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  • MONBIOT If children lose contact with nature they won’t fight for it

    If children lose contact with nature they won’t fight for it

    With half of their time spent at screens, the next generation will be poorly equipped to defend the natural world from harm

    Daniel Pudles 2011

    ‘The great indoors has become a far more dangerous place than the diminished world beyond.’ Illustration by Daniel Pudles

    One woe doth tread upon another’s heel, So fast they follow“. That radical green pressure group PriceWaterhouseCoopers warns that even if the present rate of global decarbonisation were to double, we would still be on course for 6C of warming by the end of the century. Confining the rise to 2C requires a sixfold reduction in carbon intensity: far beyond the scope of current policies.

    A new report shows that the UK has lost 20% of its breeding birds since 1966: once common species such as willow tits, lesser spotted woodpeckers and turtle doves have all but collapsed; even house sparrows have fallen by two thirds. Ash dieback is just one of many terrifying plant diseases, mostly spread by trade. They now threaten our oaks, pines and chestnuts.

    So where are the marches, the occupations, the urgent demands for change? While the surveys show that the great majority would like to see the living planet protected, few are prepared to take action. This, I think, reflects a second environmental crisis: the removal of children from the natural world. The young people we might have expected to lead the defence of nature have less and less to do with it.

    We don’t have to disparage the indoor world, which has its own rich ecosystem, to lament children’s disconnection from the outdoor world. But the experiences the two spheres offer are entirely different. There is no substitute for what takes place outdoors; not least because the greatest joys of nature are unscripted. The thought that most of our children will never swim among phosphorescent plankton at night, will never be startled by a salmon leaping, a dolphin breaching, the stoop of a peregrine, or the rustle of a grass snake is almost as sad as the thought that their children might not have the opportunity.

    The remarkable collapse of children’s engagement with nature – which is even faster than the collapse of the natural world – is recorded in Richard Louv’s book Last Child in the Woods, and in a report published recently by the National Trust. Since the 1970s the area in which children may roam without supervision has decreased by almost 90%. In one generation the proportion of children regularly playing in wild places in the UK has fallen from more than half to fewer than one in 10. In the US, in just six years (1997-2003) children with particular outdoor hobbies fell by half. Eleven- to 15-year-olds in Britain now spend, on average, half their waking day in front of a screen.

    There are several reasons for this collapse: parents’ irrational fear of strangers and rational fear of traffic, the destruction of the fortifying commons where previous generations played, the quality of indoor entertainment, the structuring of children’s time, the criminalisation of natural play. The great indoors, as a result, has become a far more dangerous place than the diminished world beyond.

    The rise of obesity, rickets and asthma and the decline in cardio-respiratory fitness are well documented. Louv also links the indoor life to an increase in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and other mental ill health. Research conducted at the University of Illinois suggests that playing among trees and grass is associated with a marked reduction in indications of ADHD, while playing indoors or on tarmac appears to increase them. The disorder, Louv suggests, “may be a set of symptoms aggravated by lack of exposure to nature”. Perhaps it’s the environment, not the child, that has gone wrong.

    In her famous essay the Ecology of Imagination in Childhood, Edith Cobb proposed that contact with nature stimulates creativity. Reviewing the biographies of 300 “geniuses”, she exposed a common theme: intense experiences of the natural world in the middle age of childhood (between five and 12). Animals and plants, she contended, are among “the figures of speech in the rhetoric of play … which the genius in particular of later life seems to recall”.

    Studies in several nations show that children’s games are more creative in green places than in concrete playgrounds. Natural spaces encourage fantasy and roleplay, reasoning and observation. The social standing of children there depends less on physical dominance, more on inventiveness and language skills. Perhaps forcing children to study so much, rather than running wild in the woods and fields, is counter-productive.

    And here we meet the other great loss. Most of those I know who fight for nature are people who spent their childhoods immersed in it. Without a feel for the texture and function of the natural world, without an intensity of engagement almost impossible in the absence of early experience, people will not devote their lives to its protection. The fact that at least half the published articles on ash dieback have been illustrated with photos of beeches, sycamores or oaks seems to me to be highly suggestive.

    Forest Schools, Outward Bound, Woodcraft Folk, the John Muir Award, the Campaign for Adventure, Natural Connections, family nature clubs and many others are trying to bring children and the natural world back together. But all of them are fighting forces which, if they cannot be turned, will strip the living planet of the wonder and delight, of the ecstasy – in the true sense of that word – that for millennia have drawn children into the wilds.

