wespeakfortheearth:

U.S. war veterans flash the peace sign before throwing their medals towards the site of the NATO Summit in Chicago May 20, 2012. Nearly 50 veterans threw service medals into the street near the summit site in protest. Baton-swinging police clashed with anti-war protesters marching on the NATO summit in Chicago on Sunday and a lawyers’ group

"We have a government that says it’s okay to eat Twinkies and Cocoa Puffs and Mountain Dew, but it’s illegal to drink raw milk and eat compost-grown tomatoes and Aunt Matilda’s pickles."

— From sustainable farmer Joel Salatin. Quote captured by Amy Eddings on WNYC Culture blog. (via newanddifferentsun)

(Source: kambui, via flappingbrickwings)

"Students today are over $1 trillion in debt. That’s more than credit card debt. A trillion dollars of debt? That’s a burden on people coming out of college. It’s got them trapped. It (tuition) is a technique of control, and it surely isn’t an economic necessity in the richest country in the world. All sorts of things started happening — the university architecture changed. Universities that were built, worldwide, in the post-’70s and on, are usually designed so that they don’t have meeting places, designed just to keep students separated and under control. Look at the ratio of administrators to faculty: it’s gone way up the last couple of decades … not for educational purposes, but for more techniques of control. What you’re talking about, I think it should be opposed, because it’s a general form of indoctrination and control, which goes down to kindergarten. I mean, that’s what No Child Left Behind is about. It’s training for the Marine Corps. It’s a way to make sure that children aren’t free, independent or inquisitive, exploring."

Noam Chomsky (via 0rgasms)

(via 0rgasms)

solitaryforager:

Farmers v. Monsanto Solidarity Rally!
On January 31st, family farmers from across the county will take part in the first phase of the OSGATA et al. v. Monsanto court case filed to protect farmers from genetic trespass by Monsanto’s genetically modified (GMO) seed, which can contaminate organic and non-GMO farmers’ crops and open them up to abusive lawsuits.As a result of aggressive lawsuits against farmers with contaminated crops, Monsanto has created an atmosphere of fear in rural America and driven dozens of farmers into bankruptcy. But farmers are fighting back!The Federal District Court judge has agreed to hear oral arguments in this landmark case to decide whether or not this case will move forward.Occupy Wall Street Food Justice, Occupy Big Food and Food Democracy Now! will assemble in solidarity with farmers on the front lines of the struggle against corporate domination of our food system.#J31 #StopMonsantoFor more info on the case, check out:www.fooddemocracynow.orgwww.osgata.orghttp://www.pubpat.org/ monsanto-seed-patents.htm

mohandasgandhi:

