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Josh



Last Updated: 3/26/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 29
Sign: Pisces

City: SAN FRANCISCO
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/13/2004

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Friday, December 05, 2008 

Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Travel and Places


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKWAiwRmDLs

Two weeks after returning from Europe, I finally finished this compilation video. It’s dedicated to our hosts. Thanks Papa, Anita, Aaron, Marianne, Lila, and Sid!

Tuesday, November 18, 2008 

Current mood:  stoked
Originally posted at Walk Slow

I just woke up in fair Fontainebleau (France) to the sound of bells chiming. To celebrate the end of Week 1 of the mustache growing season, I've picked two new school projects that you can contribute toward.

..

Day 8: Waking up Mustache in Fontainebleau

Please sponsor my 'stache today and help the 2nd grade kids in my home state of Vermont display their art or put your money behind students in Richmond, VA who want some hands on experience with clean energy.
My sponsors page (go here to donate!):
http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/viewChallenge.html?id=19596

As you know, Mustaches for Kids isn't just a world-class charity event. It's also a no holds barred, knock-down, drag-out mustache growing contest. Now that we're in Week 2 of the growing season, I'm starting to look around and see how I'm measuring up to the competition.

Face-wise, I'm starting to feel pretty good about my chances. My whiskers are teeming at the lip. Every day my face gets a little more exciting.

Kiddie-sponsor-wise, I'm in desperate need of some Rogaine, however. Out of 51 San Francisco mustachelites, I am currently 26. OUCH!!!

Now, we all know I can take four more weeks of John McCain's ridicule toward my face, but America's children can't take four more weeks of lackluster investment in their future. Help me turn the page on 26 and put my kids in the driver's seat this year:

http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/leadershipboard.html?category=40

A word about the two new projects I'm supporting:

Support Future Clean Energy Inventors in Virginia

"My students need the Nasco Fuel Cell Experiment Kit and Manual, and 3 Nasco Photocell Testing Kits to allow my students to get hands-on experience with technologies that are available to help reduce our dependence on fossil fuels."

Support 2nd Grade Art in Vermont!

"In donating for these bulletin boards you will allow my students to have colorful bulletin boards that display their work and where they can find more information about themes we are studying."

Thanks for helping the kids!
Josh

JOSH'S 2008 MUSTACHE SPONSORS
$40 Santiago Requejo (Magnum P.I.)

MUSTACHES FOR KIDS DONATION LEVELS
"The Albert Einstein" - $250
"The Billy Dee Williams" - $200
"The Burt Reynolds" - $150
"The Al Sharpton" - $125
"The Borat" - $100
"The Dr. Phil" - $75
"The 'My Name is Earl'" - $50
"The Magnum P.I." (Tom Selleck!) - $25
"The Yosemite Sam" - $20
"The Lionel Ritchie" - $10
"The John Waters" - $5
"The Frida Kahlo" - Anything below $5

Wednesday, November 12, 2008 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4e4USLsRyJs

Check this new video I made in honor of Mustaches for Kids 2008. Yesterday was Day 1 of our annual competitive growing season. December 17th is Stache Bash 2008 at the Rickshaw stop in SF!

Saturday, October 11, 2008 

Current mood:  enlightened
Category: News and Politics


Get it!
Share it!

Our best estimate is that as of 1:00 on Friday we're only about 300-400 books away from reaching the New York Times bestsellers list by the midnight deadline. Think about that! With almost no money for publicity and without a name like "Sarah Palin", "Bill O'Reilly", "Harry Potter", or "Dewey the cat" in the title, we're on the verge of making this book a New York Times bestseller. How? Magic.

Nope, not magic. With lots of friends telling friends telling friends about this book via email, phone, blogs, websites, and word of mouth, we reached 17 on Amazon on the book's opening day (Tuesday 10/7). Not too shabby if you ask me.

Just think about what having a New York Times bestseller about green collar jobs and pathways out of poverty could do this close to the election..


Learn more about the book and read reviews here.
Tuesday, September 02, 2008 

Current mood:  awake
Category: News and Politics


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EViL6w9pGws

Check out this great new 2 minute clip about Green Jobs Now! If you like it, please pass it on. Josh

Sunday, August 17, 2008 

Current mood:  accomplished
Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdIkiL4UcRk

It was the end of the day on Friday. We decided to start putting pins on a map. When that happens, everything becomes clear. www.greenjobsnow.com

Saturday, August 16, 2008 

Current mood:  awake
Category: News and Politics


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-xq10cmfHsk

WATCH: Van Jones talks about Green Jobs Now: A National Day of Action to Build the New Economy - 9.27.08.

