Category Archives: Activism

SOIL: why we need to stop treating it like DIRT

by Kate Patterson

Spring is here. Gardens are being planted, everywhere plants are flowering and the world is once again becoming green, so I thought it would be a fitting time to share some of my favorite things about one of the most dynamic, yet underappreciated systems on Earth, soil.  First, it’s important to have a bit of a background on how and why soils formed and what that has meant to the evolution of modern human civilization.  I’ll then describe some of the not-so good (and the good) news about what we have been doing to our soils in the recent past that is jeopardizing our ability to feed our growing world population and what many amazing soil scientists, farmers, gardeners, and involved citizens are doing about it.

Soil is a complex living, breathing system.  It’s packed with tons of cool organisms and is an extremely complex mixture of inorganic and organic processes, without which life on Earth could not exist.  Through industrial agricultural practices, urbanization and deforestation we are in danger of degrading our healthy soils by stripping off nutrient rich layers that are necessary for functioning ecosystems, and from a more anthropocentric perspective, for our ability to grow food.

To get a sense of just how important soil is we have to backtrack to the to the beginning of the first life on Earth, about 3.8 billion years ago, when the Earth’s average temperature was too hot and anoxic for anything except extreme cyanobacteria to survive.  The presence of bacteria on rock surfaces helped to enhance weathering rates through chemical reactions, which sped up the breakdown of rocks and formation of soils.  Carbon dioxide, an important greenhouse gas, diffused into soils to be used for various reactions, which helped to decrease its warming effect in our atmosphere.  The slow breakdown of rocks and formation of soil minerals also created a suitable nutrient rich substrate necessary for the evolution of land plants.  Through photosynthesis, plants further decreased carbon dioxide and increased oxygen levels in the atmosphere and then died and contributed organic matter to the soil.  It wasn’t until about 400 million years ago that the first land plants appeared, and only a little while before that when soils came to be as we know them today.

Fast forward to about ten thousand years ago, when humans first began transitioning to more stationary, agricultural civilizations.  Without any knowledge of genetics, we bred and domesticated plants to achieve higher yields.  It was no longer necessary for everyone to grow food.  People began to establish urban centers where new professions emerged and food was obtained from surpluses produced by a small subset of the population.  Farmers have always understood that maintaining fertile soils is imperative to successful agricultural practices.  But the advent of the Green Revolution in the 20th century led us astray, convincing us that science and technology were capable of going beyond the limits of traditional farming techniques.

The Haber-Bosch process, discovered in the early 20th century, led to the production of synthetic nitrogen fertilizers and drastically increased crop yields worldwide.  That, along with the introduction of other technologies and the use of higher yielding crops led to the establishment of larger, industrialized agricultural systems.  Our reliance on synthetic fertilizers to increase crop yields has so far allowed us to overlook the exquisitely complex systems in which plants grow best.  Sure, for now we can give them lots of nitrogen and phosphorus and they will grow.  But, without adding other forms of organic matter or manure to supply plants with nutrients and to feed bacteria, fungi and other organisms in the soil that provide essential ecosystem services, we are running a thin line between high yields and an inability to sustain the level of production that we have become accustomed to.

It seems like somehow in our urbanized, fast paced lives we have lost touch with nature and our ability to connect with the very thing that is essential for our survival and ability to feed our growing population.  In a great documentary called DIRT, there was a scene describing an urban school that wanted to convert concrete playgrounds to vegetable gardens, but a journalist reporting on the story was worried that there would be nowhere for the children to play.  I will never forget that twisted feeling I got as I realized just how disillusioned and frightened of the unpredictability of nature we have become.  We often fail to understand how important a resource soil is, and desire to escape rather than embrace and appreciate the presence of soil in our daily lives.

I happen to live in a pretty rare suburban landscape.  I have a natural greenbelt next to the river that runs through my neighborhood.  As a kid, I remember being outside and playing in soil all the time.  But it’s easy to imagine how living in urban landscapes allows many people to disconnect with nature, including more importantly I think, understanding where our food comes from.  The emergence in popularity of farmers markets and community gardens are an indication that more people are making healthy and sustainable food a priority.