    Read a fully referenced version of this article at www.monbiot.com

  • Knives are out for Gillard

    Knives are out for Gillard

    Date
    November 24, 2012
    • 241 reading now
    Peter Hartcher

    Peter Hartcher

    Sydney Morning Herald political and international editor

    View more articles from Peter Hartcher

    The story that won’t go away will dog the PM for the four remaining parliamentary sitting days of 2012 – and beyond.

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    ‘No substantiated allegation of wrongdoing’: Gillard

    The Prime Minister denies any past connection with an AWU slush fund, as disgraced former union boss Ralph Blewitt makes a sworn statement to Victoria Police fraud squad.

    Video will begin in 1 seconds.

    The Gillard government might have been rounding out a year of achievement with the Abbott opposition in retreat, but instead goes into the last week of Parliament facing its greatest crisis.

    Its asylum seeker policy is in disarray, but that is not an existential threat to the government. The grave and immediate danger to Labor’s hold on power is the fast-building crisis over the Prime Minister’s connections to a major union fraud case from 1991 to 1995.

    The government’s success this week in winning support for a plan to save the Murray-Darling river system is a signal moment for Australia, but it was given scant chance to celebrate.

    <i>Illustration: Rocco Fazzari</i>” /></p>
<p><em>Illustration: Rocco Fazzari</em></p>
</div>
<p>The  waters of the Murray-Darling supply the farms that grow 40 per cent of    Australia’s food yet the river has been slowly dying during a century  of  paralysing political argument.</p>
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<p>The dispute between the states over their conflicting claims on the  river  system were first put on the federation agenda before Australia  existed as a  political entity.</p>
<p>The argument that started in 1897  was finally overcome by the federal  Environment Minister, Tony Burke,  on Thursday in an impressive piece of  political management and  environmental redemption. Parochialism lives, of  course, and the states  are not all happy.</p>
<p>But the main elements of Burke’s plan seem set to survive the states’   objections and are now law. The plan, at a cost of $11 billion to  taxpayers,  will return at least 2750 billion litres of surface water to  the river by 2019  to restore some of its health. It could be as much  as 3200 billion litres  depending on smarter water use.</p>
<p>“Today, under the Gillard government, Australia – a century late, but   hopefully just in time – has its first Murray-Darling Basin Plan,”  Burke  declared.</p>
<p>The Greens, arguing that the river needs yet more  water for full restoration,  are threatening to move a disallowance  motion in the Parliament to kill the  plan.</p>
<p>But Burke says that practical constraints – bridges, roads, land  titles –  limit the  amount that the river can reasonably absorb. And  the Greens are  irrelevant so long as the opposition and government  concur. And it appears they  do.</p>
<p>But at Burke’s appearance at the National Press Club to announce the  deal, he  had to answer questions about two scandals with which he has  no personal  involvement.</p>
<p>He was asked about the ICAC inquiry into  corruption in the former Labor   government of NSW, and Julia Gillard’s  connections to fraud at the Australian  Workers Union in the early  1990s. The questions were not relevant but not  unreasonable, and they  hint at the difficulty the government will face trying to  tell its  story as the political system turns its attention more fully to the AWU   scandal.</p>
<p>Burke might get a chance to add another environmental accomplishment  next  week, with an apparent agreement to end the long-running argument  over  Tasmania’s forests.</p>
<p>The loggers, the conservationists and  the Tasmanian government seem ready to  travel to Canberra  to sign an  agreement that achieves Burke’s demands –  balancing preservation of  half a million hectares of the island’s magnificent  native forests with  the existence of a viable logging industry.</p>
<p>“This is a historic moment,” said Tasmania’s Premier, Lara Giddings,  on  Thursday. “After 30 years of division, we have the opportunity to  work together  towards a common goal.”</p>
<p>If the deal can survive  Tasmania’s Parliament it will go to Burke for his  signature, but, even  if it does, news of this achievement is likely to be  overwhelmed by the  political contest in the House.</p>
<p>The AWU affair is now politically unmanageable for Gillard because  there is  no single point of origin. After a slow, early trickle the  flow of new material  is now spilling out from multiple sources and is  being reported in all  mainstream media.</p>
<p>Police forces in two states, Western Australia and Victoria,  are  considering  reopening investigations into the fraud carried out by   Gillard’s then  boyfriend, Bruce Wilson, when he was the secretary of  the Victorian branch of  the Australian Workers Union, as the new  material accumulates.</p>
<p>A prime minister’s office can be an intimidating edifice, and Gillard  has  relied on it in her approach of trying to tough out the scandal  and limit media  coverage.</p>
<p>She called a press conference to  address the matter in August and declared  the case closed and all  questions answered. She has denied any wrongdoing and  demanded that her  accusers state any allegation against her, an invitation to  commit  defamation and risk the consequences.</p>
<p>But the opposition, while it’s been slow to take up the matter, is  now  determined to use the four remaining parliamentary sitting days of  2012 to mount  a concentrated challenge to  Gillard’s credibility and  integrity over her  connection to Wilson and his $400,000 fraud.</p>
