The Atkinson Diet
a local response to global warming    love where you live
   
Why Me The Diet Diet Tips The Science Carbon Stars Sign Me Up


CALCULATE YOUR CARBON

REDUCE PLASTIC WATER BOTTLE USE. BUY A REUSABLE BOTTLE OR FILTER FOR YOUR TAP.

GOTCHA GOING GREEN
PHOTO OF THE WEEK

This rooftop clothesline, scored at a rummage sale, provides its owner with sweet-smelling clothes, sunshine and fresh air, and a reduced energy bill. Send your photos of dieting locals going green to photos@theatkinsondiet.com

 

ATKINSON DIET DEFINITIONS:

flarb \flarb\ n. [KW, flab, BG, carbon] carbon flab- carbon dioxide emissions in excess of what is safe for the planet

 

 

 

 

 

 
Heart of the City
The Atkinson Diet is served up
locally by Heart of the City
Fort Atkinson, Wisconsin

 

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TOGETHER
WE'VE GOT A LOT TO LOSE

HEART OF THE CITY
Invites you to drop that extra 10 Tons you're carrying around.

SIGN UP

for our low carbon Atkinson Diet to trim your energy usage and reduce your contribution to global warming...

... you'll probably save a little money too.

Why Me?

A recent international scientific report has declared that we are all part of the problem.

Together we will all be part of the solution. Each person can choose some action that's right for their life...you don't have to do everything, just do something.

It’s SO-O-O easy.  Let’s start shedding those carbon pounds.

  • Sign up. Lending your name shows your commitment, encourages others to get motivated, and helps to create a committed community who cares. Even if you are already dieting, you can inspire others. You can join whether or not you live in Fort Atkinson.
  • Implement the 4 week plan for the chance of a lifetime.
  • Return to the web site regularly for tips to help you minimize the cloud of carbon billowing off of you.
  • Continue to educate yourself and those around you about global warming.
  • Share the stories of your carbon reduction with us.
  • Spread the word- tell others of the benefits of the diet for you and the place you live.

Let's trade our isolated independence for a community-building interdependence.

Imagine a healthier city:

  • more people out walking, biking, exchanging friendly greetings
  • more people behaving neighborly- sharing resources to avoid unnecessary energy expenditures
  • more people sharing - coordinating rides to shop, work, school and community events
  • cleaner air, less traffic, and a stronger community

Sounds pretty nice doesn't it? Together we've got a lot to lose.
Take a pledge to go on the Atkinson Diet. JOIN US NOW.


THE GLOBAL DISH cartoons by Jeremy Pinc

 

For your reading pleasure: Featured Article

Home-Front Ecology- What our grandparents can teach us about saving the world

By Mike Davis
Sierra Magazine July/August 2007

DOES THIS GENERATION OF AMERICANS have the "right stuff" to meet the epic challenges of sustaining life on a rapidly warming planet? Sure, the mainstream media are full of talk about carbon credits, hybrid cars, and smart urbanism--but even so, our environmental footprints are actually growing larger, not smaller.

The typical new U.S. home, for instance, is 40 percent larger than that of 25 years ago, even though the average household has fewer people. In that same period, dinosaur-like SUVs (now 50 percent of all private vehicles) have taken over the freeways, while the amount of retail space per capita (an indirect but reliable measure of consumption) has quadrupled.

Too many of us, in other words, talk green but lead supersized lifestyles--giving fodder to the conservative cynics who write columns about Al Gore's electricity bills. Our culture appears hopelessly addicted to fossil fuels, shopping sprees, suburban sprawl, and beef-centered diets. Would Americans ever voluntarily give up their SUVs, McMansions, McDonald's, and lawns?

The surprisingly hopeful answer lies in living memory. In the 1940s, Americans simultaneously battled fascism overseas and waste at home. My parents, their neighbors, and millions of others left cars at home to ride bikes to work, tore up their front yards to plant cabbage, recycled toothpaste tubes and cooking grease, volunteered at daycare centers and USOs, shared their houses and dinners with strangers, and conscientiously attempted to reduce unnecessary consumption and waste. The World War II home front was the most important and broadly participatory green experiment in U.S. history. Lessing Rosenwald, the chief of the Bureau of Industrial Conservation, called on Americans "to change from an economy of waste--and this country has been notorious for waste--to an economy of conservation." A majority of civilians, some reluctantly but many others enthusiastically, answered the call.

The most famous symbol of this wartime conservation ethos was the victory garden. Originally promoted by the Wilson administration to combat the food shortages of World War I, household and communal kitchen gardens had been revived by the early New Deal as a subsistence strategy for the unemployed. After Pearl Harbor, a groundswell of popular enthusiasm swept aside the skepticism of some Department of Agriculture officials and made the victory garden the centerpiece of the national "Food Fights for Freedom" campaign.

By 1943, beans and carrots were growing on the former White House lawn, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt and nearly 20 million other victory gardeners were producing 30 to 40 percent of the nation's vegetables--freeing the nation's farmers, in turn, to help feed Britain and Russia. In The Garden Is Political, a 1942 volume of popular verse, poet John Malcolm Brinnin acclaimed these "acres of internationalism" taking root in U.S. cities. Although suburban and rural gardens were larger and usually more productive, some of the most dedicated gardeners were inner-city children. With the participation of the Boy Scouts, trade unions, and settlement houses, thousands of ugly, trash-strewn vacant lots in major industrial cities were turned into neighborhood gardens that gave tenement kids the pride of being self-sufficient urban farmers. In Chicago, 400,000 schoolchildren enlisted in the "Clean Up for Victory" campaign, which salvaged scrap for industry and cleared lots for gardens.

Victory gardening transcended the need to supplement the wartime food supply and grew into a spontaneous vision of urban greenness (even if that concept didn't yet exist) and self-reliance. In Los Angeles, flowers ("a builder of citizen morale") were included in the "Clean-Paint-Plant" program to transform the city's vacant spaces, and the Brooklyn Botanic Garden taught the principles of "garden culture" to local schoolteachers and thousands of their enthusiastic students.

Click HERE to read full article.