Earth Care Group Blog: Earth Day Reflection
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- JanforGore
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However, on this Earth Day as on many other days before I am filled with hope yet sadness at seeing how we humans on the whole do not understand this message. Climate change combined with pollution now threaten to place our Earth on a collision course with catastrophe as we push the limitations of the very systems that give us life. We have become detached from Earth even though we live here. The beauty of a sunrise, a clear mountain stream, a tree, and now even the soul satisfying practice of tilling our own soil have been depraved by those who care little for the essence of Earth beyond what they can sell it for.
So on this Earth Day as I have for almost every other of the approxomate 18,697 days I have lived here, I will pay homage to the magnificence of a planet unlike any other. A planet of unsurpassed beauty and potential.
And I will never give up in doing all I can to preserve this giver of all life.
And I will blog. And I will speak out. And I will take action. And I will fight.
For our Earth. Our home.
For without her, there is nothing else.
P.S. to Mother Earth: Thank you.
Happy Earth Day.
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- Community, Green, Current Tonight, Earth and Science, 6 more
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- Environment, Climate Change, Activism, Nature, 10 more
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EthicalVegan
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Dear, sweet, sensitive, caring and beautiful Jan:
Thank you for this wonderful gift you have given us all on this, our 40th Earth Day. It brings back so many memories of our very first Earth Day.
May people around the world learn more about our earth and teach others to truly respect her.
- 2 years ago
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EthicalVegan
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JanforGore
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EthicalVegan:
You are so kind. Thank you so much.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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http://current.com/groups/sustainable-agriculture/
Today on the Sustainable Agriculture Group, all Earth Day posts will be featured.
On this day as every day, we must pay tribute to the seed and the water, the miracles that make all life possible.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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nanac
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It is extremely disheartening to see so many Americans deny the seriousness of Global warming..I would hope that all humans, do their very best to preserve the Earth, for future generations..................Thank you, for this very valuable posting!
- 2 years ago
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nanac
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JanforGore
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nanac:
I agree, and I fear a true catastrophe is all that will wake them to reality.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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JanforGore
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"The ultimate test of man's conscience may be his willingness to sacrifice something today for future generations whose words of thanks will not be heard."
— Gaylord Nelson
former governor of Wisconsin, co-founder of Earth DayPlant a seed today and watch it grow to sustain those to come. That is my pledge for Earth Day.
What's yours?
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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WakeUpPeople
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JanforGore:
Great quote.
- 2 years ago
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WakeUpPeople
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captainplanet71
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Great post! Here's another video to add to the Earth Day round up:
http://current.com/green/92390967_an-earth-day-call-to-arms.htm
- 2 years ago
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captainplanet71
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futuregen
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"AMY GOODMAN: Vandana Shiva credits you with being her mentor, the great Indian environmentalist who, I believe, is here, is here in Bolivia right now for the world summit on climate change. But can you talk about—well, among the things you taught her, she says, about Terminator seed technology?
PAT MOONEY: Well, that’s another kind of geoengineering, really. It’s another kind of a threat, which we thought we got rid of about a decade ago, when the United Nations, again, imposed a moratorium against it and when the major corporations backed away from it, saying they didn’t want to do that.
Now it’s again on the table. The Brazilian government is saying that in order to respond to climate change, to have climate-ready crops, which could be quite dangerous in some conditions, they need to have Terminator technology, the suicide seed technology, that would let them safely get those crops into the field. We’re getting the European Union saying that maybe they need to consider Terminator again or different variations of Terminator again. So it’s back on the table as a major threat to indigenous peoples and farmers around the world, who will lose their diversity. They will not have their diversity if Terminator gets into the fields.
And again, the excuse for Terminator is climate change. It is that we need to respond to effects here, so stand back, let us have a technological fix to your problem.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to Pat Mooney, executive director of the ETC Group, a winner of the Right Livelihood Award, came to Bolivia from Ottawa for this global change—climate change conference. The bestselling book Freakonomics suggests the way to deal with climate change is to—is a helium balloon and a long garden hose. Explain.
PAT MOONEY: Well, yes, in a way of getting—it’s like sucking the gases out into the stratosphere, out into space—a way out for us. And all of these ideas, though, have a kind of a scientific hubris behind them, which I think is really scary. The guys who caused the problem of climate change in the first place, who geoengineered us into this problem in the first place, are now saying, “Trust us, we’ll geoengineer you out of it again.” And I just don’t trust them. I just don’t think that’s true.
