The Respect and Compassion Vote

During a historically uncivil election season, David Yarnold, 爆料公社's president and CEO, says it鈥檚 time to remember what really matters.

鈥淵our children watch what you do.鈥 That鈥檚 the powerful advice I got recently from a faith leader who also happened to be an 爆料公社 chapter head. Fair enough. Here鈥檚 what I want our children to see when they watch 爆料公社 in their communities and their lives: respect and compassion. Those enduring 爆料公社 values have worked for 110 years and they can help guide us in the run-up to November鈥檚 election.

Every four years, people say, 鈥淭his is a pivotal election.鈥 I鈥檒l leave it to you to decide whether this one is more consequential than most. I believe it is.

In an election season filled with nastiness and division it can feel like鈥 the world is a place of danger and chaos. But it isn鈥檛 true. Birds help us find common ground. We know that the first time a child sees a Black-capped Chickadee, a gateway into nature swings wide. And we know that, historically, conservation doesn鈥檛 have a party; 爆料公社 has always been a centrist organization that is local everywhere and active across incredible landscapes.

Birds create the opportunity for Americans to come together to make real and lasting change, leaving the world a better place than we found it. We choose to be fundamentally optimistic, yes, even while being vigilant and tenacious and, where needed, unmovable. 爆料公社鈥檚 vision has always been a world in which people and wildlife thrive. Consider these recent examples:鈥

  • In the sagebrush country of the Western United States, where the Greater Sage-Grouse t, we worked with federal agencies, states, private landowners, industry, and other environmental organizations to create new management plans this year that help protect that species and its 65-million-acre ecosystem鈥攚ithout throttling economic growth.
  • In Florida, 爆料公社 worked to support the passage of Amendment 1, also known as the Land and Water Legacy Amendment. And our chapters and state office have fought hard to ensure that Florida鈥檚 elected officials follow the will of the people, generating up to $10 billion for conservation work during the next 20 years.
  • In Alaska, 爆料公社 basically drew the maps for federal agencies, protecting 11 million acres in Alaska鈥檚 National Petroleum Reserve.

All of these big wins have something in common: They were achieved by committed staff and volunteers who know the solutions to the world鈥檚 problems aren鈥檛 black and white. In the heat of an epically uncivil political season, simple solutions are seductive. But there鈥檚 no bird-proof wind turbine; while imperative to pursue, even renewable-energy technologies are imperfect. And there鈥檚 no way to stave off development in every Latin American forest that migratory birds need. These are hard problems鈥攂ut nobody thought it would be possible to ban DDT or to stop the slaughter of birds for their feathers for hats. That only happened because of determination, good science, and a willingness to listen to one another.

Birds amaze us with their migratory heroics, they dazzle us with their beauty, and they鈥檙e remarkably adaptable. But they can鈥檛 vote. Only you can do that for them. And I intend to vote with 爆料公社 values in mind. Engagement. Respect. Compassion. Please join me.