hey, remember that sad movie "SILENT Running"? It's been reversed, and our asses are gonna be the ones doing the running.
I thought this little sentence made 1 of the main points fairly strong :::
" In addition, legal precedents indicate that if a landowner's trees are contaminated by GE tree pollen, they may be sued for patent violations by the corporation that patented the GE tree."
...Rob here again.... remember, trees are the Earth's filter for taking carbon dioxide from the air & turning it into clean, breathable air. hhhhmmmm...... so now we're gonna tamper with the ONLY air filter the planet has? -----just Great.
" Many red flags have been raised about the genetic engineering of our food supply. Few people, however, realize that trees are also being genetically engineered.
...We haveno control over the movement of insects, birds and mammals, wind and rain that carry pollen.
Genetically engineered trees, with the potential to transfer pollen for hundreds of miles carrying genes for traits including insect resistance, herbicide resistance, sterility and reduced lignin, thus have the potential to wreak ecological havoc throughout the world's native forests. GE trees could also impact wildlife as well as rural and indigenous communities that depend on intact forests for their food, shelter, water, livelihood and cultural practices...
Trees are being engineered to kill insects, resist toxic herbicides, grow faster, & have reduced Lignin (the substance that protects the tree and makes it strong).
Release of GE trees into the environment assures that engineered traits will escape, contaminating native forests with these traits.
--Pollen studies by researchers at Duke University in North Carolina show that tree pollen can travel for over 1,000 miles, meaning widespread contamination by GE trees cannot be avoided or prevented, ---except by not allowing the release of GE trees into the environment in the first place."
... rob here again...well yall, ain't it great when you can't wash the herbicide off of the apple or other fruit from a tree--- because the herbicides & other traits will be IN the fruit.
> Dear NRDC Member, > > I just sent you a longer letter by postal mail
describing
President Bush's plan to sell-off
300,000 acres of
our
national forests
to cover shortfalls
in his out-of-control budget. > > Because our campaign to stop this attack on America's natural heritage is > moving so quickly, I wanted to give you an email update right away -- and let > you know that your support is urgently needed. > > You and your family stand to lose the most from the president's outrageous > proposal. That's because you live in one of the 35 states that have been > targeted by the White House for this unprecedented fire sale of America's > national forests. > > Unless we fight back now, the next time you visit your local national forest to > hike or camp or picnic, you could find a "No Trespassing" sign at the entrance > or a brand new strip mall where a forest used to stand. > > This threat has grown even more dangerous in recent weeks. The Bush > administration has rushed legislation to Capitol Hill that would give the > president the power to start liquidating our national forests at will -- to > treat them as little more than giant ATM machines. > > NRDC needs your immediate support to stop this unconscionable proposal in its > tracks. > > Please go to https://www.savebiogems.org/lands/donate_d.asp > right now and make a donation to help ramp up our campaign. > > Your gift will enable NRDC to alert and educate millions of people in those > states that stand to lose some of their most valuable national forest > lands . . . mobilize grassroots opposition in all 50 states . . . and generate > massive political pressure in Washington. > > Remember: once our national forest lands are sold off, they will be closed to > you and me forever. > > Please join me in fighting to keep our natural heritage off the auction block. > Let's make sure that President Bush and Congress understand that our natural > heritage is not for sale! > > Sincerely, > > Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. > Senior Attorney > Natural Resources Defense Council
Subject: Re: Heed the science, work to End Ancient Forest Logging
Response to forests.org e-mails December 1, 2005
Thank you for caring about the Great Bear Rainforest.
The Great Bear Rainforest stretches north from Vancouver Island up to Alaska, encompassing 21 million acres, and represents one-quarter of the remaining coastal temperate rainforest left on earth.
10 years ago, the Great Bear Rainforest was on the chopping block. In the late 1990’s, concern over the fate of these forests resulted in protests, blockades, and finally international marketplace pressure to force change and end the conflict. At that time, when environmentalists first sat down with local communities, labour unions, the logging industry, and the mining industry, 7% of the region was protected and the majority of participants at the planning table were saying no to any new parks. Now, the proposed agreements would stop logging in 5 million acres of rainforest or 33% of the Central and North Coast regions. In addition, Haida Gwaii will also see over 43% of its land base protected, for a total of 1.1 million acres. This would be the largest temperate rainforest protection decision in Canadian history.
There is plenty of rainforest outside the system of protected areas. In order to ensure we protect the ecological integrity of these forests, the agreements include a commitment to Ecosystem-based Management, which dictates that 70% of the rainforest must be maintained as old growth. This includes riparian protection, cedar cultural zones and other ecological standards.
To be successful in the Great Bear Rainforest and Haida Gwaii, solutions must go beyond preserving lands and protecting ecological integrity—they must also respect indigenous cultures and strengthen local economies. These agreements will bring significant investment dollars (over $110 million) for aboriginal communities so they can diversify their local economy away from an industrial extraction model, and funds to support locals who will act as strong stewards for their traditional lands. This will ease the pressure to use resources for short term gain to address the over 80% unemployment rates they face in their communities.
Also, integral to these agreements is a commitment to a new relationship between the provincial government and indigenous people, allowing for a more just approach to land-use decisions for indigenous people in this region.
