EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Corporate Win: Supreme Court Says Monsanto Has 'Control Over Product of Life'
- Cornel West: Obama 'Is a War Criminal'
- Patent Filing Claims Solar Energy ‘Breakthrough’
- Disaster Capitalism Strikes as Hedge Funds Circle Near-Bankrupt Municipalities Like Vultures
- Ignoring Bee Crisis, EPA Greenlights New 'Highly Toxic' Pesticide
Popular content
Today's Top News
Reading the Coca Leaves: Climate Change, Cancun and Bolivia
On the way to participate in a rally organized by the international peasant group Via Campesina in Cancun, a Bolivian indigenous farmer took some coca leaves out of his hand-woven satchel and pressed them into my hand. "You will need these during the climate talks in Cancun to keep you from getting tired or hungry," he insisted. "Pachamama -- mother earth -- gives us these leaves. She takes care of us if we take care of her." Bonding as we chewed the bitter leaves together, the wizened Bolivian farmer shared his hopes that the negotiators would listen to his president, Evo Morales, and come up with an accord that would allow the world to live in harmony with nature.
The climate agreement that was ultimately hashed out in Cancun did not reflect the viewpoint of Bolivia's indigenous community, their President Evo Morales, or Bolivia's passionate UN negotiator, Pablo Solon. The Bolivian government and its grassroots allies wanted a binding agreement that would force significant reductions in greenhouse gases. They wanted an agreement that respected indigenous rights. They wanted an agreement grounded in a new concept -- the rights of nature -- that acknowledges that she who gives us life and abundance (and coca leaves) has as much right to exist as humans.
Many mainstream environmentalists were quick to defend the Cancun agreement, insisting that that a weak agreement is better than nothing, since it allows the international process to go forward and allows activists to keep fighting for better outcomes in the future rounds, including at next year's talks that will take place in Durban, South Africa. No agreement, they suggest, would have stopped the process cold.
But we should be clear that the minimalist agreement from Cancun is totally inadequate to address the climate crisis. It acknowledges that deep cuts in global greenhouse gas emissions are required, but does not set binding targets. This is due, in large part, to the refusal of the United States -- from the time of the Kyoto Accords -- to agree to mandatory cuts.
The agreement sets up a much-needed Green Climate Fund to help poor nations obtain clean technologies but does not lay out clear sources of financing or how the fund will be controlled. The governments agreed to give an interim trustee role to the World Bank, a move that angered groups in the global south that have suffered at the hands of Bank and activists who have opposed the Bank on a policy level.
The agreement embraces a policy on "deforestation mitigation" known as REDD, Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries. This gives polluters in the north a chance to buy carbon credits for protecting forests in the global south. Bolivia, and most organizations on the ground and in the streets of Cancun for the past two weeks, object to REDD on the grounds that it commodifies the forests of the global South, endangers indigenous control over the forests and their right to livelihood, and allows northern polluters to keep polluting. Bolivian negotiator Pablo Solon said handing out carbon credits for protecting forests makes it easier for industrialized nations to achieve their emissions reductions targets without taking domestic action to rein in greenhouse gases. "We want to save the forest, but not save developed countries from the responsibility to cut their emissions," Solon said.
At the 11th hour, the negotiators -- desperate for an agreement -- were annoyed at what they saw as Bolivia's obstructionism. "The experts that know about climate change know that we are right," Solon insisted. "This agreement won't stop temperature from rising by 4 degrees Celsius, which is just not sustainable. But they just want an agreement, any agreement, so they are pushing this through." While inside the confines of Cancun's Moon Palace Bolivia was left isolated, outside Bolivia was seen as the superhero standing up for the poor, the indigenous communities, and the rights of nature.
Addressing a news conference in Cancun on December 9, Bolivian President Evo Morales -- himself an indigenous former coca farmer -- made some dire forecasts. "We came to Cancún to save nature, forests, planet Earth, not to convert nature into a commodity or revitalize capitalism with carbon markets." He predicted that without strong, mandatory emissions reductions, the world's governments would be "responsible for ecocide".
