Archive for November, 2007

Save the Cheerleader, Save the World Whale.

0 Posted by in Get Involved! on November 22nd 2007

Humpback Tail by Tom Kieckhefer

      Fig 1:Humpback Tail, photographed by Tom Kieckhefer via

 

Yesterday How Ethical! asked you to get involved and sign Peta’s petition to stop the Japanese persecution of dolphins.

Today, my activist friends, our 2 minute protest is about Japanese Whaling!

On Sunday 18th November the Japanese Antarctic fleet set sail to hunt an increased number of whales this coming winter. Targeting up to 935 minke whales, and for the first time 50 humpback and 50 fin whales, Japan will kill more whales, from a wider range of species than it has ever killed before.

Send a protest e-mail to Japan’s Prime Minister Yasuo.

Take action, fellow pesky kids, otherwise they’ll get away with it!

Discover more and find resources at Wiki’s excellent Cetaceans portal.

Hayden Panettiere fights to save dolphins

0 Posted by in Get Involved! on November 21st 2007

Hayden PanettiereHeroes star Hayden Panettiere has been in the headlines this week after paddling out to sea on her surfboard in an attempt to disrupt Japan’s annual dolphin slaughter.

 

Not many people would risk their lives by paddling into the sea to take on an angry mob of boathook-wielding Japanese anglers, but that’s just the kind of kick-butt gal Hayden is.

If you agree with Hayden that the Japanese government needs to ban the slaughter of dolphins now and forever, please sign peta2′s petition today!

 Fig 1: Hayden be thy name…

Photo by Jenny Bierlich/starmaxinc.com © 2007

Where there is no hope…

0 Posted by in Get Involved!, Sustainability on November 20th 2007

Our kids believe everything they read on the Internet. If something is written down, then it must be true.

I guess we all are a bit like that. We can be swayed by the latest research, the article in today’s newspaper, the current bestseller…especially if it feeds into the niggling doubts at the back of our mind that we choose to ignore most of the time.

So when James Lovelock, the author of Gaia, the book that us young idealists all embraced in the eighties, tells us in this month’s Rolling Stone magazine that the human race is doomed and that there is absolutely nothing we can do about it, then we can’t but wonder if he is speaking the truth.

Reveng of GaiaIn his latest book, The Revenge of Gaia, Lovelock claims that the Earth is heading towards the “tipping point” when it comes to global warming. In the article, he takes it one step further. He is convinced that by 2100 the world’s population will be as few as 500m, down from 6.6 billion today – due to mass migrations and pandemics caused by global warming. Droughts and extreme weather will be the norm and populations will have to live off man-made comestibles such as Quorn because there will be no land to grow food.

So far, nothing new. We have heard the climate change argument in the media every day in recent years. Many of us believe we are doing our bit. We think twice before booking a foreign holiday. We buy all the energy saving gadgets available. We take the bus to work. We share a bath. We think we are making a difference.

But according to Lovelock, we are not even scratching the surface. It’s just too late and we might as well stop trying now. He claims that ethical shopping is a scam and “Green is the colour of mould and corruption,” Strong words ( and in my experience, mould is grey spots on damp white T shirts or fluffy white patches on forgotten cheese at the back of the fridge.)

What if he’s wrong? This could be precisely the WORST moment to stop trying. As Rachel Johnson says in her article about this on TimesOnline. says, “If Lovelock is right, well then it is all over, hard cheese, but if he’s wrong then he is telling people that nothing can be done, just at the point when there’s still one last chance to prevent the doomsday scenario that he lays before us with something bordering on relish.”

And ultimately, whether he is right or wrong, if hope is removed from human life, then what are we left with? No aspirations, no motivation, no purpose…no reason for living. There is within each one of us a belief in something better. The desire to make the world a better place is part of being human. We were made to care for the world and all that is in it. Admittedly, we have not made a particularly good job of it, to say the least. But whilst we have hope, then the essence of humanity remains intact.

