Comments for THINK GLOBAL: Bill McKibben commentary

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Other pieces by Public Radio Collaboration 2005

Summary: Commentator Bill McKibben argues that thinking local makes sense both for people and the planet.
 

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Review of THINK GLOBAL: Bill McKibben commentary

This brief commentary is pretty obvious to people who have any concern at all for the enviromnment and both local and international sustainability. Nevertheless, it serves as a lively pep talk for those of us (and that is most of us, I suspect) who have good intentions we fully intend to put into practice -- tomorrow.
McKibbon has interesting examples of local success stories and discusses the balance between what we can reasonable want locally and internationally. He wants, for example, to listen to world music on a local channel along with reports of the local high school basketball team, not some bland market-driven Clear channel.
This is a short, punchy commentary that reminds us of the importance of the "think globally act locally" slogan, without requiring an investment of a half-hour or more of listening.

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Review of THINK GLOBAL: Bill McKibben commentary

My favorite pieces on public radio are those that take a just a few minutes yet give me something to think about for the whole day - something to discuss with friends and family. This commentary does just that. The piece is well written and presented well. McKibben touches on why people are excited about new things from distant lands, but still long for the familiarity of their own stomping grounds. In a time when keeping things local is becoming difficult and it seems as if the whole world is turning into a "Tower of Babel," this piece tells about local people making a difference in their communities.

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Think Local, Act Glob….I Mean Local

---I want my world music on my local radio station that also carries the local basketball game and in-depth reporting from the state legislature, not some Clear Channel pipeline of bland designed to appeal to the broadest possible audience.---

I agree with every word, every syllable, every letter of this well-presented first person essay pleading for an end to globalization in favor of the community. So why don’t I like it? The problem is the execution. Let me explain. I’m a generation x-er and, while I haven’t read Mr. McKibben’s bio, I would venture that he comes from that generation before me that still had heroes and believed in the fundamental goodness of man in the most earnest and humorless fashion available. This may explain the whiff of comfortable, suburban, college town moral superiority that is off putting and that, for all its urbane erudition, comes off as myopic. The author is talking down, taking moral judgments and making assumptions and suggestions far out of the reach of the regular Joe. We would all like an “energy cell” on the roof and “windmill on the nearby ridge”, but who can afford it? And while it’s really great that some people in Wyoming saved their town center from clutches of WalMart, the fact is most struggling Americans shop there because it’s cheap and simply don’t have the luxury of thinking of the big picture. Recognition of this reality is missing here. And it is a weaker piece for it.


McKibben Commentary Review

I've got a theory this piece is a parody of a Thomas Friedman column. Or maybe it is just the similarity of the voices. The difference is I love this guy. He makes me feel positive about the political and social realities of a globally competitive economy. We may recover the pleasure of relying on neigbors! Let's hope! I love the Wyoming community dry good store that defeated Wal-Mart (which McKibben calls the exemplar of placeless internationalism). Grrrrrreat!

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Review of McKibben Commentary

Kentucky farmer and writer Wendell Berry has influenced me greatly, so Bill McKibben's commentary about the importance of vibrant local communities was right up my alley. I think many listeners will find wisdom in this engaging commentary. Bill's voice is easy to listen to, and his style is approachable not didactic. Here's to hearing more of his commentaries.