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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMarjory Stoneman Douglas...
Martin Gould's post. (FB)
I'd like to tell you a little bit about this remarkable woman who made political activism her calling right up until the day she died at the age of 108. Her father owned the Miami Herald and she became a reporter there, way back in 1912. She fought for womens suffrage, joined the Red Cross to take care of wounded soldiers in World War I, and then refugees in Paris after the Great War ended.
But her greatest works came much later. In 1947, she wrote the groundbreaking book, "River of Grass," the story of the Florida Everglades. In it she explained how the Everglades functioned and its vital importance to our entire ecological system. She was the primary activist who rose up to protect the Everglades from destruction. She fought Big Sugar on dumping toxic waste water into the Everglades. She fought the Army Corps of Engineers to block the straightening of the Kissimmee River, explaining how the wandering, winding river filtered water on its journey from Central Florida to the Everglades. The "ditch," as she called it, eliminated that filtering system and turned the Everglades into a toilet of sorts.
She fought the South Florida Water Management District when they allowed water levels in the Everglades to rise dangerously high, killing off the native deer population and other species of wildlife. She was a fighter and an activist for protecting things valuable to our planet and its inhabitants.
I interviewed her on her 90th birthday on the front porch of her house. She was animated, cantankerous, courtly, insightful and inquisitive. She recalled everything she had done. I had read her book because, at that time, I was doing a number of news stories about the Everglades; the very same issues she was still fighting to fix.
She would be proud of the students who are now standing up to fight for a cause in which they deeply believe. She would have been standing right with them, demanding action and action now. She would have carried those kids on her back to Tallahassee and Washington, DC to make sure those in power use that power for the greater good. It was in her own DNA, now transferred to these courageous students.
Angry Dragon
(36,693 posts)dewsgirl
(14,964 posts)underpants
(186,944 posts)Thank you babylonsister
HopeAgain
(4,407 posts)Was truly inspirational.
Cha
(305,622 posts)these kids are incredible!
I was wondering who Marjorie Stone Douglas was?
Mahalo, babylonsister~
MaryMagdaline
(7,906 posts)demmiblue
(37,866 posts)Soxfan58
(3,479 posts)We could have learned about her under different circumstances
liberalnarb
(4,532 posts)1890-1998. 108 years old. Lived to see a lot.
DownriverDem
(6,666 posts)I don't get those who attack the Dems, but aren't doing anything to help them. Go back a few decades and see how the repubs took over and the country followed. More than anything their run could be over if we all voted.
DownriverDem
(6,666 posts)As soon as the shootings happened, I had to find out who she was. In 1993 she was honored by President Clinton with the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She for sure would be very proud of the students and if alive would join them in this gun control fight.