I can’t believe that governments who don’t have the intelligence or the integrity to tell their own populations that there’s a problem here with climate change, who haven’t had the guts to address the issues around the Kyoto Protocol, even that, are actually going to have the integrity or the intelligence to geoengineer the planet in a safe way. It’s simply ridiculous. They cannot.
AMY GOODMAN: Pat Mooney, what is the Obama administration’s policies around geoengineering?
PAT MOONEY: Well, the folks around Obama, initially, were—I thought were very opposed to geoengineering. And over the last year, what we’ve seen is a shift toward that, where they’re saying we can’t take it off the table, we’ve really got to consider this with other possibilities. They’ve welcomed the hearings in Congress on this topic. They’ve welcomed the joint hearings with the UK Parliament about it. They’ve encouraged the National Academy of Sciences to explore this area. They’re all saying, “We don’t really want to do this, folks, but it is a Plan B we can’t avoid.” We’re saying, for poor people around the world, for vulnerable populations around the world, letting a bunch of guys in the North make a decision about the science that’s going to manipulate the planet doesn’t make sense.
AMY GOODMAN: So why are you here in Tiquipaya, in Cochabamba, for this World Peoples’ Summit on Climate Change?
PAT MOONEY: Well, these are the folks that are going to be affected by it. These are the ones who will be most impacted by geoengineering, most impacted by Terminator technology. I think it’s critical that they understand that this is being discussed, that in corridors of power long ways away from here is a serious conversation going on among scientists, among some governments, saying that we’re going to risk the planet on this kind of experimentation.
They don’t know that now. The Bolivian government has only, itself, in the last few weeks, become aware that this is a new factor. It’s only now being introduced into the parlance of the United Nations. I was in Germany a few days ago with the German Minister of the Environment, who knew that there was something called geoengineering, but didn’t even realize that it was on his agenda for negotiations next month.
AMY GOODMAN: Pat Mooney, the issue of nanotechnology, of geoengineering, do people in Canada, as you talk about people here should understand, because they’ll be impacted the most—you come from Ottawa. Do people there understand it?
PAT MOONEY: I think the people do. The government doesn’t. The government is hopefully a long way from where the people really are, but our government has been one of the worst, in terms of its history and track record on climate change. It’s been full steam ahead on nanotechnology, full steam ahead in terms of synthetic biology, and in attracting and interested in geoengineering. Some of the top geoengineers on the planet are actually from Canada. So the government likes all these alternatives. Technological fixes are just fine for Canada.
AMY GOODMAN: What are the corporations that could most profit from geoengineering?
PAT MOONEY: The oil companies, for sure. All of the major energy companies find it very attractive. They’re investing in it. All the transportation companies find it attractive. The major polluters want geoengineering. If it doesn’t work, that’s OK, but it bought themselves time. It gives them an excuse for not doing anything for another decade or another twenty years.
AMY GOODMAN: Do you have hope? I mean, here you’re at a peoples’ summit on climate change. But what actually is going to come out of this?
PAT MOONEY: I’m optimistic. I must say that when we first started talking about this after Copenhagen, I thought that it was a noble idea to have this meeting, but it wasn’t going to get anywhere and it wouldn’t get much traction. It has got traction. I mean, around the world, people have come together around this conference. Those who couldn’t make it here because of the volcano are still participating in any way they can, through the internet, and are joining us. I’ve been amazed, in the discussions that I’ve been involved in just the last couple of days, how aware people are of the range of the issues, how open they are to looking at other alternative solutions, how concerned they are, again, that some solution is going to be found for them from industrialized countries and not a homegrown solution that people in Bolivia and people in developing countries can deal with themselves.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, Pat Mooney, I want to thank you very much for being with us. Pat Mooney is the head of the ETC Group. He is here in Bolivia for the Peoples’ Summit on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth, executive director of the ETC Group." - 2 years ago
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futuregen
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futuregen
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http://www.democracynow.org/2010/4/20/four
Interview: Pat Mooney on the Dangers of Geoengineering and Manipulating the Planet to Combat Climate Change
"Our next guest, Pat Mooney, heads the ETC [pronounced et cetera] Group, a Canadian-based group that addresses the impact of new technologies on vulnerable communities. The group is launching an international campaign against geoengineering experiments. Pat Mooney is the author of several books on the politics of biotechnology and biodiversity. In 1985, he received the Right Livelihood Award [in] the Swedish Parliament.
