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Non-profits & Activism

streamer
0 Views · 3 years ago

Action carried out by activists from the Greenpeace ship Esperanza during their Indian Ocean tuna tour. Activists monitored and took direct action at sea against the controversial vessel Explorer II, thought to habitually use some 80 high-powered lights to aggregate fish in a potential breach of marine regulations. After initially asking the Explorer II to halt this practice Greenpeace took direct action and used pole-mounted paint spray-guns to black out the lights. The day following the Greenpeace action the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission ruled that use of these lights in fishing would be banned.

streamer
2 Views · 3 years ago

Patrick Moore explains why he helped to create Greenpeace, and why he decided to leave it. What began as a mission to improve the environment for the sake of humanity became a political movement in which humanity became the villain and hard science a non-issue.

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Script:

In 1971 I helped found an environmental group in the basement of a Unitarian church in Vancouver, Canada. Fifteen years later, it had grown into an international powerhouse. We were making headlines every month. I was famous. And then I walked out the door.

The mission, once noble, had become corrupted -- political agendas and fear mongering trumped science and truth. Here's how it happened.

When I was studying for my PhD in ecology at the University of British Columbia, I joined a small activist group called the Don't Make a Wave Committee. It was the height of the Cold War; the Vietnam War was raging. I became radicalized by these realities and by the emerging consciousness of the environment.
The mission of the Don't Make a Wave Committee was to launch an ocean-going campaign against US hydrogen bomb testing in Alaska, a symbol of our opposition to nuclear war. As one of our early meetings was breaking up, someone said, "Peace," A reply came, "Why don't we make it a green peace," and a new movement was born.

Green was for the environment and peace was for the people. We named our boat "The Greenpeace" and I joined the 12-person crew for a voyage of protest.

We didn't stop that H-bomb test but it was the last hydrogen bomb the United States ever detonated. We had won a major victory.

In 1975, Greenpeace took a sharp turn away from our anti-nuclear efforts and set out to Save the Whales, sailing the high seas to confront Russian and Japanese whalers. The footage we shot -- young protesters positioned between harpoons and fleeing whales -- was shown on TV around the world. Public donations poured in. By the early 1980s we were campaigning against toxic waste, air pollution, trophy hunting, and the live capture of orca whales.

But I began to feel uncomfortable with the course my fellow directors were taking. I found myself the only one of six international directors with a formal science background. We were now tackling subjects that involved complex issues of toxicology, chemistry, and human health. You don't need a PhD in marine biology to know it's a good thing to save whales from extinction. But when you're analyzing which chemicals to ban, you need to know some science. And the first lesson of ecology is that we are all interconnected. Humans are part of nature, not separate from it. Many other species, disease agents and their carriers, for example, are our enemies and we have the moral obligation to protect human beings from these enemies. Biodiversity is not always our friend.

I had noticed something else. As we grew into an international organization with over $100 million a year coming in, a big change in attitude had occurred. The "peace" in Greenpeace had faded away. Only the "green" part seemed to matter now. Humans, to use Greenpeace language, had become "the enemies of the Earth." Putting an end to industrial growth and banning many useful technologies and chemicals became common themes of the movement. Science and logic no longer held sway. Sensationalism, misinformation, and fear were what we used to promote our campaigns.

For the complete script, visit https://www.prageru.com/videos/why-i-left-greenpeace

streamer
1 Views · 3 years ago

What does it mean to resist? What does it mean to know we all have the power to transform this world into a place of sustainability, equity and justice? What does it mean to believe in a brighter, greener, more peaceful future?

What does it mean to be Greenpeace?

streamer
1 Views · 3 years ago

Greenpeace, çevreyi korumak ve barışı desteklemek için faaliyet gösteren bağımsız küresel bir çevreci kuruluştur.

streamer
1 Views · 3 years ago

#calicutspecial #streetfood #Greenpeace


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തട്ടുകട സ്റ്റൈൽ ഗ്രീൻപീസ് മുട്ട | Street style Greenpeas egg stir fry
Green peas Recipe
Egg Masala





This recipe is a street food recipe prepared using cooked green peas and scrambled eggs

streamer
7 Views · 3 years ago

This fragile Earth needs action.
It needs you.

www.greenpeace.org

Music by Hecq.
Additional images from NASA and ESA/Hubble.

streamer
0 Views · 3 years ago

Greenpeace'in çalışma yürüttüğü başlıkları derlediğimiz yeni videomuz yayında. Okyanus, plastik, iklim ve enerji, tarım ve gıda alanlarında verdiğimiz mücadeleyi bu videoda öğreneceksiniz.

Greenpeace, narin dünyamızın korunması için var. Çünkü dünyanın çözümlere, değişime ve eyleme ihtiyacı var.

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⇒ Abone ol: http://bit.ly/GreenpeaceAbone
⇒ Tüm videolar: http://bit.ly/GreenpeaceVideolar

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https://www.instagram.com/greenpeaceturkiye
https://www.greenpeace.org/turkey
https://twitter.com/Greenpeace_Med
https://www.facebook.com/Green....peace.Akdeniz.Turkiy

streamer
0 Views · 3 years ago

BOOKING: ohmyisthatmir@gmail.com
Available on all major platforms
INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/ohmyisthatmir
VOCAL MIX/MASTER: M I R
🎬VIDEO: Edvinas Einoris
https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCr9wJvWkGjQrIdyGY
https://www.instagram.com/_edviziokas
Color correction made by DobaTapes Production
https://www.youtube.com/c/DobaTapesProduction

#mir #ohmyisthatmir #greenpeace

streamer
1 Views · 3 years ago

Derme çatma bir balıkçı teknesi ve bir avuç genç! Greenpeace’in çevre mücadelesi yarım asırdır hız kesmeden devam ediyor; milyonlarca destekçisiyle gezegenimizin sesi oluyor!

Kuruluşundan bugüne, Greenpeace’in hikayesini ve başarılarını bu videoda bulacaksınız.

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⇒ Abone ol: http://bit.ly/GreenpeaceAbone
⇒ Tüm videolar: http://bit.ly/GreenpeaceVideolar

--

https://www.instagram.com/greenpeaceturkiye
https://www.greenpeace.org/turkey
https://twitter.com/Greenpeace_Med
https://www.facebook.com/Green....peace.Akdeniz.Turkiy