A Fierce Green Fire lights environmentalist hearts as Gaia heats up

Fierce Green Fire8

The race to save wild places becomes a race to save humanity in A Fierce Green Fire. Mark Kitchell (Berkeley in the Sixties) directs this lively, inspiring history of environmentalism.

Kitchell succeeds in transforming five turning points into a deeply felt, dynamic story. He blends rock music, superb cinematography, historic footage, original music and narration by five environmental stars (Robert Redford, Ashley Judd, Van Jones, Isabel Allende and Meryl Streep).

The film is inspired by Philip Shabecoff’s book A Fierce Green Fire. For release dates, see their schedule. To host a screening near you, visit Tugg.

Conservation meets industry

After World War II, David Brower led the Sierra Club in opposing proposed dams in the Grand Canyon. Public outrage followed IRS threats to the club. Early organizers learned to use advertising effectively.

The Sixties brought the flowering of conservation. New national parks were created. More than a million acres of land were protected under the Wild and Scenic Rivers and the National Trails acts. Pollutants and toxic chemicals were fueling our bright, shiny future. In Silent Spring, Rachel Carson was the first to speak out about the dangers of pesticides like DDT.

Lois Gibbs led Love Canal residents in a battle to be relocated as 56% of local children were born with birth defects. Some 20 million took part in the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970.

Fierce Green Fire1

Apartheid: American style

It took two decades before the civil and environmental rights movements converged, says Robert Bullard, pioneering environmental justice advocate, professor and author of Dumping in Dixie. Hazardous waste landfills and incinerators are located in the neighborhoods of Afro-Americans, Hispanics, recent immigrants and other minorities “because of their lack of political klout,” Shabecoff notes.

For example, Union Carbide located a manufacturing plant for MIC (methyl isocyanate) – the chemical that killed thousands in Bhopal, India – in predominantly black Institute, West Virginia. The largest hazardous waste landfill in Sumpter County, Alabama was built in Emelle (now 95% black), even while no blacks sat on county commissions. “It’s called Apartheid: American style,” says Bullard.

“This is about human rights,” he adds. “The right to breathe clean air, the right to drink clean water, to eat food that’s safe, and to live in a community that is nourishing and sustaining.”

A Fierce Green Fire11

Waffling around

The Ecology movement grew out of the 1960s counter-culture movement. In a world out of balance, people wanted to build alternative futures and live the change, says author and eco-entrepreneur Paul Hawken (Blessed Unrest; The Ecology of Commerce). Buckminster Fuller’s thinking inspired ecologists. How could we do more with less?

Following the oil crisis of 1973, renewable energy only received a fraction of federal research dollars. The money went to coal, gasification, synthetic fuel and breeder reactors.

“Ronald Reagan took away all the tax credit and subsidy for the alternative energy industry,” says Bill McKibben, author and founder of 350.org. You want a wind turbine? You go to Denmark. You want solar panels? You go to Japan, Germany and China. “We’re bit players,” says McKibben.

Fierce Green Fire6

“Mind bombs” make waves

Greenpeace brought passion and excitement to environmentalism. Activists put their bodies on the line worldwide. Paul Watson, one of the Greenpeace co-founders, tells about sailing in front of a Russian whaling vessel. A mother whale’s scream sounded human, he recalls. That’s when he realized, “I work for whales. I work for seals. I work for sea turtles and fish and sea birds.”

The International Whaling Commission passed a moratorium on whaling in 1982. Activists continue to monitor the situation. Greenpeace now leads international opposition to nuclear weapons and other issues.

Fierce Green Fire12

Chico Mendes taps justice

A poor rubber tapper and union organizer named Chico Mendes stepped forward to save his people’s way of life after logging of Brazilian forests began. Mendes began to build alliances with other indigenous groups.

Through non-violent protest, the rubber tappers stopped loggers from cutting down more trees. Cachoeira, the first extractive reserve in the world, was established. In such indigenous reserves, “the people wouldn’t own the land but it would be theirs for as long as they wanted to work it,” according to journalist Adrian Cowell. “It was an idea of the people who actually lived in the forest.”

Mendes was gunned down soon after Cachoeira opened. The Brazilian government recognized the rights of the forest peoples and established parks and protected areas. Some 58 million acres were set aside in extractive reserves. Some 40% of the Brazilian Amazon was protected.

Industrial soy farming and illegal logging continue to threaten the area. Activists remain vigilant.

Bye-bye Amazon

Partial deforestation and climate change have taken a toll. The Amazon will become semi-desert by the year 2100 unless we act now, says Cowell. “It will be an apocalypse for the whole of mankind across the whole globe unless something is done.”

“I’m actually sort of a planet doctor,” says Tom Lovejoy, a conservation biologist who conceived the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments research project. Protecting endangered species means protecting their habitats, working with local communities, and facing big challenges like acid rain and global warming.

“The time is at hand for a great global bargain about the world’s forests,” says Lovejoy. We must manage global carbon and nitrogen, he notes. “It’s a different time. And who knows, it might even make us get along with each other.”

Wikimedia Commons

“Right to live” claimed

In the 1980s and 1990s, environmental movements rose throughout the global South. Issues included water and soil rights, and restoring the land. Social justice, indigenous and environmental rights became one in the developing world.

