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Let's Toast to Ten Good Things About 2007

By Medea Benjamin, Global Exchange. Posted January 1, 2008.


As the year ends, let's remember some of the gains that can revive our spirits for the New Year.
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As we close this year on the low of Congress giving Bush more billions for war, and the assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan, let's remember some of the year's gains that can revive our spirits for the New Year. Here are just ten.

1. With the exception of the White House, this has been a banner year for environmental consciousness and action. Al Gore and the scientists of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change won the Nobel Peace Prize. Green building and renewable energy have exploded. Congress passed the Green Jobs Act of 2007, authorizing $125 million for green job training.

Over 700 U.S. mayors, representing 25 percent of the U.S. population, have signed a pledge to reduce greenhouse gases by 2012. Illinois became the 26th state to require that some of the state's electricity come from renewable sources and Kansas became the first state to refuse a permit for a new coal-fired power plant for health and environmental reasons. That's progress!

2. On the global environmental scene, the Bush dinosaurs were tackled head on. When the US delegation at the UN climate change conference in Bali tried to sabotage the negotiations, the delegate from tiny Papua New Guinea threw diplomatic niceties to the wind and said that if the U.S. couldn't lead, it should get out of the way. Embarrassed by international and domestic outrage, the U.S. delegation buckled, and the way was cleared for adopting the "Bali road map." Although it is a weak mandate, it lays the groundwork for a stronger climate agreement post-2012 when the first phase of the Kyoto Protocols ends.

3. Imagine living in a waste-free urban society? Well, it's no longer a utopian dream but a well-thought-out plan for India's state of Kerala. The plan to be "waste-free" within five years includes waste prevention, intensive re-use and recycling, composting, replacing unsustainable materials with sustainable ones, training people to produce these materials, and providing funds for setting up sustainably run businesses. The ground-breaking plan, spearheaded by a local grassroots movement, demonstrates how citizen groups can advance pioneering policies to heal the planet.

4. While the war in Iraq rages on, a new war was stopped. The specter of war with Iran loomed large throughout the year, with Washington accusing Iran of killing U.S. soldiers in Iraq and being a nuclear threat. Then in December came the National Intelligence Estimate showing that the Bush administration knew all along that Iran had shelved its nuclear weapons program in 2003. It exposed the Administration claims of an Iranian threat as unjustifiably inflated, and the winds of war were suddenly subdued. Nothing is guaranteed, but a U.S. military attack on Iran is less likely now than it was earlier in the year.

5. This year also brought a decrease in tensions with North Korea. Hostilities flared after North Korea successfully conducted a nuclear test in 2006. But the Bush administration, bogged down in Iraq and pushed by international pressure, agreed to negotiate.

Following a series of six-party talks involving North Korea, South Korea, China, Russia, Japan, and the U.S, on March 17, 2007, an historic agreement was reached. North Korea agreed to shut down its main nuclear facility and submit a list of its nuclear programs in exchange for fuel and normalization talks with the U.S. and Japan. During this age of raw aggression, it is a welcome example of putting diplomacy first.


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See more stories tagged with: positive news, new year, 2007

Medea Benjamin is cofounder of Global Exchange and CODEPINK:Women for Peace.

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Let's make it a great 2008!
Posted by: greentime on Jan 1, 2008 7:55 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Let's put IMPEACHMENT front and center!

Holding these criminals responsible would be the perfect wrap up to the hostile, oily, takeover of our country by the Bush administration and their greedy allies.

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Wheee.
Posted by: grumble-bum on Jan 1, 2008 8:11 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I guess it's all cool, then? Whew.

I understand & applaud the concept here. It's laudatory that someone has taken the time to compile some less-than-suicide-inspiring news items. After the absurdities of the past year (alone), we certainly could use the morale boost.

I have to take exception to a few of the examples, however.

While I suppose I'm glad that a reinvented Al Gore did his part to heighten awareness of our looming ecological disaster (it's certainly nice to no longer explain/defend the concept every time it comes up in polite conversation), I fear it's far too little, too late. No matter how many Priuses the fiscally comfy amongst us buy, (or the rather sexy GM offering that isn't even tentatively available until 2012), we have probably long past the tipping point, or are passing it as we pat ourselves on the back. The question that I would ask is "What made the Media (& it's handlers) decide that 2007 was the year they stopped constantly insinuating that we were bat-shit crazy-folks?"

