justicia now screening v 2.0

// video added November 15, 2007 // 16 comments // // Embed video:
smorrisey
one director takes a stand against hypocrisy
  1. groups:
    VC2 Top Contenders US
  2. tags:
    VC2 Top Contenders US Oil Ecuador Greenwashing 8 more

16 comments // justicia now screening v 2.0 // Video

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  • EvilVet
  • EvilVet
    • 0
      EvilVet  
    • what? the u.s, rolling in and comitting genocide? killing people that carry sticks and blowdarts and raping the land for profit? driving wildlife to extinction? unheard of.

      love, chief sitting bull

    • 2 years ago
  • ScarletJo
    • 0
      ScarletJo  
    • what??? no one has ever visited the lovely Shell, Ecuador??? clear cutting virgin amazon rain forest for petrol is devastating! and the locals are fighting back and being slaughtered as a result.

      the US has Ecuador strangled where it hurts. it's such a sad story...it's such a beautiful country.

      great documentary!

    • 2 years ago
  • aliza
    • 0
      aliza  
    • Amazing to see people firmly putting their foot down against dirty energy companies' greenwashing.

      Dirty energy companies are all genocidal and climate-crisis inducing. We have everything to lose by granting the smallest bit of credibility to any member of this industry. Only renewable energy should ever get any green credits. Period.

      Corporate accountability will never work, until our laws demand accountability. And our laws must demand renewables. Period.

      PG&E is undergoing a massive multi-million dollar greenwashing effort in California this year. They are trying to hide the eternally toxic impacts of nuclear and hide their lobbying against renewable energy policies. We have the choice for 51% renewable energy in San Francisco. Every time a 'green' event takes their money and has them as a corporate sponsor - we loose the public will to demand better.

      In unity,
      Aliza
      Green Guerrillas Against Greenwash
      www.LetsGreenWASHthisCity.org

    • 2 years ago
  • smorrisey
  • Radio_Three_Sixty
  • shian
  • Drexl
    • 0
      Drexl  
    • The whole story is just plain sad, from the destruction of the Ecuadorean rain forest by one oil giant, to the greenwashing of an activist film festival by another oil giant.
      When will the madness cease?

    • 2 years ago
  • Graffiti_Collective
  • soloride
  • mopractice
    • 0
      mopractice  
    • Petrobras have a global push right now to make themselves look like a green energy giant. I believe Petrobras think that the American oil giants are slow to move to alternative fuels and they are moving in. They just bought their first refinery in Texas, and starting advertising on majors like CNN. Artivist took $150,000 from Petrobras allowing them to cast a net of oil over the unsuspecting filmmakers and Artivist staff. Petrobras should not be allowed to portray themselves as green when they plan to drill in areas of the Amazon where there are uncontacted tribes that are in danger of genocide from contact with oil workers.

      Martin O'Brien - Mofilms

    • 2 years ago
  • Graffiti_Collective
    • 0
      Graffiti_Collective  
    • i like this video, it shows the PR spin that is being placed upon sustainable design. PG&E is not our friend. i get sick of seeing their "lets green this city together" bs.

      Now, onto the Gap Red campaign. They just were caught using child slave labor is Asia, again.. but of course its not their fault, it was sub-contracted. to a company they still to business with.

    • 2 years ago
  • JROBOCK
    • 0
      JROBOCK  
    • This film should be mandatory for everyone involved in the alternative fuels arena and also the struggles by third world and indigenous people. It once again shows how power corrupts completely; always for the coffers of the rich and never for the common folks.

      Great job of documenting this ongoing atrocity and bringing it into the minds of the masses.

    • 2 years ago
  • robbienev
  • abbym0308

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