Albert Schweitzer – Noble Peace Prize 1952

Albert Schweitzer

Born: 14 January 1875, Kaysersberg, Germany (now France)

Died: 4 September 1965, Lambaréné, Gabon

Residence at the time of the award: France

Role: Founder of Lambaréné (République de Gabon), Missionary surgeon

Field: Humanitarian work

Albert Schweitzer received his Nobel Prize one year later, in 1953.

Biography

Albert Schweitzer (January 14, 1875-September 4,

1965) was born into an Alsatian family which for generations had

been devoted to religion, music, and education. His father and

maternal grandfather were ministers; both of his grandfathers

were talented organists; many of his relatives were persons of

scholarly attainments.

Schweitzer entered into his intensive theological studies in 1893

at the University of Strasbourg where he obtained a doctorate in

philosophy in 1899, with a dissertation on the religious

philosophy of Kant, and received his licentiate in theology in

1900. He began preac

via Albert Schweitzer – Biography.

Good Dirt Radio – About Us

On this page you’ll find our mission statement and a brief story about how GDR started, where we are currently, and where we plan to go. Follow the links below to find out more about us.

Our Mission

Good Dirt Radio’s mission is to educate the public about the connection between individual actions and a healthy future for our planet and encourage citizens to embrace positive solutions. By enthusiastically reporting on simple, creative, resource and energy saving examples from around the country, we seek to inspire listeners to replicate these actions. Our goal is nationwide distribution of our programs supporting the emergence of a grassroots environmental movement committed to a renewed, deeper, more positive relationship with the world that supports us all. As a non-profit organization, we have no political or religious affiliation.

We welcome your ideas, stories and feedback.

History

With knowledge of the environmental crises we face, the Good Dirt Radio Board formed with passion, to spread messages about innovative ways that consumers can change the course of climate history. Our concept was launched in February, 2004 and Good Dirt Radio aired its first program in April 2004. Reports concern issues that are relevant, beneficial, examples of change-inspiring stewardship of the Earth’s commons.

via Good Dirt Radio – About Us.

Green Inequality

Green Inequality
Green Inequality Racism, ageism, classism– these are truths. They exist in all forms of our society. And if the last seven political years have taught us any one thing, it is we cannot look to government to correct societal wrongs. When we have a government that snatches up people off the streets because they have a mode of worship and dress unfamiliar to most in the US and a skin color a few shades darker; when we have a government that robs Peter to pay Paul, but only when Peter is old enough to qualify for social security, and Paul is a well-connected corporation; when oil prices hit $100/barrel and the government’s idea of alternative energy sources is to crank up the old coal mines: well, it is time we take matters into our own hands. These societal wrongs exist in an environmental context as well. If one were to map out where the primary Brownsfield sites in large metropolises are and then were to overlay first, where people of color lived, next, were the aged live, and finally where the impoverished live, I’m sure it would come as no surprise that people of color, older people, and poor people come in contact with more pollution than the average American. Our government will not correct this unfairness. The question remains, who will?The “green” construction industry has failed to address this issue of environmental racism/ageism/classism. How do we, as obviously concerned citizens, point our compasses toward not just a cleaner planet, but a fairer planet as well?Part of our mission as “green” builders is to develop means of limiting “green” construction costs. Further, developments designed for the elderly, for affordable and workforce housing, cannot simply be cheap. This is unfair thinking. This is wrong thinking. This is short sighted thinking. We cannot allow “green” construction to remain the pet boutique industry of the wealthy. This means that the wealthy will be the only beneficiaries of the newest environmentally friendly developments. More importantly, if this is the sole sphere in which “green” thrives, then “green” dies. Until “green” becomes the building mode of the masses, “green” has only minimal impact– except, of course, on the lucky few who can afford renewable energy sources and those builders who can build for clients without need of a budget. But will this narrow scope of change have any significant change on the environment? I doubt it. Simultaneously, “green” construction, particularly renewable energy sources shouldn’t be financially structured as too expensive. With public and private financing intervention, renewable energy sources could be viewed as just the opposite– it would be too expensive to not use renewable energy sources. How do we do this? Well, it is no more than torquing one’s perspective as both a consumer and a vendor. As a consumer, one must be forward thinking and understand that to not invest in sustainable energy sources is to incur significant financial burden for fossil fuel costs. As a vendor, to sell systems which imbue value into a project, be it single family home, a multi-family dwelling, or a commercial building, is a means of creating more value for your product, thus making that product easier to sell. Perhaps the perspective which needs most changing is that of the banking community and, dare I suggest it, the government– municipal, state, and federal. The banking community needs to jump on board and conclude that green construction is more valuable construction. If banks adopt this perspective, then value-added green components should then allow a consumer to borrow more money. After all, 80% of 120 thousand dollars is more than 80% of 100 thousand dollars. However, banks thus far have failed to adopt any form of value conversion, and this has slowed the development of green alternatives. As for our government, well, until we have someone in the White House who does not directly benefit financially from the burning of fossil fuels, we will not have a national plan for renewable energy sources, period.For a more academically formal investigation on this topic, please go to www.hinkleycenter.com/publications/poverty_pollution_siting_94-8.pdf.   -Miles Shapiro

