The last month of 2016

Again, some reblogging!

auntyuta's avatarAuntyUta

dscn2610 This is part of Wollongong Hospital. I took this picture on Sat. 10th of Dec 2016

dscn2606 On Friday, 9th Dec, Peter had been admitted to the hospital. We were allowed to accompany him to this Holding Bay before he went to the operating theatre.

dscn2602

The 9th of Dec was Caroline’s birthday. Since we were not allowed to see Peter for some time, we took the chance to all go out for some lunch in Wollongong, sort of like a birthday lunch for Caroline.

Soon after lunch we went back to the hospital and found out that Peter was doing all right. The procedure had been going as well as expected. (In the meantime we found out that Peter has to undergo the same procedure another time in a few months.)

The following day, Saturday, Caroline and I went to visit Peter in hospital. This was the day when Caroline had…

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Uta’s 2017 February Diary, (continued for the 2nd time)

Another reblog about Peter’s disease

auntyuta's avatarAuntyUta

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

After about two hours in the Day Surgery waiting room Peter was taken to one of the Holding Bays. I was allowed to go with him.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Peter’s things were put at the end of his bed.

Peter had been given a hospital gown to change into. The nurse took Peter’s blood pressure and put some stockings on him.

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At 1,15 pm Peter was taken into the Operating Theatre and I had to leave. Peter had had no food and no drink, not even water, since 9,20 the night before! He could have consumed something till midnight, but he chose to go to bed early.

I had had a bit of breakfast before we left at 9 am. I welcomed the chance to go for some lunch when Peter went into surgery. I took a bus down to the Mall and went up Keira Street to the Indian Restaurant where we…

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Uta’s Diary, December 2016

I am sorry to say, Peter is in great pain right now. We ask ourselves is it the cancer that is spreading through his body. A bit over three years ago Peter went to hospital for the first time. This reblog says a bit about this hospital admission in December 2016.

auntyuta's avatarAuntyUta

Peter went into hospital on Friday, the 9th, and was allowed to go home on Sunday, the 11th. On Monday Caroline took another day of carer’s leave. This was a great help to us. Peter is going to see his urologist on the 9th of January. An earlier appointment was not possible.

Tuesday and Wednesday were extremely hot days. But Wednesday afternoon there was a change: It became much cooler, and later on it started to rain. It is still raining now, a nice steady rain. After yesterday’s very hot and later on cooler wind, there is no wind today, which makes the rain very pleasant.

Peter and I went to see a GP yesterday. Daughter Monika drove us there. We could not see our regular GP. We both needed a prescription, which another doctor then gave to us. It was no problem. Next week Peter’s GP is back from…

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Climate Catastrophe. We are in the Third World War – the War Against Climate Change

Doug Lowe:

