Showing posts with label Lucky '13. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lucky '13. Show all posts

Saturday, 27 April 2013

WAKE UP CANADA!

(A-and good news from Tim DeChristopher too - below.)                            Up, Down.                   Good News!   
I got this yesterday (by email) from the Canadian Youth Climate Coalition: It's Time to Wake Up Canada! You can visit their website to Sign Up NOW! as the banner urges you to do; and there is a Facebook page. [you may note that there has never been a link to Facebook previously on this blog if that means anything.]
Wake Up Canada!Wake Up Canada!Wake Up Canada!
What can be done to support them in this excellent endeavour? 
The email mentions Melina Laboucan-Massimo and Sam Harrison - you might want to get to know them a little better:
Melina Laboucan-Massimo.Melina Laboucan-Massimo with George Poitras & David Schindler.Sam Harrison at JRP in 2013.Sam Harrison at JRP in 2013.
A video of Sam Harrison at the JRP earlier this year; and a transcript. He is quite a remarkable 16 year old.

A video of Melina Laboucan-Massimo speaking briefly about the tar sands & Keystone; and speaking at the rally in Victoria in October 2012.

There were more than 8,000 Ontario high school students at the WFCU Centre in Windsor on Wednesday to kick it off - that's what 8,000 people look like:
Wake Up Canada David Suzuki April 25 2013.Wake Up Canada David Suzuki April 25 2013.Wake Up Canada David Suzuki April 25 2013.Wake Up Canada David Suzuki April 25 2013.
You can see a few minutes of the event here; and a report in the local newspaper: Suzuki rallies local students to fix the environment. 
We know some of these courageous young people already. The brave souls who turned their backs on Peter Kent in Durban; the beautiful (and tiny) young woman who held up her STOP HARPER! sign in the House of Commons:
CYD in Durban 2010.CYD in Durban 2010.Brigette DePape in the House of Commons 2011.
There are many more - and they are showing us the way. I am also thinking of the kids in Waglisla in April fasting to protest the JRP hearings there (see these short videos: Day 1, Day 2, and Day 3).

We must do all that we can do to help prepare them and ourselves to WAKE CANADA UP on May 30th. It's Lucky '13, yes!

God bless 'em!
[And I don't say that very often anymore either.]

Be well. 
Tim DeChristopher.Tim DeChristopher on Earth Day in Salt Lake City.This seems too important to save:

Tim DeChristopher's speech at Powershift 2011 is an inspiration to me - that the movement is broken and must be fixed and indeed can easily be fixed when the will arrives.

He was released from prison the day before Earth Day and gave this interview.
Tim DeChristopher on Earth Day in Salt Lake City.Tim DeChristopher on Earth Day in Salt Lake City.[I don't appreciate Democracy Now very much so it is a 3/4 excerpt of this - the rudeness in the closing is still evident.]

A movie, Bidder 70 is now available; the trailer looks good; for some reason the website is slow to answer (?) but perseverance eventually took me there to buy a copy; the movie was streamed on Earth Day apparently but I didn't know about it.

This 'not knowing' is worthy of comment since it seems to me to be one of the major deficits of the 'movement'. The Internet is mostly compost but it IS good for communication particularly through email - so why didn't I know? I'll leave it with you.

A possibly useful link to Peaceful Uprising.

I am some glad to see him out (some is a modifier used in certain maritime dialects to indicate really-really-REALLY). Yes sir! 

Sunday, 10 February 2013

Trying to nail down a blob of mercury; Clutching at straws; Whatever.

or: Wha ... ?    said Jack the lad.                                                                         Up, Down.           Year of the Snake 

¡Ya basta!I'm sorry gentle reader ... It's a bust. I blew it! Lucky '13 nothin'! (Joking, sort of :-) Sliding back into a familiar holding pattern. My son thinks I am (just) waiting to die. This is not the case, but yes, I am waiting ("Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?" ... "No sir, I do not bite my thumb at you sir, but I bite my thumb, sir.") and it has almost always been this way, separated by episodes of extreme good luck.    Theme music from our Lennie I guess: 'Light As The Breeze' (out of context of course) and sung this time by Billy Joel (or himself if you prefer).

[A-and, yes, there is a man somewhere here beneath this resplendent chemise. The only false line I can find in it is "I've lived too long on my knees," not exactly 'false' either, off, out of place? in the wrong song? whatever ...]

¡Ya basta!The process of psychotherapy was once explained to me as undoing a snarl one loop at a time (answer: as long as it takes). "You got to pick up every stitch." ... Al Kooper or Joan Jett, Julie Driscoll, Savannah Grace, Lou Rawls ... whatever ... you can run but you can't hide. This is a door, like Kafka's, made only for you and it will be right there waiting.

