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  • 24 hours to stand with Paris avaaz

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    24 hours to stand with Paris

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    Emma Ruby-Sachs – Avaaz

    5:51 AM (3 hours ago)

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    Dear friends,

    Hundreds of thousands are taking to the streets of Paris tomorrow to support the beautiful French values of equality, fraternity and liberty. But counter protests are planned and division and fear may win out. Click below to join the virtual march to show that the world stands with Paris:

    Join In

    Hundreds of thousands will march through the streets of Paris tomorrow to support the beautiful French values of equality, fraternity and liberty — and we can be there with them.

    The entire world will be watching what happens as people take to the streets in response to the brutal murder of twelve people on Wednesday. Counter protests are planned, Europe’s far-right are mobilising throughout France, and two Muslim places of worship have already been attacked. This is just what the gunmen wanted: division and fear.

    But tomorrow we can show them that citizens everywhere also support the values the journalists, staff and policeman died for. Click below to join, and Avaaz staff in Paris will carry all our names in the march:

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/march_with_paris_loc/?bhPqncb&v=51065

    On Sunday, marchers will be joined by French President Hollande, Germany’s Angela Merkel, the UK’s David Cameron, Spain’s Mariano Rajoy, and many others. But this isn’t just a moment for France or even just Europe. This is one of those moments when those of us who stand for tolerance and freedom of expression everywhere can raise our hands, our pens and our voices. Because the effects of violence like this ripples out, and threaten all of our freedoms.

    Many of us found the cartoons in Charlie Hebdo offensive, racist and purposely inflammatory. Along with the Prophet Mohammed, they targeted immigrants, nuns, the pope, Jews and more. But free speech is easy to support until we’re asked to stand for the speech we don’t like. We can help define the message this attack sends to the world’s reporters, editors, and publishers. And to those who would like to see them silenced.

    We can’t all be in Paris on Sunday, but if we all sign our names in support, we will be able to show over one million people stand in solidarity with those in the streets, an important message of global unity at a time when it is so desperately needed. Click below to join in:

    https://secure.avaaz.org/en/march_with_paris_loc/?bhPqncb&v=51065

    What happens after these attack will affect all of us. The world will be choosing between a crackdown and anger or unity in the face of fear. This is our chance to respond with a clear call for hope and cooperation, for liberty, equality and fraternity.

    With sadness, but also so much hope and determination,

    Emma, Nell, Mais, Ricken, Mélanie and the whole Avaaz team

    Sources:

    The Attack on Charlie Hebdo (The New Yorker)
    http://www.newyorker.com/news/amy-davidson/attack-charlie-hebdo

    Charlie Hebdo Editor Killed in Paris (TIME)
    http://time.com/3657402/charlie-hebdo-stephane-charbonnier-paris-attack/

    People Around the World Are Pouring Into the Streets to Support Charlie Hebdo After the Paris Massacre (Mother Jones)
    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/01/je-suis-charlie-demonstrations-paris-massacre

    No, we are NOT all Charlie (and that’s a problem) (openDemocracy)
    https://www.opendemocracy.net/can-europe-make-it/cas-mudde/no-we-are-not-all-charlie-and-that%E2%80%…

    Support the Avaaz Community!
    We’re entirely funded by donations and receive no money from governments or corporations. Our dedicated team ensures even the smallest contributions go a long way.
    Donate Now
  • The John James Newsletter 40

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    The John James Newsletter 40

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    The John James Newsletter 40
    10 January 2015

    If you’re not outraged, you’re not paying attention.

    Bumper sticker

    2014 was the hottest year on record globally by far

    http://www.climatecodered.org/2015/01/2014-was-hottest-year-on-record.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+ClimateCodeRed+%28climate+code+red%29

    Why do we do nothing when the world is disintegrating around us? 

    Here is one answer I found fascinating! It is played out through organisations funded by the unnamed and dedicated to denying any evidence for anything. How do we deal with moral and ethical uncertainty when the very facts are in doubt? It is the modern day version of Orwell’s world, of power through propaganda and confusion.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wcy8uLjRHPM

    Tropical forests a key 

    Tropical forests are a crucial factor as they are absorbing CO2 at a far higher rate than previously thought. As atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases have continued to rise, tropical forests have been absorbing roughly 1.4 billion metric tons of CO2 out of a total global absorption of 2.5 billion, while the uptake in the vast boreal forests in northern regions like Canada and Siberia is diminishing

    http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/01/04/nasa-tropical-forests-key-fighting-greenhouse-gases

    Injustice of US and Israeli Policies

    The Palestinian Authority’s formal application to join the International Criminal Court has been met with a flood of retaliation and threats from Israel and the United States. The PA seeks “justice for all the victims that have been killed by Israel,” including during the latest 50-day military assault on Gaza, which killed at least 2,194 Palestinians, over 75 percent of them civilians and more than 500 of them children.

