Anne Goddard




I'm doing 41 things
 

Anne Goddard's Life List

  1. 1. Stop the nuclear industry
    2 team members . 46 entries . 5 cheers
    2 people
  2. 2. promote the "Earth Hour Revolution"
    2 entries
    1 person
  3. 3. Force a referrendum on the way our money is spent
    3 entries . 1 cheer
    1 person
  4. 4. Help save the ancient forests of the world
    6 entries . 6 cheers
    1 person
  5. 5. Grow wise, but never Grow up
    1 entry . 7 cheers
    6 people
  6. 6. Live sustainably
    1 entry . 12 cheers
    167 people
  7. 7. Remain addicted to learning
    5 cheers
    2 people
  8. 8. articulate my "Personal Ethics"
    2 entries . 2 cheers
    1 person
  9. 9. plant the seeds of peace... and ensure they flourish
    1 entry . 2 cheers
    1 person
  10. 10. Choose my own direction. And however much I may wobble in reaction to others, keep my direction steady.
    1 entry . 2 cheers
    5 people
  11. 11. work out how to block negative or evil thoughts....
    2 entries . 2 cheers
    1 person
  12. 12. help create a sustainable and peaceful "civilisation"
    1 entry
    1 person
  13. 13. create a 43t team to share knowledge, resources and actions relating to climate change
    9 team members . 4 entries
    8 people
  14. 14. Ensure that David Hicks has been treated according to the rules of the Geneva Convention
    4 entries . 2 cheers
    1 person
  15. 15. turn the pissed tree into a timber kitchen :-)
    1 cheer
    1 person
  16. 16. Sell my car and buy a horse ;-)
    4 cheers
    1 person
  17. 17. Put up some walls in my house
    1 person
  18. 18. Put up bathroom vanity with taps (hot and cold)
    1 person
  19. 19. Get plumbing into my house
    2 entries
    1 person
  20. 20. Install a solar hot water system
    1 entry . 4 cheers
    1 person
  21. 21. USE my intuition to it's full capacity
    2 entries . 1 cheer
    1 person
  22. 22. Start a roadside "Soup Kitchen"
    3 entries
    2 people
  23. 23. Stop Wasting Money
    1 entry
    477 people
  24. 24. get out of debt
    4 cheers
    9,272 people
  25. 25. Love to fail
    1 entry
    1 person
  26. 26. register my trailer
    1 person
  27. 27. build a cover for the pressure pump
    1 person
  28. 28. build a veranda onto my house
    2 people
  29. 29. take more photos of my children, my animals and the wildlife here on this block
    1 person
  30. 30. no longer deny my good; move forward; effortlessly accept that I have a right to be here and do all the great things I'm doing.
    1 cheer
    4 people
  31. 31. Ensure that Justice is Served
    14 entries
    2 people
  32. 32. Promote the Actions of "Global Trade Watch"
    1 entry
    1 person
  33. 33. Learn Latin
    1 cheer
    1,706 people
  34. 34. Help more women become charasmatic leaders
    3 cheers
    2 people
  35. 35. Escavate for power and phone
    1 entry
    1 person
  36. 36. Finish screwing the tin onto the house
    1 cheer
    1 person
  37. 37. help my family understand me
    1 entry
    1 person
  38. 38. Encourage all the smokers who have the Amazing Goal of quitting
    58 team members . 2 cheers
    55 people
  39. 39. meditate
    1 entry
    2,048 people
  40. 40. Accept this invitation...
    1 entry
    2 people
  41. 41. rest in peace
    1 entry
    5 people
Recent entries
promote the "Earth Hour Revolution" (read all 2 entries…)
Reminder ..... Tonight in Australia - Earth Hour Revolution 4 months ago

One hour per year is not enough.
Let’s start a revolution!

“EARTH HOUR REVOLUTION

Every month on the first of the month, where-ever you are; ....
turn off your power for one hour between 8pm and 9pm.
For the earth!

More info:
http://globalclimatechangeaction.org/Earth_Hour_Revolution
Event Details (Facebook):
http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=11169192842&ref=nf
Facebook Group (sign up and recruit your friends):
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=21985809768&ref=nf



Stop the nuclear industry (read all 46 entries…)
Join the nuclear industry dots... 4 months ago

by Dr. Alison Broinowski
(Published with permision from the Author for not-for-profit public awareness purposes)

“In late June and early July, just as the Howard Government was dispatching the army to Aboriginal communities to deal with sexual abuse, the U.S. military was involved for two weeks in northern Australia in the biggest ever joint exercise, Talisman Sabre.

Most Australians saw no connection.

Military training areas, uranium mines, sites for future nuclear waste dumps and now Aboriginal land seized by the Commonwealth are dots across the Australian map.

Several of them are connected by the Adelaide-Darwin railway. Having been many times promised, the $1.3 billion link from Alice Springs to Darwin was surprisingly found viable in 1999. By January, 2004, the train was running. The only tenderer, according to research at University of Technology Sydney, was the FreightLink consortium led by Halliburton (then headed by US vice-president Dick Cheney), with state, territory and federal contributions.

