Showing posts with label Exploiting other Human Beings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Exploiting other Human Beings. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 March 2012

Help and Hindrance

Last night I watched a thought provoking episode of Natural World.
Silky Sifakas (picture from National Geographic)
I love Nature, Wildlife and the Environment as I hope has become quite obvious by now!

However, it is rare I watch programmes about them mainly because we don't have a TV but also because I become very easily upset when I see the cycle of life take place before my eyes.

Once upon a time, I went to Zambia. I was lucky to go but it was also a difficult decision for many reasons. However, go I did, only for two weeks and it was maybe one of the most intense experiences of my whole life.

I met passionate environmentalists and conservationists and wondered why I hadn't chosen this path for myself because I was enthralled by the magic and beauty of the Zambian culture and of course the Wildlife.

I won't go into the story behind this trip or the fact that I constantly wish I had known what I wanted to do with my life alot earlier on as this post is not about me. However, I wanted to touch on this experience because during this trip to Zambia, I went out on to the National Parks and Game Reserves and witnessed the wonder of the Natural World for myself.

It was awe inspiring and took my breath away. I could barely believe that I was there. I felt like I was in another world, I felt overwhelmed but also as if I belonged.

So, I came home and as the memories faded I started to acknowledge that my experience would have been very different had I witnessed the cycle of life right in front of  my very eyes!

The strange thing is, that when I was there, I didn't even consider that I might see a kill or an injured animal. The magnificance of the landscape completely overtook my senses and I could only see the wonder and beauty. Thank goodnesss!

If someone offered me the chance to go on safari now, I would turn down the opportunity because I am very acutely aware that I was incredibly lucky not to witness any bloodshed. I was completely naive to the fact that it was out there and could have revealed itself to me at any time. But it didn't and I believe it wasn't meant to. I was only there to witness the glory of the Natural World, not the goryness of it. Someone, my Earth Mother Spirit, was watching out for me.

So I have extraordinary memories which I will cherish and have no desire to repeat the experience.

However, I do watch the Wildlife programmes when I can, until the camera shows us nature in all it's brutality, at which point I turn off.

So Last night I watched Madagascar, Lemurs & Spies which told us about the complicated life of the Silky Sifakas and the fight to preserve this endangered species of Lemur.

There were no difficult to watch scenes as far as the animals were concerned.

It was difficult to watch however because it was essentially the story about how humankind is ravaging our planet.

This story concentrates on the  pillaging  of Rosewood and Ebony trees in the protected rainforst national parks in Madagascar. Many of these trees are centurys old. The illegal logging is destroying diversity, Flora and Flauna unique to Madagascar. This is the food of the Silky Sifakas which is why these lovely creatures could never survive in captivity because their diet is so Unique.

Madagascar has great biodiversity. Three quarters of the 200,000 species found there, do not exsist anywhere else, however, with the illegal logging, a large number of the large species are now extinct and more that  80% of the original forest cover has disappeared.
Madagascan Rainforest, Picture from National Geographic
In 2009, loggers took an estimated 100,000 rosewood and ebony trees out of the forests after a coup which saw an already  poor country plunged into a political and economic crisis.

These trees are so heavy that it takes many men to pull them down to the river and then another 5 -6 trees have to be cut down to float one of these trees down the various rivers to the production sites. This has led to extensive deforestation and the loggers set up camp deep in these forests which means they kill and eat the forest animals including the various Lemur Species.
Logged Rosewood, picture from National Geographic

The programme told us about the efforts of two men, a passionate scientist who has dedicated much of his life to protecting and studying the Silky Sifakas, and an Undercover Detective from Washington, to expose the illegal logging trade to ensure the long term survival of these beautiful primates.

As I watched this programme, my attention was focused on this struggle between destruction and survival and I was so aware that this was about a group of individuals with a conscience  trying to do the right thing, resisting a group of individuals with no conscience, doing absolutely the wrong thing.

And I found  myself appreciating that our societiey is made up of those that fight for justice, freedom and awaress, and those who are or choose to be ignorant and continue to destroy, devastate and wreck. I became aware of the eternal struggle between good and evil.

These two men and their teams faced great personal danger to expose this illegal trade and bring it to the world's attention but they did not let that distract them from their ultimate  mission to save the precious rainforests and wildlife of Madagascar.

I have spoken many times about my admiration for inspiring individuals such as these passionate activists. People who truly stand up for what they believe in and put their beliefs into action.
I watch their stories and am in awe of their dedication, steadfastness and resolve to bring about change. I have nothing but respect and love for their determination and passion.
Dr Erik Patel,  Picture from BBc website
But as I watched this programme,  I felt sadness that there is a need for individuals to continually fight against the wrongs done by other individuals and I wondered why there is such disparity between our values.

