|
|
Commentary
|
The
statements, opinions, or views in the articles may not
necessarily reflect that of the Goan Voice Canada. |
|
|
|
UN Climate Change Conference
Do right by nature
http://www.catholicregister.org/content/view/3667/40/
Excerpts from Editorial written by Catholic Register
Staff, |
Friday, 04 December 2009
Copenhagen World leaders are descending on Copenhagen
this week for a UN climate conference that seeks an
aggressive strategy to reduce global greenhouse gas
emissions. Their ultimate goal is a new international
agreement to replace the failed 1990 Kyoto accord.
It is an ambitious undertaking and, even before it
starts, Canada has been cast among the villains. The
UN General Secretary has singled out Canada as lacking
stringent reduction targets. Former U.S.
vice-president Al Gore has been targeting the Alberta
tar sands as a threat to the planet’s survival. The
left-leaning Guardian newspaper of London published a
column that called Canada a “corrupt petro-state”
that, more than any other nation, has been trying to
sabotage a new climate agreement.
Canada has never been a leader on climate issues. The
Liberals under Jean Chrétien scored significant
public-relations points by supporting the Kyoto accord
but then thumbed their nose at the treaty. Chrétien’s
successor, Stephane Dion, tried to remake Canada into
a white knight of the environment but was slayed by
his own party. The Conservatives under Stephen Harper
have candidly admitted that, rather than lead, they
prefer to see what the Americans do and then meekly
follow.
The climate debate is largely about society trying to
balance its addiction to material comforts against a
moral obligation to respect God’s creation. People
long for luxury in our cars, homes, appliances,
vacations, food and clothes, and expect governments to
build economies that provide the jobs and institutions
to support a consumer lifestyle. Polls may suggest
society is searching for a moral high road to save the
planet but the way we spend and the way we vote often
suggests otherwise.
The position of the church is clear. The planet is a
gift entrusted to us by God and we are called to
exercise stewardship over nature in a way that
protects it, cultivates it and uses it responsibly for
our legitimate needs. When that stewardship conflicts
with lifestyle choices and economic policies that
promote exploitation and degradation of the planet, we
are called to review our consumerism before it
inflicts catastrophic environmental harm.
Canadians, though, have been slow to embrace that
message. A recent study found Canadians overwhelmingly
believe climate change is mankind’s defining crisis
and we have a moral responsibility to save the planet.
But the same poll found half of Canadians said tax
dollars put towards environmental cleanup would be
better spent on health care and the national debt.
That ambivalence - recognizing the deadly perils of
greenhouse gases but unwilling to make sacrifices to
fix the problem -explains Canadian political inaction
and our sagging international reputation.
For the most part, while acknowledging the moral
argument, Canadians apparently still see climate
change as primarily a political and economic issue.
That position, not the moral one, is what Harper will
promote in Copenhagen. Unfortunately. |
|
|
|
The real culprit in climate change
http://www.thestar.com/comment/article/737323
Letter commenting on Toronto Star Editorial Dec. 7
The Star's editorial and crusade with other newspapers
worldwide was laudable but surprisingly made no
mention of the role of our economic system of
capitalism in climate change. We believe in and
practice an economic theory that is neither viable nor
sustainable and whose practices are destroying human
life on this planet.
The causes of global warming are directly related to
free market capitalism principles – limitless
consumption, overproduction of goods leading to the
massive waste of precious human resources, limitless
profits putting power and control in the hands of
private enterprise and a complete disregard for
humanity in the process. Each day untreated industrial
waste is dumped into our water, air and land with few
regulations or accountability upon corporate polluters
who successfully lobby governments to water down
environmental legislation.
Climate change is occurring because in our
profit-based, self-interested, materialist and
consumer-driven society consumption is the raison-d'etre
of existence. With consumption comes waste and the
increasing use of natural resources to produce
consumer goods, which then leads to their disposal,
generating huge environmental degradation worldwide.
Our dependence on fossil fuels is generating global
warming and all its related negative impacts while
suppressing the development of green alternatives.
Consumption as an economic practice is unsustainable.
Already the world's fish stocks are depleted, our air
and water are polluted, climate change is occurring
and arable land is shrinking. The warnings are
everywhere but no one is listening. We need to run our
economies in ways that minimize the potential for
greed to dominate decision-making and in ways that are
environmentally and socially responsible and
sustainable. Governments must take responsibility on
behalf of society by controlling private-sector excess
through strict legislation that ensures there is a
planet for the next generation to inhabit. Everything
else is just talk - like moving deck chairs around on
the Titanic.
Dr. Robert Bahlieda, Newmarket |
|
|
|
Rethinking a relationship... Young Goans and Goa
From:
goanet-news-bounces@lists.goanet.org
on behalf of Goanet Reader
(goanetreader@gmail.com)
Sent: December 19, 2009 12:41:42 AM
To: Goa's premiere mailing list, estb. 1994!
(goanet@lists.goanet.org )
By Jason Keith Fernandes
jason.k.fernandes@gmail.com
Subsequent to hearing a critical participant's
observation about the 'Know Goa Programme' organized
by the Department for NRI Affairs, I had my
reservations about the Programme, wondering if it was
not just another waste of public funds. My experiences
with participants of the second edition of the 'Know
Goa Programme' however, allowed me a partial retake on
the initiative.
