I realize that this probably is a sign of me being a Very Bad PersonTM, but I found the following video (HT: BigGovernment) to be hilarious.

YouTube Preview Image

If this has been done by SNL, Stewart or Colbert , I’m not sure it could have been any funnier.

With that said:

1) Do we need to be good stewards of God’s creation? Yes.

2) Should we seek to avoid wasteful lifestyles? Yes.

3) Should we get wrapped around the axle about Anthropogenic Global Warming and responsible use of natural resources?  Only if we want to waste billions of dollars for no real reason other than to assuage our collective guilt (missing the mark on it), or if we want to star in a video like the one above…

  • Share/Bookmark
This entry was posted on Monday, November 9th, 2009 at 7:45 pm and is filed under Church and Society. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
+/- Collapse/Expand All

4 Comments(+Add)

1   Eugene    http://eugeneroberts.wordpress.com
November 10th, 2009 at 2:55 am

That does have a smell of Onion(ONN) to it…

2   Rick Frueh    http://judahslion.blogspot.com/
November 10th, 2009 at 5:40 am

If authentic, I found it deeply sad.

3   troy    http://www.sheepandgoats.blogspot.com
November 10th, 2009 at 10:53 am

Yeah. If this is real, this is disturbing.

4   Chris L    http://www.fishingtheabyss.com/
November 10th, 2009 at 1:52 pm

I did some background checking last night, and this is VERY Real – it is from a 1997 series of documentaries commissioned by PBS called “American Visions” – researched and narrated by Robert Hughes:

He switches into a dead-on impression of one of the members of Earth First appearing in “The Wilderness and the West,” the third part of the series dealing with how America’s landscape shaped her art. The environmental group is shown in a North Carolina North Carolina forest, wailing over the old-growth trees cut down by loggers.

The camera lingers on one woman sobbing to the lost trees, and sitting in his hotel room, Hughes mimics her wickedly, then cackles with delight. He’s aware that the segment makes the group look pretty wacky, but he doesn’t care.

“What a bunch of freaks,” Hughes said. “Am I supposed to be some sort of conservative because these people are self-satirists?”

He said his friend, Peter Matthiessen, author of “At Play in the Fields of the Lord” and several nature books, begged him to remove the piece, saying its presence in “American Visions” would be detrimental to the environmental movement.

It’s in this episode, beginning at the 7:30 mark.