Episodes

Oct. 30, 2019

239: The Enemy

Here are the notes I read this episode from: I see human population decreasing the Earth's ability to sustain life and human society. I have a goal of increasing that ability. Actually two goals: my other goal is for people …
Oct. 29, 2019

238: The Worst Problem in the World and the Environment

Here are the notes I read from for this episode. I've talked about what I call The Worst Problem in the World for about ten years, so I'm used to it and worked from scarce notes. The problem Example: Germans and Jamaicans In…
Oct. 27, 2019

237: Leadership versus Management, Systems and the Environment

The notes I wrote and read from for this episode: Leadership means changing beliefs and goals. If you're doing anything else, you're following and perpetuating the system that created the results. Greater efficiency, recycli…
Oct. 23, 2019

236: My environmental role models

Here is the text I read from for this post: My environmental role models Why my role models? Because people keep saying what I do is inaccessible. That it's too much or extreme. That they need to balance. Well everyone belie…
Oct. 22, 2019

235: Creepiness, disgust, and the environment

People littering is creepy, like a tick or other parasite. It gets under my skin. I don't like it, but if I want to help people stop their parasitical, tick-like behavior, I feel it helps to understand them. Leadership rests…
Oct. 19, 2019

234: A shift, not a crisis

Here are the notes I read from to make this episode, sometimes diverging from them. Why I don't call our environmental situation a crisis. People think scientists will solve something or engineers will create a solution and …
Oct. 18, 2019

233: Future Generations and Us

I've been sharing the sentiment of how people today seem to think of our times versus how people from other times would see now. I expect they'd view us with horror, disgust, and disdain. Today's post reprises that perspecti…
Oct. 14, 2019

232: Michael Werner, part 2: Leading Google by bike

Since recording this episode, Michael has become Google's Lead for Circular Economy. Michael took on a challenge many people consider: biking to work for a month. He challenged himself amid product releases at work and famil…
Oct. 14, 2019

231: How are you justifying your polluting behavior?

When we pollute, we think we act for the reasons in our minds that justify that behavior, but those reasons generally come after we choose, motivated to justify behavior we consider wrong. Most environmental analysis looks a…
Oct. 12, 2019

230: Brad P, part 2: Change your habits, change your life

Brad identified the problem of people acting or not as our emotions and behavior, which many forces contribute to. We also talk about media and scientists. This refinement of the understanding to emotions points to what to w…
Oct. 11, 2019

229: How might future generations view us?

I believe many people believe we live in an age of wonder and that people from any other time would envy us. I believe future generations will not look at our flying and pollution not with envy but with horror, as we look at…
Oct. 11, 2019

228: Kicking puppies praiseworthy?

People keep describing my environmental actions as praiseworthy. I think they do it to make it seem harder and less accessible to do themselves what they expect will be hard, deprivation, sacrifice, and not what they want to…
Oct. 10, 2019

227: Economists don't know what they're talking about on growth

A few words on growth and how people misunderstand it, especially economists. I start by talking about my window garden cherry tomato plants and how the inability of the insects eating them to regulate their growth and up de…
Oct. 7, 2019

226: Brad P, part 1: Dating coaching, leadership, and the environment

Today's episode with guest Brad P, a dating coach and guru---well, former, since he's moved on, as he'll share---partly reveal a major part of my social and emotional development as an adult. He was in a sense my boss when I…
Oct. 1, 2019

225: My role model: Jonas Salk and the polio vaccine

Polio terrorized the world. People died and became paralyzed and there were no defenses to it. Science understood it and eventually Jonas Salk found a vaccine. Just having a vaccine wasn't enough. They needed massive global …
Sept. 30, 2019

224: Clarifying my strategy

People commonly misunderstand the goals of this podcast. I tried in this episode to clear up two common misunderstandings: They mistakenly believe my goal is individual change---to influence one person at a time. They mistak…
Sept. 25, 2019

223: Adam Quiney, part 2: Do the Thing

This episode is two thoughtful, intelligent people sharing environmental thoughts. I think the thoughts we share are what a lot of people think but don't share enough. We cover action, leadership, motivation, caring, beliefs…
Sept. 22, 2019

222: Why Eat Insects?

Between insects, kelp, vertical farming, lab-grown meat, and other clever options, why didn't we think of them before? Because we had better options! Few meat eaters choose crickets over steaks and hamburgers, but we've squa…
Sept. 21, 2019

221: Climate March Reflections

Here are the notes I work from for this episode: From climate march Went 3 times: Before lunch to participate in organizing group, went to Foley Square. Seemed like tens of thousands, maybe six figures. On my way to a meetin…
Sept. 18, 2019

220: Michelle Tillis Lederman, part 2: Making it habitual makes it easy

Not often do I hear something in a podcast conversation that's a new habit I'm going to try. This conversation with Michelle led to two. I recommend them both and I'll try to find a way to report back how they go. Plus she s…
Sept. 17, 2019

219: Regretful decisions

I share thoughts in today's episode I didn't have the heart to share with family on their way to vacationing in France. In my lifetime I've seen the world change and our understanding of it change from we can't really raise …
Sept. 16, 2019

218: To Those Who Say They Can't Stop Polluting

A friend told me the other day that while I could reduce flying, business people couldn't. It's not so easy for them, actually impossible. Did he forget that I have an MBA? That I started a business with an 8-digit valuation…
Sept. 14, 2019

217: Adam Quiney, part 1: Leadership for the Smartest Person in the Room

Adam studies brilliant people and leadership. There are many leadership coaches and researchers. If you like me and my way of doing things, which is geeky, you might be geeky yourself. You probably like leadership too. We ge…
Sept. 10, 2019

216: Brandon Voss, part 2: Negotiate Like Your Environment Depends On It

We start talking about how to learn---you have to practice. This is one of the most important things to get, not just in learning but in life. Too many people read and analyze, expecting to learn. If you don't change your be…