“What people are really fighting for is the right of subsistence, the right of access to clean water, to food, to forests,” says author and professor Vijaya Nagarajan. “The right to live.”

Archival footage shows Wangari Maathai of Kenya’s Greenbelt Movement, and Vandana Shiva, physicist, author and activist for seed and traditional agriculture in India. “The forests are our lives,” Maathai tells a group of loggers.

Gaia’s “tough love”

Crises beset all our ecosystems by the 1990s. Deforestation, desertification, loss of water and soil, emptying oceans, the Sixth Great Extinction and a vast hole in the ozone over Antarctica threatened. Yet global warming dwarfs all these problems.

“If Gaia heals itself from our current greenhouse gas emissions by going to 5 degrees Celsius warmer the way it did 55 million years ago, and stabilizes there, it’s fine for Gaia, but lousy for us,” explains Stewart Brand, publisher of The Whole Earth Catalog. “That’s a world in which there’s carrying capacity for maybe 1.5 billion people versus 6.8 going onto 7 that we have now. That would be a very tough century.”

World wants a real climate deal

In the summer of 1988, James Hansen, director of NASA’s Goddard Institute, warned a congressional committee that global warming had arrived. Hansen told leaders, “We’ve got to stop waffling around. We are heating the planet, this is human-caused, and it’s going to get way, way worse,” according to McKibben.

The two biggest carbon-producing nations, the U.S. and China, resisted mandatory carbon emissions reductions at climate summits in Rio de Janeiro, Kyoto and Copenhagen. Citizen protests broke out.

Atmospheric carbon dioxide reach 800 to 1,000 ppm, says Joe Romm, author and editor of the Climate Progress blog. “The consequences are so dire that most scientists haven’t even studied them.”

Global warming is “in a sense, too big an issue for the environmental movement to take on,” McKibben believes. “It took a long time even for environmentalists to really pick up on it. For much of the 1990s, it was a second-tier issue among environmentalists.”

NASA Earthrise

Where’s Planet B?

“We keep looking for love in all the wrong places” when we ask governments for change, says Hawken. He discovered two million grassroots organizations worldwide working on social justice and the environment.

“This is not going to be top down,” Hawken asserts. “It goes right back to the hundreds of millions of people on Earth who are trying to find and craft and create solutions every single day.”

This is “humanity’s immune response to the despoliation of the environment, to the degradation of living systems, to the corruption we see in economic systems, and the pollution of the industrial system.”

“Everything is hitched,” John Muir once said. “There’s no black air, no Hispanic air, no white air,” Bullard told ThinkProgress. “It’s just air.” If you’re concerned about what’s in our air, water and food, “You’re an environmentalist. You just may not know it.”

Environmentalism’s next chapter

Kitchell told the Society of Environmental Journalists (SEJ), “I think what we can do is we can educate, we can inspire, we can recruit and we can mobilize.”

“We’re talking about civilizational change and try and show, instead of say, that everybody ought to be active and out there doing something.” The film ends with a mosaic of people worldwide acting on different issues.

A Fierce Green Fire is intended for past and future generations. It’s for “the kids coming up now and in the future who will live through the storm. I want them to know that there was a movement, there were people who cared.”

The director hopes that A Fierce Green Fire “will cause people to think and then they’ll find the action deeper within themselves.”  ★★★★★

You might also enjoy: Do the Math; Arise.

Women Arise to lead environmental justice initiatives

Idanha Films

Women lead environmental justice around the world in Arise. Exquisite cinematography and music are enhanced by Daryl Hannah’s evocative narration. These voices for change may be new to you.

Arise emphasizes women’s wisdom and spiritual connection with the Earth as they live sustainably. Mother and daughter Lori Joyce and Candice Orlando direct.

The film will be offered on DVD and streaming in the future. Contact them to host a screening.

Shared stories inspire

In this era of ecological peril, women across cultures are stepping forward. Arise finds beauty and hope even in extreme poverty. Reverent vignettes of art, scenery, music and poetry read by Hannah shine in this well edited production.

The filmmakers told The Huffington Post that they persevered for seven years to bring these important stories to the screen. Each leader displays compassion, intelligence, conviction and active commitment. Among those featured are:

Judy Nyguthi Kimamo, Project Officer, Women for Change – The Greenbelt Movement, Kenya

“Once you’ve empowered a woman, you’ve empowered a nation,” notes Judy Nyguthi Kimamo. “We all need each other.” Kimamo follows in the footsteps of Wangari Maathai, the founder of Kenya’s Greenbelt Movement. Participants draw well water, tend crops and animals, sing and dance together. Through Greenbelt’s civic and environmental education programs, they’re building food security.

Many no longer sleep hungry since they have learned to cultivate arrowroot, cassava and yams. Planting trees is a cornerstone of their work. It’s the easiest way to safeguard groundwater, prevent flooding, and grow crops.

Vandana Shiva

Vandana Shiva, Founder, Navdanya, India

One of the most eloquent voices for food democracy, physicist, activist and author Vandana Shiva founded Navdanya, a biodiversity-based organic farm, to challenge Big Agribusiness and its genetically modified seeds. She was inspired in the 1970s by the Chipko women, who hugged trees to save their forest from development and feed their families.