“Why are we in a climate crisis? It is a crisis and a catastrophe because we and our governments are not prepared to take the climate emergency action required to re-engineer our economies to defeat climate change now, or tomorrow or maybe by 2050 when it really will be too little too late. They, the scientists, are telling us that even if we don’t build another coal fired power station, the world is still on target to warm by at least 3 degrees C. by the end of this century. And at the 3 degree C level, by the end of the century, coastal cities around the world will have to be abandoned which means 700 million people will lose their homes. Do we need any more reasons to be terrified about the future for our civilization. Well I will give you more reasons… what about this? Even at 1.5 degrees C which is where we are now, we are already seeing that the world, not just Australia, from the Arctic to the tropics is on fire. Hurricanes and typhoons are breaking records for size and destructive power. There is catastrophic flooding on an unprecedented scale. But even small countries like Borneo are encouraging the destruction of their primeval forests together with hundreds of their animal species and replacing them with sterile palm oil plantations. Not only are the forests being destroyed but it is scientifically proven that forests generate rainfall and continuous forests make rivers of rainfall. Destroy the forests and you create rainfall deserts. So what does Brazil do? They chop down hundreds of square miles of the Amazon rain forest every year and these are the lungs and rainmakers of the world. Instead of being custodians of the planet’s precious resources, they and the likes of them defiantly take delight in destroying it. and what do the world’s governments do? They strongly insist on their right burn ever more hydrocarbons to fuel their economies. Every nation insists it has the right to destroy their bit of the planet and it is nobody else’s business. Well – sorry – but it is our business, it is my business, it is your business, and above all it is your children’s and your grandchildren’s business no matter where you are on our small planet it is your business because it is our planet that we are all destroying. And we can and must do something about it. This is what we can do: We can declare war on the governments of the world. We can declare that this is the Third World War against the destroyers of our planet. Every politician who lamely claims that it will cost jobs and hurt the economy is guilty of climate war crimes. Their legacy will be destruction of our civilisation. And that surely is treason. And that is why we are already in the Third World War, The war against the destruction of our civilization. So I ask you: What do governments do when they are under an existential threat of extinction? Think of the Second World War. What did the British government do? Well , they mobilised all of the resources of the country for the war effort. They re-engineered their industries to make them focus on the war. And they succeeded. And so we must. They did not say mmm leave it to 30 years time. Why not? Because by then the British way of life would have been long extinguished just like ours will be, if we don’t do it now. They did it in 6 years. The British with the help of their Allies destroyed the enemy in 6 years. And using some of the world’s huge and wasteful military budget WE can do it again. We can mobilise the nations of the world to win the climate war in 6 years. But to do that – to save our planet, we have to convert our global economy from a fossil fuel economy to an electrical / hydrogen economy and we must do it in 6 years to stop and then to reverse global warming. If every country in the world diverts only 10% of military spending equal to $200 billion US dollars, that will be enough to turbocharge the green revolution. That will be enough money to build sufficient wind turbines in one year to provide enough green electricity to power every household in the USA So how can we force governments to take this action now. There is only one answer and that is people power Governments, even dictatorships can only stay in power so long as allow them to. We can change their minds. We can change their minds by peacefully marching on every city and town centre and parliament building and by filling them with people on the first day of every month until they are defeated. if we do it in our millions around the world together on the first day of every month, we shall win the climate war, the Third World War. Failure is not an option. Failure is the extinction of our civilisation All of the money raised will go to boosting this campaign.”

Climate Catastrophe – We are Already in the Third World War against Climate Change

This is the reason for my crowd funded project. I have made a home produced YouTube video which you can view here:

Unless we pay Google to promote this video it will rapidly disappear from sight amongst all of the others shouting for attention. All of the money raised is aimed at spending at least £1000 per month on making sure it is right at the top of the Google YouTube play lists. That way, you can help to mobilise the people of the world quickly to take action to force governments to act NOW using PEOPLE POWER before it is too late

Everybody is shouting about global warming but the gap between words shouted from the rooftops and action by governments is still a gaping void. Governments are notoriously good at making excuses for doing nothing and notoriously bad at taking the big decisions which are needed to save our planet

So that is why are we in a climate catastrophe. It is a catastrophe because we and our governments are not prepared to take the emergency action required to re-engineer our economies to defeat CLIMATE CHANGE now, not tomorrow or maybe by 2050 when it really will be too little too late.

They, the scientists, are telling us that even if we don’t build another coal fired power station, the world is STILL on target to warm by at least 3 degrees C. by the end of this century. And at the 3 degree C level, by the end of the century, coastal cities around the world will have to be abandoned which means 700 million people will lose their homes.

Do we need any more reasons to be terrified about the future for our civilisation. Well I will give you more reasons… what about this?

Even at 1.5 degrees C which is where we are now, we are already seeing that the world, not just Australia, from the Arctic to the tropics is on fire. Hurricanes and typhoons are breaking records for size and destructive power. There is catastrophic flooding on an unprecedented scale.

But even small countries like Borneo are encouraging the destruction of their primeval forests together with hundreds of their animal species and replacing them with sterile palm oil plantations.

