Americans
have an unfortunate genius for anointing the irrelevant and forgetting those
who truly mattered. Let’s make sure we remember four who left us
in 2014: Pete Seeger, Martin Litton, Theo Colborn and Rick Piltz.
Seeger
will surely be remembered for his music as a folksinging legend and Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame inductee (he converted a biblical passage into a Top Forty
smash for the Byrds, “Turn, Turn, Turn.)
But
his politics and his half-century crusade to clean up the Hudson River outweigh
his huge musical legacy. Seeger was blacklisted during the McCarthy
Era, and unlike many of his fellow victims, he really was a
Communist, and would gladly tell you so.
By
the 1960’s, he’d turned his attention to opposing the Vietnam War and saving
the Hudson River. The sloop Clearwater, refurbished by
Seeger and friends, became a floating classroom, lab, single-masted
bumpersticker and symbol of a spectacular, if still partial, comeback for the
Hudson. He used his musical aura to keep up the fight, well into
his nineties, until his death last January.
Oddly
enough, listening to Dick Cheney take to the talk show circuit last month,
doubling down on his defense of torture and the misbegotten Iraq War,
made me think of Pete Seeger. During his bright Red days, Seeger
defended the indefensible Soviet leader, Joseph Stalin. But unlike
Cheney, he had enough backbone to admit a colossal mistake and move
on. If only more modern leaders could do that.
Considered
the last surviving founder of the modern American conservation movement, Litton
was an epic river-runner, shooting through the perilous rapids of the Grand
Canyon in a wooden dory and making such a trip at age 87. Along with
David Brower and others, he fought against massive dam projects along the
Colorado River, losing the battle at Glen Canyon but defeating an effort that
would have turned part of the Grand Canyon into a lake.
He
was a World War II glider pilot, an editor at Sunset Magazine,
and a giant tree of a man. Which is probably why he also liked redwood
forests. Litton was a central voice in the effort to restrict
indiscriminate logging of California redwoods for decades.
What
Litton and Seeger did for rivers and trees, Rick Piltz did for scientific
integrity in politics. A mid-level staffer at the White House Council on
Environmental Quality (CEQ), Piltz was appalled by what he saw as naked
political interference in climate science. Phil Cooney, a CEQ political
appointee recruited from his lobbyist job at the American Petroleum
Institute, made a series of changes in a White House climate change report,
weakening its scientific findings and inserting elements of doubt where
little really existed.
Piltz
became a classic whistleblower in 2005, quitting his government job, aligning
with the Government Accountability Project (GAP) and handing the story to The
New York Times. The George W. Bush administration limited damage
by parting ways with Cooney, who soon found work with ExxonMobil. Rick
Piltz founded a widely read blog, Climate Science Watch, and
toiled as an advocate for keeping ideology out of science until his death in
October.
Theo
Colborn is often likened to Rachel Carson, a government scientist like Piltz
was. But Colborn’s remarkable career can also be compared to
Marjory Stoneman Douglas, who embarked on a lifetime of saving the
Florida Everglades after turning fifty-seven. Colborn was a 58 year-old
divorcee recently retired from a career as a pharmacist when she got a
Ph.D. in zoology.
For
nearly thirty years, she worked on water quality, studied the impacts of
synthetic chemicals on human health, and convened fellow scientists to seek
answers. While a legion of other scientists focused on possible links
between chemicals and cancer, Colborn led a smaller group to study chemical
impacts on other ailments, IQ, vital organs, and reproduction.
They
coined the phrase “endocrine disruptors” for a family of chemicals we’ve
made and deployed for decades, without knowing their true impact.
(Note: The founder/CEO of EHN and The Daily Climate, Pete Myers,
was a co- author of the book “Our Stolen Future,” with Colborn and Dianne
Dumanoski.)
In
her eighties, Colborn turned her attention to the mix of chemicals, often
undisclosed, used in the fracking process. She didn’t live long enough to
find all the answers, but she asked all the right questions.
I
had the honor of meeting each of these people, though no more than once or
twice each. The common quality they shared was a quiet,
gentle passion for their work. I hope humanity hasn’t stopped
producing more men and women like them.
Top photo credit from left: RobertoRizzato/flickr; Sequoia Forestkeeper/flickr; Whistleblower.org; TEDX.
Top photo credit from left: RobertoRizzato/flickr; Sequoia Forestkeeper/flickr; Whistleblower.org; TEDX.
For
questions or feedback about this piece, contact Peter Dykstra at
pdykstra@ehn.org or Brian Bienkowski at bbienkowski@ehn.org.