We welcome you to Democracy Now!
PAT MOONEY: Thanks for having me.
AMY GOODMAN: Well, thanks, Pat, for being here. You’ve come from Ottawa for this conference to talk about geoengineering. It may be the first time some people in this global audience of Democracy Now! have even heard the term. What does it mean?
PAT MOONEY: Well, it really is a massive manipulation of the ecosystems of the planet. It’s a major way of trying to intervene in climate change, to block sunlight or to sequester carbon dioxide in the ocean, to make a change in how the planet will function in response to climate change. I think it’s a terribly dangerous idea. It’s entirely a theoretical idea. And it’s gaining currency, strangely enough, in countries like the United States and the United Kingdom.
AMY GOODMAN: What are the forces behind it?
PAT MOONEY: Well, it’s a great excuse. You don’t have to do anything. If you can simply say to your populations that, “Don’t worry, folks. You can keep on driving your SUVs, you can keep on flying. We’ll take care of this through a technological fix for you”—so there’s this magic bullet that will solve the problems, and we can all go back to business as usual.
AMY GOODMAN: Is it governments? Is it corporations?
PAT MOONEY: Both governments and corporations. We’re finding some very big players in it. Besides the UK and the US, we’re seeing Richard Branson, from the Virgin group of companies, very enthusiastic about it, saying, “Well, we can keep on driving and flying now.” We have Bill Gates investing in it and—as is Branson—and also actually patenting in it, looking at ways in which you can block things in the stratosphere or on ocean surface.
AMY GOODMAN: Talk about some of the geoengineering projects.
PAT MOONEY: Well, the one that’s become most popular with the National Academy of Sciences in the United States and also with the Royal Society in the UK is this idea that you can throw sulfates into the stratosphere, blast them high into the stratosphere, where they’ll coast around for about two years at a time and block the sunlight. It doesn’t reduce greenhouse gases in any way whatsoever; it simply blocks and delays some of the effects of climate change for a period of years.
The problem is, of course, that no one really knows how that’s going to work any better than anyone knows what’s going to happen with the volcano that’s erupting right now. This is just a gamble that maybe we can buy ourselves some time by doing this. We don’t know what the impact would be for, particularly, tropical areas of the world, areas right around here. We know that probably monsoons would be set off course. We know there probably would be greater drought in Asia. There could be more famine in Africa. We’re not quite sure what would happen here in Latin America. But no one is quite sure.
AMY GOODMAN: How do you shoot sulfates into the atmosphere?
PAT MOONEY: Long pipes from polluting areas, in fact, that could blast it through the troposphere into the stratosphere. There’s other ideas of planes flying over that could blast it, as well, from the aircrafts, and not just through trails, but in a very deliberate sort of strategy. There are several possibilities. There’s also ideas of where you could whiten clouds to reflect sunlight more, by blasting salt spray, basically, from oceans into the clouds, and that would reflect more sunlight.
AMY GOODMAN: What about these artificial volcanoes?
PAT MOONEY: Well, that is the idea of blasting sulfates into the sky. It really is mimicking a volcano. But volcanoes usually only affect the troposphere. This would be getting into the stratosphere. They do occasionally get into the stratosphere, and if that happens, of course, you get global cooling very quickly sometimes.
All of these, again, are ideas which were thought and produced initially in the 1980s and the 1990s. Everyone thought they were crazy. We abandoned them. Now they’ve come back, since the failure of Copenhagen. And people are saying, “We have no choice. This is the Plan B we have to try.” And tragically, it’s a bunch of rich guys in rich countries sitting around together, saying, “We can risk the planet. We can make the decision for everybody else. We can put our hand on the thermostat and decide for everybody else what has to be done.”
AMY GOODMAN: Placing aluminum foil in the sky?
PAT MOONEY: Well, the idea is, yes, to reflect sunlight, again. Nanoparticles, basically, of aluminum foil that would be up there that would drift around for, again, a few years at a time. The cost of all of this are $25 to $50 billion, perhaps, continually. But compared to some other costs, they may seem not to be too expensive.