Not Only are the forests being destroyed but it is scientifically proven that forests generate rainfall and continuous forests make rivers of rainfall. Destroy the forests and you create rainfall deserts.

So what does Brazil do? They chop down hundreds of square miles of the Amazon rain forest every year and these are the LUNGS and RAINMAKERS of the world. Instead of being CUSTODIANS of the planet’s precious resources, they and the likes of them defiantly take delight in destroying it.

AND what do the world’s governments do? They defiantly insist on their right burn ever more hydrocarbons to fuel their economies. Every nation insists it has the right to destroy their bit of the planet and it is nobody else’s business.

WELL – SORRY – BUT IT IS OUR BUSINESS, IT IS MY BUSINESS, it is your business, and above all it is your children’s and your grandchildren’s business NO MATTER WHERE YOU ARE on our small planet it is your business because it is OUR PLANET THAT WE ARE ALL ARE DESTROYING.

AND we CAN AND MUST do something about it. This is what we can do: We can declare war on the governments of the world. We can declare that this is the THIRD WORLD WAR against the destroyers of our planet.

Every politician who lamely claims that it will cost jobs and hurt the economy is guilty of war crimes. Their legacy will be destruction of our civilisation. AND that surely is treason.

And that is why we are already in the THIRD WORLD WAR, The war against the destruction of our civilisation.

SO I ASK YOU: What do governments do when they are under an existential threat of extinction? Think of the SECOND WORLD WAR. WHAT DID THE British government do?

Well….. they mobilised ALL of the resources of the country for the war effort. They re-engineered their industries to make them focus on the war. They spent hugely on re-directing the nation’s resources to defeating the enemy. AND THEY SUCCEEDED. AND SO WE SHALL.

They did not say mmm . . leave it to 30 years time. Why not? Because by then the British way of life would have been extinguished just like ours will be if we don’t do it NOW.

They did it in 6 years. The British with the help of their Allies destroyed the enemy in 6 years. And using some of the world’s huge and wasteful military budget WE can do it again.

We can mobilise the nations of the world to win the climate war in 6 years. But to do that – to save our planet, we have to convert our global economy from a fossil fuel economy to an electrical / hydrogen economy and we must do it in 6 years to stop and then to reverse global warming.

If every country in the world NOW diverts only 10% of military spending equal to $200 billion US dollars, that will be enough to turbocharge the green revolution and make it happen. That will be enough money to build sufficient wind turbines in one year to provide enough electricity to power every household in the USA

So how can we force governments to take this action NOW. There IS ONLY ONE answer and that is PEOPLE POWER.

Governments, even dictatorships can only stay in power so long as the people – you and me allow them to. We can change their minds. We can change their minds by marching on every city and town centre and parliament building and by filling them with people ON THE FIRST DAY OF EVERY MONTH UNTIL THEY ARE DEFEATED. By peaceful protest if we do it in our millions around the world together on the first day of every month we shall win the THIRD WORLD WAR.

Failure is not an option. Failure is the extinction of our civilisation.

By joining with my project and making a small contribution towards raising enough money to fund a £12,000 Google YouTube campaign we can help to mobilise the Eco Warriors of the world. The more you contribute the greater and quicker will be our success.

Thank you

Doug Lowe

To help promote this YouTube video campaign to a world wide audience please donate now here https://chuffed.org/project/climate-c…

 

How The Netherlands Became The World’s Second Largest Agricultural Exporter

” If you didn’t like the video then you know what to do. However, if you liked it please show us you did as it helps boost morale in our fight against procrastination. If somebody asked you to name the top three countries for agricultural export, the Netherlands probably wouldn’t feature. But, in actuality, the Dutch have masterfully played the exportation game to their advantage, and, in doing so, have become the second largest agricultural exporter in the world. In the agricultural sector, the Dutch are predominantly known for producing high-quality goods (in terms of vegetables – tomatoes and chillies, dairy – cheese and milk, in addition to numerous kinds of flowers and plants.) Therefore, they’re not only voluminous in terms of how much they physically shift, but also in the quality of their products. So,how did the Netherlands manage to conquer the market and take over? As the Dutch themselves would say, laten we leren!”

