Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Control the International Arms Trade

There's a new website, formed from a coalition of Amnesty International, iansa & Oxfam, aimed at controlling the international arms trade. Here is their first email:

Every year, millions of people suffer as a result of the irresponsible arms trade.
Two years ago, 153 governments voted at the United Nations to start work on developing an international Arms Trade Treaty. We want as many people as possible to take action to control the arms trade.

Play "Catch the Bomb" and spread the word

Throughout 2008, a group of experts from 28 countries has been meeting to discuss the content of the treaty. Now is the time to turn words into action and deliver an Arms Trade Treaty strong enough to save lives and stop irresponsible arms deals.
A small minority of governments opposes international controls on the arms trade and is determined to block, derail and delay any further progress on the treaty. They must not be allowed to succeed.

Tell your government that the world is watching, it’s time for an Arms Trade Treaty

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Ending Child Poverty

There are 3.8 million children in the UK living in poverty and the NSPCC is committed to supporting the End Child Poverty alliance along with over 100 other groups such as Oxfam, NCH and Save the Children.

If you would like to read more about their “Keep the Promise” campaign you can visit their website.

Peacekeepers for Darfur?

From Oxfam's campaign email on helping people in Darfur.

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/get_involved/campaign/actions/darfur_peacekeepers.html?ito=2440&itc=0

Caption: A makeshift classroom in one of the many camps in Darfur and neighboring Chad. Credit: Brigitte Lacombe

UN Peacekeepers in Darfur, Sudan, are struggling to do their job – because scarcely one-third of the promised force has been deployed. The people deserve better. Hear about life on the inside of Darfur’s many refugee camps through the voices of those who live there. And make sure you call on Gordon Brown to deliver what’s been promised.

For more information on Oxfam's work, follow this link: Life in Darfur

All mums should have access to decent maternal care

Sounds like a no-brainer to me, so followed Oxfam's suggestion and mailed Gordon Brown:

http://www.oxfam.org.uk/get_involved/campaign/actions/maternal_emergency.html

In pictures: All mums should have access to decent maternal care. Watch Oxfam's photo slideshow and find out how some poor countries have managed to turn their health systems around.
http://www.oxfam.org.uk/get_involved/campaign/health_and_education/maternal_mortality_slideshow.html

Monday, August 18, 2008

Can a bar of soap change the world?

Probably not in itself, though I guess enough of it would certainly make the world a cleaner place.

However, the question has a serious point. We were staying with some relatives over the summer and while in the shower, I couldn’t help noticing how many plastic bottles there were on the bathroom shelf, probably about 30 bottles of various gels, shampoos, conditioners, de-tanglers etc etc for a fairly small household. All of those bottles (apart from maybe the Body Shop ones) were destined to be thrown away once empty. And I thought, what’s wrong with an old-fashioned bar of soap?

So, one personal, small-scale commitment - no more plastic bottles of shower gel. I’m gonna stick with the humble bar of soap from now on.

And recycle the cardboard box it comes in!

Saturday, August 16, 2008

The barbarians at the gates

As is so often the case, I'm reading about five books at once.  Today's entertainment was Heat by George Monbiot.  In it he asserts that he was once giving a presentation somewhere and was asked what the UK would look like if it cut carbon by 80%.  he didn't have the answer, but a colleague of his did.  The colleague suggested that the UK would look like a poor third world country!  A scary thought.  He goes on to suggest that we are the few generations that lived in luxury (in the west) and that our ancestors & our descendents would not be able to believe the lifestyle we live in (in the same way that, I guess the Anglo-Saxons thought about the Romans who had left the shores of Britain generations before).  However...  Not to be too gloomy (and I'm only there on chapter one) he does claim that if we take his advice on board, we can keep our standard of living and reduce carbon emissions enough to avoid disastrous climate change.  I for one, will carry on reading!

Friday, August 15, 2008

Making a difference

Just after my last post, got a note from my favourite campaign website - pressureworks - to say that it's closing down, but that it's gonna carry on under the Christian Aid "Act Now!" banner. Will have to check that out - my social justice alert mechanism seems to be on overdrive at the moment.

We live in strange and interesting times. With wars in ex-Soviet republics, trouble in Zimbabwe and starvation and poverty all over the world, it sometimes seems that the whole scope of it is beyond us. What can any of us do to change the world? And then it struck me. Everything is a choice. Poverty and injustice isn't just something that happens, out there, beyond us. It's something that we all make an active choice to allow or deny. We, each of us, choose in our daily lives to allow poverty, to allow injustice, to survive and thrive. So, what would be my list of top things that we can each do to make a difference.

  1. Be informed. Ignorance is the greatest breeder of injustice I can think of. So much goes on without our knowledge of consent. Knowing, understanding how the world works is the first step to changing that. Read, listen, look around you.
  2. Act - don't put off making a difference - see what other people are doing and copy it. Strike out on your own and bring people with you.
  3. Write letters and take up campaigns - there are so many websites that help you - try Oxfam, CAFOD, Amnesty International, Save the Children, WWF. Whatever takes your fancy, use that as a starting point. Tell other people what you're doing.
  4. Buy Fair Trade. A little thing that makes an enormous difference. Every time you choose not to (and I'm guilty of doing this) you choose to support unfair trade. By definition, if it isn't fair, it's unfair.
  5. Remember how powerful you are. We are all powerful - we spend money, we invest money, we vote, we have a voice. All of these things can make a tremendous difference.

Friday, August 08, 2008

Friday at last

Today was fairly mad at work, relentless!  Still, could have been worse - the Beijing Olympics began today (8th of the 8th, 2008!) as 8 is a lucky number for the Chinese.  Not so lucky if you happen to live in Georgia (Russia, not Alabama!) as Russia invaded today.  Nightmare; according to the BBC they reckon it'll develop into a full-scale war.  Not what anyone needs right now (except perhaps the various companies supplying arms and possibly post-war services!)  Or am I just getting way too cynical.  I've ordered a couple of books from the library by George Monbiot, who's a famous (originally) anti-globalisation guru, but seems to have got to grips with the global-warming thing - he's apparently a great polemicist, so I'm looking forward to reading that. 

Was watching the Extras disc from Planet Earth yesterday and crikey, it was bleak stuff - all about species extinction.  There was one comment, by, I think James Lovelock (of Gaia fame) who suggested that after one and a half centuries of unrivalled growth, what we actually need is to go backwards!  Actually contract our lifestyles.  There was also quite a bit of discussion about the role of poverty relief - ie that it's no use talking to desperately poor people in the third world about saving species when all they're concerned about, quite rightly, is saving themselves.  Goes back to my idea a while back about the value of providing pensions for people in poor countries so that they didn't have to struggle so desperately as they got older, and also didn't feel they had to have ten kids each (unless I guess they actually wanted ten kids!) in order to support themselves when they couldn't work any more.  Might have to come back to that one sometime.

Oh and possibly the end of the world will come tomorrow as CERN will be turning on the Large Hadron Collider tomorrow sometime!  In theory (well, nutter-theory, apparently) it could create a black hole that will implode the earth and destroy everything in the solar system.  I don't suppose any of us will actually experience it as, should it happen, I guess it'll be instantaneous!  See you tomorrow!