Whales Are People Too

ONE OF THE MOST important features of science is that  scientific progress regularly leads to important ethical questions. This  is particularly true with research about cetaceans — whales, dolphins  and the like — because it has become increasingly apparent that the  inner life of these nonhumans is more complex than most humans realise.  We have learned that their capacity for suffering is significantly  greater than has been imagined—which makes much human behavior towards  these nonhumans ethically problematic.
There is now ample scientific evidence that capacities once thought  to be unique to humans are shared by these beings. Like humans, whales  and dolphins are ‘persons’. That is, they are self-aware beings with  individual personalities and a rich inner life. They have the ability to  think abstractly, feel deeply and choose their actions. Their lives are  characterized by close, long-term relationships with conspecifics in  communities characterized by culture. In short, whales and dolphins are a  who, not a what.
However, as the saying goes, there is good news and there is bad news.
The good news is that the scientific community is gradually  recognising the importance of these ethical issues. For example, more  marine mammal scientists are steering away from doing research on  captive dolphins. More significantly, a small group of experts who met  at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies in the spring of 2010 to  evaluate the ethical implications of the scientific research on  cetaceans concluded that the evidence merited issuing a Declaration of  Rights for Cetaceans: Whales and Dolphins. This group included such  prominent scientists as Lori Marino and Hal Whitehead. Particularly  important in this declaration was the recognition that whales and  dolphins are persons who are “beyond use”. Treating them as ‘property’  is indefensible.
Unfortunately, while there has been consistent progress in  scientists’ sensitivity to the ethical issues, the same cannot be said  for those who use cetaceans to generate revenue.
In contrast to the considerable detail devoted to virtually every  aspect of dolphin anatomy, physiology and behavior on the US  SeaWorld/Busch Gardens Animals website,  the discussion of intelligence is so brief and ignores so much  scientific evidence that it comes off as a self-serving dodge: “Rating  the intelligence of different animals is misleading and extremely  subjective”.
Even if this statement is true, it does not explain why no mention is  made of research that shows dolphins’ impressive cognitive abilities:  to pass mirror self-recognition tests (Lori Marino and Diana Reiss); to  comprehend artificial human language (Lou Herman); and to solve problems  by advanced planning (John Gory and Stan Kuczaj). The bibliography  offered contains nothing more recent than 2003 and, not surprisingly,  omits any research that indicates the intellectual and emotional  sophistication of these cetaceans.
To its credit, the website of the Vancouver Aquarium notes,  “Studies of numerous species of dolphins have shown evidence of high  levels of intelligence, including complex social behaviour, detailed  memory, self-recognition, and the ability to learn rudimentary  symbol-based artificial codes.” However, notably absent from this or any  other site connected with a captive facility is any full discussion of  the ethical implications of these facts.
Especially troubling is the failure of the industry to respond to the  scientific discoveries at issue with any serious re-evaluation of their  practices. One of the most important ethical implications of the  scientific research on cetaceans is that these individuals are  ‘persons’, not ‘property’. Yet captive facilities continue to offer  scientifically flawed and ethically unsophisticated defenses for their  current practices. Virtually no consideration is given to the ethical  status of their captive breeding programs. Treating self-aware beings as  a commodity whose reproduction is managed for economic advantage is, no  matter what benefit it produces, fundamentally offensive from an  ethical standpoint.
It is, of course, no surprise that the managers, employees and  researchers affiliated with enterprises that make money using captive  whales and dolphins do a poor job of being sensitive to the ethical  implications of the progress of marine mammal science. These people are  caught in a classic conflict of interest. On the one hand, they have a  duty to protect the welfare of the cetaceans in their care. On the other  hand, their jobs and careers depend on keeping the current business  model intact for as long as they can.
Predictably, when there’s money on the line, people will not only  rationalise all sorts of actions, they’ll even believe their own  rationalisations. As we saw with the 2008 economic meltdown, individuals  running banks and financial institutions on Wall Street were so blinded  by a desire to maximise profits that they not only ran their own  companies into the ground, they put the economy of the entire planet at  risk. When we humans are so ready to turn a blind eye to actions that  risk hurting ourselves for the sake of profit, it comes as no surprise  that we’ll readily ignore the possibility of hurting other intelligent  species.
All of the organisations that use captive cetaceans say they are  strongly committed to the welfare of the whales and dolphins under their  care. Given the ethical challenges that have come from the progress of  scientific research over the last 30 years, the question is whether  these organisations will respond appropriately on their own or whether  they will increasingly become the targets of controversy and consumer  boycotts.
The ultimate irony in this situation is that—as was the case with the  Wall Street banks that were sunk by greed and poor business  judgment—the business model in place at the companies that make money  from captivity is not even the best one to maximise profits. The  progress of marine mammal science combined with the activities of  cetacean advocacy groups will increasingly cast these operations in an  ethically questionable light with consumers. At the very least, these  facilities will have to expend money just to keep their customer base.  More importantly, the primacy of technology in the lives of young people  provides these operations with a perfect opportunity to move away from  the enormous ongoing costs connected with maintaining live whales and  dolphins. Sophisticated multi-media (HD, 3D, IMAX) presentations would  not only be more scientifically accurate, more interesting and more  acceptable from an ethical perspective than live display, they would  also be vastly more profitable over the long term.
We are left, then, with an interesting—but troubling—conundrum. If  moving away from using captive whales and dolphins is both the right  thing to do and more profitable than current practices, why isn’t it  happening?

[Image via]


“One of the great liabilities of history is that all too many people fail to remain awake through great periods of social change. Every society has its protectors of status quo and its fraternities of the indifferent who are notorious for sleeping through revolutions. Today, our very survival depends on our ability to stay awake, to adjust to new ideas, to remain vigilant and to face the challenge of change.”

But then I remember the beauty.

seasofsynesthesia:

Autumn Skye - Remembering Eternity

unusualyoung:

Allison Harvard

"What a liberation to realize that the “voice in my head” is not who I am. Who am I then? The one who sees that."

— Eckhart Tolle (via lazyyogi)

(Source: lazyyogi)