Saturday, February 21, 2009

Do you want to be a Super Hero? / Qui veut être un superhéros?







(
français à suivre)

Dear member,

I know you have already made a major commitment to the Green Party of Canada. While nearly one million people voted Green in 2008, only some 12,000 across Canada have taken the step of buying a membership, volunteering time and supporting us financially. You are the heart of this party. I am writing to ask you to consider taking another large step in your commitment. Have you ever considered being a candidate? In each of the last three federal elections, over 300 average citizens have taken the leap and become Green super-heroes. We don't provide a phone booth or a cape for the quick change. Your local Green Party Electoral District Association (EDA) supplies the nomination meeting. The rest is up to you! If you have ever considered it, please give it serious thought now. We were all disappointed we did not make the break-through to the House of Commons in the last election. But we did accomplish enormous gains. We were the only party to gain support – the only party to get more votes in 2008 than in 2006. Gaining nearly one million votes and an all time high of 7% of the popular vote, puts us in a very strong position for the next election. In over 40 ridings, our candidates received over 10% of the vote, while I achieved a new high water mark in Central Nova with 32%. We are planning a much more disciplined campaign for the next federal election. And we would love you to be part of it. I would particularly like to encourage women and people from visible minority communities and First Nations to consider running as Green Party candidates. We need to better reflect the composition of the Canadian citizenry in our candidates. If you have questions, please contact me. I would be happy to answer questions about what it is like to be a candidate. Or contact your local EDA or Green Party regional organizer in your area to find out how to become a candidate and what we can offer to support you. We'll be opening the candidate nomination process by the end of the month. Thanks so much!!!





Elizabeth









Chère membre, cher membre,

Je sais que vous vous êtes déjà beaucoup investi(e) dans le Parti Vert du Canada. Si près d'un millions d'électeurs ont voté Vert en 2008, seules 12 000 personnes dans tout le Canada ont décidé d'adhérer au Parti, d'offrir leur temps et de nous soutenir financièrement. Vous êtes la force vive du Parti. Je vous écris aujourd'hui pour vous demander de penser à aller encore plus loin dans votre engagement. Avez-vous songé à être candidat(e)? Lors des trois dernières élections fédérales, plus de 300 personnes comme vous ont fait le grand saut et sont devenues des superhéros Verts. La cabine téléphonique et la cape ne sont pas comprises dans l'offre. Votre Association de circonscription électorale (ACE) s'occupe de l'assemblée d'investiture. Pour le reste, à vous de jouer! Si vous y avez déjà pensé, je vous demande aujourd'hui d'y penser sérieusement. Lors de la dernière élection, nous avons tous été déçus de ne pas obtenir de siège à la Chambre des communes. Mais nous avons quand même remporté des victoires éclatantes. Nous sommes le seul parti qui ait progressé, le seul parti qui ait obtenu plus de voix en 2008 qu'en 2006. Nous avons progressé de près d'un million de voix, avec pour la première fois de notre histoire 7 % des suffrages exprimés, ce qui nous donne une position très forte pour la prochaine élection. Dans plus de 40 circonscriptions électorales, nos candidates et candidats ont obtenu plus de 10 % des voix; quant à moi, j'ai établi un nouveau record personnel avec 32 % des voix dans la circonscription de Nova-Centre. Lors de la prochaine élection fédérale, notre campagne sera mieux structurée. Nous aimerions beaucoup que vous y participiez. Je voudrais encourager tout particulièrement les femmes, les membres des minorités et les membres des Premières nations à penser à être candidat(e)s du Parti Vert. Nous devons nous efforcer de présenter des candidates et des candidats qui reflètent mieux la diversité des Canadiennes et des Canadiens. Si vous avez des questions, n'hésitez pas à communiquer avec moi. Je me ferai un plaisir de répondre à vos questions sur le quotidien d'une candidate ou d'un candidat. Ou alors, communiquez avec votre ACEou avec l'organisatrice ou l'organisateur régional(e) du Parti Vert de votre région pour savoir comment vous pouvez devenir candidat(e) et découvrir les ressources que nous mettons à votre disposition pour vous soutenir. Le processus de nomination des candidates et des candidats commencera à la fin du mois. Merci beaucoup!!!




Elizabeth

Thursday, February 19, 2009

You spoke out about drug policy, Obama listened!



From: Causes 
Date: February 16, 2009 4:13:27 PM EST (CA)
To: Dave GreenEye <dave13greeneye@gmail.com>
Subject: You spoke out about drug policy, Obama listened!



Congrats everyone! More than 102,000 people signed the petition urging Obama to fix U.S. drug policy and he listened!