We can be responsible about what we flush down our drains. We can improve the quality of the air we breathe. We can reuse, recycle and reduce the quantity of rubbish reaching the landfill sites. We can improve the quality of life for farmers around the world by buying organic. We can be less wasteful with the energy that we use. We can keep the hope alive.

Call me naïve, but in my world, green is the colour of the grass and the leaves, nature at its healthiest, new life. That’s the world view I want my kids to grow up with.

First published on Hometruth.org.uk

Thanks again to Helen for allowing us to republish it. :)

Winter Watch

0 Posted by in Climate Change, Get Involved! on November 19th 2007

Did you know…

Thousands of siskins, a small seed eating finch, are visiting our shores this winter from eastern Europe – the first time this has happened since 1993. We do have a healthy population of resident birds, but their arrival in such numbers could signal a cold winter to come.

Snippit of information I discovered via the RSPB’s e-mail newsletter.

With ski resorts opening early all over the alps perhaps we’ll all be in for a white Christmas for a change?

If there is a cold snap then make sure you’re ready to put some food out for the birds. Ethical Superstore recommends this bird feeder, complete with 1kg of Organic Peanuts.

Trevor Baylis Micro Bike Torch Review

0 Posted by in Climate Change, Get Involved!, New Product, Product news, Sustainability, Technology, Transport on November 14th 2007

Find out more about the Trevor Baylis wind-up bike lights.

This product reminded me vividly of a creative writing assignment back in school. The title intrigued me and, for once, I couldn’t wait to get stuck into it! (Which as my parents would confirm was not far short of miraculous.) However having set the scene, and began weaving the fabric of a, if I do say so myself, devastating plot, for some reason which now escapes me I ran out of either momentum or time and abruptly ended the fledgling classic with the classic ‘then i woke up and it had all been a dream…’

I commute everyday by bike and have on more than one occasion been caught short with my lamp batteries giving up the fight before journeys end. So owning some lights which will always be ready to ride after a few minutes’ winding is definitely appealing. Using the lamps is dead simple. Unfold the light’s crank from underneath, and then wind it up vigorously. These lights claim to give 90 minutes’ light for one minute’s winding — but that’s 90 minutes of the power-saving one LED mode, which is just too dim for the road. For the full-power three LED mode, I dismounted and re-wound after 20 minutes – not that the lamp had totally disappeared but I wasn’t happy with the level of illumination provided. A 3 LED flashing mode is also an option.

Where this product falls into ‘it had all been a dream’ crummy territory is the mounts for the lights – these are awful! You have to wind them tight, which just doesn’t work well – I inadvertently snapped one of the mounts (front) and I was being pretty careful with it. The back bracket I had to resort to mounting on the angled part of the frame as I couldn’t get it around my seat post securely. Installation’s is a one-time thing , so if your blessed with patience and dexterity you might not find this an issue. It’s worth noting that the way the lights slide on and off their mounts is somewhat fiddly (well it is in the dark when you’ve removed them for an additional wind) but once in place they are pretty stable.

NB No mounting instructions were included in the packaging, which incidentally, I was disappointed to note didn’t mention Trevor Baylis anywhere, AND was a somewhat un-environmentally friendly looking plastic blister pack…

In the final analysis the lights themselves are simple and relatively effective (though unlikely to tempt moths to swarm you), and competitively priced – and would be a welcome addition to any frame as a secondary / emergency set. However, for me at least, the design and ‘quirky’ functionality of the mounts undermines this product. I really wanted to score this item higher but just can’t bring myself to.

Trevor Baylis bike lamps are available to buy from Ethical Superstore, but don’t say we didn’t warn you.

Trevor Baylis Bike Lights – Ethical Superstore

What we’re hoping for in version 2.0:

  • Improved bracket design
  • Rubberised design to absorb the knocks
  • Brighter optics
  • Optional wearable bracket so that you can mount the lamp onto a rucksack or jacket
  • Instructions

Also available as a twin pack – includes front and rear torches with quick release clamps. Trevor Baylis Micro-Bike Torch Front & Rear Twin Pack.