<p>And  anything stated in Parliament cannot be subject of defamation  proceedings  because of parliamentary privilege.</p>
<p>The  Deputy Opposition Leader, Julie Bishop, is set to lead the inquisition.   This will pit Australia’s two most senior female politicians against  each other,  both trained lawyers, both hardened political infighters,  in a contest that will  play to the gallery of public opinion but,  ultimately, to an audience of just  two or three people – the  independents who keep Labor in power.</p>
<p>Could this really be a greater threat than Kevin Rudd’s challenge for  the  leadership in February? Yes, because while Rudd’s failed bid  threatened   Gillard’s prime ministership it did not necessarily  endanger Labor’s grasp of  power.</p>
<p>That was a civil war in Labor. This is an affair that, depending on  what  emerges and how Gillard responds, could lead the opposition to  move a motion of  no confidence in the prime minister.</p>
<p>She could  survive only with the support of Tony Windsor, Rob Oakeshott and  Andrew  Wilkie. None of these three is a fan of Tony Abbott, and all would  prefer  to keep Gillard in place. But there is a limit to what they can  tolerate  politically. Each has to answer to his electorate, not to  Labor HQ.</p>
<p>Even one of Gillard’s cabinet ministers and a mainstay of her caucus  support,  Bill Shorten, distanced himself from his leader over the  scandal this week.  Shorten was asked on <i>Lateline</i> about the  “slush fund” Gillard had set up  for her then boyfriend in the time she  worked as a partner of the law firm  Slater and Gordon in the early  1990s.</p>
<p>Why ask Shorten? Apart from being the Minister for Industrial  Relations,  Shorten knows quite a bit about the affair. He was the man  brought in to lead  the union after the Wilson scam had been disclosed  and the AWU leadership  purged.</p>
<p>Gillard has admitted, years ago, that she helped Wilson with the  legal work  to create what was euphemistically called the Workplace  Reform Association.</p>
<p>She has described it as a “slush fund” for  union officials. Wilson and his  cronies persuaded various companies to  donate money to the fund. Wilson then  helped himself to it.</p>
<p>Asked about this fund this week, Shorten said: “Well, that account  was  unauthorised by the union and was an inappropriate account that  account as far  as I can tell. So that was out of bounds.</p>
<p>“When  that account came to light, what I do know is that the union took   action. I know that the union leadership of the day reported it to the  police.  In terms of the Prime Minister’s explanations, I am satisfied  with them.”</p>
<p>So while he did not challenge the Prime Minister’s version of events,  neither  did he mount a rousing defence of her. The political  significance of this was  not lost on Gillard’s caucus, which is  increasingly uneasy about the matter.</p>
<p>There is much detail but three central questions that Gillard will  need to  answer next week. Gillard has said she had no knowledge that  Wilson stole the  money and used some of it to buy a house in the  Melbourne suburb of Fitzroy.</p>
<p>She has said that she broke off her relationship with him in 1995 as  soon as  she realised his deceit. She was young and naive, she has said.  Specifically,  she has said she was not involved in helping with the  mortgage or the  conveyancing work to help Wilson buy the house.</p>
<p>But there is new material suggesting that she was involved with the  mortgage.  “There is absolutely no doubt that Ms Gillard not only knew  of the Slater and  Gordon mortgage in March of 1993, but was  specifically involved in taking steps  to facilitate that mortgage,” a  former colleague and legal partner of Gillard’s  at Slater and Gordon,  Nick Styant-Browne, told the ABC’s <i>7.30</i> on  Thursday night, saying he had documents to show this.</p>
<p>And Fairfax Media’s Mark Baker reported yesterday that the  Commonwealth Bank  sent a letter to Ms Gillard on March 22, 1993,  addressed ”Attention: Julia  Gillard,” confirming that the mortgage  had been insured.</p>
<p>On the same day, a handwritten note in the Slater and Gordon  conveyancing  file on the property was headed “Bruce Wilson,” noted the  bank letter confirming  mortgage insurance, and added: “Ralph spoke to  Julia Gillard.”</p>
<p>Who’s Ralph? That’s Ralph Blewitt, the bagman for Wilson, who handled  the  money and bought the house for Wilson so it wouldn’t appear in  Wilson’s name.  After 15 years in self-imposed exile in Malaysia to  avoid prosecution, Blewitt  returned to Australia this week.</p>
<p>He spoke to Victoria Police yesterday, offering to give evidence in the  matter if he were granted immunity from prosecution.</p>
<p>So  the opposition’s first central theme will be to demand to know what did   Gillard know about the conveyancing and how much was she involved in  the  house-buying transaction? Did she know the source of all the funds?</p>
<p>Its second central theme will be to demand to know whether she received any  personal benefit?</p>
<p>And  third, the opposition will take up Gillard’s account of events in which   she discovered in 1995 that she had been deceived by her conman  boyfriend.</p>
<p>Why didn’t she report her discovery to the AWU, or the police, or help  recover the money, the opposition will want to know?</p>
<p>The  questions next week will overshadow any good news of the government’s   achievements. And its very existence could depend on the quality of her   answers.</p>
<p><b> Peter Hartcher is the political editor.</b></p>
</p></div>
<p>Read more: <a href=http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/knives-are-out-for-gillard-20121123-29ytv.html#ixzz2D5atf2G4

