Climate Justice

November 19th, 2005

Just a few years ago, it seemed that ‘Climate Justice’ — the analysis of climate change as an issue of social justice as much as an environmental one — was a concept being recognised only by grassroots community groups, and indigenous rights campaigners on the forefront of community fights against the oil industry. Now more than ever, more mainstream environmental groups are taking up the fight in solidarity with communities already feeling the worst affects of climate change. Friends of the Earth International has focussed their climate change campaign around issues of Environmental Justice, and networks such as Rising Tide and Energy Action within the developed countries are adopting EJ principles and working to ensure that the voices of those most alienated by continued unjust energy policies are heard at the forefront their campaigning work.

Today, though, I read something that surprised me. A paper published in Nature this week by group at University of Wisconsin and reported in The Guardian details what many of us have been saying for a long time — that the impacts of climate change will disproportianately impact those who are both least responsible for causing the problem, and have been most affected by the injustices of the oil production cycle. Given the failure in recent times of the scientific community to stand up for the science of climate change in the face of increasing numbers of oil industry-funded “skeptics”, it’s great to see this kind of important analysis now being published.

Ban Terminator!

October 14th, 2005

For thousands and thousands of years, ever since agriculture began, farmers have been saving seeds to replant the following year. It’s a practice that is fundamental to the entire global system of food production, and for small scale and subsitance farmers, and Indigenous Peoples, in many cases their very survival depends on the ability to save viable seed from one year to the next.

So nobody would want to stop farmers saving seed, right? “Of course not,” I would have said, if you had asked me that question a few months ago, “no person, company or government in their right mind would seriously start messing with the very life processes that ensure our survival, would they?”

Yes, they would. And they are. It’s called Terminator Technology, and it’s scary stuff. Not only are corporations and governments trying to stop farmers saving seeds, they’re doing so by genetically modifying the plants so that they produce seeds that are sterile. That’s right, sterile seeds — by some twisted logic motivated by profit that flies in the face of thousand of years of common sense and traditional practices.

The good news is that we can stop it. There is a really important United Nations meeting coming up next March that has the power to Ban Terminator if we put enough pressure on governments now and in the run up to the meeting. Please take the time to visit the Ban Terminator Campaign website — I’ve been working on the technical side of it solidly all this week, and there is a good resource of information growing there already that explains what Terminator Technology is, and most importantly how YOU can help get Terminator banned. This one is winnable, but we need your support. Spread the word.

www.banterminator.org

Time Since Plugin

September 17th, 2005

At the bottom of each post on this site, a wonderful little Wordpress plugin adds how long it’s been since the post was made. It’s called Time Since. But there’s a bug in the example ‘how to use’ code… actually a few, so I’m posting updated examples of how to use the plugin here in the hope that people wondering why this plugin won’t work for them as instructed on their site will pick up on it. Good luck!

Since Entry Publication:

<?php if (function_exists('time_since')) {
echo time_since(abs(strtotime($post->post_date_gmt . " GMT")), time()) . " ago";
} else {
the_time('F jS, Y');
} ?>

Since Comment Publication:

(I don’t use this second example, so I haven’t tested it, but the problem appears to be identical.)

<?php if (function_exists('time_since')) {
echo time_since(abs(strtotime($comment->comment_date_gmt . " GMT")), time()) . " ago";
} else {
the_time('F jS, Y');
} ?>

Server Trouble

September 14th, 2005

Update: All websites and services are now back online. Contact me if you are experiencing any problems.

We’ve had some fairly major server problems this week, as many of my colleagues (and many of my friends) who I share an online home with know. We suffered some website vandalism and consequently had to take the server offline while we sorted everything out. If you look through the list of community, campaigning and small, personal websites listed below — many of which are hosted for nothing as solidarity with great community work and activism — you’ll be able to imagine the chorus of dismay that followed when we were forced to take the server offline.

This is just a quick note to let everyone affected know which sites have been restored, and which are still offline, and to apologise for all the inconvenience. Anyone I’ve talked to this week will know it has affected me as much as it has you.

I’m still working hard to bring the remaining sites back online, and once everything is back to normal I will be contacting everyone affected in person. In the mean time I will update the list below as I get the final few websites back online, but do contact me if you have been affected by all of this and want to find out the latest or if there is anything urgent I can help with.

Best wishes to everyone, and my sincere apologies — Matthew

Services now back online:

Mailman (mailing list software)
FTP
All email accounts
Webmail
SpamAssassin (spam email filtering)

Note: You will need to set your email software to use a secure connection. Contact me if you have any trouble with this.

All sites now back online:
The Pledge Against Airport Expansion
Guelph Students for Environmental Change
Elissa Smith
Rising Tide
The Yellow House
Climate Outreach Information Network
Dave Carroll
Plan B
No New Oil
Art Not Oil
National Petroleum Gallery
Hugh & Zoe
Rubbish Monsters

Finally two new sites joined us this weekend, after most things got back to normal:

Scholarship Training Series
Ban Terminator

bash script to upload files from flash drive

September 4th, 2005

Here’s a useful little bash script I just wrote to upload photos from my flash card reader onto my laptop. The script is specific to the flash card file system used by my Canon EOS 300D, but should easily be adaptable for other uses. It is Free Open Source Software and is released under the GNU GPL license.

#! /bin/bash
MOUNTPOINT="/mnt/flash/"
FLASH_PHOTOROOT=$MOUNTPOINT"dcim/"
LOCAL_PHOTOROOT="/home/matthew/photos/"
mount -t msdos /dev/sda1 $MOUNTPOINT
DIR_LIST=`ls $FLASH_PHOTOROOT | grep .canon`
for dir in ${DIR_LIST}
do
if [ ! -d $LOCAL_PHOTOROOT${dir} ]; then
mv -v $FLASH_PHOTOROOT${dir} $LOCAL_PHOTOROOT
else
mv -v $FLASH_PHOTOROOT${dir}/* $LOCAL_PHOTOROOT${dir}
rmdir -v $FLASH_PHOTOROOT${dir}
fi
chown -R matthew:matthew $LOCAL_PHOTOROOT${dir}
done
umount $MOUNTPOINT



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  • About the Author

    Photo of Matthew CarrollMatthew is an environmental and sustainability organiser and scientist currently living in Vancouver, Canada. He believes that climate change is the defining social justice issue of this generation. When he isn’t working to make the world a more sustainable place, Matthew builds online tools to help people working for a better future be more effective. He loves travel, rock climbing, singing and backcountry skiing.

    more about Matthew

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