[Januaryfirst] [SPAM] TPP ... and meeting?

Dave Diewert ddiewertt at shaw.ca
Tue Feb 25 11:20:44 PST 2014


Perhaps we could meet on Tuesday March 4th. Wed March 5th in the evening is the SHA general meeting.
dave

On 2014-02-25, at 10:36 AM, Gil wrote:

> Hello everyone!
> 
> I unfortunately have a work commitment tomorrow from 6:30-8:30 PM, so I won't be able to make it :-(
> 
> If the rest can meet, please go ahead. I'm only available again until Friday, but I can incorporate myself next week too. If I can, I'll send some ideas by email later today.
> 
> gil
> 
> 
> On Tue, Feb 25, 2014 at 10:43 AM, Lisa Barrett <lbarrett at vcn.bc.ca> wrote:
> I'm on a conference call with trade researchers in Ottawa.  We just finished discussing CETA and going on to the state of play for TPP.  I'm taking notes and will share with you all.  In Van right now but have to go back to Bowen this afternoon so sharing will be by email, not in person if there's a meeting tomorrow.  Wish I could be there.
> 
> Peace, love and justice,
> lisa b
> On 2014-02-25, at 9:18 AM, Dave Diewert wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> Wondering if we're meeting this Wednesday evening. And here's something on the TPP from 350.org (in case you haven't seen it, which you probably have).
> 
> dave
> 
>> 
>>> From: "Eduardo Santaela - 350.org" <350 at 350.org>
>>> Date: February 25, 2014 4:31:26 AM PST
>>> To: "Teresa Diewert" <teresadiewert at shaw.ca>
>>> Subject: It’s back. 
>>> Reply-To: 350 at 350.org
>>> 
>>> Friends,
>>> 
>>> I’ve got good news and bad news.
>>> 
>>> Good news first: negotiations for the “Trans Pacific Partnership”, a secret “free” trade agreement that could trash the climate, were temporarily put on hold thanks to a massive public outcry.
>>> 
>>> Now for the bad news: the TPP menace is back. Despite the global outpouring of opposition to this corporate giveaway, governments around the world are on the verge of locking in an agreement. Not surprisingly, the fossil fuel industry is helping lead the charge for a swift passage of this climate disaster.
>>> 
>>> Negotiators are meeting right now in Singapore to lock a deal -- but there’s still a chance that we can stop this. We’ve done it once, and we can do it again. This time, let’s make sure all governments withdraw their support for TPP for good:
>>> 
>>> Click here to tell governments to reject the Trans Pacific Partnership.
>>> 
>>> The TPP is so secretive that elected officials, civil society and the press have been shut out of negotiations. It is no coincidence that negotiators chose Singapore to meet: the country is one of the most strict places in the world when it comes to public demonstrations. And we had big plans at the meeting -- a team of volunteer activists was organising a petition delivery, but due to high security risks at the place, the plans had to be cancelled.
>>> 
>>> Corporations are trying to silence our movement, so we need to raise our voices even louder. If delegates are working with the fossil fuel industry on an agreement that puts our planet at stake -- without even letting people express their concerns -- than this can’t be a good deal for people or the planet.
>>> 
>>> Leaked text from Wikileaks confirms our worst fears: the TPP would empower fossil fuel companies to directly sue governments over laws and policies that they claim reduce their profits. Legislation designed to address climate change, curb fossil fuel expansion and reduce air pollution could all be subject to attack as a result of the TPP. This agreement could well be an enormous corporate power grab made at the expense of our democracy and our climate.
>>> 
>>> It’s strange enough that our governments aren’t boasting about the benefits TPP would bring.
>>> 
>>> They’re barely mentioning the deal in public, and are keeping public opinion as far as they can from negotiations. That’s why there’s no consensus among negotiators. And that’s why millions of people across the world are opposing TPP.
>>> 
>>> Stand with the people urging world leaders to reject the Trans Pacific Partnership
>>> 
>>> Let’s make them get our message loud and clear: the fossil fuel industry can try to make TPP secretive. They can try to keep us from reaching the negotiators. But they can’t prevent people-power from standing against what’s wrong for the planet.
>>> 
>>> Onward,
>>> 
>>> Eduardo
>>> 
>>>  
>>> Sources:
>>> 
>>> Secret Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) - Environment Chapter - Wikileaks
>>> 
>>> TPPA Environment Chapter & Chair's Commentary Posted by WikiLeaks - Issues for NZ - Wikileaks
>>> 
>>> TPP - power to the corporations at the expense of the planet - Ecologist
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 350.org is building a global climate movement. Connect with us on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for email alerts. You can help power our work by making a donation. To change your email address or update your contact info, click here.
>>> 
>>> To stop receiving emails from 350.org, click here.
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
> 
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