Wednesday, April 23, 2008 

Current mood:  inquisitive
Category: Blogging
The story of smokestacks and tailpipes (Abridged version)

So, here's what happened. A few hundred years ago we decided it was time to create companies. To get lots of people to buy what our companies were selling, we started looking beyond the towns we lived in for a market for our goods. As we sought out bigger and bigger markets for our goods, we had to create more and more powerful and efficient ways of producing and transporting those goods. Camels were better than peoples' backs. Boats were better than swimming. So on and so forth. Eventually, one thing led to another, companies got bigger, markets got bigger, people got bigger and more plentiful, and we decided to start producing and transporting our goods using artificial energy that comes from burning stuff. Henceforth, there were smokestacks and tailpipes. Fast-forward 150 or so years and we've got billions of people doing this along with some global warming.

The thing is, we might have noticed that it wasn't the best idea to produce and transport everything with this artificial energy that creates ugly smoke if it weren't for the fact that as we were throwing away resources, we started throwing away people too. As the smokestacks and tailpipes grew and the ugly smoke got unbearable in cities, we decided to start putting the pollution machines in places where poor people lived. So, all the digging up and burning of really dirty rocks and really dirty liquids went ahead as if it were normal for years and years. Occasionally we'd hear about people choking in coal mines or birds dying from oil spills or gas exploding all over the place, but it all seemed like a necessary by-product of having companies and getting more things.

Right. Then there was global warming. Now it made some more sense. All of that smoke and junk that goes into the air when we burn dirty rocks and liquids doesn't just choke poor people nearby and then disappear. It's actually pretty thick stuff and it stays in the atmosphere, trapping heat all over the place for a long time. About twenty years ago smart people told the government that this was happening and we'd all have lots of floods and storms and droughts and stuff pretty soon. They thought that was okay though and didn't do anything. Then we decided to watch Al Gore's movie and started re-thinking our tailpipe/smokestack strategy.

So, what do we do now? Well, it's not easy, but it is simple. It could be kind of fun also, especially if you're into Snoop Dogg and measuring things. Here's what we need to do. First, we've got to get a few big pieces of paper and start writing down where we've put all these smokestacks and tailpipes in our town. Then we have to measure how much smoke and junk they're putting into the sky during the year. At the end of the year we come up with the number of - let's call it - "emissions". Then we round up all of the groups of people we've got in the town, the company people, the camel people, the boat people, the dirty rock digging people, the school people, the government people, and we bring them into a big building. We tell everybody about this number we've come up with of our "emissions" and we remind them about Al Gore's movie and the fact that nobody wants freaky and expensive storms and floods and droughts all the time. We remind them about the greening and wind mills and stuff that came at the end of the movie. Then we say, "Okay. We got this. All we've got to do is take this big smokey number and drop it like it's hot."

Everybody gets all excited about dropping the number and starts singing Snoop Dogg lyrics. Amidst their excitement about the greening, a few people start to shout out what they're going to do to drop it like it's hot and agree to measure it. Pretty soon everybody's getting in on the action. People from some groups start figuring out that their smokestacks and tailpipes are related to other groups' pipes and stacks and they decide to get in on the greening action together. Somebody suggests a big goal for making next year's number smaller and people get excited and start to party down to that business. Then, somebody says, "Wait a second. While we're doing all of this greening and dropping, shouldn't we think about what got us here in the first place?" Ah ha!

This is the moment when we decide that yes, it's really sweet to measure and drop our emissions with green stuff all over the place, but we can't just do it the old way. The old way is the one that led to us choosing to go for smokestacks and tailpipes in the first place and sticking with it because we didn't notice the consequences. This time, we've got to do it the new way. That is, the way where everybody matters. So, we start these exciting greening and emission dropping projects in the places where power plants and oil refineries and other pollution machines have made people sick and stolen their opportunities. We make sure the business opportunities and the jobs greening everything in these places and the training for those jobs are going to the people in those communities. With everybody's help the throw away neighborhoods start to become hope and opportunity centers.

Then of course, a few years down the road when we've gotten on track and slowed the global warming, with these once-forgotten people at the center of the green revolution, we'll know when our companies are steering us toward a bad decision. With everybody paying attention and listening to each other we'll stop that blasting-nuclear-waste-into-space-idea dead in it's tracks.

I don't know about you, but I can't wait. I'm off to go buy me a gas-measurer.
Tuesday, December 18, 2007 

Current mood:  mellow
Category: Blogging
Sometimes you just need to write. It's just past noon on a Tuesday and I am wearing sweat pants. They're a fine breed of joggers that I got from my high school tennis team. But, really, I should be wearing some real pants right about now. It's fine. Really. The thing is, I am between employments. I've just finished growing a mustache for the kids. Last week that occupied a fair amount of my time. Now, I'm down to mulling over my self-assessment on the Maslow Being Values test from last year when I was going through one of these between job periods. Samantha just called and wants me to grab some weed and come see a movie with her co-workers. Who am I to refuse that?