If I didn't have to work, I would use the time to learn and what I would like to study is Social Sciences. How does society shape people?  Where do our Values and Beliefs come from? How are differences and inequalities produced? How is society shaped not just by humans but by material objects and the environment? How are we connected and disconnected from each other and how do we see each other and others?

There is a Social Psychologist called Johathan Haidt who studies how and why we evolved to be moral. He believes that by understanding our moral roots, we can learn to be civil and open minded. He says that we are not purely selfish and that most people long to overcome pettiness and become something wonderful. 

Two of his quotes which I think fit perfectly for this post is:
"The most powerful force ever known on this planet is human co-operation - A force for construction and destruction"

"If our goal is to understand the world, to seek a deeper understaning, our general lack of moral diversity here is to make it harder. Because when people all share values, when people all share morals, they become a team"

One of the reasons I found Jonathan Haidt is because I was looking at his TED talk on Religion, Evolution and self - transcendence because I am interested in Transcendence - that we can expand to identify with all humanity and other aspects of the world beyond the body. In doing so, we transcend conditions of seperateness and isolation, which are the source of much misery and angst. By recognising the inherent unity of all exsistence, we experience subsequent feelings of belonging, oneness and peace.

I wish that these loggers could relate to this transcendent sense of self because maybe then they would care for the protection of free nature as the protection of themselves.

We are all structures, as are all beings on this planet, who are sustained by an influx of matter and energy that starts at the sun and is channelled throuogh plants, up food chains to us. Therefore, any seperation in time or space between us and the natural world is a projection of the mind.

So this post is about How humanity can help our relationship with the Natural World or completely hinder it. How a group of like minded individuals with the right beliefs can make a difference when opposing a group of like minded individuals with the wrong beliefs but how it is a constant battle.

Although I have a transcendent sense of self with Mother Earth, I have a long way to go before I can expand my sense of self to identify with those ignorant individuals that plunder,destroy, kill, hurt and ravage our Natural World.

What I do understand is the power of money. If you are poor and need to feed yourself and family, if you are fighting for survival then the lure of $1 a day to cut down trees in a protected rainforest, even if you know it is illegal, must override any part of your conscience telling you it is morally wrong.

What I do understand is that if you fear for your life because you have become entangled in a situation which feels dangerous to leave, then you  may stay in that situation rather than be brave and speak out against it.

What I do understand is that we in the western world are aware of the environmental damage we are wreaking on our planet. We have been blessed with an education and given the opportunity to observe individuals with good morals and values who are  raising awareness of our impact on the environment.  Many of us choose to listen and make changes to our lives to effect better outcomes for the earth. Some of us however, choose to remain ignorant and lazy.

What I do understand is that, For those loggers who are living in one of the world's poorest countries where 70% of the population suffer from malnutrition and where there is little education system, poverty, fear and ignorance is the driving force behind their actions. So I can begin to transcend the feelings of separateness I have from them so I can challenge my anger and frustration at their actions.

I cannot however, understand why the educated, intelligent business men at the top of the chain continue to authorise action which they know is morally wrong and illegal. THey are choosing to be ignorant.  They have the information, They know what they are doing is wrong in every way for every reason, but they are greedy and power hungry, selfish and egotistic.

It is these individuals who are the force of evil that the forces of good continue to fight.

This story does end on a happy and hopeful note.

The efforts of our Scientist and Detective resulted in the biggest importers of the Precious wood, Gibson Guitars, being raided and thousands of pounds worth of wood seized.

This had an immediate impact on the illegal logging trade in Madagascar. The illegal logging has greatly reduced and for now, the Silky Sifakas are safe again.

This was truly a story of how Hope, Belief, Determination, Dedication, Passion and Hard &Dangerous work, led to a Positive and Favourable Conclusion.

It is a story of Good overcoming Bad!

It gave me hope!

May we all continue to have hope and stand up for what we know is wrong.

Earth Blessings to you
JX

I leave you with some pictures of my trip to Zambia nearly 7years ago!


































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Thursday, 8 March 2012

Womens Work

Today is International Women's Day. A day for us to consider how different our lives are to those women in the developing world.


Women carry the bulk of the burden when it comes to poverty - literally.

In countries throughout Africa and Asia, women carry, on average, 20kg at a time in water and firewood - the weight of the standard airport luggage allowance.

Walking for miles to collect basic necessities is a responsibility which usually falls upon women and girls. Tasks which take seconds in the UK can mean backbreaking work in poor communities, preventing girls from attending school and women from paid work.

This comes at a high cost. In some countries, a girl is more likely to die in pregnancy or childbirth than finish primary education.

All across our global community there are women struggling in a harsh and unforgiving climate of hostility, fear, mistrust and insecurity.
 Women and girls across the world are denied choices and opportunity on a daily basis due to poverty and discrimation.

They are treated like second class citizens and denied the freedom that we take for granted.