FreightLink owns the railway and can operate it for 50 years. It has contracted UK firm Serco, to staff and service the train.

Serco, which manages British nuclear power plants, gained a reputation in 2000 for sacking workers without AWAs at Australian naval bases in Jervis Bay.

In November, 2006, FreightLink was reported to be facing its third annual loss in a row. It tried to sell a majority stake in the railway for $360 million, without success. The owners promised to invest an additional $14 million over three years, presumably betting on the line’s long-term profitability.

It must expect – or have been promised – the railway will serve the potentially lucrative nuclear and defence industries.

Between 2004 and 2006, the Australian and U.S. governments announced more collaboration between American forces and the ADF, including missile defence (Star Wars) training, and interoperability. Several defence facilities in northern Australia have been built or expanded:

at Bradshaw and Delamere in the Northern Territory, Shoalwater Bay in Queensland and Yampi Sound and Geraldton in Western Australia.

The railway passes near several bases, the biggest uranium deposits in the world and the mines at Olympic Dam (Roxby Downs), Beverley, Ranger and Honeymoon.

Freightlink’s main business now is transporting iron ore, manganese and uranium to Darwin for export. In June, 2006, just before Prime Minster John Howard set up a nuclear power inquiry, businessmen Hugh Morgan, Robert Champion de Crespigny and Ron Walker registered Australian Nuclear Energy. It later emerged they had discussed with Mr Howard a plan to build a nuclear plant near Port Augusta.

(Learn more about Hugh:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Morgan_%28Australian_businessman%29
> snip from Wikipedia

In June 2006, Hugh Morgan formed the company Australian Nuclear Energy with Fairfax chairman Ron Walker and fellow mining executive Robert Champion de Crespigny, planning to build nuclear power plants in Australia. Morgan has a 20% stake in the company.

Controversially, Prime Minister John Howard revealed that he had a discussion with Mr Walker about the company days before he announced an inquiry into nuclear power (the inquiry predicted that Australia could have 25 nuclear reactors producing a third of the country’s electricity by 2050)

Formerly an outspoken opponent of Aboriginal Land Rights (Morgan claimed Native Title threatened Australia’s sovereignty), Morgan has more recently spoken of reconciling mining with Aboriginal welfare. With newly introduced, less transparent conservation agreements under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act , Morgan has flagged how an internationally owned nuclear waste repository could now be built (such as the one recently announced on Aboriginal land).

see more about Ron and Robert
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Walker
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Champion_de_Crespigny

The railway would take uranium ore to Darwin for export, enrichment and fabrication, and bring it back to Port Augusta as nuclear fuel for the reactor. The spent fuel
would then go back by rail to Darwin for export, or return to the NT for disposal at a waste site.

The only “suitable” sites for disposal of nuclear waste under federal government control are in the NT. If the Commonwealth takes control of as many as 80 Aboriginal communities through five-year leases in the name of
protecting children, it will put vast land areas at the Federal Government’s discretion.

The Government has begun to repeal parts of its 1999 legislation prohibiting nuclear activities.

But it is unlikely before the 2007 election to say where or how Australian nuclear waste will be stored.

The U.S., meanwhile, has more than 47,000 tonnes of high-level nuclear waste to get rid of, because its new site at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, does not meet safety requirements.

The controlling American interest in the railway indicates Australia will store American waste too.

It takes more than the Ghan railway to connect the dots in an election year. A lot more is happening than Australians are being told.

..........

Dr Alison Broinowski is a former Australian diplomat
and is now a visiting fellow at the Australian National
University’s Faculty of Asian Studies. Her latest book
is Allied and Addicted.



Stop the nuclear industry (read all 46 entries…)
Fast Breeder Reactors... their history... poison legacy! 4 months ago

Robots scour sea for atomic waste – UK, The Observer
Full story…

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/may/25/pollution.conservation

Submarines search for radioactive material dumped off the Scottish coast in the 1980s

snips…(CAPS mine)

Although the UKAEA KEPT NO PRECISE ACCOUNTS for building and running Dounreay, it is known to have cost several billion pounds.

“We built the first fast breeder reactor to generate electricity for a national grid”.
For 40 years, test reactors – part of Britain’s fast breeder reactor construction programme – operated there but the technology turned out to be messy. Fast breeders use liquid metal coolants and their contaminated remnants still await removal. “At the time, engineers were only interested in building reactors. No one thought how we might dismantle them,”

The UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA), owners of Dounreay, was eventually fined 140,000 pounds at Wick Sheriff Court last year for ‘very grave errors’ that led to the beach’s contamination. The authority’s safety director, Dr John Crofts, admitted the release represented “an unacceptable legacy.”

Two kilometres of beach outside the Dounreay nuclear plant have been closed since 1983, and fishing banned, when it was found old fuel rod fragments were being accidentally pumped into the sea.



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