In broad strokes what I am setting out to do here is ... Uh Oh! ... Can't remember! For a moment there it all seemed to fit into a sort of pattern ... now it's gone. Maybe it'll be back? 
The Gods Must Be Crazy (1980), I watched it with my kids. There was a small 'extra' on one of the CDs with a sequence about the evils of acquisitiveness among the women which I have never been able to find again - something about a sewing kit and a trunk? I have gone on here before about N!xau, the star of that movie: in 2006 and again in 2009. This time it is a (slightly more realistic) film: The Great Dance (2000) by South Africans Craig and Damon Foster. At one point (luck being frequently in the front part of the brain these days) someone says 'good luck'; here is a tiny clip of it: K'waa. (There is also the moment when someone says of a hunter who has had success, "His wife will like him tonight," which captures my imagination. :-)

Oupa Dawid Kruiper (1935-2012) and some of his family:
Oupa Dawid Kruiper 1935-2012.Oupa Dawid Kruiper 1935-2012.Oupa Dawid Kruiper w grandson Dawid.Daughter Kalai Kruiper.
This k'waa/luck is in the click language, called N|u or N|uu or Nǁng or =Khomani, nearly extinct. (This turns out to be incorrect, there are more languages among the bushmen than these. See below.)

In the process of trying to spell 'k'waa' properly (the anal retentive phase kickin' in) I am brought (through the kindness of an Internet correspondent) to Bradford Keeney and several books of his on Khomani San spirituality:
         1999 Kalahari Bushmen Healers,
         2003 Ropes to God: Experiencing the Bushman Spiritual Universe, and,
         2010 The bushman way of tracking God. 
I am suspicious of Keeney; he is too California-handsome; the books, even second-hand at Abe's, are too expensive for my current situation; BUT his early work, Aesthetics of Change (1983) is avaliable on-line; and in Chapter 1 the Introduction, is this nugget:
       During this time I taught a course in a small midwestern college on Carlos Castaneda. My first lecture presented material that 'proved' the authenticity of Castaneda's anthropological work. I reminded the class that Castaneda had received an MA and PhD from the Department of Anthropology at UCLA for his field research. All skeptical questions from the students were met with "convincing evidence" drawn from several books about the Castaneda phenomena (de Mille, 1976. 1980; Noel, 1976). The class session ended and stunned faces left the room wondering what it would mean to accept the proposition that such an alternative world of experience could be encountered.
       The second session began with an apology: I asked the students to forgive me for playing a trick on them. I announced that the Castaneda books were a hoax and that my aim in the previous session had been to show the class how easily they could be persuaded by 'authoritative' statements to accept an irrational story. Other evidence that I now introduced clearly "proved" the falseness of Castaneda's account and suggested that he had borrowed ideas for his invented account from the psilocybic visions of the botanist Robert Gordon Wasson. I added that Castaneda had on numerous occasions admitted making up the whole thing. The class then discussed how they had been tricked into believing in the authenticity of the stories.
       A week later I apologized again. This time I confessed to having previously deceived them by presenting a one·sided argument against Castaneda's work in the same way I had earlier argued for its authenticity. I explained that it was necessary to set them up as I had so that we could reach a point where more profound questions could be articulated. Several problematic issues were now apparent: What criteria for distinguishing fact from fiction are inherent in particular contexts? Does the fiction-nonfiction dichotomy itself arise from a particular world view? How real is real?
[Having noted on the very flyleaf a mis-quote of ee cummings. ... Well, we are all bunglers eh? The guy he mentions, Gordon Wasson, is worth looking up in Wikipedia, the 'discoverer' of silly-sibes apparently. More to come on Mr. Keeney (maybe) when I have had a chance to read some of his books.] 
Ouma Anna Swarts.
So ... this mental landscape becomes a palimpsest where romantic & sentimental notions, simple mistakes, intentional & self-serving (psychologically or economically or both) obfuscation, are step-by-step reduced to something more like essentials. A long process unlooping snags - but a Bahá'í might say a successful conclusion is ... inevitable?

[I have no idea if this is enough for you to see what I am trying to get at: trying to describe a therapy, a way forward involving neither palliative nor any Christian evolution towards human perfection; trying ... but the returning silence is that absolute; someone took me into a zero-echo room at a sound studio one time, that level of silence is what I get back from this blog.]

It is a similar, comparable, energy that drives ideologies such as the politically correct insistence on accentuating the positive, or the vicious downward spiral devolution of some relativisms, or inverted dismissiveness of anything even remotely ad hominem; leading respectively to superficial idiocy, total paralysis, and refusal to see human beings eating, shitting, fucking and so on.   Similar, comparable, but not the same, no.

Judgement Day - May 21, 2011.Does it reduce the story of The Good Samaritan in any way to excise it from pious scriptural reverence? Is the delight I take in snowstorms any less because I am no longer 100% convinced that either the storm or this universe is driven by God?

