Cities go dark to mark Earth Hour
DUBLIN, Ireland (AP) -- From Rome's Colosseum to the Sydney Opera House, floodlit icons of civilization went dark Saturday for Earth Hour, a worldwide campaign to highlight the waste of electricity and the threat of climate change.
Irish observation of Earth Hour got a day's head start because civil servants were told to turn off their office lights and shut down computers, not to leave them on standby mode, when they left work Friday night.
Normally they stay on all weekend, a practice that campaigners hope to abolish. Astronomers gathered in Dublin's vast Phoenix Park in vain hopes that the city lights would dim sufficiently to permit them to see the Milky Way and other faint heavenly objects.
Activists gathered outside one of Dublin's most impressive floodlit buildings, the riverfront Custom House, and cheered as the lights went out but were disappointed that lights remained on in nearby banks.
The iconic Opera House and Harbour Bridge went dark Saturday night as Sydney became the world's first major city to turn off its lights for this year's Earth Hour, a global campaign to raise awareness about climate change.
Thousands of homes were dark for an hour in Christchurch, New Zealand. The famed Wat Arun Buddhist temple in Bangkok, Thailand switched off its lights.
The three major cities were among 23 worldwide, along with 300 smaller towns, taking part in Earth Hour -- a campaign by environmental group WWF to highlight the need to conserve energy and fight global warming.
"This provides an extraordinary symbol and an indication that we can be part of the solution" to global warming, Australian Environment Minister Peter Garrett told Sky News television, standing across the harbor from the dark silhouette of the Opera House.
Garrett said government offices and national monuments around the country took part in Earth Hour.
"We're not only talking the talk, we're walking the walk," he said. "Whatever your view is about the magnitude of the problem ... we can save money by using energy wisely and efficiently, and that gives us the added bonus of reduced greenhouse gas emissions."
In Sydney, a lightning storm was the brightest part of Sydney's skyline when the lights were turned off at the city's landmarks. Most businesses and homes were already dark as residents embraced their second annual Earth Hour with candlelight dinners, beach bonfires and even a green-powered outdoor movie. Watch the lights go out in Sydney for Earth Hour. »
The number of participants was not immediately available but organizers were hoping to beat last year's debut, when 2.2 million people and more than 2,000 businesses shut off lights and appliances, resulting in a 10.2 percent reduction in carbon emissions during that hour.
"I'm putting my neck on the line but my hope is that we top 100 million people," Earth Hour Australia chief executive Greg Bourne said.
New Zealand and Fiji kicked off the event this year. In Christchurch, more than 100 businesses and thousands of homes were plunged into darkness.
Also in New Zealand, Auckland's Langham Hotel switched from electric lights to candles as it joined the effort to reduce the use of electricity, which when generated creates greenhouse gases that are believed to contribute to global warming.
WWF Thailand said the lights out campaign in Bangkok saved 73.34 megawatts of electricity, which would have produced 45.8 tons of carbon dioxide.
In Manila, the grounds of the seaside Cultural Center of the Philippines went dark after four city mayors ceremonially switched off the lights. Shopping malls turned off street lamps around the metropolis.
After Asia, lights were expected to go out in major European and North American cites as the clock ticks on. One of the last to participate will be San Francisco, California -- home to the soon-to-be dimmed Golden Gate Bridge.
Organizers see the event as a way to encourage the world to conserve energy.
"What's amazing is that it's transcending political boundaries and happening in places like China, Vietnam, Papua New Guinea," said Earth Hour executive director Andy Ridley. "It really seems to have resonated with anybody and everybody."
Popular search engine Google lent its support to Earth Hour with a completely black page and the words: "We've turned the lights out. Now it's your turn."
"Earth Hour is a call to action," said Sydney's Lord Mayor Clover Moore. "People have now responded and it's time to introduce some significant long-term changes."
No WMDs, no Hussein al Qaeda link, no 9/11 Iraq link....
$503,884,074,721 and 4299 lives and counting.
Why exactly did we go?
... and what ever became of Bin Laden?