  • No match for the bagman and the bogeyman

    No match for the bagman and the bogeyman

    Posted Fri Nov 23, 2012 10:15am AEDT

    Never mind the historic deals on the Murray Darling and Tasmania’s forests: it was asylum seekers v the AWU in a tussle for the media’s attention this week, writes Barrie Cassidy.

    The Federal Government has done some nice work on the environment and conservation in recent days, but none of it was a match for the bagman and the bogeyman.

    It started with the extension of the marine reserves around Australia to cover an area of ocean equal to a third of the country’s land mass.

    Then, as the week progressed, the Government reached an agreement on the Murray-Darling Basin plan, designed to safeguard irrigation towns while ensuring the stressed river gets all the water it needs.

    And by the end of the week, a 30-year battle over the protection of Tasmania’s forests was finally over, with conservation and industry groups bringing to an end often acrimonious negotiations.

    Not a bad result really.

    In all cases, individuals on either side of the arguments will continue to agitate for a better deal, but the major players have nevertheless signed up to compromises. These are all historic, long-term outcomes, among the biggest ever struck in this country.

    But as we have seen for years now, it takes a truly super-human political initiative to knock any new development in the asylum seekers issue off the front pages.

    The Government continues to be its own worst enemy, of course, tacking one way then the other, and all the time getting nearer to the policy introduced by former prime minister John Howard.

    The fact that the policy is attacked with equal venom, but for very different reasons, by the Coalition and human rights advocates does, however, confuse the politics.

    And the politics vary greatly anyway depending on where you live.

    Thursday’s Daily Telegraph in Sydney included the headline “Asylum Open Door Policy”, and declared the Government had waved the white flag and decided to “pay (asylum seekers) to live in the community while their claims are processed”.

    The front page of the Hobart Mercury, on the other hand, reported on the news that a detention centre had been reopened north of Hobart, saying that the decision “was roundly applauded by local residents as well as political and business leaders”. Premier Lara Giddings said the decision was “a positive move for the rights of asylum seekers and for jobs and the local economy”.

    The reality of harsh conditions on Nauru and Manus Island – and the prospect of living, poverty stricken, on a bridging visa and denied the right to work – might scare off some potential asylum seekers.

    Both prospects – the harsh conditions offshore and the poverty here at home – might even appeal to some voters in key marginal seats. That, it seems, is precisely the way they think it should be.

    So it then follows that media reporting along those lines might help the Government and aid its objectives.

    But on the other hand, every time the Government changes direction, it loses credibility, and the more it appears not to have a handle on the issue. The electorate sees consistency in one party alone, with the Coalition never budging from the policy that they say was so successful during the Howard years.

    The opposition struggles to justify its ‘turn back the boats’ policy, and indeed Tony Abbott hasn’t yet plucked up the courage to raise it directly with the Indonesian president. But flawed or not, it has been part of a package of measures that has never varied.