There are many pitfalls, and in this culture of mirrors not enough of them influence reproduction (and consequently evolution - see The Darwin Awards). 
February 2011: Snowmageddon!February 2013: Nemo.There was a snowstorm recently here in Toronto. Delightful! Not a lot of snow, a few inches - maybe 10 over a couple of days; still, it was the biggest of the year so far. It is being compared with a storm in 2011 which got christened 'Snowmageddon' - which wasn't much either, the name turned out to be ironic. This one is unofficially 'Nemo' (meaning 'no one'). Not a whit less beautiful for any of that.

The one that finally stops food getting into the city one day in a not too hypothetical future and reduces the city's life expectancy to single digit days probably won't even have a name.

Ah ... forgot to finish about k'waa - turns out it is not =Khomani at all, maybe Khoekhoe or !Xoon. Someone who understands these languages tells me that it maybe sounds more like, "This is hard man!" or, "I am sick and tired of doing this." Probably felt like a good idea at the time for the directors to embellish.

And that was not the only adjustment of perception for the sake of good film. Louis Liebenberg who seems to be some kind of tracker/anthropologist had his name taken off the credits (see: Persistence Hunting by Modern Hunter-Gatherers, 2006).

Just imagine for a moment that we went about telling each other what was actually happening? Even approximately.

A footnote on notions of progress from Gwynne Dyer: Tyrants are still with us, but we’re making progress, Friday February 8 (also at Georgia Strait). 
Equivocating with the FAO:    For several years I have been watching the Global Food Price Index (FPI) - a useful tool. It used to come to me monthly in a .pdf attached to an email newsletter. Then the newsletter got dropped and the helpful little graph got buried on the website with nothing directing you there unless you know where it is (or none that I can find). Here: World Food Situation / FAO Food Price Index.

FAO Food Price Index to January.So naturally I wondered about this? If you follow later entries to the FAO tag on this blog you can see some of that wondering.

I do still have residual faith in this Abdolreza Abbassian fellow, so eventually I sent him a polite email asking. I had an answer from a functionary, apparently annoyed at the question, denying that such a thing was happening at all. Evidence is evidence but you'll never get a straight answer from a bureaucrat unless you've got him pinned (and who can be bothered anymore).

On the other issue he said, "With regard to the drought in the United States last year, the crop which suffered most from this was maize (corn), which is just one of the 55 commodities which make up the FAO Food Price Index ..." He may be right, probably is, certainly is. The problem that remains for me is that he has not demonstrated his points in terms of the questions asked. If diverting some portion of this crop to ethanol production has such an effect, how can the drought not?

I guess I have to add more salt to the news. But something in all of this leaves me uneasy. ... I don't trust bureaucrats - though I like some of them. 
Spurious Clues:    Maybe it's the clues and maybe it's the hope engendered by them. Which is worse I wonder?   (Ah, that's interesting, 'spurious' refers primarily to illegitimate children - I thought it was places marked on maps which don't exist, or only exist sometimes.)

Anyway, what went before was setting (or trying to set) the stage for somehow finding a more balanced view of Idle No More, Teresa Spence et al. ... (Barack Obama too but I'll wait until the State of the Union coming up on Tuesday; then there will be three recent speeches to consider.)

Let's put Theresa Spence to bed up front:   The thing about guys like Ezra Levant is obvious right? They use cherry-picked and approximately true statements in a fugue of inuendo and exaggerated conclusions. Bullshit, but it works. The same happens on the other side: I sat in a lecture hall at UofT about a year ago and listened to Ron Plain tell the "Why do Natives hate snow?" joke (Because it's white and it's on their land).

There is a rich and misleading mythology in this zone: that Natives have a more profound relationship with nature; that there was a golden age represented in such as The Gods Must Be Crazy; that Residential Schools were unmitigated evil; ... the list goes on.

When I heard about Theresa Spence's hunger strike I thought there was a light showing at the end of the tunnel and went for it. When I saw that I could go up to Dundas Square on January 1st New Year's Day and somehow participate, I expected ten thousand and showed up on my useless old feet just to see 'em; and when the dance began in the middle of the intersection I thought, "Yehp! This is the real stuff!"

It wasn't. They soon moved - and I followed - onto the un-shoveled square itself. Other, more serious disillusionments arrived on schedule. 
I have excerpted a few sentences from this news report from Montreal which sum up the situation for me:
       The protesters, many wearing the red square associated with the student movement, said they are opposed to plans for new mining projects in northern Quebec.
       Marie Lys, a 25-year-old from Montreal, said the demonstrations are in solidarity with the Idle No More movement.
       “We want to keep our resources and protect the environment and the resources that we have belong first and foremost to aboriginal people,” she said.
All good, but Idle No More doesn't want to stop mining development. Nor does Theresa Spence - witness her involvement in ending the blockade of the diamond miner's winter road. None of them quite manage to put the environment on the front burner; because the force is mostly for getting what the unions have already got (and are trying desperately to hang onto), viz a share of the increasingly nightmarish Canadian dream. Not that they don’t deserve it. And labour, the large ally of the left, on the street in numbers, 15,000 or so in Toronto recently, some say 30,000 (maybe it was 10,000, I was there), and ... well ... OK. No one wants to see anyone either not get the toys they want or lose the ones they've got. (I'm sorry kids, but the toybox really is closing.)