I think Evo and my Bolivian coca farmer friend would agree that if we are to avoid ecocide, we cannot rely on government officials meetng in plush golf resorts. Instead, the solutions will come from organic farmers and social entrepreneurs. They will come activists who confront corporate polluters. They will come from passionate environmentalists putting even more pressure on their governments. They will come from those fighting for climate justice on their communities around the globe. Ultimately, they will come from a grassroots global movement steeped in the values of mother nature.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


25 Comments so far
Show AllImagine an all expenses paid convention in a resort setting every year where the less that is accomplished, save for altogether nothing, guarantees its continuity. That's more and more what these climate get-togethers by government bureaucrats are turning into. The longer the process of hammering out a comprehensive climate accord becomes, the less timely and effective the adopted regulations risk becoming. Corporate interests like nothing more than the resurgent opportunity to tweak their arguments ever more effective against the change they deem as a threat to their bottom line, their profits. After all considering its deep pockets, big industry with its government courtiers practically own the planet. And wherever it is that eludes their grasp is never far from the crosshairs of their ambitions.
Its all to little to late, let the mass migration begin! as i anxiously await as the pineapple express rolls into Seattle! Keep fighting the good fight Madea.......um got anymore of those coco leaves?
Thank you so much to the people and leaders of Bolivia! You seem to be the only sane voices in a world led by sociopaths and psychopaths.
Support Bolivia's people by purchasing organic quinoa and other non illicit products from them.
Quinoa's History and culture
The Incas, who held the crop to be sacred,[4] referred to quinoa as chisaya mama or 'mother of all grains', and it was the Inca emperor who would traditionally sow the first seeds of the season using 'golden implements'.[4] During the European conquest of South America quinoa was scorned by the Spanish colonists as 'food for Indians',[5] and even actively suppressed, due to its status within indigenous non-Christian ceremonies.[6] In fact, the conquistadors forbade quinoa cultivation for a time[7] and the Incas were forced to grow wheat instead.[8]
Quinoa was of great nutritional importance in pre-Columbian Andean civilizations, being secondary only to the potato, and was followed in importance by maize. In contemporary times, this crop has become highly appreciated for its nutritional value, as its protein content is very high (12%–18%). Unlike wheat or rice (which are low in lysine), and like oats, quinoa contains a balanced set of essential amino acids for humans, making it an unusually complete protein source among plant foods.[9] It is a good source of dietary fiber and phosphorus and is high in magnesium and iron. Quinoa is gluten-free and considered easy to digest.
World Quinoa Production - 2005
(thousand metric ton)
Peru 32.6
Bolivia 25.2
Ecuador 0.7
World Total 58.4
Source:
UN Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO) Current figures from FAO
[edit]Nutritional value
Quinoa, uncooked
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 1,539 kJ (368 kcal)
Carbohydrates 64 g
Starch 52 g
Dietary fibre 7 g
Fat 6 g
polyunsaturated 3.3 g
Protein 14 g
Water 13 g
Thiamine (Vit. B1) 0.36 mg (28%)
Riboflavin (Vit. B2) 0.32 mg (21%)
Vitamin B6 0.5 mg (38%)
Folate (Vit. B9) 184 μg (46%)
Vitamin E 2.4 mg (16%)
Iron 4.6 mg (37%)
Magnesium 197 mg (53%)
Phosphorus 457 mg (65%)
Zinc 3.1 mg (31%)
Percentages are relative to US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient database
The arrogance of jingoism, xenophobia, chauvinism are forms of stupidity that will always be with us.
Dedicated environmental activists have been confronting polluters for several decades. The methodical destruction of the planet has gone on unabated. More coal fired plants, more deforestion for soy, palm oil, etc, destroying cultursl and biological diversity in the process. International corporations are taking giant strides while organizations concerned with a healthy sustainable environment take baby steps. The battle now is being fought, ala The Matrix, in cyber space. It's the first time the greedy SOBs have really been scared. And its only begun.
Check the damage a jet does to the ionosphere before you fly to a climate conference. Unless you just enjoy the theater and frustration of these useless events.
Blow up your TV, grow some food, give extra to the hungry.
Until February my salads are sprouts. Cheap, tasty, nutricious, homegrown.
IYO, What are some good combinations of sprouts for salads?
Do you dress you sprouts salads? Any suggestions? Thanks!
You can dress the sprouts with slices of the veggies you dried last summer. Soak them in a little vinegar and oil to soften them up. Fruit is wonderful in salad. If stored properly, this years apples and some pears are still very good. Otherwise use bits of the dried ones.