    While asylum seekers stole the front pages, the Australian Workers Union slush fund scandal was prominent inside the papers and on much of the broadcast media. What was the latest incentive to stoke the issue along? The bagman arrived!

    A former AWU official, Ralph Blewitt, flew in from Malaysia claiming he had a deal with the Victorian fraud squad to tell all he knows about the slush fund scandal in return for immunity.

    He said the prime minister, Julia Gillard, had questions to answer, though he didn’t say what they were. His memory was vague; he was trying to trigger recollections by reading documents. Most importantly, he wanted to ensure that freedom of speech and the press was not shut down.

    What else do we know about this man, other than the fact that he admits to being a part of the fraud, and that he has taken 17 years to speak to authorities about it?

    There was quite an insight into his character on Radio 6PR in Perth with Paul Murray back in August.

    Murray was interviewing the deputy leader of the opposition, Julie Bishop, who was going through her now familiar lines on the issue. “It goes to her character, Paul – her ethics, her judgment, whether people can have trust and confidence in her. I think people are entitled to answers from her so that they can make a judgment about whether she is fit to be prime minister of the country.”

    Then Murray took a call from Penny.

    Murray: “What can you tell us about this?”

    Penny: “… Ralph Blewitt is my brother, he is my older brother. He is as crooked as they come. It wasn’t Julia Gillard that stole the money. She might have set up the fund, and Wilson and Blewitt, Ralph Blewitt, were the crooks, not Julia Gillard. Ralph is out to make whatever he can make out of this for himself.”

    Murray: “… he appeared on the front page of The Australian newspaper saying ‘I’ll tell my whole story as long as I don’t get prosecuted’.”

    Penny: “Yeah, well, he is crooked as they bloody come. Sorry, but he is my older brother and I am telling you now he is rotten to the core.”

    Jon Faine, the host of the morning show on ABC 774 in Melbourne, read out the transcript on Thursday and asked: “Why hasn’t that appeared on the front page of The Age or The Australian? Why hasn’t that appeared so that we can factor that in, and judge his reliability as a whistleblower?”

    Meanwhile, Minister for Agriculture Tony Burke fronted the National Press Club to talk about the three big environment initiatives, and in particular, the Murray Darling agreement.

    Two questions on water, one on ICAC, another on fishing, then: “Minister can I ask you a question on another topic?”

    Burke: “We’ve been waiting 100 years and no one will ask!”

    The question was on the slush fund.

    Barrie Cassidy is presenter of the ABC programs Insiders and Outsiders. View his full profile here.

    Topics:unions, fraud-and-corporate-crime

    Comments (544)

  • Magnesium oxide: From Earth to super-Earth

    ScienceDaily: Earth Science News


    Magnesium oxide: From Earth to super-Earth

    Posted: 22 Nov 2012 12:29 PM PST

    The mantles of Earth and other rocky planets are rich in magnesium and oxygen. Due to its simplicity, the mineral magnesium oxide is a good model for studying the nature of planetary interiors. New work studied how magnesium oxide behaves under the extreme conditions deep within planets and found evidence that alters our understanding of planetary evolution.

  • Hansen 2007 : Sea Level Rise 50 mm/Year | Real Science

    Hansen 2007 : Sea Level Rise 50 mm/Year | Real Science
    By stevengoddard
    In an interview on Australian ABC Television program, The 7.30 Report, James Hansen, a prominent NASA climatologist, predicted the liklihood that the earth will pass a tipping point resulting in Sea Level Rise of up to a metre every 20 …
    Real Science

    Web 1 new result for SEA LEVEL RISE
    Sea Level Rise Continues Strong Upward Trend Says NASA
    In August 2011, scientists at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., and the University of Colorado in Boulder reported that global sea level rise
    nanopatentsandinnovations.blogspot.com/…/sea-level-rise-cont…
  • Water Matters Distribution List

    Water Matters Distribution List watermatters@ris.environment.gov.au
    8:16 AM (1 hour ago)

    to watermatters

    Dear subscribers,

    Please find the link to the 23rd issue of Water Matters below. This issue contains information about the Murray-Darling Basin Plan.

    www.environment.gov.au/water/publications/watermatters/water-matters-nov-2012a.html

    Water Matters provides subscribers with information about the Australian Government’s water reform initiative Water for the Future.

    If you wish to unsubscribe from Water Matters, please follow this link: www.environment.gov.au/water/publications/watermatters/index.html