Now we must go one step further and make the connection to the bigger picture and understand that soils on a global scale are in danger.  In some places, we are currently disposing of fertile soil to develop big suburban communities, complete with Wal-Marts, fast food chains and vast expanses of paved area that encourage us to forget how and why we got here in the first place.  Soil erosion is a big problem in places where deforestation to make room for agricultural landscapes has destabilized and exposed soil to the elements so that it simply washes away.  Monoculture farms that use large amounts of synthetic fertilizers to maintain high yearly yields contribute to the degradation of nutrients and biotic life in soils.  Without maintaining bacterial and fungal communities that help plant roots to obtain essential nutrients, the food that we eat is not as nutritious.

It took billions of years to establish the delicate blanket of soil covering our planet that has provided us with the ability to develop complex agrarian civilizations.  Yet, in a matter of a few generations we are well on our way to destroying one resource that we really can’t live without.  It is encouraging to see that an awareness and desire for nutritious, organic food is growing in many urban areas.  Permaculture, which designs agricultural systems to maximize efficient nutrient cycling and to maintain healthy ecosystems, is a philosophy for land management that is growing in popularity, particularly among young people looking to try farming or just urban gardening.  However, it isn’t easy.  Gardening takes lots of patience and practice and I’ve failed at it more times than I have succeeded.  Even if you don’t have the room or desire to grow some of your own food, it is possible for everyone to contribute by attending farmers markets and supporting small-scale, local farms, that through grass-roots actions, are going to revolutionize the way we appreciate and value our food, soils and our place on Earth.

Now that spring is here, farmers markets will be starting up soon.  Here’s a link to find farmers markets throughout BC.

http://www.bcfarmersmarket.org

A great website with tons of info and links to other great farming blogs as well:

http://youngagrarians.org

http://www.permaculture.org/nm/index.php/site/index/

You can watch DIRT the movie free online here

http://www.truththeory.org/dirt-the-movie/

A good quick overview on the Green Revolution:

http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/pubs/pubs/ib/ib11.pdf

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Beyond Pink: Queer Straight Alliance Changing Minds at King George School

by Matea Kulić

It may come as a surprise that King George Secondary School, just a stone’s throw from the vibrant Davie Gay Village in Vancouver, was without a Queer Straight Alliance (QSA) only six months ago.

King Geoge Secondary School

“I was shocked,” says Student Support Worker Deona Zammit, describing the atmosphere of homophobia when she first started at the school. She recounts how some kids yelled out “Yes it is!” while she was tacking up a series of school board sanctioned “Sexuality is a Not a Choice” posters.

“There used to be a lot of name calling in every classroom,” QSA Student Leader Sienna St. Laurent says. “Someone asks a question and another turns around and say’s ‘that’s so gay’. They don’t think about how they use these words as part of their vocabulary.”

When Deona and Sienna teamed up to start the QSA in November they rectified the noticeable absence of King George on the school board’s list of QSA’s. Now every highschool within the City of Vancouver has one.

QSA

Deona felt the casual use of homophobic language at King George also prompted her to be more vocal about her sexuality. To tackle stereotypes, “its important for kids to see a regular adult living their sexuality in an healthy way,” she says.

While the West End is home to many open members of the LBQTQ community, a high porportion of students at King George come from backgrounds that are less tolerant of alternate lifestyles. According to the Department of Education, all publicly funded schools are required to provide a safe and supportive environment for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, transsexual, two-spirit, queer and questioning people.

Their statistics affirm that schools with QSA’s have less incidents of bullying and students feel more comfortable talking about issues of sexuality in the classroom. At King George, respecting the cultural and religious values of the student body while trying to change attitudes about homosexuality has required a balancing act.

“I don’t feel like I need to parade it around,” says Sienna with regards to her sexual orientation. “But if someone asks me I won’t lie. Mostly I wish it didn’t matter.”

It appears that the QSA’s efforts to improve the general atmosphere at the school – painting garbage cans and postering postitive messages in the hallway – is proving contagious. The morning of our interview almost every locker was tagged with a post-it note scrawled with the words, “You’re beautiful.”

You are beautiful!