During his second week in office, Obama promised to call off the federal raids on medical marijuana patients.

Then, he instructed U.S. delegates to the United Nations to support harm reduction measures like needle exchange.

And just last week, he chose Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske as his Drug Czar. Under Kerlikowske's watch, Seattle embraced more sensible drug policies: protecting the rights of medical marijuana patients, establishing needle exchange programs, openly discussing alternatives to prohibition, and making marijuana possession the lowest priority for law enforcement.

You've already made a difference. But there's still work to be done.

Although Kerlikowske will probably be the best Drug Czar to date, it's unlikely that he'll make major reforms -- unless he hears from Americans that it's what we want. That's why we need to "brief the chief"! http://www.ssdp.org/briefthechief

All you need to do is sign the petition and send it to ten friends. It doesn't seem like much, but it'll make a big difference.

http://www.ssdp.org/briefthechief

Thanks for taking action,
Micah Daigle
Students for Sensible Drug Policy

P.S. Did you know that if you think the Drug War isn't working, you're part of the majority? 76% of Americans (231 MILLION people) know the Drug War has failed. Join the Facebook group: One Million Strong Against the Drug War
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=51018601380

Stop receiving emails about this petition.



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Green Party Convention Two Weeks Away!



From: Green Party of Canada <webadmin@greenparty.ca>
Date: February 18, 2009 6:24:09 PM EST (CA)
Subject: Green Party Convention Two Weeks Away!


Join / Devenez membre | Find your Riding / Votre circonscription | Contact Us / Contactez-nous


Dear Green Party member,

The Green Party national convention in Pictou, NS is only two weeks away and the final date for registration is almost upon us! This year's convention is full of great activities to provide members with a complete Green experience. Attendees will be treated to a wide range of speakers and entertainment, and will have the opportunity to shape the party's policy. Outside of the convention members will be welcomed by the community of Pictou, a naturally beautiful town on the coast of Nova Scotia. For more information please visit our convention website . Registration ends this Friday, February 20th so sign up today!


Your subscribed email address is dave.major@sympatico.ca.
copyright 2008 Green Party of Canada, 204-396 Cooper St., Ottawa, ON K2P 2H7
Toll-free: 1-866-868-3447 (1-866-VOTE-4-GPC)

Votre courriel d'abonnement est dave.major@sympatico.ca.
© Parti Vert du Canada, 2008, 204-396, rue Cooper, Ottawa (ON) K2P 2H7
Sans frais : 1-866-868-3447



powered by phplist v 2.10.8, © tincan ltd


Dave GreenEye

skype: davez_newz


Take Action

Social media users
Spread the word



Join the action on social networking websites.


One minute actions

Sign the KYOTOplus petition and ask your friends to jump in as well.

Sign our No New Approvals petition to put the brakes to tar sands development. 



Learn more about the day's activity

http://www.greenpeace.org/canada/en/recent/greenpeace-welcomes-president-obama









You have received this email because you are subscribed to the Greenpeace Canada Volunteer email list. To remove yourself from this list, visit this link. To update or modify your personal settings, visit this link.
For more information, visit http://www.greenpeacevolunteers.ca.





Dave GreenEye

skype: davez_newz



Climate Leaders Needed - a nicely delivered statement from Greenpeace Canada


Climate Leaders Needed

Take Action

Social media users Spread the word

Join the action on social networking websites.

One minute actions

Sign the KYOTOpluspetition and ask your friends to jump in as well. Sign our No New Approvals petition to put the brakes to tar sands development.

Dear Greenpeace supporter,

Today, Greenpeace welcomed U.S. President Obama to Ottawa by unfurling a banner on a bridge near Parliament Hill that read: "Climate Leaders Don't Buy Tar Sands".


Our activists are on-site at this VERY MOMENT! And they need your help.

Ten Greenpeace activists braved cold temperatures, wind and snow to help make sure that the discussions between President Obama and Prime Minister Harper focus on one of the most serious environmental issues facing the world — climate change.

Learn more about the day's activity

The time for action is now and we need your help in pushing that message harder, in mobilizing Canadians to demand real action from the Harper government on climate change.

We want to encourage the President to assume a leadership role in fighting global warming and to bring Harper with him.

That leadership role starts with rejecting the call from the Harper government to keep buying the dirty oil from the tar sands.

Neither Obama nor Harper supports climate change actions that are strong enough. Obama supports reducing U.S. greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, Harper supports slightly greater reductions.

Obama's commitment to reducing emissions and to green energy initiatives is welcome, especially after the no action years of the Bush administration. But he needs to do more.