Women are the backbone of farming in India, says co-director Dr. Vinod Kumar Bhatt. He takes us behind the scenes at the farm’s community seed banks. Local farmers become self-sufficient by conserving and multiplying seed. “Biodiversity-based organic farming can do miracles,” says Bhatt. “It can not only increase the production but also help increase the income of small and marginal farmers.”

“Recognizing the Earth as sacred, as divine, means you first and foremost are grateful,” says Shiva. “Each time we sow a crop we know we need the cooperation of the soil as an active, intelligent, creative, sacred being to even give us the next harvest.”

Winona LaDuke

Winona LaDuke, Executive Director, Honor the Earth and White Earth Land Recovery ProjectWhite Earth Reservation, Minnesota

Winona LaDuke, Native American environmentalist, economist and writer, leads her community in becoming healthy and self-sufficient. By preserving indigenous seed and bringing solar and wind power to White Earth, she’s fulfilling that vision. “I want to restore our food, because these foods are our medicine,” she notes. “I’m trying to relocalize and capture that local food economy.”

The Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) people have lived in the region for 9,000 years. “It’s a privilege” to save wild rice from genetic modification, and to stop the damming of a local river. “I don’t consider myself an activist,” LaDuke explains, “just a responsible person.” “You need a green economy.”

Candice Orlando, Executive Director, Urbiculture Community Farms, Denver, CO

Urbiculture Community Farms is transforming empty lots, front and back yards, and school and church grounds into “food wonderlands,” says Candice Orlando. She seeks to ensure food security and to educate as community land is transformed. The food is sold through CSA (community-supported agriculture), with 30% of shares going to low income residents. Denver non-profits are also supplied with fresh food.

 

Majora Carter

Majora Carter, President, Majora Carter Group, LLC, Bronx, NY

A native of the South Bronx, Majora Carter has led revitalization projects to alleviate poverty and remediate the environment. “Communities don’t just happen. They’re made,” she says. Carter worked to establish Hunts Point Riverside Park, the borough’s first waterfront park in 60 years. Green-collar jobs have been created. A place for community celebration was born.

We can become “real heroes and players in our own lives” by remembering that the environment is ours, and we are a part of it, Carter believes.

Diverse voices presented

Also appearing in Arise are: Dana Miller, founder, Grow Local Colorado; Beverly Grant, director, Mo’Betta Greens Farmers Market, Denver; Monica Chuji, Amazonian Quechua human rights activist, Ecuador; Starhawk, author, activist and organizer for global justice; Dr. Theo Colborn, zoologist and president, Endocrine Disruption Exchange; Maggie Fox, CEO, The Climate Reality Project; Aida Shibli, Palestinian Bedouin peace activist; Jessica Posner, CEO, Shining Hope for Communities, Kenya; Bata Bhurji, administrator, Barefoot College, India.

To learn more and to get involved in environmental justice, visit Arise.

You might also enjoy: Dirt! The Movie; Women in the Dirt.

Occupy Love: Enter the heart and mind of a movement

OccupyLove

Occupy Love watches Occupy movements unfold around the world, inviting everyone to join. You won’t need to protest in the streets to take part. You only need to be mindful and to act with compassion. The film is now streaming.

How could the crisis we are facing become a love story? Director Velcrow Ripper (Scared Sacred; Fierce Light) asks this question throughout the film. Rich visuals and interviews with leading visionaries reveal love as interconnection and interdependence.

The dominant system of power does not serve people, the film says. Neoliberalism fails to promote health, happiness, and true prosperity for most. “We’re trying to create a world that works for everyone and for all life,” Ripper explains.

The beginning is here

The director confronts both darkness and light. Visiting activist hot spots around the world, he returns often to Occupy Wall Street in New York City. There he speaks with occupiers, watching democracy flourish in new ways. Police actions ensue. “Something’s different. We’re not just protesting. We’re discussing. There are no leaders offering ready-made solutions,” he observes.

Ripper rides the wave, visiting Tahrir Square, Egypt; the Indignado movement in Spain; an indigenous healing walk at the Alberta Tar Sands in Canada; and climate justice uprisings in the U.S. and beyond.

Occupy Love reveals the filmmaker’s own personal growth and practice of engaged Buddhism. It captures the feeling of real connection as people gather and talk about things that matter.

OccupyLove5

A feast for your mind

Neoliberalism “calls for the rule of the market above all and seeks to eliminate social services, privatize everything possible, and maximize profit,” Ripper notes. Yet division is no longer an option. “The system isn’t working for the one percent either,” says Charles Eisenstein (Sacred Economics).

“Everybody wants to live a life of meaning,” he observes. Many suffer from “the loss of community, the loss of connection, the loss of intimacy, the loss of meaning.” Eisenstein notes that “Joint consumption doesn’t create intimacy. Only joint creativity and gifts create intimacy and connection.”

“An economist says that essentially more for you is less for me,” he explains. “But the lover knows that more for you is more for me too.” Ultimately “love is the expansion of the self to include the other. And that’s a different kind of revolution. There’s no one to fight. There’s no evil to fight. There’s no ‘other’ in this revolution.”