    http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/01/05/retaliatory-response-palestinian-authoritys-icc-bid-underscores-injustice-us-and

    Ebola: ‘nothing prepares you for the sheer brutality,’ says Australian nurse 

    “I was unprepared for the grace that patients accepted their state; their lack of panic. I was unprepared for the full extent of the distance created between the patients, population and us as caregivers as a result of the disease and the necessary precautions. I was unprepared for how overwhelmed we were and how truly horrible it was to feel so inadequate, to work so hard and for it to feel, ultimately, so little. As a nurse I can only hope to never face such barriers to care again. Seeing the continued failure of the world to respond fast enough to the current situation I can only assume I will see worse. And this I truly dread.

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jan/07/ebola-nothing-prepares-you-for-the-sheer-brutality-says-australian-nurse?CMP=ema_632

    Attempt to Assassinate Iranian N. Scientist Foiled by IRGC

    “In the last two years, the Zionist enemy (Israel) was trying hard to assassinate an Iranian nuclear scientist, but the timely presence of the IRGC security forces thwarted the terrorist operation,”

    http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.aspx?nn=13931013001240

    Wobbles in US-EU Axis Against Russia

    French President Francois Hollande this week called for an end to Western sanctions on Russia. He is the latest senior European political figure to express misgivings about the hostile policy that Washington and Brussels have embarked on against Russia over the year-old Ukrainian crisis.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40640.htm

    2015 Will Be All About Iran, China and Russia

    The EU’s declaration of economic war against Russia makes no sense whatsoever. Russia controls, directly or indirectly, most of the oil and natural gas between Russia and China: roughly 25% of the world’s supply. The EU is doing everything it can to cut itself off from its most stable supply of hydrocarbons, prompting Moscow to redirect energy to China and the rest of Asia.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article40612.htm

    Ten Reasons Why the Trans-Pacific Partnership Must Be Defeated

    The disastrous trade agreement is designed to protect the interests of the largest multi-national corporations at the expense of workers, consumers, the environment and the foundations of democracy. The treaty has been written behind closed doors by the corporate world. While Wall Street, the pharmaceutical industry and major media companies have full knowledge of the treaty, the people and members of parliament have been locked out of the process.

    http://www.commondreams.org/views/2014/12/31/ten-reasons-why-tpp-must-be-defeated

    and

    http://www.commondreams.org/views/2015/01/07/why-trans-pacific-partnership-agreement-pending-disaster

    Start planning for climate change migrants now

    Natural disasters displace three to 10 times more people than all conflicts and war in the world combined. 22 million people were displaced by extreme events in 2013, led by Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines.Many more in a growing population live more exposed to more extreme weather.  Governments should step up planning for migrants.

    http://www.smh.com.au/world/start-planning-for-climate-change-migrants-now-experts-warn-worlds-governments-20150108-12kmqp.html

    Land Concentration, Land Grabbing And People’s Struggles In Europe

    This report, involving 25 authors from 11 countries, reveals the hidden scandal of how a few big private business entities have gained control of ever-greater areas of European land. It exposes how these land elites have been actively supported by a huge injection of public funds –at a time when all other public funding is being subjected to massive cuts

    http://www.countercurrents.org/cit060115.htm

    See the Most Beautiful Space Photos of 2014

    NASA’s Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array’s first picture of the sun taken in high-energy X-rays released on Dec. 22, 2014.

    http://time.com/3652639/international-space-station-timelapse/

    Was the Mayan civilisation wiped out by an extreme drought? 

    Study of Great Blue Hole suggests 100-year dry spell caused collapseThe Classic Period from 300 to 900 AD. In 514 they were building around ten monuments per year, rising to about 40 in 750. The numbers began to decline quickly so by 900 no monuments were being built. This theory of the Classic Maya Collapse argues that climate change was the reason.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2891111/Was-Mayan-civilisation-wiped-extreme-drought-Study-Great-Blue-Hole-suggests-100-year-dry-spell-caused-collapse.html

    The Euro Crisis Is Entering A New, Highly Dangerous Phase

    Although Mr Tsipras says he wants to keep Greece in the euro, he also wants to dump most of the conditions attached to its bail-outs: he would end austerity, reverse cuts in the minimum wage and in public spending, scrap asset sales and seek to repudiate much of the country’s debt. Such a programme seems, to put it mildly, to sit uncomfortably with Greece’s continuing membership of the single currency. It is hard to believe that a Greek crisis will not unleash fresh ructions elsewhere in the euro zone – not least because some of Mrs Merkel’s medicine is patently doing more harm than good.

    http://www.businessinsider.com.au/the-euro-crisis-is-entering-a-new-highly-dangerous-phase-2015-1#ixzz3NrWvuZK7

    Iran’s leader talks of nationwide referendums

    Iran’s president said Sunday that he might invoke a powerful but neglected tool in his fight with hard-liners, suggesting the possibility of organizing direct referendums that would bypass the institutions the conservatives control and give more of a voice to Iranian voters. In the largely opaque world of Iranian politics, Rouhani’s remarks are a clear warning.

