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October 12, 2007

LaDuke speaks on water, environment

LaDuke speaks on water, environment

Winona "Environmental activist and former Green Party vice presidential candidate Winona LaDuke spoke at the University of Massachusetts Campus Center last night on the topics of global warming and environmental social justice.

LaDuke, an Ojibwe activist and author of the 1997 novel "Last Standing Woman," as well as several non-fiction books, is a self-described "rural economist by training" who got her degree in native economic development from Harvard University in 1982. The speech covered issues ranging from the effects of western capitalist policies on the environment to sustainable living and human rights with regards to resources.

"A lot of people think that climate change is a 'new' problem," she said. "The reality is that it is a symptom of a larger set of problems."

She stressed the importance of tackling the "daunting challenge" presented by global warming.

"We have combusted ourselves pretty much to the brink of oblivion," she said.

LaDuke placed the blame of many of the economic and environmental problems faced today on the forces of western imperialism.

"A society based on conquest is not sustainable," she said. She added that food sustenance becomes an environmental liability when the "average food product travels 1,546 miles - and I'm not talking about kiwis from Australia.

"Part of what I think we need to think about in this millennium is how to make a society that has a resonance on this earth, and not one based on empire," she said.

"We are the most wasteful society anyone has ever known," said LaDuke. "We produce 50 trillion pounds of waste each year - and that's not including waste water."

She went on to point out that over 1.7 billion people - including many in the European Union - are deprived of clean water.

"This should be a basic human right; it should not be something you have to buy," she said. "It should not be something owned by Nestle in Massachusetts."

LaDuke also addressed the overburdening of the nation's prison systems and what she described as a lack of funding for education and school meal plans.

"We need to create an industry in this society that is not based on human misery," said LaDuke, in reference to the nation's prisons, which she described as "a growth industry."

July 07, 2007

07/07/07

On 07-07-07: you can watch the Live Earth Concerts, or you can go out on a limb and get married, or you can go to the local casino to try your luck to see if those three sevens come up! All three of those are a real gamble, with the live earth concerts you are hoping people start giving a dam about the earth, getting married you hope its for love and that it lasts, and with going to a casino...well need I say more about that one!

I had my fill of casinos when I went to vegas awhile back, so I guess I will watch some of the concerts!

Was Kurt Vonnegut, one of my favorite authors, wrong when he said "I don't think people give a dam whether the planet goes on or not. It seems to me as if everyone is living as members of Alcoholics Anonymous do, day by day. And a few more days will be enough. I know of very few people who are dreaming of a world for their grandchildren."

April 22, 2007

Earth Day-2007

101 things to do to save the earth and other living things!

Na_dreamcatcher

March 25, 2007

Global Warming spurs race for arctic resources

Global Warming spurs race for arctic resources

"The latest report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says the ice cap is warming faster than the rest of the planet and ice is receding, partly due to greenhouse gases. It's a catastrophic scenario for the Arctic ecosystem, for polar bears and other wildlife, and for Inuit populations whose ancient cultures depend on frozen waters.

But some see a lucrative silver lining of riches waiting to be snatched from the deep, and the prospect of timesaving sea lanes that could transform the shipping industry the way the Suez Canal did in the 19th century."

February 17, 2007

Warmest January

January 2007: Warmest January Ever Recorded on Earth!

Global_warming
 

January 17, 2007

Yellow Bird: Climate Change impossible to ignore

Yellow Bird: Climate Change impossible to ignore

"My first thought about global warming in North Dakota and Minnesota was, “Whoopee!” Brutally cold weather makes traveling dangerous and limits outdoor adventures. A longer summer, spring and fall could mean more time for gardening and make tree-, grass- and fruit-growing here easier.

But this view is much too narrow. Polar bears that can't find food are just one of the animals that may disappear. This extinction of some plants and other living things also will result."

 

January 02, 2007

A Climate Expert

A climate expert warns '07 could be the warmest on record! 

"Kurt Vonnegut said something to the effect that our Mother Planet has an infection (that would be us), and therefore she has a fever."