Please add your voice to the tens of thousands of Canadians already opposing the tar sands and let President Obama know that the tar sands have no place in his vision for a clean, green energy economy.

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Green Facebook comment sparks debate

Camille Labchuk
posted a link to a news story. - Comment - - Share

Comment - - Share


B at 11:07am
"Don't call yourself a human if you're a rabbit"

C at 12:10pm
Ok, with all due respect, I knaw down on hunted meat or post-grass-grazing bison every once and a while....

From an environmental stand-point, it all depends on how the animal is raised (best if wild), and what your consumption levels are (i.e. if everyone even cut out meat one day a week, we'd be a whole lot more in tune with the process of sustainability).

An average American (eating commercial meat!) going vegetarian = same impact on climate change in one year as switching from a regular car to a hybrid!!!

D at 1:12pm

I agree with C, Camille. The energy and resource balances are far lower if someone were to go pluck a deer out of the woods than procuring food from even a environmentally conscience farm. The biggest reasons are wild game grow themselves, require no inputs from us humans, and disturb very little to no soil.

We eat too much meat in the West and depend far too much on concentrated groups of ruminant animals for our meat which causes too much methane. If we were to consume meat that was grown on the frames of non ruminant animals we would be much more sustainable. A field of grass is planted once, and if taken care of, doesn’t have to be plowed for decades, where as most of our annual vegetable fields need intensive tillage every year, and disturbed soil equals soil loss, even in ‘organic’ farming.

Perhaps your statement should be “Don’t call yourself an environmentalist if you regularly eat at a fast food restaurant!”

Camille Labchuk at 1:26pm

If humans began to exclusively consume wild animals instead of animals confined to factory farms, we'd very rapidly decimate wildlife even further. Animal populations everywhere are already in decline.

Obviously, eating certain types of animals causes a greater impact than eating certain others, but humanity's meat habit is one we can no longer afford. The climate costs are too great. No one needs meat. It's destroying our climate, our health and the environment so we should eat plants instead.

E at 1:47pm

On the other hand bovine excrement is one of the only substances that will restore the beneficial bacteria (humus) to soil that we have managed to sterilize (kill) through extensive usage of pesticides, herbicides, fungicides and chemical fertilizers! A case can be presented that seriously large herds of cows are needed to save the soil in North America's agricultural areas!?

F at 1:50pm

If we simply controlled our numbers a bit better, we could eat all the lovely animals we liked.

D at 1:54pm

I wasn't suggesting we eat exclusively wild animals Camille, just using that as an example and as stated before, we do eat too much meat per capita. It's not this simple fact ruminant animals are destroying our climate, it's we HUMANS on the overall growing too many of the wrong types of animals, not to mention the other taxing of resources we do. Almost 6.5 billiion humans, ikes! Right now I wish seals tasted better cause there is no shortage of them!

If we are going to survive Camille we need to quite disturbing the soil as much, it's one of those invisible detriments, urban agriculture and skyscrapers devoted to food production are going to be key factors in sustainable food production. Maybe we need to engineer ourselves to be capable of digesting grass, lol.

And for the record, I'm a big fan of veggies!

D at 2:06pm

Thank you for the comment E, and yes bovine excrement is a good source of organic matter, however it's addition alone is not nearly enough, we need to be putting almost all of our organic matter back into the land, like horse manure,composted food scraps, etc. We still produce most of our food on a linear nutrient path, meaning we mine out macro nutrients from the ground, grow food with it, we eat the food, then poop it out and it is then those nutrients are flushed away forever into our rivers or landfills in most places.

Your logic is right about cow poop, but recycled cow poop nutrients eventually leave the farm as meat or milk only to be supplanted with mined macro nutrients. I wish I could post a diagram on this, lol. Our farm does well as we have been importing large quantities of horse manure laden sawdust plus a low concentration water based nutrient source for almost a decade now and the positive effects on our soil is quite impressive.

E at 2:47pm

"Don't call your self an environmentalist if you still eat meet!" Now there's a comment to alienate people?!?
Once we can replicate the stuff...like on star Trek.. or just in a lab.. I would totally switch. But until then lets educate the people about alternative protein products instead.. diplomatically

Please check out this link from the University of Maryland http://www.newsdesk.umd.edu/scitech/release.cfm?ArticleID=1098


F at 4:13pm

"no one needs meat" - are you suggesting that no one in the world needs meat and that it is morally wrong to do so? I think you would have a very difficult time justifying that to many cultures and peoples, including the indigenous people in Canada.

i understand that eating meat contributes to increased carbon emissions. but so do the planes that take you around the country or the boats that take you to see seals in the ocean. perhaps more pertinently, so does the food you eat that doesn't come from nearby, including spices, fruits and vegetables etc. But emissions alone cannot be an argument for banning something. it has to be accompanied by more substantial benefits to the individual as well as for societies/communities, especially if you want it to become a social norm. this just doesn't do that.