Thunberg: ‘Indigenous Peoples Lead the Fight Against Crisis’

By teleSUR

07 February 20

Meanwhile, Brazil’s Bolsonaro facilitates business activities in the Indigenous Peoples’ Amazonian lands.

 

he Fridays For Future (FFF) movement activist Greta Thunberg praised the role of Indigenous peoples in the fight against global climate change during a demonstration in Jokkmokk, Sweden, on Friday.

“We must give voice to Indigenous peoples around the world because we depend on them, even if we don’t want to accept it,” Thunberg said.

The organization Saminourra reported how the effects of climate change affect the Lapps’ daily lives, especially reindeer herding, a fundamental activity in the culture of the Sami, an Arctic Indigenous people of about 80,000 persons who are spread across Norway, Russia, Finland, and Sweden.

“We are in a serious climate crisis and the Indigenous people are the ones who are first and most affected,” Thunberg stressed.

“They lead the fight and are the ones who resist the most. They are the front line. We support them.”

The founder of the FFF movement also recalled that solutions to climate-related environmental problems should include the knowledge of Indigenous peoples “who live from and with nature.”

Licypriya Kangujam

@LicypriyaK

Today completed my 1 year of protests in front of the Parliament House of India to pass a climate change law in India. Delhi Police & other securities threatened me to detain / arrest if not leaving the place. But I did it. I told them, “Arrest me if you can!”

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Thunberg’s positive appreciation for indigenous traditional knowledge, however, is not shared by those who work in favor of transnational corporations.

On Thursday, Brazil’s far-right President Jair Bolsonaro presented a bill to facilitate agribusiness, mining activities, oil extraction, and hydroelectric construction in Indigenous peoples’ territories located in the Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest.

In response to the harsh criticism that his bill is receiving, the former captain said that he would like to lock environmental activists in the Amazon, which meant an ironic allusion to what South American dictatorships used to do with leftist political prisoners who were sent to prisons in the jungle.

“Are we going to suffer pressure from environmentalists? Someday, if I can, I confine them to the Amazon because they like nature very much. Stop bothering here in the cities,” Bolsonaro said, as reported by local outlet Petroleo E Gas.

Climate Change Response

https://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/53671-rsn-climate-change-response-pits-trump-against-us-government

Climate Change Response Pits Trump Against US Government

By William Boardman, Reader Supported News

01 December 18

I don’t believe it.

– Donald Trump, November 26th, referring to the 1596-page Fourth National Climate Assessment, released by the White House at 2 p.m. on Black Friday, November 23rd, the day after Thanksgiving.

 

 don’t believe it” is not, by definition, a rational argument supported by evidence. It’s a statement of faith, not susceptible of proof or rebuttal, and as such is useless to effective governance. “I don’t believe it” is the empty opposite of the Fourth National Climate Assessment that is part of a continuing, multi-disciplinary, real-world examination of climate change that began in 1990 (more on this under-publicized report later). Produced by the 13 government agencies that comprise the U.S. Global Change Research Program, the Assessment is the latest report in a thirty-year climate watch that has seen steady, unchanging trends toward catastrophic global impact. Climate change is a dynamic process, driven by human activity that humans have done little to mitigate for a generation. Climate change is happening, it is irreversible, but there is still time to mitigate its worst effects, to save lives, to preserve habitat, to adjust economies, to sustain a somewhat civilized world.

“I don’t believe it” is Donald Trump’s response to all of this. Researchers in the Trump administration are forbidden – forbidden! – from even mentioning climate change, never mind developing strategies to cope with its varied impacts. Sorry about that, Puerto Rico. Sorry about that, Houston and North Carolina. Sorry about that, California. Sorry about that, everyone.