The Chocolate Challenge

1 Posted by in Fair trade, Food & drink, Get Involved! on November 9th 2007

No, it is not a competition to see who can eat the most chocolate biscuits during an episode of Eastenders. Nor who can name the most different types of chocolate bar on our supermarket shelves. Neither is it a pledge to go without chocolate for a whole day.

Hmmm lots of Divine Fairtrade ChocolateThis week, the Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, called for a boycott of all chocolate that is not certified as Fairtrade. This is “the chocolate challenge”. Recognising that we are a nation of chocoholics, – we eat more chocolate than any other nation in Europe – he urged us to always choose only fair trade chocolate and to ask for it in stores where it is not available, adding “If you keep that promise, you could be playing your part in ending a 21st-century iniquity.

The Archbishop was speaking in Hull, the constituency of MP William Wilberforce, who put an end to the slave trade 200 years ago. What better place to point out that slavery is far from a thing of the past. According to the Stop the Traffik campaign for an end to modern slavery, more than 12,000 trafficked children are working on Ivory Coast plantations to produce 43 per cent of the world’s cocoa beans. So whilst child labour is prohibited in Britain, there is a clear link between cocoa bean production and the ongoing slave trade.

Ironically, as Ruth Gledhill, Religion Correspondent for the Times points out on 31st October, most of the leading chocolate manufacturers in Britain were Quakers, many of whom campaigned for the abolition of slavery. An additional irony: Dr John Sentamu’s archiepiscopal seat is in the same city as the confectioner Nestlé Rowntree.

Cadbury does own the chocolate manufacturer Green & Black’s, founded in 1991 and awarded Britain’s first Fairtrade mark in 1994. Nestlé also has a stake in an independent supplier of Fairtrade chocolate.

Not enough.

According to Robert Beckford in “The Great African Scandal aired on Channel Four about a month ago, only 3% of the cocoa beans produced under fair trade conditions by the Kuapa Kokoo co-operative in Ghana are sold at the fair trade premium price. Consequently, 97% of their produce is grown under fair trade regulations – that is no child labour, fair wages for all workers – without obtaining a fair price.

So the fair trade produce is out there, but the big manufacturers refuse resolutely to pay a fair trade price. They know their have won our hearts via our stomachs. “The chocolate challenge” could be the only way to make a difference.

But can we actually do it? Do any of us have the willpower? Availability, variety, familiarity all conspire to tempt us back to our favourite brands. A fair trade choice is out there – Divine, Green and Blacks, Traidcraft, the Co-op to name a few – delicious alternatives admittedly, but still the decision involves forethought, resolve and the confidence to speak out. Not just as an occasional treat that tastes good and makes our conscience feel better for a while. This is a boycott of all non Fairtrade chocolate. Doesn’t it boil down in the end to whether any of us really care enough? Do you?

This post was first published on the Hometruth.org.uk , November 8th 2007.

Green Guys Global

1 Posted by in Get Involved! on November 7th 2007

Green Guys Global Logo

GreenGuysGlobal is the new blog from the folks at www.GreenGirlsGlobal.com

Aimed at guys, this blog “puts men in the eco-driving seat”.

Both of these site are done by the nice people at Make Hay – who are an ethical web design and e-media company.

Interesting things to note about the logo.

1. The guy in the middle is either Travis Bickle from Taxi Driver, or he’s BA Baracus. Either way, that’s pretty cool.

2. The guy on the right has six fingers.

3. The guy on the right only has 4 toes.

What’s going on there? Is it a statement about inclusiveness? Enquiring minds want to know…

Black Gold – Out now to buy on DVD

0 Posted by in Fair trade, Food & drink on November 2nd 2007

Black Gold Movie

Black Gold , the movie highlighting the plight of Ethiopian coffee growers, is now out to buy on DVD.

We’ve blogged about it a couple of times, but you can read Vic’s in depth review of the movie here:

EthicalSuperstore.com :: Blog :: Black Gold Review

…and you can buy the movie on DVD here:

Ethical Superstore.com – Black Gold – A Film About Coffee and Trade

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