An alliance between any of these groups (and such individuals as Theresa Spence and Raymond Robinson) and the environmental movement is ... problematic.

Here's another nail in the coffin: First nations carving out an energy bridge to the B.C. coast.

Frustrating! Whatever ... They did set a good example of how to go about it. They opened a door. 
Belo Sun Mining Corp., Canada (BSX:CN).A small & probably temporary victory - Belo Sun stock losing value:

News came through about the MPF evaluation of Belo Sun's Volta Grande project: from Amigos da Terra, Globo, Jornal Fatos Regionais (blog), and WD Notícias.

The source documents from Ministério Público Federal / Procuradoria da República no Pará are dated in January - I guess they were not released until they had been processed somehow:
     Recomendação Nº 001/2013/GAB1, January 14, and
     Recomendação Nº 002/2013/GAB1, January 21.

Both originating with Thaís Santi Cardoso da Silva & Meliza Alves Barbosa, Procuradoras da República; and both asking that SEMA (Secretaria Estadual de Meio Ambiente) not issue licences to Belo Sun until certain conditions are met.

The main SEMA website appears to be hacked so I can't provide links.

Bottom line:    Belo Sun drops 7% as doubts over $1 billion Amazon gold mine creep in, Frik Els, February 7 2013; with a note included that the stock is down 19% over a month. The Globe chart shows it coming back a bit; have to wait and see if SEMA picks up the ball. (?)

No pictures of Thaís Santi or Meliza Barbosa (yes, they are bureaucrats and yes, I am praising them) anywhere that I can find, but their emails are listed here so in a few days you can send them a Valentine's Day card (nevermind it is not celebrated in Brazil in February). 
Cod is a noun referring to a kind of fish; a-and it is also a verb meaning to trick, fool, pull your leg (or push it if you are in Latin America).

I don't spend much time thinking of it anymore, but it turns up. John Crosbie recently posed for these pictures with an old friend of mine; they came to me in the mail, and turning over the ol' compost pile after looking at them I came upon this in the CBC Archives. The ads for cars and cell phones on the CBC piss me off so I put up a (hand-held) copy on YouTube: John Crosbie in Bay Bulls Canada Day 1992.   He says, "Why are you yelling at me? I didn't take the fish from the God damn water! So don't go abusing me!"    Why indeed ...

John Crosbie & Gerry.John Crosbie & Gerry.I wouldn't be so rude as to put this here except that I also watched a fairly recent interview of John Crosbie by Rex Murphy - and the way he still brags, after all this time, about being somehow courageous in confronting his electors that day chokes me. He was deeply culpable, along with most of the fishermen facing him. I think I can legitimately comment here because I did a few shifts in the Newfie inshore fishery - when there was one - and found my colleagues just as well attached to their toys as the OFL folks (not all of ‘em mind you, the guy I fished with being an exception).

It was not God who brought about the end of the cod. Surely by the 1990's Crosbie, as a Minister of the fecking Crown had someone on his staff who told him what James Hansen was saying in Washington in 1988? If not, why not? Lots of people knew, credible people, and said so, and he didn't listen - he was busy building Canada's dragger fleet. Another footnote from Gwynne Dyer: Mackerel wars in the North Atlantic. 
Naomi Klein, changes over time:   (For reference: NaomiKlein.org.)

1999: World Trade Organization Conference in Seattle, November.
    : No Logo published December.
2000: Interview on TVO with Allan Gregg (25 minutes), January 30.
2001: 9/11.
2004: The Take w English subtitles (9 segments 10 minutes each).
    : Baghdad Year Zero, September 1st in Harper's.
2007: The Shock Doctrine published.
    : Disaster Capitalism, October in Harper's.
    : Charlie Rose Interview (30 minutes), December 28.
2008: panel w Hernando de Soto & Joseph Stiglitz, October 20th (1 hour).
2010: Shout Out at Massey Hall June 25.
    : G20 Toronto June 26–27.
2012: Powershift 2012 in Ottawa (30 minutes), October 27.
    : Interview with Bill Moyers, November 15 (30 minutes).