And the very attractive thing for the US Congress, which is discussing this now, the UK Parliament, that’s also discussing this now, the attractive thing is that they can have a coalition of the willing of their own. They don’t need to have the United Nations to agree. They don’t need to have a peoples’ summit agree to it. They can really decide themselves, as a handful of countries, that we’ll do this for the planet.
AMY GOODMAN: What does it mean to fertilize the oceans?
PAT MOONEY: There are areas of the ocean which are nutrient-deficit in terms of iron, so they’re saying that what they can do is they can take iron filings, nanoparticles of iron again, spread them over the surface of the ocean, 10,000 square kilometers of ocean at a time, 50,000 square kilometers of ocean, and create a phytoplankton bloom that would soak up carbon dioxide and, when the phytoplankton die, sink to the bottom of the ocean. The international community said that’s a dumb idea. The United Nations, two years ago, imposed a moratorium against doing it. But it still keeps on coming back again from industrialized countries as a solution for some parts of the world, perhaps.
AMY GOODMAN: What is the body, perhaps an international body, that oversees this?
PAT MOONEY: There isn’t one, really. I guess we could say that the UNFCCC is—the climate change folks—are the ones that have to address it most closely. It also affects the biodiversity convention, the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, that’s meeting twice this year, where the US is not a member, by the way, which imposed a moratorium against ocean fertilization, which does have on its agenda geoengineering most broadly and is going to look at issues like not just ocean fertilization, but also stratospheric interferences.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about what nanotechnology is?
PAT MOONEY: Well, nanotech is partly a dream, I guess. It’s a theory by some companies and governments that we can reduce everything down to the nanoscale and we can take advantage of the impacts of quantum effects at the nanoscale, so that, for example, the silver here in Bolivia and the lithium here in Bolivia that we’ve been talking about may not be as important twenty or thirty years down the road, because nanotechnology could change the nature of compounds so that they would act in different ways, so other materials can replace lithium, other materials can replace, not the iconic value of silver, but other uses of silver. - 2 years ago
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futuregen
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futuregen
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Excerpts of interview:
"AMY GOODMAN: Explain climate debt. This is a term that is being talked about very much in other parts of the world, but in the United States, very few people have heard it.
PABLO SOLON: Well, climate debt has five components, from our perspective. It doesn’t have to do especially with money, because people, when they hear the word “debt,” they think money. For us, it has to do, in first place, with the atmospheric space. What has happened is that the 80 percent of the atmospheric space of the world has been occupied by 20 percent of the population that is in developed countries. What we need is to have a democratic and equitable distribution of the atmospheric space between all nations, taking into account their population. So that, for us, is the first main issue when we speak about climate debt. It’s not possible that only 20 percent of the world occupies 80 percent of the atmosphere with their emissions, because then what happens with the rest of the world is that we don’t have any space for any kind of development, because you need to industrialize, and that’s going to mean you are going to throw some greenhouse gas emissions to the atmosphere. But if that’s already occupied, then whatever you do goes against that. So that is one problem.
The second issue is, for us, climate debt means to recognize that we have a debt not only with humankind, but also with nature, with Mother Earth. Now, how do you repair, how do you pay that debt to Mother Earth? We say by recognizing the rights of Mother Earth, with the goal to reestablish harmony with our nature.
The third component is the debt with the migrants. We’re going to have between 200 and 1,000 migrants in the next years. And then we have the debt of adaptation and development for developed countries—for developing countries, excuse me, because instead of spending money for health, for education, we have to spend money in order to attend natural disasters."-------------------------------------------------------------------
AMY GOODMAN: Will the United States be sending a delegation?
PABLO SOLON: It is the only country, and I may say, that has not—that has sent a letter saying that they are not going to send any delegate to this conference.
AMY GOODMAN: So what response do you have to that?
PABLO SOLON: Oh, it is a pity, because we are very open. We invited to 192 governments. We didn’t do what they did in Copenhagen, because in Copenhagen they did only a meeting with about twenty-five to twenty-nine presidents, and they didn’t invite the rest. We invite everybody, because we want to dialogue with everybody. But the main and the most important thing is that we’re going to have about 500 persons coming from the United States to this conference, representatives and leaders from different social movements and civil society of the United States. And that, for us, is the main thing." - 2 years ago
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futuregen
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futuregen
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http://www.democracynow.org/2010/4/19/bolivian_un_ambassador_pablo_solon_on
(Go to website for video, I'm getting an error message as I try to post).