This is not acceptable in 2012. We must act to stop this betrayal of humanity. We must ensure that Human Rights prevail and that Justice, Fairness, Freedom and Truth are not denied.

We must not allow anyone or any being to suffer cruel and inhumane treatment at the hands of regimes or individuals who seek to control, stifle protest and target dissenters.

We must strive for social change that resists the establishment when it exploits and promotes harm to Any individual or sentient being and betrays their trust.

As any readers to this blog will know by now, my passion lies in promoting a change in attitude and beliefs towards the way we treat our fellow creatures with whom we share this planet. I believe that we cannot stand back and witness cruelty to animals anymore than our forebears who worked for the abolition of slavery and other blatant injustices such as aparthied and torture, and those who work to combat the appalling suffering endured by women, children, and indeed men, all over the world.

So,  although I invest my energy and concentrate my focus on campaigning for a revolutionary approach to overthrow the systems that enforce a lifetime of agony and frustration for animals, my compassion is not limited and myself and my family sponser, through PLAN UK, a young girl from Senegal. Her name is Awa and she is 12 and lives with her mother and father and 2 siblings. Her mother was 16 when she married her father. Awa does not go to school because her parents do not think that it is important for her to do so.

We support Plan's "Because I am a girl" campaign which aims to support four million girls in developing countries to have more choices about what they can do with their lives and to move from a life of poverty to a future of opportunity.

"Currently, 75 million girls around the world are being denied the right to an education, every year, 10 million girls in developing countries are coerced or forced into marriage under the age of 18, with thousands of girls each year giving birth when they are still children themselves"

From Plan's Wesite: http://www.plan-uk.org/

Free Speach is a basic Human Right and those of us who are blessed and have the right to Freedom of Expression need to exercise this right and stand up for those who are Oppressed.

So, today on International Woman's Day, March 8th 2012, do something to raise awareness for those women, for whom survival is an uphill struggle.

£100 can help build a water pump close to a poor community, saving a girl's gruelling daily walk and giving her a fighting chance to fulfil her potential.

This is Annie Lennox, a woman who I believe is one of the greatest campaigners of Woman's rights of our time. Her focus, energy and commitment is palpable and she is definately a most Inspiring Individiual. Annie Lennox deserves nothing less than the utmost respect for her pioneering and passionate work.

She is an Artist and an Activist, two qualities that I admire and strive to be. She is dedicated and dignified in her campaigning and that's why she is the UN Aids International Ambassador, Global Ambassador on Women's issues for Oxfam and Leader of the EQUALS coalition which is a partnership of charities lobbying to end gender inequality.

Annie Lennox saw the huge discrepency in woman's rights in Africa and knew she had to do something.  Her achievements are many and she has drawn public attention to the plight of women and children who endure chronic and endemic poverty. She campaigns against the disempowerment of women and for their right to access basic healthcare in a world where HIV and Aids are the biggest killer of women.

After reading this post, please watch this interview with Annie Lennox on BBC News
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-17305262
and feel her passion, anger, frustration and above all desire to keep working for change.

She is ONE TRULY AMAZING WOMAN!

(oh, and one more fact before I finish which I feel I have to add.........................at the end of the above interview, Annie Lennox gives us the following fact: 
In the western world, we spend 3 times MORE on BOTTLED WATER than we do on Development Aid....
Now that's something none of us should be proud of)

HAPPY INTERNATIONAL WOMAN'S DAY TO ALL YOU WONDERFUL WOMAN OUT THERE, MY FRIENDS HERE IN PERSON, AND THOSE OF YOU IN  BLOGASPHERE LAND! YOU ARE ALL AMAZING, ARTISTIC AND PASSIONATE AND TOGETHER WE CAN BE THAT COLLECTIVE VOICE FOR CHANGE!

Friday, 2 September 2011

Phones, Photos, Cameras and Computers

Ok, so 5 posts in, and I would say that this blog is rather becoming all consuming! Although yesterday's post was relatively easy to write and didn't take too long in the grand scheme of things, it was the finer details that saw me up until the early hours!
I need to get a grip on this technology thing! I've never been one for doing things on computers, I can't get a handle on all the different things they do, and I haven't got the patience to find out! I'm a practical person, I like to be active and I find myself getting frustrated when the computer won't do what I want it to do!!!
So last night found me adding the pictures and photos onto post 4 which ended up taking ages as I learnt how to place them where I wanted, which still didn't go according quite to plan!
I think I need to persuade 1 of my more technology minded friends to "show" me  how it works and what I can do rather than to spend hours "trying" to work it out for myself.
So, any offers...............................................................................................???!!!!
I was given a camera for my joint birthday and Christmas last year, it is a lovely snazzy thing which I think does alot, however, I have only really worked out how to take photos on it. So along with learning how to make the most out of my blog, I need to link that in with learning how to use my camera properly which can only compliment my blog with relevant photos and video clips!
And now, to top it all off, I have to learn to use my new mobile phone after my old one was drowned some time ago while out walking in the rain!
Now, I have toyed with the idea of really, truly living what I preach, and not having a mobile phone at all. Afterall, I lived without one until I was in my mid 20's and I survived! It is just another "thing" which makes life more complicated, stressful and busy!
I am extremely uncomfortable with the cost of the environmental footprint that the production of mobile phones has and the cost on human lives. We talk alot about our carbon footprint, but our personal footprints are much bigger than that, they are social as well as ecological. Many of us are lucky enough to live in a charmed world where we can buy anything if we have the money, however we know little about what our footprints are. It all happens so far away. The people and pollution that sustain us are invisible to us.