Waiting now (in anticipation) for her upcoming book - and hoping it is not more of the same blancmange we have just had from Al Gore!    Interesting remark from Halle Lasn about our Naomi in the Globe:
But then, he says with unmasked disdain, “all the lefty luminaries – [Slavoj] Zizek and Naomi Klein and all of those people suddenly sort of appeared there in Zuccotti Park and tried to be part of it.”
Not so in Naomi's case at least - I watched her learning how to use the People's Mic and was impressed - everyone was learning. Never heard of Slavoj Žižek - here he is in Wikipedia. 
Can (Will?) Corporations help?

The curious case of Climate Week's disappearing EDF logo saying, "Campaigners No Dash for Gas claim victory, Climate Week denies it," and asking, "Can corporate sponsorship of green campaigns ever be squared?"

Short answer: No. (Also see: No Dash for Gas – the new, chimney-climbing face of climate direct action in which the sub-text is decreasing interest, raising the question - again - about whether the environmental movement can or will help either?)

Around Jambi, Sumatra, Indonesia.Around Jambi, Sumatra, Indonesia.The end run began last year: APP establishes deforestation moratorium in Jambi; greens remain skeptical. Now it's Leading paper firm pledges to halt Indonesian deforestation: "Asia Pulp and Paper will end the clearing of forest across its supply chain by preserving high-carbon stock rainforests." And here: The beginning of the end of deforestation in Indonesia?

Horsecock! Bollocks! The only way APP could do this is by closing shop and getting out of the business they are in, doh; unless they make paper like the tailors in The Emperor's New Clothes (very comparable to David Keith and his bogus CSS story).

Some of the beneficiaries are pictured there to the right - except that the world they are smiling about may turn out to be a living hell by the time they take it over. They're too young to understand that they're being cruelly tricked. 
Remember when pictures of forest rape like that came from k-k-Canada? Nothing has really changed.

Here, check this out: Grande Cache, Alberta, home of the Milner coal generating plant recently coddled by our so-called 'Environment Minister' Peter Mansbridge ... and also home of the Canadian Death Race (symmetry is everywhere at all levels). Those are not all clouds in the upper right there (you may have to turn on 'Satellite' view), they are clearcuts. Oh sure, the 'forest industry' has largely abandoned Grande Cache these days, right. But they left their mark on it eh? And they are hard at it elsewhere.
Grande Cache Alberta from far.Grande Cache Alberta from closer.Grande Cache Alberta from farther.Grande Cache Alberta from some 'then'.
Still, I am sure it seems to the 3,500 or so who live there that the frontier is largely undiminished. And getting these folks to vote against 'development' is a no-brainer non starter. Hell! Getting them out to vote at all!
 
The Enbridge team.The Enbridge team.
Enbridge CEO 2001-2012 Pat Daniel.Enbridge CEO 2001-2012 Pat Daniel.Enbridge CEO 2001-2012 Pat Daniel.
Enbridge CEO 2012- Al Monaco.Enbridge CEO 2012- Al Monaco.Enbridge CEO 2012- Al Monaco.
A luncheon in Edmonton with the oil barons:

1) The luncheon chat: on the Enbridge website or YouTube, Wednesday January 30 (7 minutes) with some interesting slides.

 

2) The clock is ticking on proposed pipeline projects: Enbridge CEO. Al Monaco says other nations could beat Canadian producers in the race to supply growing Asian oil market. Uh Oh!

 

3) After a harsh lesson in crude economics, new pipelines now biggest issue for country, says Enbridge CEO. He says (off camera), “The opposers are now focused on pipelines, but they are trying to stop energy development generally.” Got that right.

 

The people in that top photograph are: Al Monaco, Patrick D. Daniel, J. Richard Bird, David T. Robottom, Bonnie D. DuPont, Stephen J.J. Letwin, & Stephen J. Wuori. Out of date, a changed team in place now but with the same mentality. 
Real Climate: 2012 Updates to model-observation comparions, Gavin Schmidt, 7 February 2013.

How well did Hansen et al. (1988) do?How well did Hansen et al. (1988) do?
Towards the end he asks, "How well did Hansen et al. (1988) do?" The answer, "... while this simulation was not perfect, it has shown skill in that it has out-performed any reasonable naive hypothesis that people put forward in 1988 (the most obvious being a forecast of no-change)."

Hansen's 1988 paper is available on-line" Global Climate Changes as Forecast by Goddard Institute for Space Studies Three-Dimensional Model, J. Hansen, I Fung, A. Lacis, D. Rind, S. Lebedeff, R. Ruedy, & G. Russell, August 20 1988. From the abstract (because you need this to understand the graph): "Scenario A assumes continued exponential trace gas growth, scenario B assumes a reduced linear growth of trace gases, and scenario C assumes a rapid curtailment of trace gas emissions such that the net climate forcing ceases to increase after the year 2000."