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Osama BinForgotten is hiding out in Afghanistan. We've just been looking in the wrong country for 5 years.
I want to know what happened to this:
"We will make no distinction between the terrorists who committed these acts and those who harbour them." ~ George W. Bush, President of the United States.
And lest us not forget that George W. Bush [President] is wanted by a number of countries for war crimes; and the U.S. will not expedite him.
Bin-who? Oh, do you mean the ex-CIA agent, who was trained and funded by the US government whilst he fought the Soviet Union?
I read today that Bushy boy said that there had been "a major strategic victory in the broader war on terror".
Interesting perspective. One which I doubt is shared by the rest of the world, nor the Iraqi people themselves.
It's my current opinion, backed up today by another of his quotes, that: "Defeating this enemy in Iraq will make it less likely we will face this enemy here at home", is that the Iraq invasion was a quick and dirty way of drawing Jihadists into a battlefield far from America.
The war was pre-planned a long way in advance of the fundamentally flawed British 'dossier' of evidence on WMD, by Wolfowitz and Cheney, both as a means to pre-empt a influx of 'terrorist' to the continental USA, and as a money-making scheme for such conglomerations as Kellog, Root, Brown, various petroleum companies and the American military industrial complex, including Lockheed Martin.
After a decade of sanctions and air strikes, Iraq was a 'soft target' and the US Administration, being fed false information by Iraqi exiles and flawed intelligence, driven by 'neo-conservative hawks', who themselves have vested interests in those organisation most likely to benefit financially, saw an opportunity and they jumped right in to the 'quagmire' that Saddam Hussein predicted.
It almost smacks of the 'infinite crusade' that Bush declared shortly after the Afghanistan invasion, which was hurriedly changed for fear of betraying what many theorise is an actual ideological religious war, hidden under the facades of capitalism, terror and imperialism.
Can we say "Friends in the oil business is making a killing."
Please... its all about money and putting someone they want in control of the oil. They control it- they price it.
I'm damn sure I'm not as dangerous as a terrorist!
The speaker is Sally Kerns, teacher and Oklahoma state rep, who told supporters at a country Republican meeting that gay people are more dangerous than terrorists.
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I made my own entry about that.
Bombs vs people loving regardless of gender.
hmmmmmm..........
If you feel such hatred towards people for reasons that are none of your business and feel compelled to remove their rights as human beings, then I'd say how other people influence your children is the LEAST of your concerns when it comes to their healthy developement...
Seriously I think they underestimate the power of words. It does not change how gross they appear to me- distored in hate. Althought while upset that this was said, I feel sorry for them and how small their lives must be that they fear so greatly.
My response to a homophobic editorial about HRCs classification of Wal-Mart and suggested boycotts:
Our history is rich of examples where the status quo was intolerance- slavery, voting rights, laws regulating when and how women could work, forbidding inter-racial marriages, separate and unequal educational systems, etc.
Everyone has a right to their opinion no matter how wrong they might be. Similarly, everyone in the US is granted the freedom of assembly to organize and conduct lawful protests.
Unless you see an injustice occurring with labor, environmental, and gay rights groups protesting the many questionable practices Wal-Mart does, why would you care enough to bring up the boycott?
If the whole topic centers on gays being intolerant of noncommittal cohabiters, then you might be onto something. I know I would be offended if the same license that is denied to me is freely granted to individual who commit adultery or are abusive to their spouse. There are many noncommittal cohabitators who have a marriage license from the government though they have no sanctity for the establishment they entered. If you really want to purify marriage- start there and let companies decide if its in their own best interest to offer alluring benefits packages to satisfy and attract employees.
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Marriage is like a contract. You pledge you will do this, hold the other safe and true. Most couples break it, throw it away like it is nothing. Sad that the holy event is turned into this.
Marriage is like a contract. You pledge you will do this, hold the other safe and true. Most couples break it, throw it away like it is nothing. Sad that the holy event is turned into this.
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I like how you mind thinks.. and yes- I think she would of been better then anything we had at the time of Katrina.
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