Copenhagen Pedal Power
Read all about it here.
"This column is dedicated to the proposition that Canada (and indeed the world) is in a crisis situation and that fundamental social change is required to remedy this situation." - The First Column, Lambda November 2, 1971 This blog is inspired by my column of the same name in the Laurentian University Newspaper, Lambda, from 1971-1973. The title refers to the concept of subverting the system from within. To read key excerpts from those columns read the first few posts in this blog.
Read all about it here.
Posted by rww at 20:17 0 comments
Labels: bicycling, Christmas tree lights, climate change, Copenhagen, Denmark, environment, pedal power, United Nation Climate Change Conference (COP15)
From the NCC:
Greenbelt Conference and online dialogue
The National Capital Commission (NCC) is conducting a review of the 1996 Greenbelt Master Plan, which guides the use, management and protection of the Greenbelt.
Take part in the discussion!
Noted speakers from Canada, the United States and the United Kingdom have agreed to share their knowledge about other greenbelts around the world, including the importance of greenbelts and the variety of roles they play, and the lessons learned from the experiences of other cities and regions.
We invite you to take part in this dialogue to help shape a vision that will guide the management of the Greenbelt for the next 50 years.
Conference: The Future of the Greenbelt
Wednesday, November 25, 7 pm
National Arts Centre, Panorama Room
53 Elgin Street, Ottawa, and on the web
Webcast and online dialogue: National Forum on the Greenbelt
Live, November 25 and 26, starting at 8:30 am
Delayed broadcast, until January 2010
More information can be found here.
Webcasts of these events will be available here.
January
In January you will be invited to take part in further public consultations to discuss the future of the Greenbelt in greater detail.
Further Information
The timeline for the Greenbelt Master Plan Review can be found here.
Information on Step 1 of the Consultation Process (and documents presented) can be found here.
Further information on the Greenbelt Master Plan Review can be found here.
Information on the Greenbelt can be found here.
Posted by rww at 10:51 2 comments
Labels: environment, Greenbelt Master Plan Review, National Capital Commission, National Capital Region, NCC, Ontario, Ottawa, public consultations, trails
Well, nothing, actually.
The Liberal Party has always been a centrist (and opportunistic) party, slightly to the left of the Progressive Conservative Party. The fact that the latest incarnation of the Conservative Party has moved to the right does not make the Liberals progressive. Indeed, if anything, the Liberals under Iggy have moved to the right into (and past) the spot held by the old Progressive Conservatives.
As for the Greens, they are simply a recognition that broader support for environmentalism has created a spot for a right wing environmental party that recognizes that without an environment there can be no profits and that there are profits to be made from environmentalism. But their solutions are clearly capitalistic and not progressive.
The fact is that Canada has only one mainstream progressive political party. It is the party that has always been the political wing of the progressive movements, including the environmental movement. And, of course, that party, with it's own inherent problems from time to time, is the New Democratic Party.
Posted by rww at 08:43 3 comments
Labels: capitalism, Conservative Party, environment, Green Party, Liberal Party, Michael Ignatieff, NDP, New Democratic Party, political parties, Progressive Conservative Party, progressive movements
I was reviewing the Fifth Column and I decided to click on the Next Blog link in the blogspot top bar and this is where it took me:
Martin Horwood MP CheltenhamThere are some serious allegations buried in the nastiness on this page, if you look that far. However their credibility is extremely tainted by the nastiness they are buried in. This might have been fun to create but how effective it is is really questionable.
Norwich North Liberal DemocratIf you keep googling the subheadings you discover that someone has a serious hate on for the Liberal Democrats.
Posted by rww at 11:26 0 comments
Labels: Cheltenham, googling, Liberal Democrats, Martin Horwood, Members of Parliament, nastiness, politics, United Kingdom
Most of us know good people who are religious and we know some good things have been done in the name of religion. Indeed Canada would not have Medicare, public pensions or most of it's social programs if it was not for CCFers and New Democrats inspired by the Social Gospel.
However we also know that any rational understanding of history finds that way more evil than good has been done in the name of religion that and religion is the tool invariably used to get good people to do evil things because "god is on our side".
It is not any specific religious doctrine or act in the name of "god" that is the most harmful thing about religion. Rather it is the religious mindset. It is the religious mindset that allows people to reject facts and reason. It is the religious mindset that allows people to believe something just because they choose to, or because someone like Osama Bin Laden, Adolf Hitler or Glenn Beck tells them to. It is faith, belief with no rational basis, that is the foundation of all religion and which makes it so dangerous.
Was anyone not surprised by the selection of United States President Obama as this year's Nobel Peace Prize recipient. While many, I am sure, saw him as a potential future winner, most saw the newly elected President as not having been in office long enough to have the accomplishments necessary to win the prize.
The Nobel Committee obviously saw it differently and I think that speaks to a number of things.
The Norwegian Nobel committee said the president was selected "for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and co-operation between people."The committee seems to have put a lot of emphasis on the hope created by Obama's election. In a way they have given him the prize, not for specific accomplishments, but for setting the stage for future accomplishments.
The committee attached special importance to Obama's vision and work for a world without nuclear weapons in the prize citation, which was read in Oslo on Friday.
"The vision of a world free from nuclear arms has powerfully stimulated disarmament and arms control negotiations," the citation said.
...
Norwegian Nobel committee chair Thorbjorn Jagland told CNN that the five-member committee had unanimously voted to select Obama as the Nobel laureate.
Jagland told CBC News the committee expected criticism about the selection. But the prize is meant to help "strengthen his role and his policy," he said.
Though Obama has been president for less than a year it has been "enough time to inspire the world," Jagland said.
The Nobel committee said Obama has created a new climate in international politics that has focused on multilateral diplomacy and an emphasis on the role of the United Nations and other international institutions.
"Only very rarely has a person to the same extent as Obama captured the world's attention and given its people hope for a better future," the citation said.
Posted by rww at 12:56 1 comments
Labels: Barack Obama, diplomacy, hope, Nobel Peace Prize, Norwegian Nobel committee, nuclear disarmament, peace, Thorbjorn Jagland, United States
LIMBAUGH: I've been mentioning this since I started this show. "Workers" is a communist word. "Workers" is a socialist, a Karl Marx word. Workers of the world unite, workers -- we don't have workers; we have citizens, we have employees. We have associates. When I worked at the Kansas City Royals, the team was owned by Ewing Kauffman, who also owned Marion Labs. He never called one person a worker or an employee. Everybody was an associate, from the custodial staff on up. Workers? All this little leftist lingo trickling into our lexicon.So remember next time you see somebody working stop them and ask them what they are doing.
Source: The Limbaugh Wire for 09/29/2009
Posted by rww at 14:32 1 comments
Labels: associates, communism, International Workers Day, Karl Marx, language. leftist lingo, lexicon, Rush Limbaugh, socialism, work, workers