Gavin Schmidt's bottom line: "The conclusion is the same as in each of the past few years; the models are on the low side of some changes, and on the high side of others, but despite short-term ups and downs, global warming continues much as predicted." 
“Getting and spending we lay waste our powers.” ... Who said that? ... Oh yeah, Wordsworth ... he also wrote, “up-gathered now like sleeping flowers,” a footnote for the environmental movement in that (if a bit out of context).

This went on waaay too long, sorry gentle reader. The devil made me do it.

Be well.
  
Down.

Saturday, 26 January 2013

Lucky '13    (Mark II.)

Heal our broken selves.        (Mark I is here.)                                                     Up, Down.                        Wolf Moon 

The bottom line is this: not until we have a plan to heal the planet that also heals our broken selves and our broken communities do we have a hope of preventing this most dire of all crises, and our job is to begin to imagine - quickly - what that wholistic healing process might look like.”

              Naomi Klein at Powershift 2012 in Ottawa (video, 30 minutes).

Watch the video a couple'a times; listen carefully to her; read that quote until you have got it straight; and then skip the rest of this gentle reader. Take a break. Meditate on it. 
Naomi Klein at Toronto Police Headquarters, 2010.Naomi Klein at Occupy Wall Street, 2011.Naomi Klein at Occupy Wall Street, 2011.Naomi Klein, 42 years old. Here's her website.

Scott Parkin (you can get to know him a bit better in this very short video) quotes Naomi: “The climate movement needs to have one hell of a comeback,” in Harnessing Rebel Energy – Making Green A Threat Again, 18 January 2013; from Counterpunch & Earth First News. Reading this prompted me to re-read the source: Capitalism vs. the Climate from The Nation, November 9, 2011.

Which led me (by a commodius vicus of recirculation) to the Power Shift video above - which then    blew my mind. (!)    My only criticism is that she doesn't mention population - hesitated to do it maybe, for obvious reasons.

An exercise in understanding is to read Scott Parkin's article, then Naomi Klein's essay, and then come back to Scott Parkin for a quick 'compare & contrast'. I file things in that Addenda thing because (for me who is easily distracted) the pop-ups and advertising shit get in the way of reading; and also so they won't disappear or have the URLs change quite so quickly; and one of the aspects of doing it is to have to read the text repeatedly, intimately.

In Capitalism vs. the Climate she references 'Cool dudes: The denial of climate change among conservative white males in the United States' by Aaron McCright & Riley Dunlap - several times in fact; so here (for the sake of completeness) it is at Science Direct for $31.50, or this free & open copy at University of Colorado Boulder. 
Naomi Klein & family at Power Shift, 2012.I was not always a fan of Naomi Klein; in fact I was a grumbling-arsehole critic (a white male of a certain background & experience y'unnerstan). It started before No Logo, early-mid 90's sometime, some article of hers set me off, must have been when she was at 'This Magazine' ... and then later on I read 'No Logo' and was not impressed. Someone asked me why - and - I can't remember anymore. All my papers from those days have been lost and I don't have a copy of the book anymore either ... so. More recently I tried to read The Shock Doctrine and was put off by the ideology - she seemed to be so pretty and so certain, a bourgeois princess with perfect pitch in the key of politically correct.

Then I saw her in 2010 during the G20 here in Toronto; and followed her, along with about 1,000 others, from Massey Hall up to Allan Gardens. She hit the grace note so perfectly, and so humbly, I could not resist: all she said was, "I'm going to take a walk up to Allan Gardens when this is over to see how it's going there, and if you want to come along, feel free." I began to change my opinion; and when I read her long article Capitalism vs. the Climate the first time in 2011 I was about turned around.

No one likes to change their opinion, especially when it is curmudgeonly and imperfect, maybe even shameful; but there you go, that's how this all happened as well as I can remember. 
She is in the index here half a dozen times, so when it was all done and dusted I followed up on 'maybe even shameful' and went to have a closer look at the past, the trajectory.

Uh oh!

At least nine times it turns out: Wednesday September 9 2009,   Saturday September 12 2009,   Sunday June 13 2010,   Sunday July 25 2010,   Sunday March 27 2011,   Wednesday July 13 2011,   Sunday October 2 2011,   Sunday October 9 2011,   Tuesday January 15 2012.

Whew! What a struggle! Google Search don't work worth shit (using double quotes in the blog Search box has no effect). I was sure I had mentioned her Pied Piper routine at Massey Hall but ... can't find it. And Blogger has changed the way the <P> tag is interpreted so the posts I touched (to insert a link) all got gibbled and the HTML had to be repaired (follow the </P> with an '&nbsp' non-breaking space, intuitively obvious) in many many places.

Another Odyssey: reviewing old opinions and statements (some of them quite scurrilous & loutish) can be humbling. Any lesson in humility is good I guess. See Negative Resilience below. Maybe someone else also remembers Brian Mulrooney saying, "we had to adjust our perceptions," during some election campaign.