Crises signal evolution

“Having people disconnect, see one another as enemies is so crucial to the maintenance of that dominator system,” says bell hooks (All About Love).

“This shift from hierarchical to lateral power is going to change the way we live, the way we educate our children, and the way we govern the world,” notes economist Jeremy Rifkin (The Foundation of Economic Trends). “We have to create the basis for an empathic civilization.”

“Crises are always the starting points for evolution,” says Elisabet Sahtouris, evolutionary biologist.

OccupyLove4

Earth calls out for healing

Climate change is happening now, says Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org. “So far since Kyoto we’ve done essentially nothing as a planet to deal with climate change. In the end it’s not a technical issue, it’s a power issue.”

The destruction of the boreal forest at the Alberta Tar Sands “is a final colonial pillage that’s going on right now,” says Naomi Klein (The Shock Doctrine). “This is the vision, to save the economy by clawing away at the Earth in the most violent way, pretending that climate change isn’t happening.” “I cried when I saw the devastation that’s happened,” says Tom Goldtooth of the Indigenous Environmental Network.

“The same mentality that trashes people trashes the planet,” Klein asserts.

A feast for your soul

“What is justice?” asks hooks. “The heart of it is really longing for people to be able to grow and develop freely in a positive and constructive way.”

“Being awake is love,” says Roshi Joan Halifax. “Being not separate from all the suffering, all of the emptiness, all of the compassion, all of the wisdom.” “There’s so much profound uncertainty that is in the weave of the world today,” she adds. Some become resigned, while others are “walking the knife’s edge.”

“There’s a love emerging now that’s coming from our creativity, that’s yearning for joining because it can’t fulfill itself alone,” says Barbara Marx Hubbard (The Foundation for Conscious Evolution). “Love can be the liberating force for humanity,” says James O’Dea (Cultivating Peace). “It’s so primal and so simple like light, that if it’s allowed to move through us, its movement is endless, its creativity is endless.”

Occupy Love1

Creating “a beloved community”

Feminist activist Judy Rebick sees OWS as “a loving atmosphere with a lot of excitement about discussing ideas and proposals. It is becoming a love story. And out of that love and that connection of people to each other, you’re going to create.” It looks like what Martin Luther King, Jr. called “a beloved community.”

“The love story is people getting to know each other for a change based on their human experience,” says Malik Rhassan of Occupy the Hood. Rhassan says he spent every day at OWS. “I’ve never felt so human in my life . . . watching the homeless get fed every day. Watching people who would not normally have dialogue with each other talk every day.”

How to change the world

Finally, Ripper sees “a messy, imperfect, human love.” He told Reality Sandwich that “Occupy is still alive in different forms, whether Occupy Sandy or the Strike Debt movement, or Idle No More, or Transition Towns, or the emerging gift economy.”

“Find out what your gift is,” Ripper told We Are Change Connecticut. “Unwrap it. Bring it out into the world and figure out how that can align with being of service to your community and the planet.”

To learn more and to get involved, visit Occupy Sandy; StrikeDebt; Idle No More; Transition US; and 350.org.

You might also like: Do the Math; Money and Life.

theindependent.ca

Bidder 70: climate activist Tim DeChristopher acts for humanity

In Bidder 70, climate activist Tim DeChristopher commits civil disobedience to save 22,000 acres of Utah’s red rock wilderness. Beth and George Gage direct this film about a young man’s heart, courage and patriotism.

In the final days of the Bush administration, Utah’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) held a controversial auction to sell oil and gas drilling rights for public lands in southern Utah. The wilderness is known for its beauty, and borders on several national parks.

DeChristopher became Bidder 70 at the auction on December 19, 2008. He knew he risked prison. Yet his mind was clear. A deep sense of peace filled him. The University of Utah economics major won a dozen bids worth about $1.8 million.

Direct action saves wilderness

It was “an ethical, necessary and direct action to protect our planet, our democracy and my fellow human beings,” DeChristopher said. Motivating him were the “exploitation of public lands, the lack of a transparent and participatory government, and the imminent danger of climate change.”

Climate change is a “big weight that our generation is bearing on our shoulders.” He met with Terry Root Ph.D., winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. She confirmed that the worst effects of climate change are now unavoidable. “This is human lives at stake,” he said. “Massive amounts of human lives and human well-being.”

Wikipedia

 

Finding a new path forward

Incoming Interior Secretary Ken Salazar later cancelled drilling leases on public lands in Utah. DeChristopher was still indicted on federal charges.

As hearings and delays continued, he co-founded Peaceful Uprising, a movement known for its lively art, music and street theater. The BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico underscored the urgency of climate change. He spoke at national rallies, including PowerShift 2011.

Activism is “not a one-day deal”

Visiting his native West Virginia, DeChristopher was stunned by its poverty. Environmental activist Larry Gibson showed him areas decimated by mountaintop removal for coal mining. “The movement is not a one-day deal,” Gibson noted.

“Time is hard to do,” anti-war activist David Harris advised DeChristopher. “They got your body. No way around it. But they only get your mind if you give it to them.”

