"I would like to think our Prime Minister is not only listening to the leaders of other nations in terms of his decision to go to Copenhagen but that he's listening to his people," says Lucy Lawless, climate change campaigner.
Lawless says 180,000 Kiwis have signed a petition supporting much tougher targets. She and others are watching for more concessions.
Auckland Saturday December 5, 2009 – Thousands of people turned out today in support of John Key taking strong action at the Copenhagen climate talks.
The Planet A, March and Concert for the Climate
was held in Auckland. Over 4,000 people marched up Queen
Street then gathered at Myers Park, to hear top Kiwi bands
play in support of a good outcome at the summit. Performers
included Opshop, Midnight Youth, Don McGlashan and Lucy
Lawless.

I was about 13 years old when they started bringing up the spectre of global warming. Thirty years later, there are still people who find comfort in denial. But it’s going to be a cold comfort.
There’s no time to waste. We can’t put our heads in the sand and say global warming’s not real. There’s no time for all that. The bloody ice caps are melting!
Let’s not mess around anymore. Let’s roll our sleeves up.
Evolve
or die. We’ll go the way of the dinosaurs. It’s so funny that dinosaurs
became fossil fuels, which threaten to make us extinct. Can you see any
parallels?
It’s not even our grandchildren who are going to be boned, it’s our kids. In 40 years my kids could be frazzled by terrible skin cancers.
We’ve got to joyfully go about the business of setting things to rights, for our kids’ sake.
There’s a moral fix for what ails the planet. Every single one of us can do something.
It’s better to fight for it now, because the pain of change is not nearly as bad as the pain of staying the same.
My husband and I fight about heating the pool. Every single family has these questions about how you will take personal responsibility for the planet and where your limits are. You can’t do everything. You’re only human.
You can get compassion fatigue, so you’ve got to set limits—but I’m not there yet on global warming. And Starship remains a huge priority in my life.
I sensed a lot of pain and fear in America. Obama’s inherited such a monstrous snowball of problems.
Part of my not becoming an American citizen was because I was not a fan of the Bush administration. I wish I had now though, because then I could have voted. That was foolish of me. I’m certainly going to vote now.
It’s better here. Our children are flourishing in New Zealand. I’m working with my husband and we’re doing work that we’re proud of. My husband is American, but he’s as Kiwi as anyone I know.
We’ve gotten rid of a house, and a pool, and several cars in the US, and I’m driving a Prius. Our next project is solar heating for the pool, because it’s driving me crazy.
We have two beehives, because we want to help the bee populations. This guy takes care of them, we found him online, all you do is supply the land. You’ll get more honey than you could possibly eat.
We’re planting native flowers and trees all over our property. We’ve got compost going. I rescued a whole lot of punga logs, and we’ve built weta and skink habitats. My husband and son are natural gardeners. I’m learning. I don’t mind making my home a weta wonderland.
You don’t need much space to do these things. I went to a one-acre farm in Costa Rica where they had two cows, and ran their kitchen off the methane. One of my boys, that’s his plan. He wants to be a farmer.
When I was a kid, post-Cold War, there was still the threat of nuclear war. I remember feeling despair as a child, this feeling of impending doom. I don’t like to put these worries on my kids. I want them to have a full childhood so they’re not burdened with a feeling of nihilism.
I remember a gasoline company that posted a $6 billion profit in the wake of the first Iraq War. I thought, What are you going to do with that, buy a new planet? There’s no planet B.
My biological job is done. If something happened to me tomorrow my kids could survive. But I want to make sure they have a habitat to survive in. We don’t want to say that we weren’t part of the solution.
I think we can do this, we really can.










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| Random thoughts of what I would want to do to get more out of my time on Earth. If I am young: 1. Have lots of fun! 2. Be a good son/daughter/friend/student. 3. Maybe ask “do I really need a new one of those, or does my old one still do the job?” 4. Maybe plant something on the grass verge/in backyard. 5. Don't Litter! If I am over 25: 1. Wake up! I am now a grown up and I will never feel anymore grownup than I do right now. Enjoy the fact that I have free thought and can question authority and belief systems and test them against my own gut feeling of right and wrong. I can change my mind as I grow. 2. Enjoy the good things in life, the things that cannot be bought. 3. Enjoy my child's free thought. The free child is invariably good and social. 4. Question anything/anyone that diminishes my health & freedom or that of others. In their environment, being happy is an act of rebellion. 5. Question what tells me that without their product or belief system I am “less-than.” In their world, being emotionally/practically self-sufficient is a sacrilege. 6. Get close to nature. It will sustain me 7. Laugh a lot. |
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| I am off to a Sign On promotion today. Putting pressure on our government reps to come clean on Carbon Emissions policies. Climate Change is The No. 1 issue facing the human race. PLEASE SIGN ON TO A CLIMATE CHANGE GROUP IN YOUR AREA!! |