I'm sorry gentle reader to have learned so little that I just ... carry on. 
Across this table lately:
Barack Obama a lame ... liberal:


Map of Keystone adjustment.
Russ Girling, CEO of Transcanada.Russ Girling, CEO of Transcanada.Dave Heineman, Governor of Nebraska.

1) Barack Obama's Second Inaugural Address (complete, 20 minutes), the bit on climate (1.5 minute clip from about 11:45), & the transcript; "We, the people ..." a rhetorical mantra ... Ommmmm ...

 

2) How serious is Barack Obama about climate change?, Suzanne Goldenberg, Monday 21 January 2013;

 

3) Obama under pressure after Nebraska governor signs off on Keystone XL, Suzanne Goldenberg, Tuesday 22 January 2013 7pm;

 

4) Obama stalls for time after Nebraska approves Keystone XL oil pipeline, Suzanne Goldenberg, Tuesday 22 January 2013 11pm;

 

5) Governor of Nebraska Backs Route for Pipeline, John Broder, January 22, 2013, which includes this sentence: "The decision came a day after Mr. Obama made an assertive pledge in his Inaugural Address to tackle climate change in his second term." The only victory here being in the structure of the sentence - that Keystone is now expected to implicitly connect with climate change.

 

6) A rally is being planned for February 17, President's Day, in Washington DC by 350, The Sierra Club, and the Hip-Hop Caucus. Another 17 hour bus ride? Dunno.

 
 
Margaret Wente, a lame self-serving woman of a certain age:

1) Global warming stopped 16 years ago, reveals Met Office report quietly released... and here is the chart to prove it, David Rose, 13 October 2012;

 

2) Whatever happened to global warming?, Margaret Wente, January 24 2013;

 

3) Debunking the Denial: “16 Years of No Global Warming”, Phil Plait, Monday, January 14, 2013;

 

4) Global warming over the last 16 years (2 minute video), John Cook, 7 January 2013;

 

5) Short term trends: Another proxy fight, Gavin Schmidt, 1 November 2012.

 
 
I really don't want to mention Ezra Levant - any publicity being good publicity in that realm - but this longish video is interesting on all sides. And if he is going to be mentioned, I guess it's fitting to couple him with Wente.

I would like to be able to encounter Margaret Wente or Ezra Levant, or that guy from the anti-wind group, Daryl Hemingway, and stand up to them - short answer is: I can't. Tom Flanagan is another one; he gets his oar in here: Native talks with the Crown challenge Canada’s very existence. By all means! 
Nicholson, Heatwave in Australia: 44 degrees / It's all the fault of the greens ya know ...Boris Johnson, a lame hard-right wannabe:

1) It’s snowing, and it really feels like the start of a mini ice age, Boris Johnson, 20 January 2013;

 

2) Boris Johnson says snow casts doubt on climate change science, Leo Hickman, Monday 21 January 2013.

 
 
Ria Voorhar.Lauri Myllyvirta.2015 or 2020, not that much much to choose really:

1) China and Australia top list of 'carbon bomb' projects, Oliver Milman, Tuesday 22 January 2013;

 

2) Point of No Return - The massive climate threats we must avoid, Ria Voorhar & Lauri Myllyvirta, January 2013.

 
 
Kal.Kal.
UK vs. EU:    "Fog in Channel: Continent cut off." (an island nation)

1) David Cameron's speech, 23 January 2013 (40 minutes); transcript, the offending remark: "... we need to examine whether the balance is right in so many areas where the European Union has legislated including on the environment ..." (somewhere in Principle #3);

 

2) EU referendum: Climate efforts could be 'collateral damage', warn MEPs, Arthur Neslen, Thursday 24 January 2013;

 

3) David Cameron's EU speech is grave news for our environment, Tony Juniper, Friday 25 January 2013;

 

4) Britain’s Prime Minister Defends Decision to Seek Vote on European Union, David Jolly, January 24, 2013 (which does not mention the environment);

 

5) United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) petition; UKIP Environmental policy (2008) "UKIP accepts that the world’s climate changes, but we are the first party to take a sceptical stance on man-made global warming claims."; European Citizens' Initiative petition "We Demand Affordable Energy!";

 

6) EU carbon price crashes to record low, Damian Carrington, Thursday 24 January 2013 - It fell to €2.81 ($3.81CDN) from ~€17 in 2010. So what? It had to be $1,000 & Fee & Dividend to do any good!;

 

 
Theresa Spence Thursday January 24.Bob Rae, Danny Metatawabin, Raymond Robinson.OH MY, I knew right away, almost at the beginning that she wasn't gonna pull it off - as I watched that first interview (the first one I saw) and she played the money card; and Raymond Robinson cinched it.

I didn't say, because I    hoped - superstitious simpleton that I am - not for their deaths but for a ... miracle, understanding, on all sides. Some of my feelings are echoed in Naomi Klein's Globe article.

