If you have any interest in ecology - saving our planet and our health - CONSIDER THIS
Greenpeace’s True Food Network website: http://www.truefoodnow.org lists companies and their products which are genetically engineered.
If you have any interest in ecology - saving our planet and our health - CONSIDER THIS
Greenpeace’s True Food Network website: http://www.truefoodnow.org lists companies and their products which are genetically engineered.
The Ecology Department urges us to work to restore the environmental balance and harmony of our planet and all of the life on it, which we share and affect profoundly. This is a critical time for our planet Earth, and changes must be made in our ways of life if we are to save our deteriorating environment. In articles and information in this section of our magazine many ways are suggested in which we can turn the tide of our wasteful and damaging habits to help heal the earth. - Maurice Secrest, Director
(Editor's note: to post a new story in this section, choose "create content" and set the topic of your post to "Environment". To comment on any story here, click on the "add new comment" link.)
(Editor's Note: October 16 is World Food Day.)
PRESS RELEASE: Source: http://www.evana.org/index.php?id=38147&lang=en
provided by Diana D.C.
On 7-8 October 2008, the European Commission, the European Parliament and the United Nations marked the anniversary of the Declaration of Human Rights which assures everyone’s entitlement "to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food". read more »
BATTERY RECYCLING PROGRAM (THINK GREEN!)
Sponsored by
Theosophical Order of Service/USA
In an effort to increase environmental awareness, the Theosophical Order of Service /USA invites you to participate in our battery recycling program. Household batteries may be small and look harmless but these batteries can release toxic chemicals into the environment when thrown out with domestic waste that ends up in the landfill. This project provides a way for concerned citizens to safely dispose of used household batteries. read more »
People should consider eating less meat as a way of combating global warming, says the UN's top climate scientist. Rajendra Pachauri, who chairs the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), will make the call at a speech in London on Monday evening. UN figures suggest that meat production puts more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere than transport.
This is not a conventional article, but rather a type of discussion group. It is a page for users to post their comments on how we all might combat global warming by changes in our day-to-day lives. Please comment on this page, and "subscribe" to the page to receive email notices of new comments and discussion. Note that any site visitor can now post comments on this website without being a "site member."
by Rene Wadlow
In an earlier article Arctic Oil and the Law of the Seize, I mentioned that some such as Scott Borgerson, who teaches maritime studies at the US Coast Guard Academy and is a fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, are looking to the Antarctic Treaty of 1959 as a model to prevent an Arctic race for oil by avoiding the provisions of the Law of the Sea Convention which the USA has not signed. read more »
Rene Wadlow
In a mixture of the titles of the “Citizens of the World” and the “Friends of the Earth” – the representatives of 40 governments speaking as the “Citizens of the Earth” called on 2 February 2007 for an improved UN system of ecological governance. read more »
There is a touch of the 19th century scramble to divide Africa among European colonial powers in the decision of Russia to drop a capsule containing a Russian flag on the Arctic sea floor not far from the North Pole on August 2. In preparation for the 1885 Berlin Conference which was to draw the boundaries of the African colonies, there was a mad rush to place national flags on all the commercial outposts so that France, England, Germany, Spain, Belgium and Portugal could claim prior possession of the area. read more »
by Morry Secrest, Director
The two powerful hurricanes, Katrina and Rita, which struck the Gulf coasts of Louisiana and Texas within two weeks of each other, were an awesome display of Nature’s power. Cities have been badly damaged and towns have been simply erased. Millions of people were displaced from their homes and hundreds of businesses have been crippled or totally destroyed. The attention of the entire United States has been riveted on the pictures and reports of damage. read more »
‘Native Plant Society’ is a wonderful name. It distinguishes us from exotic plant societies that fascinate over tropical orchids, African violets and other plants from far away. The word ‘native’ anchors us to the place we inhabit and makes us an organization that appreciates local nature. We are more than a garden club, and have our roots in the natural world. I often wonder why more people do not join us, or similar societies, and am confronted with the realities of current attitudes and values. Here is an example – a true story. read more »
Several years ago, one of my uncles, who lives in Omaha, Nebraska,
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