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/news/world/2015/01/05/iran-president-proposes-direct-referendums-way-bypass-rivals/a3S3xLDEuaXQdVPSRqUZdO/story.html

    Israel to ask US Congress to halt aid to Palestinian Authority

    Move follows freeze on millions in tax revenues after ICC bid; Palestinians looking to resubmit statehood bid Israel was weighing its options Sunday for further punishing the Palestinians after freezing millions in tax revenues as a first response to their bid to join the International Criminal Court. A senior Israeli said Jerusalem would lobby pro-Israel members of the US Congress to enforce a law that would halt $400 million in annual American aid to the Palestinian Authority, Israeli daily Haaretz reported.

    http://www.i24news.tv/en/news/israel/diplomacy-defense/56722-150105-israel-to-ask-us-congress-to-halt-aid-to-palestinian-authority

    Western idealism is cruelled in the Middle East

    The Islamic State is confined to largely poor Sunni areas of eastern Syria and northern and central Iraq. It is no match for the Iranian-backed Shia south. And any threat to Australia and the US is better handled with tough anti-terror laws and homeland security than endless wars in the Persian Gulf.

    http://www.smh.com.au/comment/western-idealism-is-cruelled-in-the-middle-east-20150105-12hxpv.html

    The Boko Haram crisis

    A few guides to this insurgency and its hatred of western education.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-30728158

    Lnk to a profile on their leader.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-18020349

    Worse Than the Dictators 

    Egypt is enacting authoritarian laws at a rate unmatched for 60 years. Since the overthrow of Mohamed Morsi in July 2013, Morsi’s successors have used the absence of an elected parliament to issue a series of draconian decrees that severely restrict freedom of expression, association and assembly.

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/26/sp-egypt-pillars-of-freedom-crashing-down

  • You have a message about Royal Australian College of General Practitioners’s petition

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    NEVILLE — Thank you for signing the petition “The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians.”

    Forward this email to people you know and ask them to sign too.

    The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians
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    The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians

    Petition by Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
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    From 19 January 2015, patient rebates from Medicare will be CUT by up to $25, meaning patients will pay more. Both patients and GPs have been unfairly targeted under the… Read more
  • Produce More, Consume Less – monbiot.com

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    Produce More, Consume Less – monbiot.com

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    George Monbiot <noreply+feedproxy@google.com>

    6:17 PM (6 minutes ago)

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    Produce More, Consume Less – monbiot.com


    Produce More, Consume Less

    Posted: 08 Jan 2015 10:36 PM PST

    How our governments’ crashing contradictions destroy their climate policies.

    By George Monbiot, published on the Guardian’s website, 8th January 2015.

    As you read this, a monster of a bill is passing smoothly and quietly through Britain’s parliament. It’s so big and complex, and covers so many topics, that it makes a mockery of democracy.

    The Infrastructure Bill epitomises the rising trend of legislation-stuffing: cramming so many unrelated issues into one bag that parliamentary votes become meaningless. MPs must either accept this great bundle of unrelated measures in its entirety or reject it in its entirety. So laws can pass which no one in their right mind would have voted for.

    Bills like this are good places for burying bad news, and this one is a graveyard.

    Among its outrageous and scarcely-debated provisions, slipped in by the government some time after parliamentary debates began, is a measure that undermines every claim it has made about preventing dangerous climate change. It is a legal obligation on current and future governments to help trash the world’s atmosphere.

    The government already has a legal obligation to do the opposite. The Climate Change Act 2008, supported by all the major parties, commits successive governments to minimise the UK’s greenhouse gas emissions. The Infrastructure Act 2015 will commit successive governments to maximise them.

    Needless to say, that’s not quite how it is expressed. The bill obliges governments to produce strategies for “maximising the economic recovery of UK petroleum”: in other words for getting as much oil out of the ground as possible. Oil is extracted to be burnt; burning it releases greenhouse gases; maximising recovery means maximising greenhouse gases.

    The Infrastructure Act, if passed – and so far it is scarcely being contested (hello Labour, do you still exist?) – is the Climate Change Act’s evil twin. Both acts oblige current and future governments to report at fixed periods on how they will achieve their contradictory objectives. The same person, the secretary of state for energy and climate change, will be responsible for both policies: ensuring that the UK both consumes less oil and produces more. Perhaps he’ll seek to minimise climate change by day, then, after a stiff dose of potion, come out at night to maximise it.