“I really hate that it wasn’t my idea,” Deona laughs. “But it’s great to see this kind of school spirit emerging.”

In just half a year since the first QSA meeting, King George has experienced a seismic shift. “The entire vibe of the school has changed,” say Deona. “Even as staff member I feel more comfortable coming to work.”

Among their successes they count: attracting the younger grades to meetings, a recent thousand dollar grant to partner with the Gordon Neighbourhood House, and their most ‘liked’ event, ‘The KG Shake’ in which fifty students danced off to the viral YouTube ‘Harlem Shake’ video gyrating their hips bedecked in pink.

Pink Shirt Day

Pink has a special status in the anti-bullying campaign ever since two Nova Scotia high school students took it upon themselves to distribute pink t-shirts to the school populace after they witnessed a boy being bullied for wearing that color.

When asked if Pink Shirt Day’s focus on bullying obscures the link between violence and homophobia, the response is mixed. Sienna notes that gender based fashion stereotypes are waning. “V-necks are in and I mean, a lot of the guys wear pink everyday.”

Deona says, “Kids are very aware that gender is a social construction these days. At the same time whenever I go into the gym and see the guys lifting weights and the girls bouncing on balls, I think the gender stereotypes seem very much intact.”

The QSA has helped affirm a zero-tolerance policy when the insults “gay” or “fag” are used to pick-on kids stepping out of gender or other adolescent norms. Events such as Pink Shirt Day provide a platform from which to bring in speakers and discuss the various ways bullying takes form.

With everchanging social media radicalizing the way teens communicate, tackling the way language can be used as a weapon is high on most educators agendas. In response to the QSA’s initiatives, the teachers at King George have been hugely supportive and have begun a more open discussion about sexuality in the classroom. Sienna says the impact is palpable: “homophobic comments are way down.”

Sienna hopes to tackle engrained stereotypes by targeting elementary aged kids through QSA outreach. She says the six members who regulary meet at King George have a lot of work to do. “My old high school in Maple Ridge had things like Gender Swap Day and a Mini Pride Parade. They signed the wheel chair accessible bathroom as gender neutral.”

“I don’t see why we can’t do that here,” Deona intersects, “I’ll send the email today.” In a school of only 500 students, “where everyone knows eachother’s business,” this DIY spirit has already made a world of difference.

“I used to come to this school and think ‘man I hate this school, everything here sucks.’ says Sienna. “Now I come here and think, wow I belong to a community.”

Interview held on March 8th with Deona Zammit and Sienna St. Laurent.

Find the King George QSA online on their Facebook Page:

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Happy International Women’s Day! Less talk, more action to end violence against women

by Sarah Allan

Happy International Women’s Day!

I wish that this day could be spent celebrating the successes and achievements of women around the world, but sadly, though its 2013 and we have come a long way, locally and globally the focus is still on the very real and seemingly ever-present issue of violence against women. While it is variously referred to as ‘domestic violence’ (by the B.C. government), ‘family violence’ (by B.C.’s Family Law Act), ‘violence against women in relationships’ (also by the B.C. government) , and other other vague names, it all boils down to, and should accurately be called, violence against women. When talking about an issue as important as this, it’s important to choose our words carefully and with intention, as the language we use to frame a discussion sets parameters for coming up with solutions, whether we mean it to or not. I among others take issue with the misleading labels commonly used to describe physical, sexual, emotional and psychological violence towards women, as ‘domestic violence’ infers privacy and violence that takes place in the home; as ‘family violence’ and ‘domestic violence’ both obscure the gendered nature of what it is most often describing, violence by a man against a women; and as ‘violence against women in relationships’ glosses over the fact that women’s risk of violence increases once a relationship is over. Call it what you will, but i doesn’t erase the reality of violence against women in this country. It is still true that more than half of all Canadian women have experienced at least one incident of physical or sexual violence since the age of 16 and that women are more likely to be assaulted by someone that they know, than by a stranger.

