Monday, February 7, 2022

Fossil fuel pollution = global warming = pandemics = death!


logo greenpeace

Nelson,

 

Two weeks ago, on an extraordinarily cold winter day, a group of Greenpeace volunteers and I visited 12 bank branches of the Big Five in Toronto – precisely, RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO and CIBC.We postered, went live on Instagram, and reminded everyone of the Big Five’s ongoing role in funding fossil fuel projects that violate Indigenous rights and accelerate climate chaos even as they continue to try to greenwash themselves. [1]

 

Together, we need to demand that Canada’s Big 5 banks stop funding destructive fossil fuel projects. Will you join me in doing so?

GP1SWOGV_Medium_res_with_credit_line

The CGL pipeline severely violates Indigenous rights and increases fossil fuel production. While Canada’s big 5 banks have made public commitments to achieve net zero emissions by 2050 [2] and to respect Indigenous land rights, their actions speak louder. And they are funding CGL, even as the Royal Canadian Mounted Police repeatedly raided unceded Wet’suwet’en territory in acts of colonial violence. [3] [4] [5] [6]

 

If you’re a customer of Canada’s Big 5 banks, remember that these banks are using YOUR money, YOUR savings to fund such projects. Tell them you don’t approve.

It’s not at all impossible to stop investing in destructive pipelines or fossil fuel projects. A recent Greenpeace report shows that although the big 5 banks are more exposed to climate risk than they admit, they could phase out their support for fossil fuels. [7]

I hope you can join me in telling them to do so.

 

Thank you for your support!

 

Tara,

Mobilizations Campaigner, Greenpeace Canada

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Greenpeace doesn't accept any money from companies or governments so we can be independent and challenge anyone who threatens the planet or peace. To help us keep fighting climate change, defending our oceans and protecting ancient forests, please make a regular donation or start a fundraiser. Thank you!

 

You can grow the movement for a green and peaceful future. Forward this email and share the signup link for our regular email updates and ways to take action.

 

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Saturday, February 5, 2022

  
 
PETA
 
 

Gandalf lived, suffered, and was killed in a laboratory—we must spare other monkeys a similar fate.

Gandalf
 
 
Donate Now!
 
 

Dear Joseph,

Gandalf—a monkey confined to a laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh (Pitt)—was so desperate for affection that he presented his back to passersby and gestured desperately to try to get them to groom it.

But he received no affection or warmth—only torment. After a severely stressed monkey caged nearby bit Gandalf's hand down to the tendons, the veterinarian on call refused to examine his injury. Instead, she just prescribed ibuprofen—a woefully inadequate treatment for such a serious wound. He was then forced to undergo an experimental surgery. Three weeks later, he was euthanized and sealed in a biohazard bag after experimenters took tissue samples from his corpse.

Today, there are hundreds more monkeys trapped in cages at Pitt, while tens of thousands more languish in other laboratories, experiencing pain and fear as Gandalf did.

PETA's eyewitness observed other monkeys in the laboratory slowly losing their minds: pacing, rocking, and displaying other repetitive behavior often seen in stressed animals held in captivity. Since our investigation, news reports broke that a monkey who may have been infected with a dangerous pathogen escaped from a cage at the same university and that staff allegedly attempted to cover it up—potentially putting animals and humans alike at risk.

Powered by committed PETA supporters like you, our work to end experimentation on animals has helped reduce the number of monkeys, rabbits, and other animals suffering each year:

  • We recently persuaded food giant General Mills to ban experiments on animals for the purpose of making health claims about its products. It now joins Coca-Cola, Lipton, and many of the world's largest food companies that have stopped cruel tests after hearing from PETA.
  • Not long afterward, the U.S. Coast Guard confirmed that it had ended the use of animals in cruel trauma training drills. It took years of aggressive campaigning by PETA to stop the service branch from shooting, stabbing, and dismembering goats, pigs, and other animals.

But as long as even a single animal is suffering in a laboratory, we must push forward to end the neglect and abuse—and we can't do it without your support.

Our goal is for 1,000 generous supporters to make a donation by midnight on April 30. We're making good progress, but we need you with us, too. Give your gift of $5 or more now and help prevent more animals from suffering in laboratories and cruel experiments!

As always, thank you so much for all that you do for animals—every step we take toward a kinder world is only possible with your dedication and compassion.

Kind regards,

Ingrid E. Newkirk
President

 

They deliberately infected volunteers with Covid.

The Download
Your daily dose of what's up in emerging technology
Infectiousness insights
02.03.22
Hello! Today: insights have started trickling in from the first study to deliberately infect people with covid—we break down the most significant findings. Get your friends to sign up here to get The Download every day.

What researchers learned from deliberately giving people covid
 

The news: People who’ve caught covid become infectious far more quickly than previously believed, according to the world’s first “human challenge trial” study in which healthy young volunteers were deliberately infected with the virus. The study, carried out by a team led by researchers at Imperial College London, is the first to watch what happens from the moment someone is infected with SARS-CoV-2.

The findings: The 36 volunteers, all aged 18-30, were exposed to a low dose of the original SARS-CoV-2 virus in the nose. Half of the participants developed covid symptoms, and became infectious within just two days, with levels of infectious virus peaking at five days. It has previously been estimated that it took about five days from exposure to first symptoms. Participants in the study remained infectious for an average of nine days.

What it all means: The findings come with the caveat that they’ve been derived from a small pool of volunteers. However, they provide useful insights nonetheless. The fact that people become infectious so quickly and stay infectious for so long suggests that recommended isolation periods should be kept at around ten days. Although the virus was detected in the throat first, it was eventually present at much greater levels in the nose, highlighting the need to wear face masks properly. The research also supports the regular, widespread use of lateral flow testing. And the fact that the challenge trial was carried out safely also suggests that this approach could help test future vaccines, variants or treatments.

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