
Who & What is Our Blue Orb
Our Blue Orb is a fledging organization of like minded people who are forming a synergistic cooperative for preservation & improvement of Earth’s environment & the sustainability of our natural resources. Together we shall marshal our efforts and resources to achieve these goals.
OurBlueOrb.org is setting up a Board of Directors as we continue to outline and define our goals, objectives and mission.
Our Blue Orb will publish a register of nonprofit and for profit foundations, businesses and charities with links directly to their websites. There are no finders fees, commissions or “affiliated partnerships” associated with the provided linked referrals. Links to organizations in harmony with our mission are posted to educate the public and for people to use and support. When these links are utilized, users will be sent directly to the organizations’ websites without tracking intervention or privacy concerns.
Our Blue Orb
and
Colonial Organizations:
The Borg
Porpita Porpita, are called Blue Button jellyfish. Although they look like them, they are not actually jellyfish or even a single organism. Porpita Porpita are multiple individual animals, organized and physically connected as a Borg to form colonial organisms. Each of these small animals, called zooids, has its unique special function and responsibility that is vital to the organism's survival. These zooids function together much like bee colonies where each animal has its essential job to do for success. Although Portuguese Man O'War also superficially resemble jellyfish, they too are colonial organisms made up of zooids.
Corals are also colonial organisms made up of hundreds of thousands of zooids or small animals called polyps who work concurrently for joint success and survival. Corals share this kinship with many jellyfish, sea fans, anemones & Porpita Porpita.
It is now our responsibility to join hands and work together as one entity to ensure the survival and resilience of our ecosystems, all other living things and earth’s natural resources. It is necessary to work collectively to achieve our organization's goals and objectives.

Why We Work In Unison:
To Leave A Legacy

Personal History:
The first Earth Day, Wednesday, April 22, 1970, I spent that night trying to convince Florida’s Governor Claude Kirk to do something to save the Everglades. Kirk had come to our university campus to prevent what he said would be a student uprising. The Everglades, engineered and decimated by the US Army Corps of Engineers with a grid of canals, levees and spillways designed to drain the swamp, was disappearing to make the arable land. Our sea of grass was being destroyed by our government, private developers, sugar plantations, a devastating drought and out of control wildfires. This ecological jewel was under attack. Unfortunately, like many legislators of his time, Governor Kirk just didn’t get it.
Since then, I’ve continued to advocate for and to remain in harmony with our environment, staying true to my core values to do no harm. 1970, for me and my fellow Baby Boomer students, Earth Day was a real awakening. We continue to pay it forward; now more urgently, much more must be done. For more than 50 years I have wondered what could I do to effect a more positive outcome, anything that would make a measurable impact on the environment. I set up this website and founded this organization to accomplish life goals of sustainable resources and viable Earth and Oceans Biomes.
In 1969, Senator Gaylord Nelson had an idea for a national teach-in about the environment to send a message to Washington that public opinion was solidly behind a bold and necessary political agenda of fixing environmental problems. Earth Day became his brainchild. He saw the need to provide unity to the grassroots environmental movements and increase ecological awareness. "The objective was to get a nationwide demonstration of concern for the environment so large that it would shake the political establishment out of its lethargy,” Senator Nelson said, “and, finally, force the issue permanently onto the national political agenda.”
Rachel Carson's sea trilogy, ‘Under the Sea Wind,’ 1941, ‘The Sea Around Us,’ 1952, ‘Edge of the Sea,’ 1955, and ultimately the 1962 publication of her book ‘Silent Spring,’ about the lethal pesticide effects, are often cited as the beginning of the modern environmental movement. Sustainability, a “back-to-the-land” movement and ecology concerns became the values of ecological awareness which were never then and are not now part of a radical liberal left wing agenda or uprising. Environmental activism is needed now.
Back when John Kennedy established three national seashores to protect coastlines and oceans, promoted a youth conservation corps and moved the needle on the necessity to preserve the environment he made his "Legacy a comprehensive environmental initiative." The first Earth Day had increased environmental awareness of our government and the general population until in 1970 the Environmental Protection Agency was established by Nixon’s executive order to regulate and enforce national pollution legislation. This continued Earth Day fever caused Congress to pass the Clean Water and Endangered Species Acts which Nixon signed into law. Now, not so much is being done on our country's environmental front.
Let the spirit and unity of the environmental activism of Earth Day provide the needed justification to give us the dedication to join together to continue improvement of all our ecosystems, so necessary to reduce pollution, conserve our natural resources, and promote sustainable practices to protect habitat and enhance overall well-being of all Earth’s creatures as we nourish life on Our Blue Orb.
stevendphilbrick
sr+ for Sustainable Resources & Our Blue Orb
Everybody Needs To Leave A Legacy!
Take Action!
Make a positive change for the environment
start right now.

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stevendphilbrick
