Thursday 8 November 2012

A New Energy Policy, A New Economy


A New Energy Policy, A New Economy

It is the day after Obama was re-elected and the Dow/Dao fell 312. The TSX fell 130.  It was not a free fall.  It held steady the last 3 hours before the close.  Pundits are suggesting this is not a reaction to the renewed Obama presidency.  In fact, futures were going up after the President was declared re-elected.  The fall may be more related to negative speeches made in the early morning about the financial crisis in Germany and concern over a possible contraction in the American economy if Obama cannot negotiate an acceptable strategy for dealing with taxes and the debt.

But there could also be some anxiety over Obama’s approach to energy security.  In his acceptance speech he actually drew attention to the looming problem of climate change.  What will be the US energy policy to deal with this developing crisis?  The environmentalists voted for him because he delayed the XL pipeline.  Romney said he would approve it the first day of his presidency.  Will Obama delay that pipeline with investigation and environmental assessment?    Will the people's will or the oil company interests prevail?

Harper is not pleased to have to do battle with the President of the United States who is supposed to be his buddy and ally.  Harper will not like begging to be allowed to set up systems for delivering a higher volume of dilbit to the United States.  The US was supposed to want an unlimited amount of our dirty oil.   Maybe industry and the stock market are nervous that energy policy is about to change.

But if Obama focuses on renewables (as we want him to do), the demand for oil might not come back.  It might even continue to contract.  This could leave oil companies over-extended and in trouble.  As anti-pipeline activists let us separate our objectives.  Our objectives are not to destroy oil companies.  Our objective is to work with energy executives to plan the down-sizing of the oil sands in order to focus on energy conservation and renewable energy.  The big money will no longer be made from ecocidal mining of oil and other minerals.  

We want the big money to be made in making anything that uses power to be more energy efficient:  anything that improves on current batteries and energy storage systems;  anything that sets up systems to make hydrogen whenever there is electricity being wasted;  innovation in networking complex power grids and setting up systems for maximum efficiency.  Maximum innovation must be stimulated in these areas.  The oil, coal, and nuclear industries must learn to change their focus and make money in the new economy.  We may need transition programming to help them convert.  We need energy executives to lead us forward toward a greenhouse gas--free world.  

We need to understand as a society that when we conduct such activities as mining, we must, intentionally, design the mining or forestry processes for minimum impact on the surrounding ecosystems.  We must internalize the cost of preserving the environment into the price of any activity we undertake. 

Both companies and government must incorporate environmental and human well-being indexes into the measure of how successful our economy is.  GDP will be one among several indicators tracked on a regular basis.   

In my dream world, during this time of transition, the United Nations would be leading a political dialogue with all the leaders of the world on how we could build a world at peace and stop spending the world's resources on manufacturing weapons and nuclear power plants.

I would like to see the world organized by watersheds such as the Athabasca Watershed.  Very large river catchment areas would be countries.  They might be broken into several provinces drained by main feeder tributaries.  Municipalities would centre around local watersheds.  People would be intimately connected with the water that provides the life-giving capacity of the land.

In my dream world, the law would be changed so that private corporations would have equal fiduciary responsibility to the shareholders and to the community.  We need a market-based economy to ensure that we encourage innovation and entrepreneurship.  We also need it accepted in the core values of society that the activities of private companies have a big impact on the communities in which they are located and on the surrounding environment.  No activity that produces a negative bottom-line for the community or the environment can be considered to be beneficial to shareholders.  The co-op model of enterprise where workers own their own means of production is to be encouraged.

In my dream world we would also substantially reduce military spending.  We can solve the world’s oil crisis by massively reducing consumption.  We need to take similar steps with water.  We cannot afford a century of war over these precious resources.  Instead, we need to develop peaceful means to negotiate, and share the resources we have.  With the financial dividend achieved by reduced military spending, we create jobs in environmental reclamation, environmental assessment, environmental management, health care, education, social work, transportation, and so on.  We build the new infrastructure and work out piece-by-piece which parts are best done by the public and which by the private sector and how the two complement each other.  This is how we must share the wealth in a service-based economy where everyone has worth and dignity and all who are able have the opportunity to contribute through meaningful work.


Tuesday 6 November 2012

Raven Courtney: Sandy and Climate Change


Dear friends and family, many questions came in my inbox regarding this weeks oncoming of events with Mother Earth and my opinions on it. I will be very honest and very open minded about it....I love Mother Earth with deep love and will go that extra mile and some to bring voice to her to help protect her.
My deepest feelings are that we are faced with natures comings and goings and we cant control it in however we try to.....if earthquakes are going to happen, they will, if cyclones are going to happen they will, if tsunami warnings are going to come then they will....that is the nature of our Mother Earth, it breathes and it lives and that is why we need to bring her rights and protect her. No....Mother Earth is not capable of punishing us, its our own conciousness that punishes us for what we do or what we know. We live in this world and all we have to do is learn how to live and care for ourselves in this world of natural elements that come to us. Mother Earth is a huge force and it can be gentle or the opposite but only becuz it breathes and lives on its own and not to punish us.
"we the people" have to work alittle harder together to bring our Mother Earth rights and end the era of ecocide and protect her. Even with the earthquakes, cyclones and tsunami warnings we must still move forward in bringing her voice and taking care of our home.
Yes, we do irresponsible actions towards our Earth but we can still help make it stop today and make that difference....for a better tommorow. We will still have our earthquakes, cyclones and tsunami warnings but we will get stronger each time.
Climate change and does it do this? Can we isolate climate change with what is happening today with the superstorm? many questions are asked and sometimes we just have to sit back and think about the facts we gather ie:Atlantic Ocean is 5" f warmer then average, warmer water equals more evaporation and heavy rains, higher sea levels cause storm surges.....the warmer weather makes these storms more intense then usual, it makes strong storms even stronger. In my own opinion I believe that that the extreme weatheris a strong signal for climate change, in the last two years we had extreme weather conditions, with hurricanes, earth quakes, tsunamis, heatwaves, floods, droughts, wildfires and the epic melting in the Artic. We all have our own thoughts, opinions and stories but we all know we have to change in how we treat our precious Mother Earth.....end the era of ecocide and make ecocide against the law, we can all do this together........love and peace, Raven
www.eradicatingecocide.com
www.eradicatingecocideincanada.org