Bidder 70a

“A movement of the heart”

Actor and activist Robert Redford, a Utah resident, praised DeChristopher. “He just did what he thought was his constitutional right. In the meantime we have all these guys on Wall Street sending this country into the tank. And no one’s going to jail. No one’s even being brought to justice.”

Civil disobedience starts as “a movement of the heart,” said John Schuchardt, attorney and peace activist. “It’s always a matter of conscience, and conscience only operates through an individual.”

As DeChristopher and his friends hike the Utah wilderness, he observes: “To see this land and this view, there’s no way that I could ever regret what I did.”

Ecoactivists encouraged

DeChristopher told the court: “In these times of a morally bankrupt government that has sold out its principles, this is what patriotism looks like. With countless lives on the line, this is what love looks like, and it will only grow.”

Bidder 70 is an excellent film for peaceful protestors and the Occupy movement. It offers hope that “we’re going to completely overhaul our system and create a more just world.”

Bidder 70: Take Action

To learn more and to take part in participatory democracy, please visit: Peaceful Uprising, 350.org and Sacred Economics. To bring Bidder 70 to your area, please visit the website.

DeChristopher was released from prison in April 2013. He continues his activism.

If you like Bidder 70, you might enjoy:  The Last Mountain.

 

Bidder 70   2012  /  NR  /    1 hour,  13 min

Cast Overview:   Tim DeChristopher, Terry Tempest Williams, Robert Redford, Patrick Shea, Dennis Willis, Terry Root, Ron Yengich, John Schuchardt, David Harris, Larry Gibson

Director:  Beth and George Gage

Genre:  Documentary

PeacefulUprising.org

Chasing Ice: climate change recorded in Balog’s Extreme Ice Survey

“The story is in the ice.” Chasing Ice documents James Balog’s Extreme Ice Survey (EIS) with haunting images of day-to-day climate change in glacial regions. Jeff Orlowski is director and cinematographer.

Chasing Ice takes you to Greenland, Iceland, Switzerland and Alaska. Balog’s time-lapse photos are combined with beautiful footage, music and scientific observations. Balog rappels down sheer ice cliffs and wades barefoot on icy shores, determined to capture what’s happening.

A nature photographer and geologist, he speaks to audiences worldwide. Balog himself was a climate change skeptic 30 years ago.

Cameras don’t lie

You’ll see a glacial chunk the size of lower Manhattan break off. Crashing into the ocean, it turns bottom side up. This “calving” is a natural process. The problem is that glaciers are thinning and receding too. Climate change is causing extreme weather worldwide, scientists agree.

The cameras don’t lie. “I never imagined that you could see glaciers this big disappearing in such a short time,” Balog worries.

Climate change in action

Ice is “sculptural, architectural, insanely, ridiculously beautiful,” Balog says. It’s a simple, moving metaphor that can reach almost everyone, he believes. “We have a problem of perception,” he adds. “Time is running out.”

Balog and his assistants set up camera posts. Returning each year, they are struck by rapid change. Equipment malfunctions. Balog stands weeping near a broken camera. He wants to preserve history. Most of all, he wants to show his own daughters that he did something during this crisis.

Our lives depend on nature

Balog’s knee problems finally make it impossible to hike in some locations. Videographers carry out the most difficult treks.

“You can’t divorce civilization from nature,” Balog says. “We totally depend on it.” Chasing Ice won the Audience Award at SXSW 2012, and a Sundance Award for Excellence in Cinematography.

Chasing Ice: Take Action

To learn more and take action on climate change, visit Chasing Ice;  350.org (@350 on Twitter) and the Sierra Club’s Climate Comes Home page.

If you like Chasing Ice, you might enjoy:  The Cove; WHY in the World Are They Spraying?

 

Chasing Ice   2013  / PG-13  /  1 hour, 15 min

Cast Overview:  James Balog, Jeff Orlowski, Tad Pfeffer, Louie Psihoyos, Svavar Jonatansson, Adam LeWinter, Jason Box

Director:  Jeff Orlowski

Genre:  Documentary

Top 25 Films: Countdown to 2012 and Beyond

Moviespirit presents the Top 25 Films: Countdown to 2012 and Beyond. Historic, worldwide shifts are here.

Upheaval, promise, scholarly vision and compassion shine in these outstanding films. They provide a wealth of ideas, knowledge and inspiration to help you make sense of massive world changes.

 

Occupy Love  ~~~  Watch now.  Read more.

A sacred world works for everybody. Find out how the Gift Economy is replacing the Money Economy in Occupy Love, the documentary and inter-media project of filmmaker Velcrow Ripper. “Everybody wants to live a life of meaning,” says Charles Eisenstein. “Only joint creativity and gifts create intimacy and connection.”

Great wealth can’t replace community. In a love-based economy, more for you is more for me. Naomi Klein, Judy Rebick, Bill McKibben and other prominent figures speak. Yet this beautiful and dynamic film centers on the people. Love is the movement. Each one of us is a gift.

Occupy Love is Moviespirit’s Top Film of 2012.

 

Thrive ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Everyone can thrive if we take part in personal, social and global change. Following the money, Foster Gamble and Kimberly Carter Gamble analyze the causes of world scarcity and suffering. Steve Gagne directs. For every elite banker in the U.S. there are a million citizens, says Gamble.

