has information on their website about how to recycle and how to dispose

1110
01:09:17,320 --> 01:09:21,280
of e-waste or batteries properly.

1111
01:09:21,280 --> 01:09:25,240
So basically most of your state and local government resources will have guidelines

1112
01:09:25,240 --> 01:09:26,900
on how to do things properly.

1113
01:09:26,900 --> 01:09:30,920
Like what if you have a gallon of antifreeze in your garage, what do you do with it?

1114
01:09:30,920 --> 01:09:36,440
If you look at those types of resources, that'll be a great guide, you can look up your local

1115
01:09:36,440 --> 01:09:37,440
college.

1116
01:09:37,440 --> 01:09:40,680
Maybe there's departments that would have faculty members that are experts in your particular

1117
01:09:40,680 --> 01:09:42,400
area that could help you out too.

1118
01:09:42,400 --> 01:09:47,880
I think too there's a lot of nonprofits out there that champion either sustainable food

1119
01:09:47,880 --> 01:09:55,640
production or conservation, the Nature Conservancy, Audubon Society, groups like that, or even

1120
01:09:55,640 --> 01:10:00,720
like the Ocean Conservancy, my sister's employer and nonprofit.

1121
01:10:00,720 --> 01:10:03,680
Those groups are always looking for support and donations too.

1122
01:10:03,680 --> 01:10:07,960
So it just kind of depends on what your question is and where you want to go.

1123
01:10:07,960 --> 01:10:10,000
It's like, how do I do this?

1124
01:10:10,000 --> 01:10:14,700
I would start with your state and local government and local community organizations.

1125
01:10:14,700 --> 01:10:21,760
But if you are interested in a particular cause, then look for organizations that are

1126
01:10:21,760 --> 01:10:27,240
involved with that and see how you can contribute either through your own time or in-kind donations,

1127
01:10:27,240 --> 01:10:28,240
stuff like that.

1128
01:10:28,240 --> 01:10:29,240
And there's tons of books.

1129
01:10:29,240 --> 01:10:35,800
I mean, the book that probably got me started down this road, as you can see, it's pretty

1130
01:10:35,800 --> 01:10:36,800
beat.

1131
01:10:36,800 --> 01:10:40,040
It's called A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold.

1132
01:10:40,040 --> 01:10:47,280
Aldo Leopold was, he worked for the Forest Service and I think it was like in the 1930s

1133
01:10:47,280 --> 01:10:52,040
or 40s, I think is when he started that.

1134
01:10:52,040 --> 01:10:55,720
Yeah, this book was published in 49, so it was earlier than that.

1135
01:10:55,720 --> 01:11:02,280
But there's some really neat moments in this book where he's talking about he was born

1136
01:11:02,280 --> 01:11:08,220
and raised in a world, think about the United States in the turn of the century, right?

1137
01:11:08,220 --> 01:11:13,080
Every mountain in central PA was bare at that point because the lumber industry had clear-cut

1138
01:11:13,080 --> 01:11:14,680
the whole place.

1139
01:11:14,680 --> 01:11:20,880
And getting back to the idea of the Western industrial mindset about nature is there for

1140
01:11:20,880 --> 01:11:22,240
us to use.

1141
01:11:22,240 --> 01:11:27,240
We clear-cut the woods and made a lot of money and became an industrial superpower.

1142
01:11:27,240 --> 01:11:28,560
But it came with a price.

1143
01:11:28,560 --> 01:11:34,080
And this guy went to Yale and became a forester and worked for the Forest Service and went

1144
01:11:34,080 --> 01:11:37,680
out west and was doing the things that he was told to do.

1145
01:11:37,680 --> 01:11:41,440
But he was going, should we exterminate wolves?

1146
01:11:41,440 --> 01:11:42,760
Are they really a pest?

1147
01:11:42,760 --> 01:11:47,080
Or maybe are they part of a system that we don't quite understand?

1148
01:11:47,080 --> 01:11:49,600
Do we as humans have the right to make these decisions?

1149
01:11:49,600 --> 01:11:53,240
And it was a really fundamental shift in looking at it.

1150
01:11:53,240 --> 01:11:57,320
Because going through school and looking towards a career in conservation, I was like, I'll

1151
01:11:57,320 --> 01:12:01,480
just pull the levers and push the buttons and we'll fix this.

1152
01:12:01,480 --> 01:12:05,880
But it's really a cultural paradigm shift that we're talking about.

1153
01:12:05,880 --> 01:12:08,680
And books like that, that's a good place to start.

1154
01:12:08,680 --> 01:12:14,460
It's old school, but there's lots of other books about the human environment interaction

1155
01:12:14,460 --> 01:12:16,920
that are very engaging and approachable, too.

1156
01:12:16,920 --> 01:12:18,960
So your local library has plenty of that.

1157
01:12:18,960 --> 01:12:19,960
Great.

1158
01:12:19,960 --> 01:12:24,640
And I know you did a presentation here at the college about not quite 10 years ago with

1159
01:12:24,640 --> 01:12:25,640
Dr. Noe.

1160
01:12:25,640 --> 01:12:26,640
Yeah.

1161
01:12:26,640 --> 01:12:28,600
And you were discussing concepts from that book.

1162
01:12:28,600 --> 01:12:30,080
So we'll post a link to that video.

1163
01:12:30,080 --> 01:12:31,080
Yeah, that's on YouTube.

1164
01:12:31,080 --> 01:12:32,080
So yeah.

1165
01:12:32,080 --> 01:12:33,080
Awesome.

1166
01:12:33,080 --> 01:12:36,080
Thank you for being here with us today.

1167
01:12:36,080 --> 01:12:37,080
It was a pleasure.

1168
01:12:37,080 --> 01:12:38,080
I appreciate it.

1169
01:12:38,080 --> 01:12:39,080
Yeah.

1170
01:12:39,080 --> 01:12:40,080
Thank you so much.

1171
01:12:40,080 --> 01:12:41,080
All right.

1172
01:12:41,080 --> 01:12:42,080
Thank you.

1173
01:12:42,080 --> 01:12:43,080
Thanks.

1174
01:12:43,080 --> 01:12:45,960
Thanks for hanging out with us today.

1175
01:12:45,960 --> 01:12:50,600
Don't forget to rate, review and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.

1176
01:12:50,600 --> 01:12:54,600
Check out our show notes for bookmarks to your favorite sections and links to resources

1177
01:12:54,600 --> 01:12:56,640
that we mentioned in today's episode.

1178
01:12:56,640 --> 01:13:01,960
You can also find past episodes and see what's on deck for upcoming ones at pct.edu slash

1179
01:13:01,960 --> 01:13:03,600
podcast.

1180
01:13:03,600 --> 01:13:07,120
And of course, we are open to your thoughts, ideas and suggestions.

1181
01:13:07,120 --> 01:13:12,120
So send those over at podcast at pct.edu.

1182
01:13:12,120 --> 01:13:13,120
It's been real.

1183
01:13:13,120 --> 01:13:20,120
We'll catch you next time.