The more cynical answer would be that an internal consensus was reached that a critical mass of awareness had arisen regarding the woes of the environment, & that the decision was made that it was "safe" to start covering them more seriously now that, well, nothing much could be done anymore. Oops, gee, if only we'd known earlier, shrugs the corporate government. But wait, we've still got some great, last-ditch, half-assed "solutions" to sell you before it's all over!

As for the author's comments on Blackwater, I fail to see how they'll have any fewer fingers in Iraq-as-pie. We are firmly in the midst of the Age of Corporate Crony-ism, where no bad deed goes un-rewarded. Massively. Even if their heavy involvement in Iraq is scaled back (for real, & not just maintained under another guise), the recent bad press/"black eye" is a joke. Why? Well, besides Blackwater's continuing maneuvers to take on domestic duties, the core problem here is that none of us really gives two shits about what these goons are doing to Iraqis. & I mean us Progressive types, too. We may like to wring our hands & quote them as statistics, but do we really even see them as real people (other than when it suits our rhetorical ends)? I think if we did, this obscene farce of an occupation would have ended some time ago. We just don't want to deal with the consequences of our ravenous appetites, so if at the end of the day we must tacitly allow mercenaries to kill, rape & oppress in our name, well so be it.

On a brighter note, I would like to thank the author for the recap on the Chavez situation. Funny thing, I hadn't heard more than a few passing words on the fate of that referendum, even here on the Alterna-news. & kudos to Chavez, Rudd & other (individually tiny but collectively powerful) pockets of common sense/dissent on the world stage. One of the greatest gifts any human can receive comes in the form of a rebuke. Hopefully we'll hear it...

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MCurie
Posted by: MCurie on Jan 1, 2008 8:23 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Other items to be thankful for in 2007 are your many personal actions of civil disobedience which brought to public attention the atrocities of the Bush administration. You have paid for this by being banned from the Capitol, as I understand it, and by being placed on the infamous "no-fly" list.
Thanks to you and the many actions of "Code Pink", and to the other brave people like Cindy Sheehan who haven't let up in their criticism of Bush policies, especially the Iraq War with its resultant human destruction.
We salute you!!!

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» RE: MCurie Posted by: funnyfarm12
Choosing your language
Posted by: leftymathprof on Jan 1, 2008 8:52 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I noticed that you used the phrase "war on terror" without putting in quotes. Please, people, when using a fictitious or distortionary concept, please put its name in quotes. Do not support its legitimacy.

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Best of 2007??
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Jan 1, 2008 8:56 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Best of 2007??

One day closer to Cheney-Bush out of the white house.

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The ratio is correct . . .
Posted by: newsound on Jan 1, 2008 9:40 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
20 annoying things verses 10 good things . . . that ratio is pretty accurate. For every positive step forward, Bush and company have taken us 2 steps back. It's going to take an entire generation to reverse this oil slick we've spilled on our country. The sooner we start, the sooner our children will have their Democracy back.

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Nice to hear some good news, but...
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Jan 1, 2008 12:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
conglomerated corporate interests are still sitting on their newly erected throne while democracy grovels at their feet in Gitmo-style restraints.

Who was really behind the Iraq invasion and the attempted seizure of the oilfields? Halliburton, Exxon, Chevron, BP, Shell, and their Wall Street shareholders. The defense contractors and private security corporations (Dyncorp and Erinys (it's not just Blackwater), Lockheed, Northrup, SAIC, etc.) also made a lot of money off the deal.

Incidentally, the main reason that global warming action has been prevented for the last three decades is the non-stop lobbying campaign by the fossil fuel lobby - they've spent hundreds of millions of dollars on a campaign of lies and distortion, using every PR trick in the book to do so.

Who is really behind the atrocious state of U.S. health care? Pharmaceutical and health insurance corporations, who were exposed by Michael Moore's Sicko (though he sort of ignored the pharmaceutical aspects). The unreported story there is the Project Bioshield contracting - a gross giveaway to corporations like Battelle Memorial Institute (makers of all anthrax vaccines - Vaxgen and Emergent Biosolutions are just fronts for BMI's subcontracts).