Impressively researched and organized, the film’s model for change  integrates progressive, conservative and libertarian ideas. Reform of current systems, enhancement of individual rights, and voluntary cooperation are key. Technologies for free, unlimited, clean energy already exist. “Goodbye Exxon Mobil, goodbye oil, goodbye coal,” says Steven Greer of The Disclosure Project. Check out the Thrive Movement for a wealth of resources and ways to get involved.

 

Dalai Lama Renaissance ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

World leaders and activists meet with His Holiness the 14thDalai Lama to tackle world problems like poverty and resource depletion. Khashyar Darvich directs.

Egos clash and divisions arise as the group seeks “a new and higher level of truth.” When the Dalai Lama leads the group in a one-minute meditation, each one experiences being compassion.

As they reconcile, genuine personal transformations are captured on film. Among the luminaries are quantum physicists Fred Alan Wolf and Amit Goswami (What the Bleep Do We Know); Dr. Michael Beckwith (The Secret); national radio host Thom Hartmann; conscious evolution author Barbara Marx Hubbard; revolutionary social scientist Jean Houston; and author and environmental activist Vandana Shiva (The Corporation).

 

The Road to Q’ero: A Journey Home ~~~ Watch now - Password: qeroayni13

Read more.

Honoring the Earth can save humanity. A gentle message of fierce love, this documentary is directed by Iva Peele, Jack Peele and Beth Bornstein Dunnington.

A small group of family and friends climbs the Andes to reach Q’ero with their guide, shaman Lorenzo Ccapa Apaza. They participate in never-before filmed rituals, or karpays. The karpays release “heavy energies” and increase understanding. They later discover that don Lorenzo is initiating them to share this knowledge with the West. An era of new consciousness, or pachacuti, can begin if humans are willing to create it.

In a sustainable, just and peaceful world, the Eagle (science, industry and “male” energies) will live in harmony with the Condor (the heart, intuition and “female” energies). Economist, shaman and author John Perkins explains that every indigenous culture is predicting this era of potentially “extreme, radical, beautiful change.”

 

2012: The Odyssey ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

Sharron Rose travels across America to ask scholars and visionaries about humanity’s 2012 evolutionary turning point. “People are truly ready for a change, for an end to the suffering,” Gregg Braden notes. As we make “life-affirming or life-denying choices, we’ll either experience the rapture or the ascension.” We can align with these new energies “by living lives consciously with intent, by being kind to one another, by acts of kindness.”

Braden does not believe we will experience the “apocalypse” that some predict. Rose investigates mystical signs and wonders, visiting an indigo child and touring the Georgia Guidestones. Jose Arguelles, Alberto Villoldo, Jay Weidner and others share insights.

 

Timewave 2013: The Future is Now ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

We can master time in a world without limits in part two of Sharron Rose’s documentary 2012: The Odyssey. The director visits the Q’ero, shamans and healers descended from the ancient Incans. Living in the present moment, the Q’ero do not own televisions, computers or cell phones. With clear perception, they are able to see past and present. Shamans Don Umberto Sonco and Dona Bernadina Sonco perform a Despacho ceremony to release negativity and change the future.

Disasters will affect many areas of the world, says Don Umberto. “We must make our prayers to the feminine, to the Mother. We must come back to the ways of the feminine, of stewardship, of protection. The United States has a great power, it has great brilliance, great resources. It is up to the United States to take leadership in the world.”

Rose interviews Alberto Villoldo, Jean Houston, John Major Jenkins and others.

2012: Time for Change ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

Daniel Pinchbeck sees an empowered “global tribe” replacing poor, suffering masses. The founder of the Evolver social movement and editorial director of Reality Sandwich interviews scholars and leaders around the world.  Joao Amorim directs.

“It’s going to be up to individuals and then communities to make a profound shift,” Pinchbeck explains.  Animation describes spiritual practices, sacred activism and new technologies. Learn  about functional design, habitat restoration, ecological detoxification, intentional community, aquaponic agriculture, open source currency and diverse currency tools. Hot button issues like water and soil scarcity are detailed. This film is based on his book 2012: The Return to Quetzalcoatl.

 

2012 The Mayan Word ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Contemporary Mayans speak out about their lives and the Mayan 2012 prophecies.  Melissa Gunasena directs. The documentary raises awareness about contemporary Mayan economic and political struggles. They speak out in activist marches and sacred ceremonies.

“Neoliberalism wants us to disappear,” says Silvia Cime Mex of the Chichen Itza Artisan Collective, Mexico. “They want our culture to remain, but without us.” Activism becomes an outgrowth of love for Mother Earth. Cosmic vision, spirituality and politics are all necessary to prepare for the changes of 2012.

“The Mayans didn’t speak about the end of the world. They spoke about the end of a cycle,” says Efrain of the Collective. “What’s most important is the moment where we can make a change in the human system, in the mind and in the heart.”

3 Magic Words ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

It’s time to wake up to our divinity in this enlightening film featuring authors, artists, scientists, philosophers and children. Michael Perlin directs.

The illusion that we’re separate has prompted great destruction, says Neale Donald Walsch, author of Conversations With God. “That single shift of perception – separate or all one – changes everything. It changes our beliefs, which alters our behaviors, which creates an extraordinary new reality.”

