the atmosphere doesn’t care what year it arrives

If you are curious at all about the skyrocketing temperature of our planet and what to do about it, please watch this. 
Bill McKibben delivering Notes from the Climate Change Fight recorded at the Chan Centre, UBC.
http://youtu.be/XyVYXLvg2kE [note 00:36:09 mark]
McKibben says BC is a key area for the climate change fight TODAY because of _The ENBRIDGE NORTHERN GATEWAY Project_ a new twin pipeline system running from near Edmonton, Alberta [ TAR SANDS ], to a new marine terminal in _Kitimat, British Columbia_  to EXPORT PETROLEUM and import condensate. Oilspills all along the way are inevitable as we have seen with BP oilspill in the Gulf. Meanwhile, the Tar Sands is poisoning everything around.
The DENE NATION (NWT) are fighting hard against the expansion of the Tar Sands, calling FOR A MORATORIUM ON OIL SANDS DEVELOPMENT, b/c oil sands has leeched at least 13 toxic pollutants – including lead and arsenic – into the Athabasca river, “which flows 3,000 miles downstream to the Arctic Ocean. http://ow.ly/7DJKz
 
350.org led a campaign to stop the The Keystone XL pipeline operation which is currently delayed until 2013 - a big but possibly temporary win. Even before pipeline was approved construction was already underway. http://act.350.org/sign/global-pledge/
Canada’s Human Rights record isn’t looking very good these days: 
Aboriginal Children in State Care
• 54 per cent of the children in care in B.C. are aboriginal.
  http://ow.ly/7DK1H   (How many children total are in state care?)
• 56% of the aboriginal population in Canada is under 25. 
  http://ow.ly/7DK3l    (What is the total population?)
G20 Summit police brutality and mass arrest
Check out how many oil tankers actually enter the Burrard Inlet TODAY: http://twitter.com/#!/burrardinletoil
Escalating police violence and militarization of finance & state indicate that there’s inertia or inability by our current defenders of rights (UN, law, state) to help the people on the ground being hurt. We might need to form our own Human Rights Watch teams.

(via The Terry Global Speakers Series Presents: Bill McKibben | Terry)

Bill McKibben will be speaking at the Chan Centre for the Performing Arts at the University of British Columbia. Tickets will be available in the Chan Centre box office and free to all UBC students, staff, and faculty. Stay tuned to this post for updates on picking up ticket logistics. As it currently stands, it looks like tickets will be ready for pick-up at the Chan Centre box office as of 12 noon, Friday, October 28th. You will need to bring your UBC ID in order to pick up tickets (2 per person max). 

“Bill McKibben is an environmentalist, author, and activist. Hailed “the world’s best green journalist” by Time magazine, McKibben has re-framed the climate change debate. He is the author of a dozen books about the environment, including his seminal The End of Nature (1989), widely regarded as the first book on climate change for a general audience.

 

In addition to his writings, he has worked tirelessly to foster global grassroots activism in the struggle for climate justice. As head of 350.org, he organized a demonstration that spanned 181 countries, labeled “the largest ever global coordinated rally of any kind” by Foreign Policy magazine. Since 2009, he has organized over 15,000 rallies to pressure government and industry for real climate action. An activist and intellectual that exemplifies the Terry philosophy, Bill McKibben is an interdisciplinary thinker who is moved by the force of conscience to fight a global inequity of the highest order—one where the behavior of a fortunate few devastates the vulnerable many.”