Best and Brightest … Genius — Esquire

A once-in-a-lifetime game-changing advance
in our field everyone else will follow
— Marshall Goldsmith

Astrophysicist turned new media whiz — NBC

Passionate … confident … — Forbes

You don't just learn theory from
him, you improve your life.
— Inc.

The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Harvard University, Standford University, Princeton University, MTV, IBM, US Army

My Mission

My mission is to help change American (and global) culture on sustainability and stewardship from expecting deprivation, sacrifice, burden, and chore to expecting rewarding emotions and lifestyles, as I see happen with everyone I lead to act for their intrinsic motivations.

In my case the emotions have been joy, fun, freedom, connection, meaning, and purpose.



Systemic change begins with personal change.

Some of my values. What are yours?
Months living off the grid in Manhattan: 40 (and counting)
Loads of garbage I filled in 2025 so far: 0
Loads filled in 2024: 0
Loads filled in 2023: 0
Loads filled in 2022: 0
Loads filled in 2021: 0
Loads filled in 2020: 0
Loads filled in 2019: 1
Loads filled in 2018: 1
Loads filled in 2017: 1
Days picking up litter: 3,121 and counting
Years not flying: 9 (115 months) and counting
2024-25 grid electric grid use at home: 0 kilowatt-hours
Annual carbon emissions: about 1 ton
Daily burpees: 258,298 and counting
Resting pulse: 46 bpm

LATEST BLOG POSTS

The number of levels of failures in society that litter reveals. Abysmal.

on December 12, 2025 in Nature

This photograph shows a guy employed by a local “business improvement district” to pick up litter, the “BID” on the gray trash bag and his coat/uniform show. How do we reach this level of failure? In principle we shouldn’t litter. For that matter, with all the talk about circular economies and reaching “net zero,” shouldn’t we not produce goods that could become litter? Doesn’t New York City have a sanitation[…] Keep reading →

Book update: progress found and lost, but in sight

on December 11, 2025 in Art, Creativity

The first drafts of all my past books were long, followed by many rounds of editing, including a lot of cutting. My latest draft is around 80,000 words with maybe 20 percent more to write. At 275 words per page, that’s pushing 300 pages. Not bad for a first draft. Except for some good news. My best writing, or progress, tends to come not when I’m writing or at the[…] Keep reading →

Have you thought about sanitation systems? They violate ideals of the left and right. They are socialist *and* imperialist.

on December 10, 2025 in Leadership, Models

Americans are divided over health care. Since everyone knows about the controversy there, I’ll share some properties about it, then connect to sanitation. For comparison: health care People on the left want socialized health care. Everyone gets sick, no one wants to, so to them it makes politically, morally, and economically to provide health care to all. It spreads out the costs no one wants to pay but everyone has[…] Keep reading →

Specious, deceptive, irrelevant claims on climate

on December 9, 2025 in Nature

I see these plots a fair amount from people on the right. They come from Bjorn Lomborg. They’re a straw man and a distraction. Global warming is a problem, but it’s one of many. As I’ve written, I recommend Only specify fixing climate and carbon if you want to wreck everything else (forests, biodiversity, rivers, etc) because that happens when you do. There are other places where our behavior mediated[…] Keep reading →

Having the number of kids you want is freedom. People, especially government, telling you otherwise is usually coercion.

on December 8, 2025 in Choosing/Decision-Making, Freedom

The news keeps covering that population is growing less fast than before. Note that it is still increasing, just the rate of increase is slowing. They overwhelmingly treat it as a problem. They say so because they use economic models built to show population growth always helps, which is wrong. Their models saying something is a problem wouldn’t necessarily mean it was a problem even if their models weren’t wrong.[…] Keep reading →

This week’s selected media, December 7, 2025: The Fire Next Time, Your Music and People, What Is a Woman?, Constitution 201, Children’s Rights to a Life-Sustaining Climate

on December 7, 2025 in Tips

This week I finished: The Fire Next Time, by James Baldwin: I’ve known about James Baldwin for years but never read his work. I’ve seen him speak on videos, but a book is another story. A book takes time to compose. Almost always when I finish a book I reread at least the first few paragraphs, sometimes the first few pages. A teacher in college told me that authors can’t[…] Keep reading →

Listening is sharpening your axe

on December 6, 2025 in Leadership, Tips

The playing field of leadership is the other person’s emotional system and situation. The more you know them, the more you can lead and inspire them. The challenge is that people’s greatest motivations tend to be their greatest vulnerabilities, so we tend to protect them instead of sharing them. Thus it helps to listen, but many people who want to accomplish things tend toward action. Acting or prompting others to[…] Keep reading →

Democracy, wedge issues, and calm

on December 5, 2025 in Leadership, Nonjudgment, Relationships

People’s language and emotions get intense around wedge issues like abortion, gun rights, and tax levels. One side says the other wants to control women’s bodies, the other says the one wants to kill babies. Such characterizations, mischaracterizations, and seeing the other from your view not theirs makes finding common ground nearly impossible. I call this pattern the worst problem in the world. Yet we have to live together. Secession[…] Keep reading →

One of the most important statements of environmentalism: giving up on changing culture (and what to do instead)

on December 4, 2025 in Doof, Freedom, Leadership

I enjoyed reading Bill McKibben’s latest book Here Comes the Sun. I found much of it well researched. Still, I don’t think it made clear what I consider its starting point. Before you read the critical stuff I start with about the book, I end on a high note. I’ve written many times how tools like technology, market incentives, and legislation aren’t good or bad. They implement and augment the[…] Keep reading →

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