via Building A Zero Energy Home.

Renewable Energy Jobs from Greenjobs.com

North America

Eval. & Mkt. Research,

Oregon

Solar Lead Generator,

California

Regional Coordinator,

California

Certified Electrician,

Colorado

Senior Installer,

Colorado

Outside Sales Consultant,

New Jersey

International

Laboratory Manager,

Germany

Key Account Manager,

Germany

Cables,

Germany

Site Manager,

England

%

via Renewable Energy Jobs from Greenjobs.com.

THE GREEN MARKETING COMPANY: Search Engine Optimization

Ensure Website Visibility With Search Engine O...SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION

Search Engine Optimization is the key, your site has to be built to be found and frankly there are very few people on the planet that can obtain search engine ranking as well as Steve Schappert. Steve’s real estate business provided 550 leads a month to a network of 2000 agents nationwide because his site ranked #1 on GOOGLE for 10 years. The #1 ranking also lead to his business being recommended by Woman’s Day Magazine. Schappert’s building business shipped a home from NY to Germany because of a #1 search engine ranking. Absolutely amazing opportunities are created and sales dramatically increase with little effort when people can find you! There are marketing companies that will sell you monthly SEO packages that continuously spoon feed your site to search engines at your expense, we believe in building it right from the start.

We follow GOOGLE’s best practices. The Green Marketing Company was created on August 15, 2011. Our website currently out ranks about 41,800,000 websites that are competing for the first page on GOOGLE for the term “Green Marketing”. Within 10 days of registering the site we had two links on the first page of GOOGLE and made the cut for the first page on BING and YAHOO, competing against 230,000,000 websites.. We Can Get You Noticed!

“SEO is an acronym for “search engine op

via THE GREEN MARKETING COMPANY: Search Engine Optimization.

Appetite for Change Maps Path to a Sustainable Food System – News | SustainAbility

Appetite for Change Maps Path to a Sustainable Food System

23 Jun 2011 – News Release

June 23, 2011, London, NYC – A new report from SustainAbility reveals that experts from leading food, technology and finance companies agree that the food sector is failing. Published today, Appetite for Change goes on to set out a vision for what needs to happen next.

“We have to realize that the basic thinking of economies of scale has to go; [we have] to develop solutions that will impact not only one company but also consumers and society as a whole,” says Jose Lopez, Executive VP of Operations at Nestlé.

Signs of failure in the current food system are increasingly difficult to ignore:

Recent E. coli outbreaks in Germany highlight safety and security lapses in the supply chain;

925 million people are malnourished while another billion are chronically obese; and

Over half of the world’s farmers suffer chronic hunger.

“We still have a long way to go,” says Patrick Medley from IBM’s Smarter Planet, Smarter Food program. “The food industry currently is operating at a 6 out of 10. The challenge is how we move upwards from a 6 … I don’t think there’s enough going on that’s fast enough.”

Appetite for Change uncovers a disturbing disconnect in the way corporate and non-corporate actors are tackling food security issues. The biggest source of innovation is occurring outside the corporate sector, with multilateral institutions like the UN calling for a radically new ecological approach to agriculture. Conversely the energy of the food companies is focused on squeezing more out of current approaches, which are inherently unsustainable.

Industry leaders now acknowledge that it is incumbent upon them to find ways to be part of a holistic solution – both for market advantage and to meet societal goals – but say that the path forward is not clear. By way of response, Appetite for Change sets out a new agenda to help the food sector and its partners chart a collaborative course toward a sustainable food system.

via Appetite for Change Maps Path to a Sustainable Food System – News | SustainAbility.