F at 4:15pm

also you may disagree with it, but the science is still not saying that people should have no meat in their diet. some says maybe, some says you should actually have a bit of meat in your diet - even for carbon emission purposes.

we all have our morals and values, but we also learn that many of them are relative, not universal. sometimes we have to get off our moral high/green horses and understand that our convictions are not shared with everyone else - and that that is not a bad thing, or is it against us as individuals - it is simply diversity in beliefs, values and principles.

your goal seems honourable, i have no doubt. but i think you should lead by example.

G at 4:24pm

mmmm burgers...


H at 6:43pm

Great article!


Dave GreenEye at 7:01pm

"don't call yourself because you will get a busy signal"


Dave GreenEye at 7:02pm

Camille, do you really need to divide your followers? that seems to have been somewhat of a hardcore labeling.


H at 7:36pm

You are right of course, Camille. Environmentalist and meat eater is obviously a contradiction in terms. Perhaps if governments stopped subsidising animal rearing and murder, and your friends had to pay the real cost for the dead animals they call food, they would have second thoughts. Methane, water usage, hormones, antibiotics, manure-pits, etc mean nothing to your friends. Anything to justify current way of life! And god-forbid, you bring up conscience and compassion. they'd block you!


D at 7:38pm

Great debate! Some comments are off the cuff. . and moving on. . We all still love you Camille!!

I at 10:36pm

I think the problem here is that people do not want to admit that their own behaviors could be so harmful to the environment. I am certainly not saying that my actions are perfect to any extent, but it is all about doing the best you can and admitting your mistakes so you can improve. I personally think that it is better to cut out meat altogether (if you have the choice - I wouldn't suggest the same thing to someone who is starving) but if people cannot imagine themselves doing that but are willing to cut out meat a few times a week, we're all better off. It is better that people are open to the idea of eating less meat/vegetarianism rather than feel that all vegetarians/vegans are judgmental and unwilling to accept anything less than perfection. It may be better to live off of plant-based foods completely, but eating less meat is better than people eating meat at every meal. We all just gotta try our best! Now go eat a bean burger! :)

J at 11:24am February 18

"Don't call yourself an environmentalist if you still eat meat!"

I've thought a lot about you saying this, probably more than necessary.

I have a lot more I could say about this, I will leave it by saying that I think such a standard would disqualify a lot of people who have done a lot of tangible good for the environment.

Camille Labchuk at 11:37am

It's funny that the comments on this link revolve around my comment, rather than the substance of the article. If I had said "Don't call yourself an environmentalist if you still drive a Hummer", no one would have thought twice. Eating meat is the environmental equivalent of driving a hummer and going veg saves more emissions than switching to a hybrid. People are threatened when habits that are familiar and generally accepted are called into question. I believe speaking the truth is more important than offending others.

Given that consuming animal protein creates 18% of planetary emissions, wastes resources, pollutes water, directly causes a host of diseases (cancers, heart disease, diabetes to name a few) and causes unspeakable suffering for billions of animals, it's hard to justify on any basis. Makes more sense not to and that's all there really is to it.

J at 11:53am
Heh, that's why I thought twice about saying anything at all, I figured it was just a throw-away line that you didn't deserve to be taken to task on.

D at 1:53pm

True that Camille, the intent of your message was lost focusing on your comment. I personally don't make a point of frequenting fast food restaurants because of the high ecological foot prints involved. And it would be wonderful if more people didn't as well, but it comes down to educating people and then having them make a choice. I know where my food comes from, and most of it is local, and it does not derive from factory farms, and yes more people need to eat more veggies. See, we need more farmers, that's what it really boils down to in my opinion, these large scale concentrated farms are a product of our collective lack of respect for where our food comes from and the perceived need to have 'cheap food' at any cost, the problem is more of the process than the product, most veggies are produced in large scale models too. We need a major reconnect. For those of us who are much more aware about food systems we need to reach out and educate in a constructive manner.

D at 1:56pm

And what if the Hummer had an electric motor that derives its energy from wind and solar, then that Hummer is not what we consider a Hummer to be in today's society. Just about everything is relative.

Dave GreenEye at 2:44pm

or the Hummer is made of cardboard, like the Trabant (was my first car), and goes on vegetable oil, like Frank's car...