7 Ways to Protect Future Generations!
March/April 2013 |
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Dear Friend,
The game of Monopoly has a major flaw: Boardwalk and Connecticut Place don’t have forests, rivers, and prairies; nor does it show what happens on the Pennsylvania Railroad when the train full of fracking fluid overturns and poisons the land and children. Our economic system is no better since it is governed by laws with many of the same flawed assumptions as Monopoly. The law is an epic fail in protecting the basic necessities for living, including clean air and water, a relatively stable climate, and healthy ecosystems. What if we had laws and policies that actually protected health, the land, and Future Generations? What if the law was based on rights and responsibilities, especially to future beings? Last September, something extraordinary happened in Moab, Utah. Women, men, youth, and elders came together as a shadow government to draft a set of laws and polices that are designed to protect present and Future Generations and the Earth--to protect the things that are more precious than money. SEHN, along with Peaceful Uprising and the local radio station KZMU, co-organized the Women's Congress for Future Generations to begin the work of drafting the rules of respect and care for present and Future Generations. We came together to fulfill the special responsibility that women hold as the first environment for Future Generations. We took a hard look at the law and realized there is no Bill of Responsibilities held by present generations and the Bill of Rights does not contain the right to a clean and healthy environment. As a result, the Congress produced a living a document, the draft Declaration of the Rights Held by Future Generations and Bill of Responsibilities for Present Generations. The Declaration has four sections--a preamble, a bill of rights, a bill of responsibilities, and a set of guiding principles. Those who attended the Moab Congress felt their voices represented only a fraction of the world’s women and of the diverse communities of Future Generations to come. Not wanting to speak on behalf of those whose voices were not represented, they conceived of these as working documents to be used, amended, illustrated, challenged, and explored. These drafts will live, breathe, and evolve as an ever-widening circle of people add their voices to these statements and pass down these rights and responsibilities from generation to generation. What can you do?
Sincerely, Carolyn Raffensperger Executive Director Science and Environmental Health Network |
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