We can win by saving what we love instead of fighting what we hate.
So many of us are deeply moved by nature, and find peace and solace there. Yet few people make the connection between the relaxing beauties of nature and the hard work of voting.
In the terrified aftermath of November 2016, as we faced the reality that yes, Donald Trump had really been elected President of the United States, a certain poem often cropped up in my Facebook feed. It’s called The Peace of Wild Things by Wendell Berry, and in those unsettling times many people turned to it for support, and still do.
When despair for the world grows in me
and I wake in the night at the least sound
in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be,
I go and lie down where the wood drake
rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.
I come into the peace of wild things
who do not tax their lives with forethought
of grief. I come into the presence of still water.
And I feel above me the day-blind stars
waiting with their light. For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.
And that’s lovely, isn’t it? So soothing, so calming.
Twelve days after Trump’s inauguration, the Republican-dominated Congress passed a joint resolution to block the coal mining regulation known as the Stream Protection Rule, aimed at limiting the dumping of coal mining waste into streams. And so the wood drake and the great blue heron were out of luck. They’re not going to find much to feed on in any of those streams polluted by mining sludge.
Sigh.
If we cherish the peace of wild things, we have to take some forethought of grief. We have to get out the vote for legislators who will make laws to protect wild things. It’s as simple as that.
Okay, so how to help with this worthy goal? I think that an organization called the Environmental Voter Project is on to something. Here’s how they describe their work: “With behavioral science-informed messaging, we call, canvass, mail, and send digital ads to millions of low-propensity environmental voters each year with just one goal: turning them into better voters.” In other words, they reach out to folks who love nature but haven’t yet made the connection between loving nature and voting to protect it.
You can donate to EVP, of course, or you can get more directly involved. They have an excellent phone-banking program that runs all year, not just in fall for the big election. You sign up for a certain date and time, and after a brief Zoom training you’re given a script and some phone numbers to call.
As someone who’s a bit telephone-phobic, this is a stretch for me, but it’s effective. You don’t have to get in a big long conversation, just say your piece, thank you, and hang up. You might be calling voters in Pennsylvania to remind them about the upcoming primaries, or giving voters in Nebraska information about a special election. And EVP also has useful postcarding programs, sending notes to carefully targeted audiences who, if they vote at all, will vote to support environmental causes.
And if you’re not up for phone banking or donating right now, I think their general idea has a lot of merit: seeking out voters who are on the fence about voting and giving them a gentle reminder of the stakes coming up in November.
Check out my substack, The Optimistic Activist, for more ideas: The Optimistic Activist | Anita Sanchez | Substack
Do you know anyone who loves nature? Loves the red gleam of a cardinal at the feeder? Someone who spends hours in the garden nurturing tulips or fussing over irises? Can you nudge them in the direction of their polling place? Ask them if they’ve seen a creek with a wood drake or a wading heron recently…
Political nerd here! I’ve listened to a lot about the supreme court this year, and one decision has made me livid: what is known as the Chevron Deference case. The long and short of it is that the EPA is no longer the arbiter of environmental policy – the courts (who know little if anything about environmental science) are. This ruling extends to all the “unelected” departments of the government. From the FDA to the Department of Education and the Department of Transportation – oh, and the CDC. Goodbye to no plastic in your dog’s food. More library censorship is in the way. And Trump’s dream if discrediting the CDC will be complete. Vote for people who will not only protect the environment but your food sources, your children’s education (and your ability to get real information from your public library), and sensible guidance about the next epidemic. People who know things in their area of expertise should be able to help us through this difficult world, not people whose religion is next quarter’s bottom line of one of the increasingly small number of corporations in this county.