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Stuff - what is it and where does it come from?

on December 13, 2007
Category: Dumb America, Environment

From Extraction through to production, consumption and disposal, Free Range Studios presents

The Story of Stuff exposes the connections between a huge number of environmental and social issues, and calls us together to create a more sustainable and just world. It’ll teach you something, it’ll make you laugh, and it just may change the way you look at all the stuff in your life forever.

90% of the stuff consumed in the US is trashed within six months - now that is truly scary

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Someone Asked me if I was an Environmentalist

on November 2, 2007
Category: Assault on Dissent, E-Activism, Feminism, Environment

By accident. By accident, I am an environmentalist. Growing up financially challenged (read: poor) makes me very conscious of conserving resources and re-using things. This was not because as a child I cared so much about the future of the planet, but because if you ran the water too long then the bill would be too high, if you left the lights on in unoccupied rooms then the electricity bill may not get paid, if you recycled those cans and bottles then that would be money to rent videos that week, and if you saved those plastic bags from the grocery store then we could save money on trash bags. There was also the if you take care of your clothes you could pass them on to a sibling, or if we run all of our errands at once, then we can save gas money.

These were all lessons that I feel a lot of struggling families and communities pass on to others without consciously affirming an environmentalist discourse. Through the hustle and bustle of the day, working 2-3 jobs, raising kids, etc. none of them, and especially my parents, had the time to sit down, think, research and say ‘by gosh! I am an environmentalist.’ For all they know, they were just trying to navigate poverty and make it through the day. Of course there are those who are consciously activists and organizers, but there is a certain beauty in the unconscious activist. Sure, the explicit intentions–or what we can myopically perceive of them aren’t to change the world, but by circumstance there is some organic initiative to at least ‘fix’ the situations that seem most accessible.

This is not to force the punitive conclusion that every struggling woman in the hood is an activist, but it is an attempt to force all of us to (re)conceptualize the way we understand activism, activists and organizers. I always refer Robin DG Kelley’s Race Rebels: Culture, Politics, and the Black Working Class. Kelley addresses the politics of everday—so-called “hidden transcripts of resistance” by placing things such as theft, feigning laziness, or the refusal to enter the formal work sector within the James C. Scott’s paradigm of “infrapolitics.” Infrapolitics as he explains is

the circumspect struggle waged daily by subordinate groups is, like infrared rays, beyond the visible end of the spectrum. That it should be invisible…is in large part by design—a tactical choice born of prudent awareness of the balance of power.

With all the conferences converging self-identified activists and organizers, can we get a conference to get the informal, unconscious activists together? Can we have a conference to garner respect for these people? Because Allah knows that I can site all the most wonderful organizers and revolutionaries of the world and none of them will come to close to my mother. Not because my mother has transformed a country or establish community centers; but because she never saw her life as a mother as different as the life of an activist. That artificial separation was never there–it was just an organic impulse to act because it is how we survive(d), how they survive(d).

Maybe the way mothers mother is a form of activism. Maybe there is a such thing as radical mothering, and maybe all the feminists who are so hasty (and nasty) to critique stay at home moms, have yet to realize that those mothers are the midwives for the revolution. They are the ones who give birth to and sacrifice to raise the me’s and the you’s.


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Quick Links -

on August 10, 2007
Category: Blogosphere, Poetry, African Diaspora, Environment, LGBTI, Nigeria, Gender Violence, Literature

* Jessica Stern of the “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights Program” writes an open letter to President Thabo Mbeki on “Homophobic Violence” in South Africa

In recognition of National Women’s Day, we urge you to ensure that the criminal justice system is capable of responding sensitively, effectively, and promptly to incidents of sexual and hate-based violence. A full investigation of these murders, weighing the possibility that the women’s gender and sexual orientation may have been motivations for their murders, is vital not only to achieving justice but to building trust between the South African Police Service and lesbian communities broadly. Police and other authorities should work closely with groups working for LGBT and women’s rights both in pursuing investigations and developing effective strategies and policies to improve protection.

* Science and Development has a special issue on Climate Change in Africa. One topic we don’t read about very much and maybe we should be just a little concerned?

Africa has contributed less than any other region to the greenhouse gas emissions that are widely held responsible for global warming. But the continent is also the most vulnerable to the consequences.

What are the concerns? Water supplies, food security, health (some countries are seeing increases in malaria). On the positive side there are local adaptive strategies being adopted.

* Wangari Maathai also writes on climate change in the East African

In wealthy countries, the looming climate crisis is a matter of concern, as it will affect both the wellbeing of economies and people’s lives. In Africa, however, a region that has hardly contributed to climate change — its greenhouse gas emissions are negligible when compared with the industrialised world’s — it will * be a matter of life and death.

* Zucky comments on the Yearly Whiteosphere gathering of the Yearly Kos

Shockingly, just shockingly, the blinding whiteness of the liberal blogosphere, as represented at YearlyKos, is seen as a cause for some concern and alienation to people of color who happen to be involved, and merely an annoying tangential subject to white mainstreamers who have more important things to talk about.

* Afro-European Sisters Network - is a site run by Sandra Rafaela. She publishes short stories and poems by African women. She recently started a blog of the same name.

You will read about experiences of black women. Reading the stories of these women will hopefully motivate other black women to express their lives also. The more knowledge shared the more there is to learn. This will create a network where black women can improve themselves by achieving goals an having an overall better way of living.