Saturday 3 November 2012

Crime Prevention


2012 10 31 – Crime Prevention

I have just receieved a powerpoint presentation that gives me information on what is being done by different levels of government about crime prevention and the growing gang economy. 

It tells me that the gang economy is 3.6% of the world’s Gross Domestic Product or, in other words, among the world’s top 20 economies.  It compares in power and financial strength to a country, but it does not have the public accountability of a country.  It is a completely private and independent economy with only its own self-interest at heart.  It is comparable to a very large multinational corporation, or perhaps several.

It tells me that Ottawa doesn’t have a very big problem compared to  Los Angelos (9.8 per 1,000)  Saskatoon (3.86/1000) Toronto (1.23/1000) Edmonton (.58/1000) Ottawa .53/1,000) (Density per 1000 people in a city’s population.)

Then it gives me the names of government programs and how much money it has thrown at the problem through which agencies.  Now don’t get me wrong.  We need government programs and qualified professionals from social workers to scientists, computer specialists and communicators to tackle many social and environmental problems.  I am grateful for their dedication and service.

But I do get frustrated with the many political responses I receive describing the money they have allocated to solve our country’s problems.  I don’t know what it means to throw money at a problem.  I don't know if a few million dollars is a lot or a little for that problem.  I don’t know what these programs are doing, or how they are being evaluated.  I don’t know if they are even addressing the problem.  I certainly don’t know how much of this money the Federal or Provincial or City government has spent actually gets down to the people who need it.

It would seem as though the government believes if it has spent money it has done something.  The politician has completed their responsibility.

Meanwhile, gang membership continues to grow.  Young people continue to choose gang life over an education.  We know what could be done to prevent this, but we are not doing it.  We have to fund education right into the post-secondary level, and we have to go back to a scholarship and bursary system rather than a student loan system to finance education.  We have to keep our commitment to educate all First Nations students through to a trade or a University Education.  We have to provide employment opportunities for high school and post secondary students – equally available for all people.

We could take away the reward for our youth to deal marijuana by legalizing drugs and selling them through a government-regulated establishment like the LCBO, but we don’t.  That would make access into the gang setting much less attractive.

We could fund adequate affordable housing so that people could afford to buy their own food instead of using food banks.  If people were not hungry they would not resort to gangs for their living.  Hungry people do desperate things.  You have to have a system that gives people a chance so they will have hope.  But we don’t.

We think we can scare people into accepting their hopeless condition with legislation like Bill C-10, but we can’t.  Desperate people take risks without thinking.   They may believe it is their only chance for the good life.  Threat of punishment and intimidation and fear will not succeed and will be very expensive. 

These are not the tools that will generate community and respect.  If we want our young people to grow up to be strong citizens then they must face the consequences of their action and take responsibility for what they have done.  Our court system does not encourage this.  The punishment has no relationship to the crime.  Our system is more and more punishment-oriented and the person may never even admit their crime.  We do better  when we find creative sentences that allow the person to pay the victim back or face their community and decide together how a person can be held accountable and be restored to community as a contributing member.

In this regard, the work of prison chaplains is extremely important.  They have time to establish a relationship with a transgressor, and to help the person realize the harm they have done.  They have the opportunity to make creative interventions that help inmates who want to learn more about the impact of what they do on others and to develop their capacity for empathy and compassion.  We could support such programs and make more such services available to inmates in institutions but instead, we are taking away all the chaplains who may have spoken to a particular minority group.  I guess we think that people in jail are just throw away people. 

The population for whom these statements are most true is our First Nations’ and Inuit peoples.  We keep them as poor as we possibly can. We fail to honour our treaties.  We fail to have meaningful consultation with bands about what will happen on their territories.  Many of our aboriginal peoples have inadequate housing and poor quality water.  We devastate their land with our invasive strip mining techniques, and strip their forests.  We take away their ability to hunt and fish and push them to buy low quality food at exhorbitant prices out of their non-existent incomes.   We don’t fund their education to the same level as other Canadians enjoy.  It is a policy of social exclusion.

Does the money the government boasts having spent get through to the people who really need it?  I think very little trickles down even though the bureaucracies are very well-intentioned.

When will we see real programs that have an effect making improvements in people’s lives?  And what do those programs look like?  Let’s start with a guaranteed annual income, available to everyone, that will allow all people, the elderly, the disabled, the refugee, the unemployed  to have access to decent housing and enough food.