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|    Blue Dot tour - tomorrow night's finale     |
|    08 Nov 14 17:12:19    |
      XPost: bc.general, van.general, vic.general       XPost: nanaimo.general       From: Panca@nyet.ca              Vancouver Sun - November 7, 2014                     David Suzuki’s last stand              Blue Dot Tour is B.C. environmentalist's final push for big changes                     The Blue Dot Tour: With David Suzuki, Neil Young, Feist, Margaret Atwood,       Raffi, Shane Koyczan and more       Nov. 9, 8 p.m. | Orpheum Theatre       Tickets and info: bluedot.ca                     David Suzuki wants a clean environment to be a constitutional right.              That’s why the 78-year-old environmentalist and host of CBC’s The Nature Of       Things is crossing Canada with his Blue Dot Tour, the last major endeavour of       this kind Suzuki will undertake in his career.              Suzuki called the Blue Dot Tour, which wraps in Vancouver at the Orpheum       Theatre on Nov. 9, “the most important thing I’ve ever done.”              The Orpheum performance will feature a gaggle of guests including veteran       rocker Neil Young, celebrated author Margaret Atwood, children’s entertainer       Raffi and spoken word wizard Shane Koyczan, among many others.              In a recent interview with The Vancouver Sun during the Blue Dot Tour stop in       Yellowknife, Suzuki joked that the Vancouver event is so big he will have to       find a way to keep it “under six hours.” He also took some time to talk       about       the logistics of the tour, how he aims to change the Constitution, climate       change and the future of The Nature Of Things.                     Q: Can you tell us about your experience so far on the road doing the Blue Dot       Tour?              A: It’s been beyond anything I possibly could’ve ever imagined. I’ve       done five       or six other cross-Canada tours, always trying to raise public awareness so we       get a movement, but this one has been extraordinary in terms of the       participation of people ranging from artists to writers and musicians. We’ve       sold out in all of the venues. By the time we get to Vancouver this week,       it’s       going to be a tsunami, I think. (He laughs.)              Q: What do you think makes this tour different than previous endeavours?              A: Part of it is that it’s an idea whose time has come. People are hungry to       get off this constant repetition about the economy, the economy, the economy.       If you scratch Canadians, close to 100 per cent of them will say, “Nature is       absolutely critical to my well-being and my identity.” Close to 85 per cent       of       them say, “Yes, the right to a healthy environment should be enshrined in the       Constitution.” We have a multimedia presentation — (B.C. spoken word       artist)       Shane Koyczan wrote a piece that is absolutely electrifying. The Barenaked       Ladies blew out Massey Hall and they have a new song for the tour that       they’re       gonna play in Vancouver. Margaret Atwood is flying in from Toronto to be at our       Vancouver event. It’s not about the environment, it’s about the way we’re       living and the values that matter to us. And people are excited about it.       It’s       caught their attention.              Q: Looking at the Blue Dot plan, it seems like a riff on an old idea — and       not       necessarily a bad one — that “to think globally, you have to act       locally.” Do       you think that motto still applies?              A: We don’t hear that used very much any more. I used to say it all the       time.        Part of the problem is that when you think globally, it becomes so       overwhelming — “Oh shit, I’m just one person. What difference does it       make?”        I really think it’s at the local level that you can see an impact and that       empowers you then to go to a higher level. We didn’t invite any politicians       (on this tour), although they were welcome to come as individual citizens.       But it wasn’t about politics, it was about getting grassroots support and       going from there.              Vancouver passed our declaration for a healthy environment last week. Richmond       was the first to pass our declaration two weeks ago, unanimously. Once       there’s       enough buzz at the municipal level, they will go to the province and say, “We       need provincial legislation,” and then if we get seven provinces with more       than       half the population of Canada, then we can go to the feds and ask for (a       constitutional) amendment.              Q: So how do you get the discourse to shift from the economy to the       environment?              A: That’s the big challenge. The economy has set the frame far too long. I       think going for the constitutional amendment really changes the whole thing by       focusing on what is the most important thing that we need as a biological       creature and surely that’s the environment. No CEO, no politician can say,       “I’m not in favour of a clean environment — clean air, clean water and       clean       energy.”              Q: With an environmental “tour” comes criticism about the carbon footprint       and       travel arrangements. How do you answer people asking, “How can you do a tour       without doing exactly what you’re criticizing?”              A: This is the thing I can’t believe: We’ve had no pushback of that sort. I       know that Neil Young — I was on Neil’s Honour the Treaties tour — got       hammered       in Alberta over that.              For me, it’s very easy. First of all, we came across the most efficient way       of       moving people over long distances: That is a bus. But it’s the greenest       bus       on the planet. It runs on biodiesel. Normally, when Neil pulls up to a       venue, he stays in the bus and the bus runs its engines to provide power. This       thing has got six solar panels on the roof that charge batteries so that when       you park, the refrigerator and the lights all run off batteries. It’s very       cool. So we don’t even talk about the bus because it’s an efficient way to       travel.              On this tour, (electric vehicle infrastructure company) Sun Country Highway has       donated cars to accompany us along the bus right across the country. I’ve       been       in Teslas, Volts, Leafs — they’re all terrific. You can go 100 to 150 km       and       then just pull in and you’re loading electrons in your car instead of fossil       fuels. You think, “Holy shit, why haven’t we been doing this for       decades?”       This really is the wave of the future. Electric cars are coming big time.              Q: But what’s probably scary for oil companies is to potentially lose the       power       infrastructure?              A: The thing I keep telling them is, “You guys are energy companies, not oil       companies. Why don’t you show some nimbleness and see what’s coming?”        There’s       absolutely no question fossil fuels are going to have to be phased out if we       want to survive as a species on this planet. The latest report from the       (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) makes that crystal clear: Fossil       fuels are sunset industries.              Q: The conversation about climate change centres a lot on North America, but       what do you think about China and India, who are really relying on coal and       carbon-based energy at the moment?                     [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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