Excerpt from interview with Pablo Solon Bolivia's UN/US ambassador:
"AMY GOODMAN: You just came, Ambassador Solon, from Bonn, where you criticized the United States cutting aid to Bolivia. Explain what happened.
PABLO SOLON: Well, we were notified by the media that the United States was cutting around $3 to $3.5 million for projects that have to do with climate change. And the explanation that they gave was that because we were not supporting the Copenhagen Accord—that is, a declaration that is being promoted by the United States government. And we are not in favor of that accord.
Why? Because of what I just said. The Copenhagen Accord is a way to not have substantive commitment for the next period. For example, the United States, with all due respect to the population of the United States, is making a commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent, but taking into account the levels of 2005. So in reality, the reduction is going to be only three percent, taking into account the levels of 1990. Those are the levels, the base levels, that are established in the Kyoto Protocol. Well, if everybody does that, we’re going to have an increase of the temperature in—well, far beyond four or five degrees in this century. So that is why we don’t support the Copenhagen Accord. We think we must think in our—in humanity in the future of mankind and in our nature, in our Mother Earth.
AMY GOODMAN: So the US is cutting off aid to Bolivia for climate change projects because you didn’t think that the Copenhagen Accord, which very much was shaped by the United States, didn’t go far enough?
PABLO SOLON: Yes." - 2 years ago
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futuregen
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futuregen
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Democracy Now! is in Bolivia all this week for the World People's Summit on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth. Please check the Democracy Now! website for their coverage of this most important Summit.
- 2 years ago
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futuregen
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JanforGore
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futuregen:
Thanks for that reminder. The wisdom of indigenous people is what has preserved the sustainability of this planet for so long. They know the Earth.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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WakeUpPeople
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Let every day be Earth day! Thanks for posting. I will fight alongside you until our home is respected and appreciated for its HOSTING of our human race.
- 2 years ago
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WakeUpPeople
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Maeveeo
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WakeUpPeople:
I am with you on that , cause its all we have !
- 2 years ago
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Maeveeo
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JanforGore
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"Keep close to Nature's heart... and break clear away, once in awhile, and climb a mountain or spend a week in the woods. Wash your spirit clean. "
John Muir
American environmentalist, founder of the Sierra Club, whose birthday is tomorrow.
"We abuse land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and respect."
Aldo LeopoldAmerican environmentalist whose death is noted tomorrow.
The circle of life.
I think in order to go into the future with hope, these words of wisdom from the past regarding our connection to the Earth must never be forgotten.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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Atalanda_Cameron [removed]
- This comment was removed as a violation of community guidelines.
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Atalanda_Cameron [removed]
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JanforGore
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Atalanda_Cameron:
Happy Birthday.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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nanac
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Atalanda_Cameron:
Happy Birthday.
- 2 years ago
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nanac
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Nephwrack
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Happy Earth Day everyone!
- 2 years ago
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Nephwrack
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futuregen
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Thank you for posting about earth day. The first guy that called in to the Alex Jones show yesterday (second hour) discussed Public Intelligence.net leaking documents re: staged IND (improvised nuclear devices) being set off in Nevada, expecting this to happen over the next three months. (Also in NLEO10). I hope the nuclear industry/military industrial complex is not planning on making themselves a nuclear dump (i.e. contaminate an area and then put all the nuke waste there.) The guy said this would be near the Nevada test site, Western Shoshone territory but that it would be billed as "terrorism". It is very hard to save this planet but I will keep trying. All these absolutely insane people running things does not make it any easier. God bless You JanforGore. And God bless this planet. I think Mother Earth of Iceland is getting revenge on all those European bankers that bankrupted Iceland.
- 2 years ago
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futuregen
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JanforGore
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futuregen:
Some may not believe it, but I believe the Earth knows and reacts to our actions.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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bailey78
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Happy Earth Day Jan may you have many more.
- 2 years ago
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bailey78
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JanforGore
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bailey78:
Thanks. May the Earth have many more.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore
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bailey78
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oh wow thats very moveing thank you Jan for shareing.
- 2 years ago
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bailey78
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treewolf39
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Peace Jan. After 40 Earth Days myself Stewardship of the planet is the only course of action. Thanks for working so hard to promote awareness!
- 2 years ago
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treewolf39
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JanforGore
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treewolf39:
Same to you. May we finally see humanity come around.
- 2 years ago
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JanforGore