The following information comes from "Confessions of an eco sinner" by Fred Pearce.
A typical mobile phone weighs only about 75g but taking its  many ingredients from the earth requires the mining of 30kg of rock. In addition, manufacturing the chips requires several hundred litres of water, and the energy that probably comes from burning several tens of kilos of fossil fuels.
There is 1 mobile phone for every 3 people on the planet.
More than 2 phones are assembled from components every second in factories, of which the majority are in China, mainly in Shenzan, which, 25 yrs ago, was a fishing village surrounded by rice paddy. Today it is an urban sprawl of 12 million people. People make these phones, and those people are hundreds of thousands of young women migrant workers.


Behind the component suppliers lies another vast industry, mining and refining the metals other materials that go into components. The phone is a miniature smmorgasbord of metals and other ingredients.
The main metal that is needed for our mobiles is "Coltan" which is an african nickname for a bunch of minerals that contain 2 elements, columbium and tantalum. Tantalum is essential to the modern mobile phone, without it, mobiles would still be the size of bricks and need recharging every 15 mins. And the smarter the phone, the greater the number of tantalum capacitors (the tiny components of electrical circuits that store and releace charge). A phone with a camera and video function requires more than 20 capacitors.
Today more than half the world's tantalum goes into making more than 20 billion capacitors every year - 3 for every person on the planet.
As the demand for mobile phones soared,the mines in Western Australia and Germany were not enough and the coltan reserves of eastern Congo were exploited. Unsavoury rebel military leaders made fortunes out of the ore and used it to raise cash for arms or filled their swiss bank accounts.
They pressganged child soilders and prisoners to mine the coltan and ship it off to brokers.

Amnesty International says that coltan paid for a war within a war that claimed hundreds of thousands of civilian lives and subjected millions of others to a humanitarian catastrophe.
For a while, Congo was the main source of the world's coltan and much of that went into mobile phones.
Coltan prices eased in 2002 and the congolese civil war subsided soon after but the warlords are still in business making trouble in the jungle. And since then, another vital resource has come under their control. Rising global demand for tin has triggered a rush for rich congolese reserves of cassiterite, an ore containing tin oxide. The same soilders, and the same illicit supply channels through Rwanda, are involved
http://inspirationgreen.com/minerals-that-cause-war.html




And what happens to phones after we have finished with them? There are many take back schemes which recycle old phones by melting them down, extracting the metals to make new phones. Many charities benefit from these schemes by selling donated old phones to these schemes so I believe this is the best use for our my old drowned mobile.
So after writing all that, I am in fact questioning my decision after my post yesterday extolling the values of a freedom from material desires and avoiding waste!
However, I will ease my guilty conscious by pledging here and now, on this blog (not that anyone's reading yet!) that I will learn how this phone works and make use out of every function that will serve to benefit me.

I think the message from what I have written today is that, for me, I want to be driven by idealism, not by a desire to keep up with the latest fashion or consumer durables. Antimaterialism is good for the soul and the planet. We could all get by on much less if we had different priorities.  If we just reduce our consumption, we'd be well on the way to tackling global warming, reducing human suffering and ensuring a more equitable global distribution or resources.

"Everyone thinks about changing the world, but no one thinks of changing himself"
Leo Tolstoy, novelist and moral philosopher

So, I hope that by my 6th post, I will have learnt more about how to make this blog look more interesting, learnt about all my phone, and even have a better understanding of my camera's abilitly to help me make this blog more exciting!
More challenges to keep me motivated, focused, interested and energized! I am really enjoying writing this, and anything that is going to make it easier, less time consuming and more visully pleasing will keep me committed!
Now I have written 5 posts, I am going to email all my friends and family and hope that they log on!
Off to Animal Aid training tomorrow about how I can raise awarness of animal welfare in schools, and then helping to run a stall for our primary school at the Wychwood forest fair on Sunday.
http://www.animalaid.org.uk/h/n/AA/HOME/
http://www.wychwoodproject.org/wps/wcm/connect/occ/Wychwood/Events/Forest+Fair/
Better put a whole day aside next week to write all about those experiences!

Till then!x