Showing posts with label blog action day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog action day. Show all posts

15 October, 2009

Blog Action Day 2009

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I remember a time when I could blissfully board a plane and fly down to the country of my heart, Grenada, or another country of my dreams on a whim. I remember a time when riding to work every day on my bicycle was an alternative lifestyle rather than a ecological political statement. There was a time when being a vegetarian was about salads and stir-fried vegetables and not about the environmentally wasteful complexities of producing meat. There were ocean crossings and long coastal cruises where I believed in the omnipotence of nature's divinity and punitive influnences of the human race.

Yet, in the proceeding decades so much has changed. So much is at risk. So many of us need to make sacrifices. We need to change our practices big and small. Wouldn't it be wonderful if we all just stepped up to the plate. Why can't all of us; politicians, corporations, organizations, groups, family, and individuals, just study the wealth of information available and translate it into practice?

14 September, 2008

Give Some Thought

Blog Action Day 2008 is approaching quickly. October 15th is the day that we are all asked to write our thoughts, opinions, or reflections on this year's theme, "Poverty".

Blog Action Day 2008 Poverty from Blog Action Day on Vimeo.
Last Year's theme was "Environment" and I wrote a post telling about how my knowledge about environmental issues and practices had changed in the 25 years since I moved to Germany.

This year, I am not sure what I will write about, other than it will be something dear to my heart rather than a piece of study. I've been thinking about poverty and abundance a lot in the last weeks. Mainly because of the US election where an astronomical amount of money is being spent promoting the candidates rather than the politics of changing the government with such astronomical debts.

I'm looking forward to writing something for Blog Action Day. I'm looking forward to reading the many other blog posts throughout that day as well. Please join.

15 October, 2007

Every Individual Counts

Today is Blog Action Day.

I moved to Germany nearly twenty-five years ago to this day. When I moved here:

  • The American military presences was all pervasive
  • Russia and the eastern block countries posed a threat to our democracy
  • The European Union was an ideology and not a reality
  • We paid for our goods in German marks and not Euros, and
  • This industrial nation was one of the largest contributors of emissions on the continent

It has been exciting to experience the evolution of the European Union, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the implementation of a single European currency. Yet, all these changes occurred because politicians sat together and made the changes creed. We, the little people, embraced, coped, or futilely resisted these changes as we chose.

The greatest change of individual empowerment has, I believe, occurred in people’s concern about the environment and the resulting environmental friendly practices. Everyone, young and old, is knowledgeable about reusable and recyclable alternatives. In this post I would like to use the example of garbage waste practices to show how a voluntary collective effort of many individual can make concrete changes in a positive direction.

In most areas of Germany homes have two garbage bins for waste: compost waste and “rest” waste (things that can’t be reused or recycled). In the apartment building I live in, with six apartments (15 residents) we use one bin a week for “rest” garbage. Our compost bin is emptied every two weeks.

We bring all our other recycling produce,

  • Glass (coloured and clear)
  • Paper and cardboard
  • Metal
  • Clothes and shoes

to the recycling containers strategically positioned in the near vicinity to where we live. In the cities these recycling containers are usually found within three to four block radiuses. In small towns and villages they are centrally located.

All reusable produce (plastic and glass (juice, water, and soft drinks) bottles, yoghurt jars) is returned to the stores.

There are economic motivators for these practices, as well as environmental:

  • You receive a small sum, e.g. 15 cents, on each returned bottle
  • You pay dearly for each garbage bin with “rest” garbage
  • You don’t pay for compost garbage
  • Recycling produce can be put into the recycling containers for free

In the last fifteen years, since such practices have been followed Germans have increased their consumption, while drastically decreasing waste production: economical growth, ecological sound practices.

If you want to know more about what Germany is doing and hopes to do in the future, please listen to the German minister of environment, Sigmar Gabriel, speak (podcast of 26.09.07 about 32 minutes into the program) on The Kojo Nnamdi Show about the social, ecological, and economical factors of environmental changes.

Politicians determine and regulate of our environmental laws. but it is only through the collective effort of each individual that change will occur. We do not have to wait for others to tell us what to do. We can all just choose to make changes ourselves.