Dissident Voice: here and here. I even did a review of that documentary,
The People VS Agent Orange, which highlights Tran To Nga‘s fight in France “Eternal Impunity of Capitalism’s Crimes“. Here’s one passage from that story I wrote:
Dr. James Clary was with the Air Force in Vietnam, which ran the program. He was ordered to dump the computer and erase all memory. Instead, he printed out a stack of documents two feet high – missions, sorties, coordinates, dates, gallons dropped throughout all of Southeast Asia and Laos.
“We had the information coming from Dow that there were real problems for people associated with this chemical. It was all locked up for 35 years.”
David Suzuki: Reconciliation means rethinking parks governance
David Suzuki: Reconciliation means rethinking parks governance
Protection and restoration initiatives in public parks are still subject to colonial approaches – globally and in Canada By David Suzuki
ndigenous people were also forcibly removed to create Quetico Provincial Park in Ontario.
Protection and restoration are two sides of the conservation coin – protection for spaces that haven’t yet been damaged or destroyed by large-scale human impacts and restoration for ecologically critical places that have.
Although both might seem like relatively straightforward scientific tasks, they have been and continue to be significantly shaped by colonialism – globally and in Canada.
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NOW Magazine
No Mow May: The benefits of not mowing your lawn
Mowing your lawn less is a simple way to help insects and boost local ecology, writes David Suzuki By David Suzuki
Daniel Watson / Unsplash
As May brings sunnier weather to Canada, many will mark the season by firing up their lawn mowers. Before you dutifully join the grass-cutting hordes, I encourage you to take heed of the No Mow May movement, which encourages a month-long pause in this well-intentioned yardwork for the sake of insects like bees and butterflies.
Although social pressure might drive you to keep your turfgrass tidy, researchers have found that regular mowing, especially early in spring, has unintended ecological consequences. Mowing less is a simple way to help insects and boost local ecology.