Blog

June 14, 2012

Monaco, Vegetarians, and Birds Oh My!

More articles by »
Written by: Abdul
Tags: , ,

Report From The Trenches – A.K’s Report

Team Rio – Day 2

Welcome to the Rio+20 pre-convention, convention. That statement could probably sum up the day but I will give you a complete picture.  After a long (almost 2 hour shuttle ride complete with leftist college grad who I stumped and awed in a debate about capitalism and free markets) we finally arrived and entered the pearly gates of sustainability. We found ourselves as lambs among a pack of wolves.  The theme of sustainability existed from the poorly designed wood and cardboard pens to even a restaurant that claimed sustainability by serving only vegetables and non-alcoholic beer.

The highlight of the day included the many panel discussions that took place all across the huge site.  My favorite of the day was about the topic of overpopulation.  Every panelist tip-toed around the solution we all know they wanted, abortion and just living with less.  I stood up and asked the panel to clarify a few points about how to quote “use the same but with just less resources.”

The short answer to me was that (for some reason) they believe private companies just like to waste resources – and that is why the government needs to intervene and force companies to do the same with less.  To put this concept into words lets say Ford could make 3, F-150’s (I’m from rural ND) with the same resources it takes to make 1, F-150, the commies on the panel believe that apparently Ford would not…which is a ridiculous notion if you understand the basic notion of capitalism or business in general.

I was extremely looking forward to the “indigenous” people of Rio protest rally but apparently they decided to do whatever it is the do instead, sell beads or something.  We spoke with delegates from countries like Burundi, Germany, China, and Monaco about what they thought about the sustainability debate.  Lastly, we tried to get our hands on the illusive “Zero draft” document that is the new document to “change the world”.  Unfortunately, due to their policy of transparency the made it transparent that no one could see the most recent draft.  But do not worry; CFACT will be here in the trenches, to make it known to the world when it does come out.

A.K. Kamara

Collegians Midwest Coordinator






 
 

 
Rio+20 Sustinable Question Mark

After Rio – what next?

It’s time to give all mankind a real chance to enjoy genuine development Kelvin Kemm The Rio+20 World Environmental Conference has come and gone. The “Plus 20” comes from the fact that it took place twenty years after the...
by CFACT
0

 
 
Rio+20 I'm sure you've got humans

From charming to alarming: Rio+20 sustainability propaganda

A small sample of the propaganda imagery of the Rio+20 summit
by CFACT
0

 
 
CameraZOOM-20120620105038147

Dodging another UN bullet

‘The Future We Want’ offered sustained power and money grabs in name of sustainability Paul Driessen and Duggan Flanakin The Future We Want outlined a “common vision” for planetary “sustainable development,” as proc...
by CFACT
0

 

 
CFACT Sand art future we dread with cfact logo

Washington Times: Rio+20’s expensive wish list

$1,325 per American family for U.N. bureaucrats By Paul Driessen and Duggan Flanakin The NGO Major Group Organizing Partners have finalized their key document for the Rio+20 Summit. “The Future We Want” outlines the com...
by CFACT
0

 
 
CFACT Sand art future we dread

CFACT’s Copacabana Beach sand art. Watch Now!

An important message in the sand plus music and dancing.  Enjoy!   Tweet
by CFACT
0

 



0 Comments


Be the first to comment!


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>