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Aaron Swartz and the Fight for Freedom of Information

by Tracy Giesz-Ramsay

I had the brief chance to meet Aaron Swartz two years ago while in New York, and was instantly drawn to his charismatic outspokenness and passion when talking about the freedom of the internet and it’s powerful capability to inspire revolution and organize youth activism around the world. The room was full of fellow advocates and friends who when Aaron spoke, listened with awe and intensity to his every word. It was a swift encounter but a truly inspiring one. The following is a collection of statements from his close friends, family, and acquaintances that I find summarize the tragic situation far better than I could hope to myself:

AaronSwartz

“Since his arresting the early morning of January 11, 2011 — two years to the day before Aaron Swartz ended his life — I have known more about the events that began this spiral than I have wanted to know. Aaron consulted me as a friend and lawyer that morning. He shared with me what went down and why, and I worked with him to get help. When my obligations to Harvard created a conflict that made it impossible for me to continue as a lawyer, I continued as a friend. Not a good enough friend, no doubt, but nothing was going to draw that friendship into doubt.

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Idle No More – Snowflakes, Drums and Thunder

by Sarah Spence

I’ll be honest, I have never been a very political person and I have struggled with finding my identity as a member of the First Nations. I can confidently say that both of these have been because of the barrier that separates the ‘Indian’ world from the ‘White-Man’s’ world. It’s sad to say that this barrier still exists and continues to shackle my identity in a state of limbo, as I assume it has done to many before me and will do to many after me. However, this is a reality that many Indigenous people throughout the world are faced with when going through the integration process into the non-Indigenous society. There are stereotypes and ignorance regarding these separated societies that get picked up, and the fact that individuals do not follow these stereotypical concepts about being of Indigenous descent can often make them feel fraudulent, ambivalent and confused.

When I first started hearing about Chief Theresa Spence’s hunger strike and the Idle No More movement regarding Bill C-45, I was slightly hesitant and skeptical of what my involvement should be. Then I watched a Youtube video of Chief Theresa Spence explaining the cycles of pain of the people in her community who are living in third-world conditions. One thing she mentioned in the video struck a chord with me: that children can’t even take a shower without the possibility of getting a rash because the water isn’t clean. It wasn’t until I heard those words come out of her mouth that I realized the ignorance that I had been carrying around throughout most of my life.

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Idle No More – #idlenomore

by Matea Kulic (italicized verses by Joy Harjo) with photographs by Shelby Tay

photograph by Shelby Tay

photograph by Shelby Tay

It was almost a year ago now I watched those words sear through the air of the auditorium. It was the red of her I noticed first: Red leather coat and boots, bright red lips.

I have a memory.

      It swims deep in blood

 

My spirit comes here to drink.

My spirit comes here to drink.

Blood is the undercurrent.

Each saxophone note and beat of her drum stained my ears until they echoed in stories of loss, love and life that only Joy Harjo can weave so seamlessly.

Her words lifted out of the room, past the main square of San Miguel, where the Wixarika Indigenous gathered. They flew out over vast bronze hills and colored the cacti as they opened in blossom.

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The Gentrification Conundrum

by Sarah Allan with photographs by Tegan MacDonald

Gentrification is a huge source of conflict and debate, particularly in Vancouver B.C., where the city changes faster than anyone can keep up with. As a phenomenon, gentrification is not necessarily a negative or a positive thing for a city. Gentrification was defined in the 1960′s by sociologist Ruth Glass as involving the change of a working-class or vacant area of a city to a middle class residential and/or commercial use area. Despite this seemingly neutral definition, there are definitely winners and losers when gentrification occurs in a city; there are things that are lost forever, and things that are gained. Lately, I have been asking myself, and others, a few questions as we all struggle to find our place in this rapidly changing urban environment: Is it wrong to benefit from gentrification? Is there a way for gentrification to occur, without sacrificing the communities that already exist?

Photo by Tegan MacDonald

Photo by Tegan MacDonald

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The Case of the Cuban Five

by the International Committee for the Freedom of the Cuban Five

A LEGAL UPDATE: THE CASE OF THE CUBAN FIVE

In September 1998, five Cuban men were arrested in Miami by FBI agents. Gerardo Hernandez, Ramón Labañino, Fernando Gonzalez, Antonio Guerrero and René Gonzalez were accused of the crime of conspiracy to commit espionage. The US government never accused them of actual espionage, nor did it affirm that real acts of espionage had been carried out, as no classified document had been confiscated from the Five. Their actual mission in the United States was monitoring the activities of the groups and organizations responsible for terrorist activities against Cuba. After the triumph of the Cuban revolution in 1959, Cuba had been the victim of more terrorist attacks than any other country in the world, killing 3,478 and injuring 2,099. The vastly majority of those attacks originated in southern Florida, by groups tolerated and partly financed by the US government.