Who is really behind all the domestic spying in the U.S.? Again, it's a host of privatized ex-intelligence corporations and their telecom allies - AT&T, Verizon, Booze Hamilton, ChoicePoint, etc.) who have been sucking down more government contracts via the NSA, "Homeland Security", and so on.

The biggest problem we face is this unholy, neofascist-neocommunist alliance between government and large corporate interests - the revolving door between Congress and lobbying agencies, between the military and defense contractors, between city and county and state governments and water and power corporations - it's completely out of control. It's a return to the late 19th century era of the robber barons.

Two of the biggest culprits in this are the U.S. university system, which has been steadily reinventing itself as one big corporate research park that works for the benefit of Wall Street interests, and the U.S. corporate media, who has steadily and repeatedly refused to investigate this corrupt alliance between corrupt government officials, power-mad politicians, and entrenched corporate interests in energy, pharmaceuticals, communications, defense contractors, water privatization interests, and the like.

However, people are finally starting to figure it out. The #1 public concern in the 2006 election was corruption in government (a fact that the press tried to bury). A lot of people have worked overtime to inform people - Naomi Klein's "Shock Doctrine", John's Perkins "Confessions of an Economic Hitman" and "The Secret History of the American Empire," Michael Moore's "Sicko", and Chalmers Johnson's "Nemesis" - just a few examples of how individuals have managed to expose the rotten nature of our current government.

Now, we have to break up the corporate conglomerates and send their owned politicians, professors and news executives packing. As Chlamers Johnson (and Ben Franklin) said, you can have a democratic republic or a totalitarian empire -but you can't have both.

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Eleventh good thing
Posted by: Hans B on Jan 1, 2008 3:23 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Number 11 on the good news front: the housing bubble bust didn't wait until the Democrats would be blamed for it, as was apparently the Republican's intention. It had to happen sometime, lucky it happens while Bush is still around. That way at least part of Bush's disastrous legacy won't be blamed on the next White House incumbent. (Of course Bush's successor still risks taking the blame for the national debt, recession, the wars and their aftermat, climate change and every other time bomb deliberately placed by the Bush-Cheney team. Still, it's nice to know that at least one of the fuses was too short.)

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Sadly, it remains to be seen what Rudd (Australia) will really do
Posted by: jparsons on Jan 1, 2008 7:18 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He has already refused to commit to genuine
reduction targets, and gagged his own environment
minister on the topic of climate change. He
claims it is an economic issue, not an
environmental one.

Not too cheery....

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a new little light arrived too ...
Posted by: siamdave on Jan 2, 2008 12:47 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
2007 also saw the arrival of a new book that could change the way a lot of people think - They're Building a Box - and You're In It - spread the awakening ....

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It''s GOOD
Posted by: Ms.Katmai on Jan 2, 2008 6:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for some positive news, collectively WE don't read enough of the good that is bubbling all around us.
No.12 - People of all sorts are noticing and doing something to help others;the viral spread of kindness and generousity. Let's have a great year of more positive change.
Cheers!

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Anyone notice the Good list
Posted by: Chloe2005 on Jan 2, 2008 6:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is half the size of the BAD list? A big thank you to Michael Moore and Al Gore.

Put the Happy in the New Year! Impeach!

Peace

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IMPEACHMENT TALK IS CARELESS TALK
Posted by: Raymond Emerson on Jan 3, 2008 8:13 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
simply because there are not enough democrats in the congress to sustain a sucessful impeachment even if every democrat stuck together. There weren't enough republican votes to get Bill Clinton. They knew it when they started. They did it for the 'show'. It was all theatre. To attempt to impeach Bush, Cheney, or any of the rest of them would fail and only make the Washington democrats look stupid.

But having said this, next year could be spent in intense investigation. If the elections make impeachment possible, there are four supreme court justices that will still be there and could be given their walking papers.

The democrats have been pulling their punches. Ronald Reagan should have been tried for treason for his complicity with Bill Casey and the Ayatollah Khomeni. Then Bush could have pardoned him. If the people of the United States knew what the republicans' CIA was responsible for, it would take a long time to get another Republican elected.

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