Theresa Spence & Raymond Robinson folded, gave it up for some bullshit bureaucrat's blancmange; here, read it and weep: Declaration of Commitment - January 23, 2013. "First Nations: Working Towards Fundamental Change," thirteen points (A daemonic parody of Lucky '13? Is that it?) ... Bah! And Bob Rae gets his ol' clamdigger in there (reported in the Globe & Postmedia/Canada.com/Regina Leader-Post).    Bollocks!

BUT this does not diminish that they opened a door. Curious; I used that phrase 'opened a door' with someone I know and she thought I meant opening a door into native culture or 'ways' or something - which is not it at all.

What I mean is that they demonstrated the power of courage combined with an effective tactic (including someone trustworthy at your back).

And they did their best, in the face of the full force of bourgeois inertia, external & internal, bore the brunt. Too bad it's not about one version or another of 'economic development' aka growth. Close but no cigar, oh well. 
CALL TO ACTION!   NO LINE 9!
A hardy handful showed up at City Hall, some familliar faces. When it wound up, three of us decided to walk over to Moss Park en route to Allan Gardens.
Demonstration against Enbridge Line 9 at Toronto City Hall, Saturday January 26 2013.Demonstration against Enbridge Line 9 at Toronto City Hall, Saturday January 26 2013.Demonstration against Enbridge Line 9 at Toronto City Hall, Saturday January 26 2013.
Several hundred, maybe 500 by the time the march got underway, were gathered at Moss Park. A percussion corps played while people ate the delicious hot lunch provided free, coffee too. We were joined by another smaller rally of teachers before we got to Allan Gardens.
Gathering at Moss Park for OCAP rally, Saturday January 26 2013.Gathering at Moss Park for OCAP rally, Saturday January 26 2013.Gathering at Moss Park for OCAP rally, Saturday January 26 2013.
Another handful, more familliar faces, were waiting at Allan Gardens with a banner and some large bird puppets wearing 'NO LINE 9' accessories.
Allan Gardens.Allan Gardens.
Someone told me there were 30,000 in the rally by the time we were on our way to Maple Leaf Gardens and this has been repeated by the social media - so maybe it was 10-15,000. 
For a few moments in front of Maple Leaf Gardens the crowd roared, as one. I had never heard such a thing before - it felt louder than a football crowd in the Maracanã. Awesome! Hit me right in the 0'th chakra.

The short answer is that (in Toronto) 10-20, maybe 50, will come out for the environment, 500 or so will muster for the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP), and an order of magnitude or two more for Sid Ryan (Doh!?) and the Ontario Federation of Labour (OFL). There were about as many anti-wind placards in the OFL march as there were to stop Enbridge's Line 9 reversal! Disheartening.

So.     ...     There are a number of lessons to be learned here. Many of them are impertinent so I'll spare you. Anyway you should be able to figgure them out for yourself. F'rinstance, ask (quietly and to yourself of course): Exactly what do the civil service unions want?

Stop Line 9 near Yonge & Finch.Stop Line 9 near Yonge & Finch.There was something going on up at Yonge & Finch too but no idea how it turned out; more later maybe ... Ah! Some pictures of it here (thanks to Amelia for letting me know): Stop Line 9.

Loose Ends:

I want to find out who paid for that OCAP lunch and give them some support.

Greg Renouf and his photographer sidekick Frank showed up at the OCAP rally - and for some reason I do not understand they were asked to leave (on the ridiculous charge of 'security'), they didn't. I am wondering about this ... 
"If a law is unjust, a man is not only right to disobey it, he is obligated to do so," (Thomas Jefferson, slave owner).

Syllogism:   An argument expressed or claimed to be expressible in the form of two propositions called the premisses, containing a common or middle term, with a third proposition called the conclusion, resulting necessarily from the other two (OED). Or check out Wikipedia. Sort'a like means & extremes. Out-of-date in some circles, old fashioned.

Justice or Just Us?     Couple'a tunes for y'all: Neil Young Bound For Glory & Leonard Cohen (watch out for the ad) Always.

Negative resilience:   This could be two posts in one: A vanishing point, to beyond the zero vs. a possibility for change & even a kinda-sorta feasible prescription for it. The internal landscape is so reduced and bleak that anything short of orgasm doesn't register and any hiccup locks the gates. A Heisenberg uncertainty principle of the soul. The merest hint of a hiccup, even a hypothetical hint, and the wheels fall off. Or I go out and Give 'er! and barely manage to crawl back here on broken feet to an empty inbox. Can't hardly walk today and gotta take the garbage out. (Boo Hoo. :-)

“We'll be goin' down so deep the river's gonna weep and the mountain's gonna shout, "Amen!"”

It's all good gentle reader. Be well.


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