Menu



error This forum is not active, and new posts may not be made in it.
PromoteFacebookTwitter!
Jim
Jim Allen

5804
11253 Posts
11253
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
A Mountain to Protect - A True Resource Based Economy is Threatened.
1/28/2010 2:14:44 PM
Hello Dear Friends,

The above greeting sounds out of reality, to you, coming from me. We may have differing opinions, approaches and the way we perceive and say things. But, I do appreciate the variety and true friends I have made here. One thing for sure I will defend your right to be as you are.

Lately, I have had conversations regarding many things related to current events, the past and the many conspiracy concepts and so forth.

One of the "hot topics" is a "Resource Based Society". In this discussion we are led to believe, that science, technology and a new way of thinking will solve our ills. But this will only come for many of us after some great catastrophic event that makes us come together as one.

This will not happen in my lifetime because, Freedom will be the cost of admission. Something I will not willingly give up. Enough compromises have been made and all the prior models are catastrophes in their own right. A socialized society does not necessarily mean you have have to be a socialist.

While searching for a video to post, I happened across a video and drama that threatens a truly "Resource Based Society" of humans living in the mountains of India. Yes, India is not all desert dust.

Please pay attention to the following Especially the VIDEO and help spread the word and whatever your heart tells you do to protect this and other "Resource Based Societies" that may still exist in our world. I believe this is where you start.

‘Avatar is real’, say tribal people 25 January

Avatar's story is being played out in real life.
Avatar's story is being played out in real life.
© 20th Century Fox

Following the film ‘Avatar’’s win at the Golden Globes, tribal people have claimed that the film tells the real story of their lives today.

A Penan man from Sarawak, in the Malaysian part of Borneo, told Survival, ‘The Penan people cannot live without the rainforest. The forest looks after us, and we look after it. We understand the plants and the animals because we have lived here for many, many years, since the time of our ancestors.

‘The Na’vi people in ‘Avatar’ cry because their forest is destroyed. It’s the same with the Penan. Logging companies are chopping down our big trees and polluting our rivers, and the animals we hunt are dying.’

Kalahari Bushman Jumanda Gakelebone said, ‘We the Bushmen are the first inhabitants in southern Africa. We are being denied rights to our land and appeal to the world to help us. ‘Avatar’ makes me happy as it shows the world about what it is to be a Bushman, and what our land is to us. Land and Bushmen are the same.’

Davi Kopenawa Yanomami, known as the Dalai Lama of the Rainforest, said, ‘My Yanomami people have always lived in peace with the forest. Our ancestors taught us to understand our land and animals. We have used this knowledge carefully, for our existence depends on it. My Yanomami land was invaded by miners. A fifth of our people died from diseases we had never known.’

Director James Cameron received his Golden Globes awards for ‘Avatar’ last week, and revealed one of the central ideas of the film.

‘Avatar asks us to see that everything is connected,’ he said in his acceptance speech, ‘All human beings to each other, and us to the earth.

Cameron was inspired by the Maori language of New Zealand when devising the language spoken by the Na’vi.

Survival’s director Stephen Corry says, ‘Just as the Na’vi describe the forest of Pandora as ‘their everything’, for most tribal peoples, life and land have always been deeply connected.

‘The fundamental story of Avatar – if you take away the multi-coloured lemurs, the long-trunked horses and warring androids – is being played out time and time again, on our planet.

‘Like the Na’vi of ‘Avatar’, the world’s last-remaining tribal peoples – from the Amazon to Siberia – are also at risk of extinction, as their lands are appropriated by powerful forces for profit-making reasons such as colonization, logging and mining.’

‘One of the best ways of protecting the our world’s natural heritage is surprisingly simple; it is to secure the land rights of tribal peoples.’

*
A feature article about ‘Avatar’ and tribal peoples is available for publication from Survival.

Contact Miriam Ross:
E mr@survivalinternational.org
T +44 (0)20 7687 8734

Share this news story

The real Avatar: Mine - Story of a Sacred Mountain



What will one tribe have to do to save everything they know?

http://www.survivalinternational.org/...

Mine, narrated by Joanna Lumley, tells the story of the remote Dongria Kondh tribe's struggle to protect Niyamgiri, the mountain they worship as a God. London-based mining company Vedanta Resources plans a vast open-pit bauxite mine in India's Niyamgiri hills, and the Dongria Kondh know that means the destruction of their forests, their way of life, and their mountain God.
=====================

I hope you took the time to "READ" and this story as well as watch the video.

Now what will I do? I plan to spread the word, I will contact the company and express my views on their invasion of these people's lands and commit to continue sharing this story with as many folks as I can reach.

This is history repeating itself.

I am sure these people would welcome you into their homes and share what they have. Though paltry by our standards, but I believe I would enjoy their simple life for a time.

Heck I am sure there are Elites and Intellectuals that would pay well for a vacation in this paradise.

I do not mean develop this area for tourism. I have other non-destructive to this environment and people, ideas. Like leave the industrialized world for 30 days and get back in touch with your inner self. I believe we all long for such a simplistic way of life, at least to escape our hustle bustle life for a time.

I do suggest saving this environment for future generations of the
Dongria Kondh Tribe, they need your help.

I subscribed to the YouTube channel where I found this story and hope you will too, and help spread the word to help these folks Protect Their Land and their Mountain! http://www.youtube.com/user/survivalintl?feature=pyv&ad=4590156105&kw

Thank you for reading all this, your time and the action you take from this point forward.

