martes, 4 de enero de 2011

Miles de globos de colores volando en el cielo no sólo son espectaculares y portadores de mensajes...

Constituyen un riesgo para la salud. Están hechos de material sintético, y emiten gases nocivos cuando se queman.
Los globos de poliuretano tardan más de 450 años en degradarse y no se pueden reciclar fácilmente.
Cuando se inflan con helio y se sueltan al aire libre, tarde o temprano llegan a ríos, mares, lagos, estanques y bosques...
¡Miles de animales al año como aves y tortugas, confunden a los globos con comida y mueren asfixiados!

¿Qué hacer si resulta inevitable que utilices globos?

1.    Asegúrate de que tus globos no sean de poliuretano, y compra únicamente globos de latex natural los cuales son biodegradables.
2.    Si vas a usar globos de poliuretano, no los lances al aire.
3.    Si usas globos metálicos en tu fiesta, asegúrate que sean resellables, es decir que una vez que se les sale el helio o el aire, los puedas volver a inflar para usarlos de nuevo.
4.    Evita jugar rellenando globos con agua, adicional al daño que ocasionan los globos, se desperdicia una gran cantidad de este vital liquido

Importante:
Comencemos el año tomando acción y si vas a enviar una carta a Los Reyes Magos considera hacerlo vía correo electrónico o tradicional.

Por: ExpoEnVerdeser

After five years of production we are pleased to announce the release of The Economics of Happiness.


At the International Society for Ecology and Culture, we have spent the last three decades raising awareness of the underlying causes of the many crises we face today. From climate change to terrorism, financial insecurity to the epidemic of depression – we have argued that most of our most pressing problems can be traced back to an unsustainable global economic system. More importantly, we have pointed to a strategic way to address these problems simultaneously: economic localization.

The Economics of Happiness offers not only a big-picture analysis of globalization, but a powerful message of hope for the future. The thinkers and activists we interviewed for the film come from every continent, and represent the interests of the great majority of people on the planet today. Their message is unambiguous: in order to respect and revitalize diversity, both cultural and biological, we need to localize economic activity. They argue that a systemic shift – away from globalizing economic activity and towards the local – is an almost magic formula that allows us to reduce our ecological footprint while increasing human well-being.

When people start connecting the dots between climate change, global economic instability and their own personal suffering – stress, loneliness, depression – there is the potential for a movement that will truly change the world. Featuring a wealth of diverse perspectives, the film illustrates these often hidden connections. We go beyond the narrow analysis of the mainstream to show that antagonism between human needs and the needs of nature is not inevitable.

Resistance to further economic globalization has created powerful new alliances: deep ecologists linking hands with labor unionists, independent businessmen collaborating with small farmers. Now, at the grassroots, localization is also bridging divides in a completely new way – bringing people together across ethnic, religious, economic and even partisan divides.

We have found the process of making this film incredibly inspiring. Simply to see the multitude of grassroots movements afoot has been heartening – a testimony to human goodwill and resilience. We hope that The Economics of Happiness will bring the same inspiration to viewers around the world. It provides insight, hope, reassurance and above all, motivation to join in the growing localization movement. Bringing the economy closer to home can not only save us from environmental and economic catastrophe, it can help us to re-discover those essential relationships – both with the living world and with one another – that ultimately give our lives meaning and joy.

– Helena Norberg-Hodge, Steven Gorelick, John Pagehttp://www.theeconomicsofhappiness.org/