Saturday, October 13, 2007
Al Gore - The Message
For years, former Vice President Al Gore and a host of climate scientists were belittled and, worst of all, ignored for their message about how dire global warming is. On Friday, they were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for their warnings about what Gore calls "a planetary emergency." Gore shared the prize with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations network of scientists. This scientific panel has explained the dry details of global warming in thousands of pages of footnoted reports every six years or so since 1990.
Gore, fresh from a near miss at winning the U.S. presidency in 2000, translated the numbers and jargon-laden reports into something people could understand. He made a slide show and went Hollywood. His documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" won two Academy Awards and has been credited with changing the debate in America about global warming.
For Gore it was all about the message.
What message are you telling the world today that will impact tomorrow?
For years, people have been ridiculing Al Gore for what he stands for and what he believes in, especially Climatic Crisis. Since his loss to George W. Bush in 2000, Gore put aside political aspirations and become a global warming evangelical. He traveled to more than 50 countries. He presented his slide show on global warming more than 1,000 times.
Maybe, it was a good thing that he lost to Bush, since his voice can now be heard and received with passion in so many countries. On the other hand, the enemies of Bush would have wished that Gore should have won.
What message are you leaving for your next generation?
What kind of life example are you leaving behind?
Would your work or passion be remembered as a legacy years after you have gone?
Labels:
Al Gore,
climate,
Nobel Peace Prize
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