    But there could not be a greater contrast between the ways in which the two acts (or their relevant clauses) were developed. The Climate Change Act was the result of a massive campaigning effort, over many years, by citizens’ movements that mobilised public opinion and pressed MPs to act on it. The provisions in the Infrastructure Bill were slipped surreptitiously into the back of a legislative juggernaut that was already rolling down a six-lane motorway. In other words, the first act was an example of how democracy is supposed to work; the second is an example of how it gets corrupted.

    Now, on the day that MPs sit down in committee to discuss this bill, Nature publishes the most detailed scientific paper yet on how much fossil fuel should be left in the ground if we’re to have a chance of preventing more than two degrees of global warming.

    To deliver a 50% probability (which is not exactly reassuring) of no more than 2° of warming this century, the world would have to leave two-thirds of its fossil fuel reserves unexploited.

    I should point out that reserves are just a small fraction of resources (which means all the minerals in the Earth’s crust). The reserve is that proportion of a mineral resource which has been discovered, quantified and is viable to exploit in current conditions: in other words that’s good to go.

    The Nature paper estimates that a third of the world’s oil reserves, half its gas reserves and 80% of its coal reserves must be left untouched to avert extremely dangerous levels of global warming. Two degrees is dangerous enough; at present we are on course for around five by the time the century ends, with no obvious end in sight beyond 2100.

    The only sensible response to such findings, which some of us have been advocating for years, is a global agreement to leave these unburnable fossil fuels in the ground. But it’s not just that no such agreement exists, no such agreement has ever been mooted.

    Researching Don’t Even Think About It, which I see as the most important book published on climate change in the past few years, George Marshall discovered that there has not been a single proposal, debate or even position paper on limiting fossil fuel production put forward during international climate negotiations.

    “From the very outset fossil fuel production lay outside the frame of the discussions and, as with other forms of socially constructed silence, the social norms among the negotiators and policy specialists kept it that way.”

    I would guess that it is not altogether inconvenient for governments to ignore the role of fossil fuel companies in causing climate change.

    While most states have not taken the astonishing, ecocidal step of making it a legal obligation, almost all are pursuing the same policy as the United Kingdom: maximising the production of fossil fuels. And almost all pay lip service to the idea of minimising greenhouse gas emissions.

    There is no attempt to resolve this contradiction, or even to acknowledge it. They don’t have to. They know that it will resolve itself. If the stuff keeps coming out of the ground, it will be burnt, without regard to the feeble policies seeking to limit its consumption.

    I believe I might have been the first person to suggest in the media that the best means of addressing climate change is to leave fossil fuels in the ground, in a Guardian column in 2007. Since then, this solution has been championed by the indefatigable Bill McKibben, through his Do the Math tour and 350.org, and it has been picked up by many other organisations.

    But still our politicians pretend not to hear. Even the current secretary of state for energy and climate change in the UK, Ed Davey, who is often fairly responsive, blocks his ears and sings loudly when the crashing contradictions in his role are mentioned. Otherwise, how could he creep out at night to reverse the policies he pursues by day? Like Dr Jekyll, he could not live with himself if he was fully aware of what Mr Hyde was doing.

    Were the world’s governments to regulate the wellhead rather than just the tailpipe, logistically the task would be a thousand times easier. Instead of trying to change the behaviour of 7 billion people, they would need to control just a few thousand corporations.

    These companies would buy permits to extract fossil fuels in a global auction. As a global cap on the amount of fossil fuel that could be burnt came into force, the price would rise, making low carbon technologies, such as wind, solar and nuclear, much better investments. The energy corporations would then have no choice but to start getting out of dirt and into clean technologies. The money from the auction could be used either to compensate poorer nations for not following us down the coal hole or to help them survive in a world in which some dangerous warming – but hopefully no more than 2° – will inevitably occur.

    For 23 years, governments have been wasting precious time by pursuing an unworkable solution. Perhaps that was their intention. But if the climate talks in Paris in December are to have any meaning or purpose, they should abandon the self-defeating policy of addressing only consumption, and concentrate on restricting production. This, I believe should be the focus of our campaigns. Through groups like 350.org, we must make this such a potent electoral issue that we drag governments out of the clutches of the fossil fuel industry.

    You think that’s tough? Well try the alternative: living in a world with 5° of global warming, in other words a world of climate breakdown. By comparison, almost anything looks easy.

    www.monbiot.com

     

  • The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians

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    NEVILLE — Thank you for signing the petition “The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians.”

    Forward this email to people you know and ask them to sign too.

    The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians
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    The Hon. Sussan Ley: Quit targeting general practice and the health of all Australians

    Petition by Royal Australian College of General Practitioners
    Australia
    9,925
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    From 19 January 2015, patient rebates from Medicare will be CUT by up to $25, meaning patients will pay more. Both patients and GPs have been unfairly targeted under the… Read more