“I don’t believe it” has a corollary in White House practice: “I don’t want you to believe it.” The White House considered suppressing the report, but that would require overt law-breaking, since the National Climate Assessment is mandated by Congress. The White House reportedly considered editing or censoring the report, but feared that would make things worse (as it had when a Bush administration oil executive falsified an earlier climate report). So the White House went with a traditional subterfuge, releasing the Assessment when it would be least likely to get significant news coverage – at 2 p.m. on a Friday, not only a traditional black hole for bad news but super-shopper Black Friday after Thanksgiving as well. For a report that signaled the inevitably of an uninhabitable planet within decades, unless the U.S. and others make major changes of public policy, the story has received rather muted attention.

As one Trump advisor summed up the dishonest White House approach, adding a touch of conspiratorial paranoia:

We don’t care. In our view, this is made-up hysteria anyway…. Trying to stop the deep state from doing this in the first place, or trying to alter the document, and then creating a whole new narrative — it’s better to just have it come out and get it over with. But do it on a day when nobody cares, and hope it gets swept away by the next day’s news.

To reinforce distraction from news that affects every American for generations, the White House also chose to lie about it. The White House issued a statement on November 23rd that falsely claimed that “the report is largely based on the most extreme scenario.” The report included a range of scenarios. White House spokesperson Sarah Huckabee Sanders repeated this lie on November 27th, falsely claiming the official U.S. government position on climate was “not based on facts.” Sanders also lied when she claimed that the National Climate Assessment process was not transparent. Sanders also made false environmental claims that are irrelevant to and a distraction from climate questions.

In a sense, it’s not news when Donald Trump and his followers double down on climate denial. These are veteran birthers, after all. But the scale of climate change is vast and daunting. The stakes in dealing with climate change are intimidatingly high: millions of lives, billions of acres, trillions of dollars. It’s enough to give the most careful, rational leader pause.

“I don’t believe it” is not an answer. It’s not a policy. It’s cowardice or worse.

At this point, the world is past the point of preventing climate change from doing serious damage. That damage is already happening. Bigger and more powerful storms, coastal and inland flooding, larger and more intense forest fires, water scarcity, lethal heat waves and more, all exacerbated by climate change, take more lives and property every year. The problem is global; political dithering is pandemic, reinforced by political corruption. We’ve known – or should have known – for at least thirty years that we have a problem we need to face. Exxon and other oil companies have known for fifty years or more that their profitability came at the cost of putting the planet at risk. Coal companies have always known that coal was unhealthy for people, if not the globe.

“I don’t believe it” is an abdication of leadership. “I don’t know” is what you say, whether you believe it or not, when your goal is to put a prohibitive tariff on solar panels, to slow the rush away from fossil fuels.

We didn’t have to get to this place, where our choices are all stark. In 1989, President George H.W. Bush initiated the U.S. Global Change Research Program. In 1990, Congress passed the Global Change Research Act, designed to develop and coordinate “a comprehensive and integrated United States research program which will assist the Nation and the world to understand, assess, predict, and respond to human-induced and natural processes of global change.” From that rational beginning of intellectual integrity, we have drifted through one feckless presidency and Congress after another, squandering thirty years of opportunity to save ourselves from ourselves.

“I don’t believe it” seems to have become the national motto, sometimes expressed as “In God We Trust,” long since replacing e pluribus unum or any other aspirational goal. The reigning cultural stupidity of the United States, its suicidal cultural stupidity, was neatly encapsulated by Utah Republican senator Mike Lee on November 25th, when he expressed the widely shared mindlessness that passes for conventional wisdom on addressing climate change:

All the proposals I’ve seen so far that would address any of these issues would devastate the U.S. economy and have little or no benefit that is demonstrable from our standpoint. And so I have yet to see a proposal that would bring this about. I think if we’re going to move away from fossil fuels, it’s got to be done through innovation. And innovation can be choked out through excessive government regulation.