Jim Allen III

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


+0
Jim
Jim Allen

5804
11253 Posts
11253
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: A Mountain to Protect - A True Resource Based Economy is Threatened.
1/28/2010 2:56:54 PM

Imminent: Anglican Church decision on Vedanta Resources’ abuses 27 January

There have been numerous protests against Vedanta's plans.
There have been numerous protests against Vedanta's plans.
© Survival

The Church of England is meeting this week to decide what to do with its £2.5 million investment in UK mining company Vedanta Resources.

The Ethical Investment Advisory Group of the Church will meet to decide whether to recommend selling their stake in Vedanta Resources, or to keep their money with the miner and continue to ‘engage’ them in dialogue.

The UK government has already declared that Vedanta’s plan to mine aluminium ore from a hill range in Orissa, India, ignores the human rights of the Dongria Kondh tribe who live there, and flouts international law. But the government, which began investigating Vedanta Resources after a complaint from Survival, has no power to stop the company.

Last November a Church representative visited the region of India where Vedanta has already built an alumina refinery and intends to start the mine. During his visit he met people who have lost almost everything to the refinery, and was able to get some sense of what the Dongria Kondh who will be affected by Vedanta’s mine, stand to lose.

The Dongria Kondh tribe have never been formally consulted about the mine, which will destroy their sacred mountain and irrevocably change their forest home. When Survival visited the tribe in December 2009, they found that some Dongria do not even know exactly where the mine is going to be, and no one from Vedanta has ever tried to explain the likely impact on their lives and land.

Stephen Corry, Survival’s Director, said today, ‘If the Church of England now decide to keep their cash with the company it will be in the full knowledge that the Dongria Kondh’s rights are about to be trampled. The UK government has already told Vedanta that the project is unacceptable, but Vedanta has ignored them – it’s painfully clear that words, without action, are meaningless. The Church must take action, and sell its stake in Vedanta Resources.’

Act now to help the Dongria Kondh

Your support is vital if the Dongria Kondh are to survive. There are many ways you can help.

May Wisdom and the knowledge you gained go with you,



Jim Allen III
Skype: JAllen3D
Everything You Need For Online Success


+0
Peter Fogel

1470
7259 Posts
7259
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: A Mountain to Protect - A True Resource Based Economy is Threatened.
1/28/2010 6:03:21 PM
Hi Jim,

This is all very interesting and not the first time it's happened and unfortunately won't be the last. One of the best examples are the rain forests in South America.

But if you think about it it's been going on throughout history and it was always called progress. Today we can better appreciate the uniqueness of the indigenous tribes their connection to the land and all the natural resources around them. This is a sad story and I appreciate the enormous fight facing them in order to save their culture and the mountain that's so important to them and their way of life.

Their belief structure is their strength and hopefully enough influential people will get involved and save them from the "company store" that will eventually control their lives.

This is truly a resource based society that lives off the natural resources that are all around them and their agricultural farming. Note the difference though it's a society and culture and not economy and it doesn't need beautiful pictures to make it work nor giving up their belief in a "God" and having computers tell them what to do and what not to do.

Thanks for sharing this with us and I'll certainly pass this on to others.

Shalom,

Peter
Peter Fogel
Babylon 7
+0
Roger Macdivitt .

3169
7333 Posts
7333
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: A Mountain to Protect - A True Resource Based Economy is Threatened.
1/28/2010 6:23:38 PM

images-1.jpg picture by romacmail

Hi Jim.

You are full of surprises.

I knew that we shared some views regarding fairness but our methods are different in bringing about change. This is appalling unfairness.

As a British national i have already much guilt about what my nation did to India but there is no need to keep on indicriminately raping the land of minerals at human cost. I am amazed to find the Church of England involvement.

I am 100% with you on this. They have a great champion in Joanna Lumley, she won a huge victory here for Nepalese gurkas.

Thank you for bringing this to us.

I shall be contacting my Member of Parliament and also spreading the word.

Great Cause.

Well said.

Roger

+0
Roger Macdivitt .

3169
7333 Posts
7333
Invite Me as a Friend
Top 25 Poster
Person Of The Week
RE: A Mountain to Protect - A True Resource Based Economy is Threatened.
1/28/2010 6:27:32 PM

Quote:
Hi Jim,

This is all very interesting and not the first time it's happened and unfortunately won't be the last. One of the best examples are the rain forests in South America.

But if you think about it it's been going on throughout history and it was always called progress. Today we can better appreciate the uniqueness of the indigenous tribes their connection to the land and all the natural resources around them. This is a sad story and I appreciate the enormous fight facing them in order to save their culture and the mountain that's so important to them and their way of life.

Their belief structure is their strength and hopefully enough influential people will get involved and save them from the "company store" that will eventually control their lives.

This is truly a resource based society that lives off the natural resources that are all around them and their agricultural farming. Note the difference though it's a society and culture and not economy and it doesn't need beautiful pictures to make it work nor giving up their belief in a "God" and having computers tell them what to do and what not to do.

Thanks for sharing this with us and I'll certainly pass this on to others.

Shalom,

Peter

Peter,

Like you I dread the repeat of things done in the name of progress.

Complete destruction of a peoples environment just to serve another is immoral.

I am so pleased that Jim brough us this.

Roger

+0


facebook
Like us on Facebook!