These agreements present a rare opportunity to establish a world-class land-use model that combines economic opportunities and aboriginal aspirations along with conservation and community development, sustaining the entire region’s ecosystem and the communities within it as a single, unbroken whole. Please support these agreements. Go to http://www.forestethics.org/action.php?action=5
Sincerely, ForestEthics
RAINFOREST ACTION NETWORK - FORESTETHICS - GREENPEACE - SIERRA CLUB of BC CANADA
B.C.’s Coastal Temperate Rainforest: The Vision Going Forward
By the Turning Point Initiative Society member nations (Heiltsuk First Nation, Kitasoo First Nation, Gitga’at First Nation, Wuikinuxv First Nation, Council of Haida Nation, Old Massett Village Council, Skidegate Band, Metlakatla First Nation and ForestEthics, Greenpeace, Sierra Club of Canada, B.C. Chapter, and the Rainforest Action Network
British Columbia’s Central and North Coast (the Great Bear Rainforest) and the islands of Haida Gwaii are among the world’s greatest ecological treasures. One of the largest unprotected temperate rainforest remaining on the planet, this region also has a rich cultural landscape, and is the Traditional Territory of twelve First Nation communities.
From the Amazon basin to the Great Barrier Reef, the challenge on the Central and North Coast and Haida Gwaii is echoed around the world: How do we integrate the needs of natural systems with the needs of the people who depend upon them for their livelihoods and way of life?
The coastal rainforests and waters are a vital natural, cultural and economic resource for First Nations, coastal communities and British Columbia as a whole. To be successful , land use agreements must not only preserve the lands and protect its ecological integrity—they must also respect indigenous cultures and strengthen local economies. To be successful, conservation must be sustainable, both ecologically and economically.
Having inherited the responsibility to protect and restore their lands, waters and air for future generations, British Columbia’s coastal First Nations continue to work to create an ecologically and economically sustainable future. In a declaration signed in June 2000, coastal First Nations committed to make decisions that ensure the well-being of their lands and waters, and to preserve and renew their territories and cultures through tradition, knowledge, and authority. This declaration provides the foundation for protecting and restoring First Nations culture and the natural world.
Years of work – science, community forums, stakeholder dialogues and government to government negotiations - have forged agreements among diverse parties around land-use for the North and Central Coast and Haida Gwaii. These agreements represent a new, more holistic approach to conservation and through them three unprecedented breakthroughs have emerged for this unique and threatened region.
The first is a commitment to a new relationship between the provincial government and First Nations. Beyond mere consultation, this government-to-government relationship allows for a more just approach to land-use decisions now and in the future.
The second sees the total size of the Great Bear Rainforest’s protected areas quadrupled to secure many of its most sensitive and intact valleys and islands. This is more than 5 million acres of area protected from logging. When approved, it will be the largest temperate rainforest protection package in Canadian history. In addition, there are over a million new acres of protected areas on Haida Gwaii, which when announcd will bring the total rainforest protection package in the region to over 7 million acres.
The third and, in many respects, boldest breakthrough is a commitment by the people of the region to rebuild a sustainable relationship with the forest itself. This relationship is termed Ecosystem-based Management, and to many coastal First Nations represents a scientific articulation of thousands of years of cultural practice and traditional resource use.
On the ground, Ecosystem-based Management means a comprehensive protected areas network within a working landscape that is managed to ensure low risk to the ecology of the rainforest. Outside of protected areas, cultural sites, rare and endangered species habitat, wildlife corridors, and other elements require special protective status while allowing EBM logging to occur in a manner that doesn’t undermine the ecological and cultural values of the region.
Economic redevelopment
Economic challenges facing the people of the region are as important as the conservation challenges. Unemployment and poverty rates in coastal communities are well above national averages.
Coastal First Nations have worked alongside the conservation community to make an alternative economy possible. Over $60 million in new private funding and investment are set to flow into the region. This is contingent upon land use agreements being finalized and implemented this fall, and matching funding from provincial and federal governments. This, then, will create a total of over $120 million for communities to create sustainable business opportunities for First Nations. An additional $80 million in Socially Responsible Investments may be secured for native and non-native ventures alike.
Ecosystem-based Management. Ecotourism. Sustainable fisheries. Other exciting new enterprises. The economy of the Central and North Coast and Haida Gwaii will indeed be ‘re-built to last’, following principles crafted by the people who live and work there.
Implementing a bold vision
This endeavour represents many firsts. It is the first effort to apply integrated concepts across such a large and complex natural and social landscape. At this scale, Ecosystem-based Management is a paradigm shift. It amounts to re-engineering an entire regional economy, tuning it to measurable indicators of ecological health and human well being.
The challenge is enormous. But the opportunity is extraordinary. The application of these agreements—conservation areas and Ecosystem-based Management&mdashresents the world with its best chance yet to integrate conservation, community development and First Nations self-determination.
That is why we believe this step for Haida Gwaii and the Central and North Coast of British Columbia is worth taking. Moving forward with these agreements does not mark the end of our work, but rather the beginning of its next phase.
We are proud to support these agreements, and strongly urge the British Columbia government to use the necessary legal and legislative tools to make them a reality.
Robert Scheer on
Terrorism"The Global War
on Stealth Underwear" --
There is no
“war” against
terrorism. What George W.
Bush launched and Barack
Obama insists on
perpetuating does not
qualify. Not if by war
one means doing the
obvious and ...