An article in the May 18, 2026, edition of The New York Times was titled as follows in the hardcopy version: "In Pacific Palisades, A Mother's Agonizing Dilemma." Click that link for the article online (but be aware that the online headline will differ from what I have given you here).
In the hardcopy edition, there was a picture on the front page of the paper that immediately attracted my attention since it showed an old Sears store, repurposed with a new sign reading, "Pali High." I, personally, am a graduate of "Paly High" (class of '61), meaning Palo Alto High School, located in Palo Alto, California. I wasn't, actually, offended by the "Pali High" sign, but I can't help thinking that my own highschool is the original and authentic version.
At any rate, Palo Alto High School has not (to date) suffered the kind of fate affecting the "Pali High" located in Pacific Palisades. The Pacific Palisades wildfire - one of the "most destructive wildfires in Los Angeles history" - badly damaged the high school, but it was "still standing" after the fire. However, the real problem about repopulating the school with students, like Pearl Villemaire, pictured above, was the accumulation of toxic chemicals. Pearl's home was "smoke-damaged," too.
If you read the entirety of the article, you will find that it may well be that students are being sent back to a highschool that is, in fact, a hotbed of toxic dangers (and Pearl's home is in the same condition). This brought a thought to mind. As we enter a time in which wildfires will, almost certainly, continue to erupt during warm weather - thanks to the global warming which our nation, and the world entire, is failing to address - we are going to have a lot more problems like the ones documented with reference to "Pali High." We are constructing our cities with plastics and other materials created not by nature, but by human artifice, that may well leave us with a toxic legacy, after such fires, that will then doom our children to a life of chemical pollution, dangerous to health.
One way to begin addressing this problem (which is referenced in the article) is just to "pretend" that the toxic residues are "ok," and are not a mammoth health danger. This is, possibly, what is happening in Pacific Palisades, and this is what constitutes the "agonizing dilemma" that the article discusses. Pearl wants to go back to school; she is experiencing real panic attacks and depression because of the disruption to her life caused by the fire. Her mom wants to help with that, as do the other parents of students at "Pali High." It's agonizing for such parents to send their students back to school, however. While the parents know that this will make their children happier, immediately, they also know, at some level, that this decision may condemn them to future disease and an early death.
Pearl's going back to school, at Pali High. Let's cross our fingers! However, there could be another way - a lesson drawn from the situation documented by the article in The Times. Maybe we could start seriously confronting and dealing with global warming - on an immediate and urgent basis - and since global warming is caused by the combustion of hydrocarbon fuels (oil and gas) that would mean phasing them out, immediately (as quickly as is humanly possible).
That is a possibility, and there are some (I am raising my hand) who don't think a decision to do that should really be "agonizing." The decision to do that, I think, should be "obvious."
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