He doesn’t mention regulation like a tariff on solar panels. He has no proposal of his own. He’s not even sure fossil fuels are bad (“if we’re going to move away from fossil fuels”). For the foreseeable future the Mike Lees of the world, who hold positions of power everywhere, are content to let the planet creep toward further catastrophe rather than disturb the profit centers of their patrons. He may as well as have said, “I don’t believe it.”

While it is true that climate change is a global problem that needs a global solution, it is also true that the U.S. is the single largest contributor of greenhouse gases driving the problem. And the U.S. is led by people committed to creating ever more greenhouse gases until some uncertain future date when something unspecified will change their course. In February, the U.S. Energy Department reported that there was likely to be no decrease in U.S. carbon emissions for more than 30 years. That would mean the rest of the world would have to achieve zero carbon emissions, immediately, just to maintain the already damaging status quo.

Thirty years ago, Bill McKibben published “The End of Nature,” an early warning about what was then called “the greenhouse effect.” McKibben’s recent piece in the New Yorker of November 26th is a long, angry, despairing piece about our collective path to self-destruction:

The extra heat that we trap near the planet every day is equivalent to the heat from four hundred thousand [400,000] bombs the size of the one that was dropped on Hiroshima.

As a result, in the past thirty years we’ve seen all twenty of the hottest years ever recorded. The melting of ice caps and glaciers and the rising levels of our oceans and seas, initially predicted for the end of the century, have occurred decades early. “I’ve never been at … a climate conference where people say ‘that happened slower than I thought it would,’ ” Christina Hulbe, a New Zealand climatologist, told a reporter for Grist last year…. 

All this has played out more or less as scientists warned, albeit faster. What has defied expectations is the slowness of the response. The climatologist James Hansen testified before Congress about the dangers of human-caused climate change thirty years ago. 

The cultural vacuity of American leadership is as stunning as is it self-willed. Confronted with an official U.S. government report, American leadership chooses to ignore three decades of conscientious, consistent, accumulating research that a real problem is getting steadily worse, choosing instead to ignore, deny, lie, and maintain the policy that feeds the crisis. This is beyond rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic. This is maintaining full speed ahead while betting that there are no icebergs.

No matter what happens next, the failed American leadership of the past thirty years has assured that we, and the rest of the world, will go on suffering unnecessary losses for a long time into the future. Perhaps the new Democrats in Congress will force the failed party leadership to adopt a “Green New Deal” and perhaps, in time, that can make some difference, though it’s too late to make much difference in time. But that’s one of the two grim choices we face: do something to reduce carbon emissions as quickly as possible and risk the possibly severe economic consequences.

The other choice is to follow current policy and risk almost certain, severe economic consequence – as well as severe ecological consequences – as well as severe consequences to human well being, health, and life. This is the path of Trump’s climate leadership, and it is fraudulent, irresponsible, and criminal.

Criminal? We have seen the carnage caused by climate change already. We know there will be more and worse to come unless we take efforts to mitigate the consequences. Trump shows no evidence that he knows the risk or cares about it, so how is that not criminal negligence on a global scale? Lock him up.

William M. Boardman has over 40 years experience in theatre, radio, TV, print journalism, and non-fiction, including 20 years in the Vermont judiciary. He has received honors from Writers Guild of America, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Vermont Life magazine, and an Emmy Award nomination from the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

Diary: Climate Emergency

I wonder how many Australians still feel that we are in a ‘climate emergency’?

To my mind this climate emergency is ongoing. 

I have the feeling that our politicians treat us mostly as though we were children. They try to keep us in the dark as much as possible. But I think even children should not be treated like this. When children notice, they have been conned, they do feel terrible. Most children  notice eventually that they have been lied to. I do not believe that this makes them feel better.

I realize of course that there are quite a few adults who want to put  off facing the truth. These adults do not seem to mind a few lies just to keep them going. I keep thinking about global warming. It seems to me. to have to put up with warming of 2C, is something that is more or less already a given and requires enormous adjustments all over the world. We could at least aim to not let it go further than 2C. For that we desperately need leadership of corporations and governments!