The 'Know Goa Programme' is apparently modeled on the
'Know India Programme' that has been designed for
young adults (between the years 18 to 28) of Goan
origin to spend some time in Goa, and get to know the
place their parents or grandparents arrived from. The
experience involves something of a guided tour across
Goa, and the opportunity to interact with individuals,
institutions and officials. Interacting along with
other local Goans with these visitors over the past
weekend, it became obvious that despite the
possibility that the Programme could in fact be an all
expenses paid holiday trip, it has it benefits.
Listening to the participants of this year's programme
speak, Harish Rao, a Californian-bred Goan, and
present in the gathering, spoke up, hitting a nail
squat on the head. He pointed out that when we (as
young people of Goan origin) come to Goa on holidays
with our parents, Goa is reduced entirely to an
encounter with family. It boils down to visits from
one family home to another, and a few photographs.
There is no experience of a wider Goa outside of this
family circuit.
If we are to develop a connection with Goa, this young
man pointed out, we need to be able to move out of
these family circuits and establish larger connections
with the society at large. To be sure, this is what
the Programme seems to be attempting, allowing these
young persons an initial engagement with Goa as
individuals, and outside of the suffocating frameworks
of family (and its often tiresome obligations).
Unfortunately though because the Know Goa Programme is
couched within the larger context of diasporic
politics, the Programme (or at least the part I was
witness to) replicates the problems of diasporic
politics. Two of these problems are, the
essentialising of culture, and the restriction of the
cultural identity within a national framework.
In their encounter with local Goans, the participating
young adults were berated with the idea that they
ought to learn 'Konkani, our language'. Then came the
usual lament of how we don't do sing the Mando, dance
fugdi, dhalo etc etc. There are a number of problems
with this approach, the most important being that it
freezes culture into being necessarily from the past,
and must be held on to.
There is no recognition of the fact that this culture
evolved in the context of a certain time, certain
kinds of social relations, and as time, economy and
social relations change, this culture will change as
well!
One must be aware of the past yes, but hanging on to
it suffocates a society. This suffocation is perhaps
one reason why latter generation immigrants of Goan
origin do not attend Goan events, or why younger local
Goans take 'cultural events' lightly; these do not
speak to the vibrancy of their lives and experiences.
These events ask only that we continue to animate
corpses that ought to have been buried.
Another problem with this way of understanding
culture, is that once locked into lament mode, the
only way in which you can address the Other (in this
case the young participants) is to ask for their help.
Because they also largely come from the countries of
the developed West, this request for help comes loaded
with all the implications of colonial and post
colonial politics. Do we really want to continue these
racist and deeply inegalitarian relations, or do we
want to move on to equal and mutually nourishing
relationships?
The third problem of diaporic politics is the manner
in which a rich cultural tradition is shoved into a
national framework. Thus given that Goa is now
politically linked to the Indian nation-state, one has
to stress the Indian connection. The rich histories of
the Goan migrant that evokes memories in Karachi, in
Mozambique, in Kenya are all erased. If not erased,
then because we now view Goa primarily through an
'Indian' lens, there is no way to meaningfully make
sense of, and engage with this wider cultural
tradition and history.
I would like to supplement Harish Rao's suggestion of
breaking out of the family networks to engage with the
larger society. I would suggest that the way forward
lies in encouraging the participants of the Programme
to engage as individuals with other individuals. Thus
meet officials and get to know of institutions, but
also know the individuals behind them. More
importantly get to know local individuals who would
like to know you on an individual basis. Such an
individual interaction; quite simply the development
of friendships, offers one way out of the problems
with diasporic politics.
Get to know an individual and you get to know of her
daily experiences and the manner in which she deals
with the challenges of daily life. This is her
culture, strongly rooted in the contemporary local.
Vibrant and alive, there may not be a direct link to
the Mando, fugdi, dhalo and Konkani. Yet despite this,
they are profoundly Goan!
Engaging with another's experiences draws you also
into an understanding of local politics. The 'Culture'
that is normally presented within diasporic settings
is apolitical and hence dishonest. For example, when
we are urged to speak Konkani, we are not told that
there are huge contestations around the language.
There are issues of dialect and script. Feelings of
shame and humiliation. We are also not told that
Konkani is just one (as it is) of the many languages
that are natural to the Goan.
Engaging with politics and with the individual,
develops bonds of affection, that perhaps offer a far
greater possibility of the person of Goan origin
engaging with Goa's future. What is more, for reasons
of being based on a personal relationship, it is
possible that these relations will tend towards being
egalitarian, rather than reproduce the inequalities of
international relations.
Finally, based on relationships, it encourages rising
above the national boundaries that are severely
limiting and fail to allow us to appreciate culture in
all its breadth and depth. Emerging from a State
initiative, it would be difficult for the Programme to
achieve these objectives, but in merely creating a
space, the Programme is perhaps doing enough!
Published in the Gomantak
Times, 9 Dec 2009 where it was first published under
the title Engagements from Beyond the Border:
Reflections on the Know Goa Programme
Read JKF's blog:
http://dervishnotes.blogspot.com/ |
|
Goan Voice designed and compiled by
Demerg Systems India,
ALFRAN PLAZA, "C" Block, 2nd Floor, S-43/44,
(Near Don Bosco School), Panjim, Goa-403001
Tel: +91 0832 2420797 Email:
info@goanvoice.ca
|
|