Going to a Craft Fair Thinking About Climate Change

We’re under attack from climate change — and our only hope is to mobilize like we did in WWII. Bill McKibben

Last weekend, Michele and I went to the West Coast Craft Fair at Fort Mason in San Francisco. A lot of our favorite people were there but the show did not have the sparkle that it used to have, say, twenty years ago. Part of it is that the majority of the exhibitors are the same people that were showing their work here in the 1970s and some even date back to the Renaissance Fair in the 60s. It feels like the scene needs more young blood but, looking around, there seem to be more young people than two years ago so maybe that is changing. Either way, the show was low key but still fun and that is not what I really want to talk about. What I want to talk about is the location,

As an aside, when we first got to Fort Mason, the upper grass area was packed with young adults standing around, drinking and talking. It reminded me of an Italian Piazza where, after dinner, the locals gather to talk. When I first started going to the Fair, the upper grass area was usually empty on a Saturday afternoon. End aside.

As another aside, maybe a month ago, Michele and I went down to Santa Cruz for the 50th anniversary of Woodies on the Wharf. Fifty years ago, I was 29 and most surfers had long given up their hard to maintain Woodies for used vans. But I know the allure of old cars, I was sort of drifting into old Italian cars which were pretty cheap in the 60s and these guys were drifting into Woodies that were even cheaper. But “here’s the thing”, as Joe says over and over again, the same people are still into Woodies. The Woodies shown on the Wharf are owned by the same people, the result is a strange, all white, male, environment wherein they all look like me. It is a phase interest hobby obsession that came into being in the 50s and 60s and never really changed, it just grew old, the world has moved on to standing around on the grass, drinking and talking rather than tinkering in the garage. If that sounds derogatory, I don’t mean it to be; the world is changing and 50s solutions will not fix today’s problems. End aside.

Walking around the fair, I kept thinking about how great it is to have these buildings for something like this, these huge spaces that the Federal Government gave to San Francisco. But they didn’t originally build these spaces for San Francisco, they built them to support a war. When Pearl Harbor was attacked, the United States changed, everything became about the war and these buildings are a microcosm of that. The Craft Fair is in a loading dock, one of three, which were built to load young Soldiers and Marines onto troopships to send them into battle against Japan. When the war started, both the troops and the troopships didn’t exist. The troops had to be trained and the infrastructure to get them to battle had to be built. Over three and a half years, using an already existing British design, the USA built 2,710 Liberty ships, many of them built at shipyards around the Bay Area. Thousands of workers, a proportion of them black, were enticed to move here from the Gulf Coast. New buildings had to be built to house the new workers, the Bay Area was changed forever.

In three and a half short years, over 23 million tons of equipment and material plus 1,647,174 men were shipped from here into the combat zone in what was known then as the Pacific Theater (and, it should be noted, the big push was in Europe against the Nazis). At an average of 40 tons each – and 40 tons is probably too high – that’s about 575,000 train cars of stuff to supply the war effort. Over twelve hundred men a day were brought into San Francisco – most of them on trains – and loaded on ships at Fort Mason along with an average of about 450 train carloads of equipment and material. Because the troops had to have a place to sleep and be fed, the ships had to be furnished with beds and blankets as well as with new plates and new flatware. As an aside, for years afterward, schools and camps all across the country used flatware that said “USN”. End aside. The government mobilized everything to fight the war, everyday life revolved around the war and the herculean effort it took to wage it.

I have no idea what Donald Trump, the man, thinks about the science of global heating but Donald Trump, the President seems hell-bent on getting as much climate-damaging carbon into the atmosphere as possible. He gets lots of money from the Fossil Fuel Industry and he has their back, I guess, no matter what it does to the environment. The Democrats are not much better, sure, at least all the candidates running for President admit to the reality of global heating but few are reacting to it as the existential problem that it is. Bernie and Elizabeth Warren have both signed on to the Green New Deal – and so have, to a lesser extent, Cory Booker, Kristen Gillibrand, Amy Klobuchar, and Kamala Harris – but the Democratic Leadership gets a lot of money from the same Lobbyists as Trump and the Republican members of Congress and those lobbyists are trying to minimize any discussion of Global Heating at the debates and, especially, keep the Democrats from hosting a special debate on Global Heating. It is depressing and scary. Still, one comment that I find comforting is by Bill McKibbens in which he said something along the line of “We will have to have a weather event comparable to Pearl Harbor before we do anything, then we will react as we did in World War II”. That sounds true to me; at some point – to paraphrase Isoroku Yamamoto – the sleeping giant of America is going to wake up and face the existential threat of Global Heating and, I hope, we will do it with a terrible resolve.

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