Morales and Salon emerged as the superheroes in these sham negotiations because they are leading the way to a real solution to the problem of climate change. The solutions being proffered at Cancun such as REDD - Reducing Emissions from Forest and Forest Degradation - are just a means for the big players to enrich themselves while pretending to address the problem of reducing carbon emissions. Under these schemes, the rich countries will continue polluting, and whether or not there are any modest gains, the poor people of the world in places such as Bolivia and Ecuador and Indonesia will foot the bill. Bolivia supports and speaks for the people - movements such as Via Campesina, a world wide movement of peasants against corporate control of agriculture.
The U.S. has perfected the art of stalling in the decades long Middle East 'Peace Process'. This climate crisis stuff is easy pickens for the Amerloques. They want to 'win' just like in their professional sports paradigm. What they don't realize is that by 'winning', their own children and grand-children will lose everything that makes life worth living: 'the health and life of the world' as Wendell Berry so eloquently says. What morons to think that they'll be able to keep their dominance and their stuff on a dying planet. What profoundly low consciousness their 'wealth' has brought them. Doesn't say much for private schools, either.
Even better, they are all going to 'home school' their children so that they can feed unchallenging material in person and 'protect' their innocence. I'm very curious what will happen when the generation of home-schooled kids actually discovers what reality actually is.
We taught our children at home for many years. They learned how to think, not what to think. The children of public and private schools certainly haven't led us out of the darkness. They become soldiers of commerce and war. "discover what reality is!!??" are you refering to twittering your facebook friends at the mall?
No, like physicscitizen, I am very skeptical that home schooling can provide the necessary rigorous, challenging training in maths, science, logic and analytical thinking, communication skills, awareness of ones historical cultural and literary heritage, knowledge of other lands and cultures and their history, etc, etc. needed to function in a complex world. How many home-schooling parents even have, say, a laboratory for science projects, or are qualified to teach calculus and physics?
Sabo, You obiously know little about home schooling, the teachers or the students.
My children, all home schooled, interacted daily with people of all ages, who, like their parents, became teachers. Their communication skills and social interaction in a wide variety of situations illustrates their growth as creative individuals.
I also know some who teach their peers in science related projects. Public and private school these days are more than 50% organizational. Our local school has cut many art and music programs. All three of my children, musicians, artists, problem solvers in many fields, have done well in their persuit of higher education.
They also have a talent, almost lost in todays world of fashion and frivolity, of avoiding the piles of bull shit stinking up the place.
Sheesh. I used to think Baptist bible-thumpers were about as crazy as you get. WRONG. Baptist fundamentalists have nothing on some of these Earth-Worshippers.
"Think_Freely"... noone is forcing you to stay on this planet! Matter of fact, if you were to leave, the projected 64 baby idiots your spawn would create in the next 50 years would not happen!Now, if we could get the other ostriches like yourself to "leave", we would reduce the population even further!...My new motto.."Earth. Love it or leave it"
Hallelujah! Genuflect to algore!!!
.
In the meantime, please keep your religious beliefs to yourself.
Stink Freely, you best tighten your neck tie as it appears your brain has decended somewhere below the waist. There are surgical procedures that will correct this condition but don't doddle as constipation makes recovery difficult.
So why exactly are they crazy?
Morales knows that the only real solution to the environmental crisis is to do away with capitalism. He is certainly a 21st Century Marxist.
Indeed. If we do away with capitalism, then the whole world can become an environmental paradise...Just like Chernobyl, the Aral Sea, or Atom City.
...or the Gulf of Mexico , Love Canal, the leveled mountains of Appalachia, the clear-cut forests,and way too many other ongoing disasters to list here. All the result of what you call "capitalism' and I call corporate communism.
So, what is your point? That we should continue to whine about capitalism? Me, I will take the Gulf of Mexico over the poisonous stew that the Communists turned the Aral Sea into anyday. I will take the accountabality that BP was held to over the "accountability" that the operators of Chernoybl were held to any day, too.
Think_ Weakly....you will " take" whatever happens, as we all do. That does not translate into acceptance in my world.People of concsience that care about the future will never bend over and "take" it! I hope that you will overcome your weakness, fear and confusion. I suggest a few years of isolation therapy, without computer access.Please?
So you would choose lockjaw over botulism when we don't need either. That's just defeatism.
The term "environmentalist" should be abandoned, substituting for it the term "earth conservationist".
It's a far better description of who we are and what we advocate.
Just my opinion.