* Hate speech, blog lynchings, publishing private photos/videos, outing bloggers, flaming, hacking sites, death treats, are some of the cyber nasties taking place on blogs . Joan Walsh of Salon.com writes about a particularly horrible attack on a female programmer. There are others I personally know of, but does anyone really knows how often this is happening? Women seem to be a major target group however anyone could be game for the anon crowd.

* Funmi Iyanda on “new” dress code mania by public officials in Nigeria alongside awful uneducated poor people.

For years, l have told the morality brigade that the average uneducated person who is resentful of his poverty and blames all above him does not know the fine line. Therefore, the subject of indecent dressing is so subjective and potentially prone to abuse it should not be trifled with. Indecent exposure (flashing your privates) yes but indecent dressing? By what standards, religious, ethnic, class? Are these not seeds of discord and disintegration?


* Haiti Liberte
is a new monthly newspaper (print and online) which describes itself as a

new forum for the airing of new ideas on how to advance the struggle for Haiti’s liberation. We will do our best, under the difficult conditions of this fight, to defend not only the fundamental rights of the Haitian people, but above all to defend our national soil.

The first edition focuses on Haiti’s long history of foreign occupations and to demanding an end to the present UN occupation. The paper is published in Kreyol, French and English.


From Microscopiq “Note to commenters: I will delete your comment for name calling or generally being obnoxious. I will not delete your comment for disagreeing with me.” Ditto

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15th Erase Racism Carnival

on July 30, 2007
Category: Social Movements, Racism, Environment

via RaceWire

15th Erase Racism Carnival! Read all about it!
Welcome to the July Erase Racism Blog Carnival!

Every month, a different blog gathers posts from throughout cyberspace that explore issues of racial justice. The goal is to enhance the discussion of race online and connect bloggers working hard to make that happen. We thank everyone who submitted pieces for this, the 15th carnival.

This month we wanted to highlight some topics we feel don’t get enough time in the sun. So we sought out several pieces on topics that matter: Media Representations, the Green Economy and Black/Brown relations.

In addition, we grouped the blogs under a few other topics we hope you find pertinent and interesting:

–Race and the Green Economy
–Race, gender, and the media
–Black/Brown relations
–Historical identities
–Whiteness revisited
–Darfur

Without further delay, here is this month’s Erase Racism Carnival! Let’s Celebrate!

***

RACE AND THE GREEN ECONOMY

Van Jones
The New Environmentalists
More people of color have not yet grabbed the microphone for three reasons: our long-standing pattern of viewing environmental issues as luxury concerns; the mainstream media’s “whites only” coverage of the green phenomenon; and serious structural impediments to action within the racial justice movement itself.
Colorlines

Toxic Waste and Environmental Justice

A report
A DC Birding Blog

RACE, GENDER IN THE MEDIA

Kai Chang
Food Racism and Capitalism
What I find rather amazing is that so many non-Asians continue to find these moronic clichés funny and/or fascinating, to the point that lurid stories about tainted Chinese food have been at or near the top of corporate fake-news for weeks.
Zuky

read more over at RaceWire

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Sajida Khan: 1952-2007 - Death of an Eco-Feminist

on July 17, 2007
Category: Feminism, Women making a difference, Environment, African Women, Obituary

Sajida_Khan.jpg

A tribute to Sajida Khan, who fought against global capitalism at the continent’s largest rubbish dump - a fight that cost her life. Sajida was a key activist against carbon trading and died as a direct result of the toxins emitted from illegal medical waste in an incinerator and waste from a nearly paper mill and sugar factory on her doorstep. The landfill site will continue to emit toxins for the next 27 20 years.

Below is the Google Earth rendition showing the landfill and the surrounding houses in Durban including her family’s.

Clare_Estate_Rubbish_Dump.jpg

Sometimes when lives are judged by visual victories, we see failures, and after all, the dump remains right outside Sajida’s front door after her 14 year fight. But on the other hand, if a life is judged by a legacy that endures and is built upon, hers is one of multiple larger victories: of a woman standing against male domination of nationalist politics, of knowledge about global capitalist ecology over amnesia, of ordinary people harnessing the most incredible forms of expertise so as to enter forums usually dominated by people with multiple degrees, and of a political ecology that is a politics of all the people. Whatever you might say about her race and class privilege, the final denominator is that she’ll die fighting the cancer infection, and fighting the dump that gave her that cancer. This was not a death of privilege, it was murder Patrick Bond and Rehana Dada [Ashwin Desai]

The government had repeatedly broken it’s promise to close the dump and the practice continued unchecked in the post Apartheid period. In 1996 a landfill in Umhlanga, white suburb in the north of Durban, began closing down. And where did the waste previously destined for Umhlanga go? To Bisasar Road.

According to Carl Albrecht, research director at the Cancer Association of SA,

‘Clare Estate residents are like animals involved in a biological experiment.’

Sajida Khan documented 70% of Bisasar Road households with tumor cases, not to mention severe respiratory problems. Bisasar Road toxic dumps are replicated across the continent and no one knows how many poor people, many unaware of the dangers of the air they breathe, have died and continue to die from this practice.

Sources:
see CCS also for an interview with Sajida and more on her work as an eco-feminist activist.

“Trouble in the Air: Global Warming and the Privatised Atmosphere” A Civil Society Energy Reader edited by Patrick Bond and Rehana Dada.

Links: South Africa: Durban’s perfume rods, plastic covers and sweet-smelling toxic dump

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