Last night was a warm, fuzzy change of pace for me. It was the end of the non-work day and I was a little down about my lack of good ideas for the evening when my friend Sarah called. We hadn't hung out in a good month or more and it was time to remedy the situation. She hadn't a clue what to do and neither did I, but we figured it was better to be in that place together. So, I suggested a double date, she suggested a funky eatery called "Weird Fish" in the Mission, and it turned into something decidedly different. As I was unable to get a hold of my lady, our friend Nick came into the picture asking about a drink. We added friends, Kassie, Sharon, Courtney, and Art, and turned it into a pasta-making adventure at Nick's place. With a few bottles of wine, some small-kitchen cooking, a few youtube videos, and some music, the evening became a hit.

I have a good time in this city for the most part. There are nights of obscure bands, take-home movies after sushi dinner, unplanned foolishness at the bars, and a good amount of house parties and themed events. But last night was something rare. We had a little ad-hoc potluck with old friends who mesh well but don't see enough of each other. It was simple, but a dandy good time.
Sunday, November 18, 2007 

Current mood:  good
Category: Blogging
Friends and family,

I just wrote the first personal blog in a few months. It's about my trip in the Philippines. It's here if you want to read...
http://walkslow.wordpress.com/

Since I haven't written in a while, I thought I'd add more of a comprehensive update as well:

The Philippines and Mustaches for Kids
After spending most of October and the beginning of November staying with John in Washington, DC working for Energy Action, doing outreach, volunteer recruitment, and other preparation for Power Shift 2007, the first national youth summit on global warming, I've hopped a jet for the Philippines for two weeks. Power Shift was the finale of my work at Energy Action as Partnerships Director and the Philippines is simply a bit of vacation and exploration in a part of the world I've never been. In the middle of my trip, the start of Mustaches for Kids 2007 arrived on Tuesday. I've got one month to grow the meanest 'stache I can muster to help the kids of San Francisco. Like a marathon or something, it only works if I get people to sponsor me and my mustache. Here's how:
Donate online via Breakthrough's JustGive.org page. When you arrive, make sure you note that it's a donation via "Mustaches for Kids:Josh Lynch" in the "As A Gift In Someone's Name" field. Make sure to email me to let me know you donated so I can put you in the 'Stache Hall of Fame! If you need some background, check out a blog entry I wrote last year on the subject.

Power Shift
Power Shift was literally a life-changing experience for me. I don't think I'll ever think about the people that I've been working with or the community that we've built in the same way again. It has certainly changed my perspective on how much power we really have right now to influence the national debate. We (leaders in the youth climate change movement) had begun thinking up the idea of doing a big national conference about five years ago. Maybe we could have predicted the size (5500 students and youth at University of Maryland packed into a basketball stadium and dozens of classrooms and hallways), but there's no way we could have predicted the impact of what happened or the energy it brought not just to our community of activists but to the entire U.S. global warming movement. There was a major focus on diversity and social justice at Power Shift, which made everything feel that much more powerful. There were fiery keynote speakers, badass musical performers, enlightening panels and workshops, a packed career fair, and the largest lobby day on global warming that Congress has ever seen (with about 3000 young people rallying outside the Capitol and then going into their representatives' offices in groups of all sizes from their district to deliver the message that young people want immediate action on global warming and are united for the 1 Sky priorities: green jobs for those most in need, 80% cuts in carbon by 2050, and no new coal-fired power plants.
Check out some incredible video clips and an article on nytimes.com from the three days of Power Shift:

Jessy Tolkan, EAC co-director lays into Pat Buchanon on Hardball
Cheryl Lockwood, a native Alaskan youth, gives emotional testimony to Congress
Van Jones fires up the crowd at Power Shift
MTV News: The Revolution Starts Right Now
NYTimes.com - Whose climate is it anyway?
Discovery: Young People Bring Green Demands to DC
More Power Shift media...

What's Next
So, after being a student activist for three years in college, spending two years organizing with SEAC in Philadelphia and Burlington after that, working as national student organizer for Greenpeace in San Francisco for two years, and taking on the role of Partnerships Director for Energy Action Coalition during the past year, I'm now moving on from the world of student environmental activism at age 27. It's been real. No, seriously, I consider myself incredibly lucky to have worked with the people whom I did and with the organizations I've been a part of. I never would have stayed involved for as long as I did in the "youth movement" if I wasn't constantly inspired and supported by truly visionary, intelligent, and passionate people who treat the work for a clean, just, and sustainable future like their lifeblood. I owe everything to these people. I am also proud the role I've played in all of it and have no regrets. For me, this next step is about finding something I can make a career out of, making room for new leaders, and most importantly, living it large in the Philippines and San Francisco as carefree and unemployed as the day I was born. That's a joke.

I've been talking to some people about getting into energy policy work and finding a way to gain expertise and experience in that vein. I don't know exactly what my next gig will be yet. That'll happen when I get back to my old time zone. What I do know is that I'm interested in moving visionary and solutions-focused energy and climate policies and continuing to work and live in the Bay Area. In my spare time, I have been particularly interested in decentralized energy, Woking, the electranet, and other frameworks for making distributed generation energy more viable on a large scale.

Well shucks. Internet cafe is closing.

all the best,
Josh