We are all one, according to modern physics. “By harming nature, by harming the planet and the ecosystem, we’re harming ourselves,” says Dolores Canon, author, publisher and past life therapist. The fastest way to undo separation is to “see others as being Divine and whole and perfect,” according to Gary Renard, author of The Disappearance of the Universe and speaker on A Course in Miracles

 

Hungry for Change ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Our health is directly related to our diet and lifestyle. Love and plant nutrition send your body the right signals for safe, effective weight loss. James Colquhoun and Laurentine ten Bosch direct this bold sequel to Food Matters.

The nutritionists-turned-filmmakers interview doctors, nutritionists and authors who have reversed cancer, obesity and more. Find out why diets don’t work. Learn how food additives are engineered for addiction.

“The best strategy we’ve got is, add in the good stuff,” says nutritionist and raw foods expert David Wolfe. “Inevitably, you’re going to feel so much better eating the good stuff that the choice for the bad stuff is no longer valid.” “If we had a rampant epidemic of self-love then our health care costs would go down dramatically,” says Dr. Christiane Northrup, author of Women’s Bodies, Women’s Wisdom.

 

The Cure Is ~~~  Read more.

Beliefs and lifestyles – not genetics – boost our health. Top doctors, authors and people who beat terminal disease are featured. David Scharps directs.

The Cure Is melds science and spirituality in a clear, accessible way. The speakers are excellent.

“When you love your life and body, miraculous things happen,” says author Dr. Bernie Siegel. Probably less than 5 percent of disease is genetic, says Bruce Lipton, Ph.D., cell biologist and author. We have the power to change how we live and think. Dr. Joel Fuhrman, author of the bestseller Eat to Live tells why natural plant foods boost health.

Dakota 38 ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Representatives of the Dakota ride their horses each December from Crow Creek, SD to Mankato, MN. The 330 mile journey commemorates the hanging of 38 ancestors in Mankato in 1862. It was the largest mass execution ever recorded in U.S. history. Silas Hagerty directs this tale of reconciliation.

Peace and harmony begin within. Dakota 38 documents the 2008 ride. When Europeans settled in what is now the United States, they forced millions of indigenous people onto reservations. Mutual violence erupted. The riders experience visions and ancient memories.

“I love you very much,” says Jim Miller, spiritual leader and Vietnam veteran. “We can’t blame the wasichus [white men] anymore. We’re doing it to ourselves. We’re selling drugs. We’re killing our own people. That’s what this ride is about, is healing.”

 

Genetic Roulette ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Americans have been eating genetically modified (GM) food since 1996, risking their health in a giant human experiment. Jeffrey Smith directs this clear, compelling case about GM food dangers. Scientists, doctors, activists and parents speak out.

Genetic engineering transfers genes between species. This creates DNA mutations which “can produce new allergens, toxins and carcinogens.” Find out which nine U.S. foods are genetically engineered. Learn why eating organic, whole foods is best for your health and the health of the planet.

Inflammation triggered by inserted genes may promote digestive disorders, allergies, kidney disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, autoimmune and thyroid disease. There have been no long-term, controlled human studies on how GM foods affect health. Smith is executive director of the Institute for Responsible Technology.

 

WHY in the World Are They Spraying? ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Geoengineering controls the weather as jets spray heavy metals across our skies. Government and private investors pay for it. It’s been happening since the mid-1970s. Michael J. Murphy’s important documentary reveals the links between geoengineering and disease, crop failure, weather extremes and global warming.

Former government experts, a meteorologist, scholars and geoengineers reveal what’s going on. Murphy takes you behind the scenes at scientific conferences. Controlling the weather “enables certain individuals to consolidate an enormous amount of both monetary and political power,” Murphy warns.

“If you control the weather, you’re going to control the planet. It’s that simple,” says meteorologist Scott Stevens.

Growthbusters ~~~ Watch.  Read more.

Dave Gardner is a GrowthBuster. His mission is to warn us that our growth addiction is dangerous. Reckless growth is liquidating the Earth’s resources, stealing from future generations, and enslaving us. This jaunty, thoughtful film will challenge your views.

“We no longer find ourselves growing happier as our economy grows, or even as our individual prosperity grows,” explains Bill McKibben, co-founder of 350.org and author of Deep Economy and the End of Nature.

Growth can mean leading a satisfying, creative life. Farmers’ markets, co-ops and local businesses are thriving. Job sharing can raise our standard of living. Wise population planning is urgently needed. A post-growth world will honor family, friends, community, volunteering and lifelong education.

 

Ethos  ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

We don’t live in a true democracy, says this study of elite power and public manipulation in America. Ethos is dedicated to progressive historian Howard Zinn. Pete McGain directs.

Real power resides in the hands of a wealthy few, says Noam Chomsky, M.I.T. professor and author. Many live paycheck to paycheck while elite bankers make billions. The Federal Reserve, which controls our money supply, is owned by a private banking cartel.

Find out how the U.S. media has been compromised by an “Iron Triangle” of big business, political and military interests. Discover how basic American freedoms have been compromised since 9/11. Woody Harrelson hosts.

