In an in depth interview with Democracy Now, Ambassador Pablo Solon shares:
- Bolivia’s perspective on wikileak revelations on US use of blackmail to secure support for Copenhagen Accord,
- the lack of progress so far in Cancun as Developed Countries try to reduce responsibilities and impose them instead on Developing Nations
- why Bolivia will not walk out on negotiations
2 comments
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December 6, 2010 at 10:31 pm
Adam Zemans
What is your editorial process for your comments section? My comments seem to be disappearing.
You can reply to my email. Thank you.
Adam Zemans
Environment Las Americas/Bolivia
December 8, 2010 at 10:07 am
Keith Lampe
We need to examine carefully a quite-neglected aspect of Developed Countries’ effort to “reduce responsibilities and impose them instead on Developing Nations”.
Developed Countries–predominantly the US–now have the knowledge to replace both coal and oil swiftly but they suppress this information of behalf of Big Oil and Big Coal profits.
The information occurs mainly within the new-energy fields of zero point (that is, tapping the ether), cold fusion and advanced hydrogen. Most of it is available–but currently inaccessible–in the archives of the US Patent Office near Washington DC.
Is the People’s World Movement for Mother Earth strong enough yet to shut down the US Patent Office by surrounding it and allowing no one in or out until this information is released? I sure hope so. This is probably the quickest way for us finally to stop using filthy coal and oil.
Yours for all our relations,
Keith Lampe aka Pondo and Ro-Non-So-Te
Co-founder, US environmental movement in
1969, Living Creatures Associates in 1972,
All-Species Projects in 1978 and founder,
US Pro-Democracy Movement in 1991
Vilcabamba, Ecuador