After their arrest, the Five were immediately placed in solitary confinement, isolated from all other inmates for the entire 17 months of pretrial custody. For the first five months they were housed in separate cells isolated from each other as well as the other inmates. After those five months, a motion was filed by the defense asserting that their need to work on their defense was being compromised by the isolation. Four were then moved into the same single cell, with one kept housed alone, but they remained in the Special Housing Unit in isolation cells for all 17 months before their case was first brought before a court.

In spite of the vigorous objections raised by the Five’s defense, the case was tried in Miami, Florida, a community with a long history of hostility toward the Cuban government, which prevented them from receiving a fair trial.

Cuban 5

The trial, which lasted over six months, became the longest trial in United States history. More than 119 volumes of testimony and over 20,000 pages of documents were compiled, including the testimony of three retired US Army generals and a retired admiral, who agreed that no evidence of espionage existed.

Near the trial’s conclusion, when the case was about to be handed to the jury for consideration, the US government recognized in writing that it had failed to prove the main charge against Gerardo Hernandez, conspiracy to commit murder, admitting that it was facing an “insurmountable obstacle” in connection with winning the case. This charge had been added seven months after Gerardo’s arrest. However, the jury, under intense pressure brought to bear on them by the local media and Cuban-American community, nonetheless found the Five guilty of all charges.

The Five were sentenced to a total of four life sentences plus 77 years and were imprisoned in five separate maximum security prisons spread across the US without the possibility of communication with each other.

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A year in review…It’s our birthday!!

Happy birthday to us!

Our first post was on December 1, 2011 and we are now one year old!

In the last year, Pass it to the Left has:

  • Posted 113 articles!
  • Featured 55 different contributors!
  • Included submissions from all over Canada, including British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Quebec, and all over the World, including the US, France, England, Zambia, Guatemala, and Burma!
  • Posted articles on important topics including the tar sands and proposed oil pipelines; cuts to environmental protections; First Nations issues; Western/Middle East relations; international development; the Bhopal disaster; sustainable fashion; the cancellation of Katimavik; Quebec’s student protests; Human Rights; feminism; gentrification; refugee protections; democracy, and our collective future as a society (among other things…)!!
  • Posted articles on global and local issues, including those affecting Afghanistan, Iran, the US, Laos, Mexico, India, the Congo, Nigeria, Haiti, Guatemala and Palestine!
  • Posted articles on other important human topics including love, food, friendship, family, solidarity, music and art!
  • Featured in our ‘Artist Series’ 12 different artists, sculptors, illustrators, singers, bands, musicians, rappers, music video producers, DJ’s, and galleries!
  • Had over 30,000 visitors to the site, from more than 70 different countries!
  • Created an amazing network of intelligent, passionate young people!

We hope you will treat Pass it to the Left as your own, continue to contribute your amazing ideas and stories, and share it with your friends!  Thank you!

Sincerely, your lovely Admins, Sarah & Tracy

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Power to the Online People!

by Sarah Wenger

Where were you when news of the tsunami hit Japan in 2011? How about when Michael Jackson died? Probably online, according to many experts who claim that social media has become the main media source for hundreds of millions of people. Not just in the U.S., either; Facebook alone has more than 900 million users spread across the globe as of 2012. Other social media giants like Twitter have facilitated revolution against unjust leaders and warned people of impending natural disaster. In fact, so many people regularly interact online that if the Internet were a nation, it would exceed the Americas, Europe and the Middle East combined in population. No wonder more than 13 million members of the online community used Reddit and other media platforms to protest SOPA, a proposed Internet censorship bill. Keep this graphic in mind next time you log on, because knowledge is power — and a little knowledge goes a long way in the Internet Age. Check out: www.open-site.org!

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