The Student News Site of Whitworth University

The Whitworthian

The Student News Site of Whitworth University

The Whitworthian

The Student News Site of Whitworth University

The Whitworthian

There’s no reason to oppose sustainability

Sustainability is a word that gets tossed around a lot, and not just at Whitworth. Some people argue that sustainability is just a buzzword thrown about in order to keep those people who adamantly “go green” happy.

I asked several students what they thought about sustainability, and the major­ity of them had a negative view of it. It was described as a hobby for the rich. The ste­reotype attached to being green was a Toms wearing, sometimes barefoot, homeless challenge, YoungLife yuppie.

It is a tragedy that such a negative reac­tion spawns from such a positive movement. Whitworth seems to be committed to being a sustainable campus, meaning we try our best to be green and to salvage the world that we share.

If sustainability makes you unhappy, your unhappiness is completely illegitimate. I know there are people out there who litter, who toss plastic into fire, who consistently destroy the earth, just to spite global warm­ing, as if sustainability were a liberal con­spiracy to brainwash the world into believ­ing in global warming.

Who cares about global warming? Re­gardless of any views of global warming, the point is we continually destroy our earth without worrying about the repercussions. We make materials that are not biodegrad­able, dig landfills to fill with our waste, and refuse to cut back on our comfortable hab­its. Argue all you want about the effects of global warming, but you can’t deny things like landfills.

What would Jesus do? What would Gan­dhi do? What would anyone do who isn’t so selfish that they aren’t worried about main­taining the earth? They would probably join forces, drive around in a hybrid called The Green Machine, and they would recommend we save the earth.

Some anti-mother earth ad­vocates (as I like to call them, though they will vehemently deny it) are so irritated by the idea of sustainability that even seeing a hy­brid throws them into a fit of rage. When someone tells them that maybe burning that plastic bottle isn’t a good idea, they want to throw you in the fire instead.

Why? I ask these people; does it bother you when someone is feeding the homeless? No. The only difference is one person is do­ing charity unto people, and one is doing charity unto the earth, our home, that we all share.

The biggest stigma attached to sustain­ability is hypocrisy. Some students com­plained that the very kids who advocate being green, also drive their car from the Hixson Union Building to Hawthorne. How­ever, I’d wager that almost everything people do is also plagued with hypocrisy. Let’s start with Christianity, or any major religion. Hy­pocrisy within this religion (though not by every Christian) is one of the main deter­rents to new believers. However, just be­cause every Christian isn’t as pure as Jesus himself doesn’t mean that the term “Chris­tianity” should induce an angered reaction. Yet, it often does. There is a strong parallel between this and sus­tainability.

Here’s what is real. We are slowly de­stroying our earth, and there are some people who are at­tempting to change it. They may not be perfect, but they are trying. Although some people just like the image of sustainability, other people truly feel like it is a just and important cause, because it is. It isn’t a conspiracy, it’s a fact. We are stuffing our world, like a turkey, with trash. Nothing about that is positive, but everything about sustainability is. So get off your high horse, and start doing a little bit more to help out.

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There’s no reason to oppose sustainability