 

The Forgotten Bomb ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

Isn’t it time we had a peace culture? Stuart Overbey and Bud Ryan direct this bold call for nuclear sanity. Ryan shares his 20-year quest to raise awareness.

Facts about leaking plutonium, broken arrows and nuclear weapons accidents are revealed. The U.S. has spent over $7 trillion on nuclear weapons defense. Thousands of U.S. and Russian weapons remain on alert, years after the Cold War. There were 23,000 nuclear weapons in nine nations when this film was made. Only one nation, South Africa, has dismantled all of its nuclear weapons.

Mutually assured destruction (MAD) is alive and well. “It’s a very unstable situation. I think it’s outrageous that it still exists. It’s senseless,” says former U.S. Secretary of State George P. Schultz. We must pay attention to this proliferation.

Samsara ~~~ Watch now. Read more.

Samsara could be exactly how God sees the world. Ron Fricke and Mark Magidson direct this visually stunning sequel to their film Baraka. Landscapes, individuals and cultures are photographed on 70mm film. Startling, awe-inspiring and disturbing images are set to evocative music. No words are spoken. Samsara sweeps across 25 countries.

The film presents all humanity as a whole. It revels in our intrinsic worth and highest aspirations. It exposes our cruelty and ignorance. The word “samsara” means “continuous flow,” and refers to the cycle of death and rebirth in Eastern philosophies.  ”Baraka” can mean “a blessing from God” such as spiritual wisdom or divine presence.

 

The Collective Evolution ~~~ Watch now.

We are here to play, learn and grow. We are beautiful souls empowered to create and evolve. This film from the Collective Evolution team boldly asserts the basics of human nature, experience and transformation. Five social structures ripe for change are examined: finance, education, religion, entertainment/ media, and health/ food.  Filled with ideas and hope, The Collective Evolution says that we can and must bring about world change together, connected through love.

 

The Collective Evolution II: The Human Experience ~~~ Watch now.  Read more.

True peace in a world without limits is unfolding, says Franco diNicola, a member of the Collective Evolution team. This documentary about our evolution into enlightenment is filled with narration, interviews and beautiful visuals. The world is now shifting into an economy of sharing rather than ownership. We experience and choose collectively. As one of us becomes more conscious, we all do. Who are we? Why are we here? Get ready to look behind the curtain.

 

The Money Fix ~~~ Watch now.   Read more.

Money is a scam. It’s credit, numbers on a screen, an agreement, an idea. Economic scholars dissect the money system. Alan Rosenblith directs.

Local currencies will help us stop worrying and allowing money to rule our lives. Congress gave The Federal Reserve a monopoly over issuing the national money supply in 1913. The Federal Reserve is neither federal nor a reserve. It’s a private, profit-making corporation.

Our money beliefs have been influenced by “50 years of very intense propaganda, indoctrination,” says activist MIT professor Noam Chomsky. We believe that there’s not enough to go around, and some people will always be left out, says Lynne Twist, author of The Soul of Money. The money system artificially creates scarcity, says author Riane Eisler.

This Sacred Earth: The 2012 Phenomenon ~~~ Watch.  Read more.

Live with intention and reverence. Embrace change. The new Golden Age will make our world seem like Neanderthal times. Mind-to-mind, heart-to-heart communication and synchronicity will reign, notes Alberto Villoldo. “What we focus on expands,” according to Billie Dean, shaman, author and co-director of this film.

Living simply means living with less. Grow a garden and share with others, suggests Australian author and “white witch” Lucy Cavendish. “It’s a fantastic opportunity for us to fall back in love with this planet, our home, to fall back in love with each other,” she adds. Shamans and scholars share their wisdom, demonstrating how to live in harmony with the Earth and others.

 

Economics of Happiness ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

Go local to solve environmental, economic and human problems. Filmmaker Helena Norberg-Hodge impeccably documents how globalization wastes resources, destroys livelihoods and accelerates climate change.

Globalization promotes insecurity and unhappiness. This isn’t “progress.” Governments must re-evaluate what they regulate, tax and subsidize. Wasteful and inefficient practices, government hand-outs to big business, and false accounting must end.

Brilliant solutions are examined. For example, the Genuine Progress Index (GPI) measures human, community and natural wealth in addition to produced, material wealth. Leaders and thinkers from around the world speak out.

 

An Inconvenient Truth ~~~ Watch now.

“Isn’t it beautiful?” Vice President Al Gore’s classic documentary aims to educate citizens about global warming with his comprehensive slide show. Gore reveals his love for the Earth as he urges everyone to live sustainably. The film won an Oscar for Best Documentary Feature. Davis Guggenheim directs.

Gore eloquently raised international public awareness about climate change while sparking controversy from vested interests and climate change deniers. Filled with scientific and personal observations, An Inconvenient Truth has been used in school science curricula. Gore wrote a detailed book by the same name.

 

Road to Peace ~~~ Watch.   Read more.

The Dalai Lama promotes a new era of dialogue in The Road to Peace. A living incarnation of the Buddha of Compassion, he meets with many around the world. Reminded of their own Divine nature, his followers burst into smiles and tears. See rare, behind the scenes footage of His Holiness.

“If we combine our knowledge, skills and expertise with our will power and determination, then no matter what problems we face, we can solve those problems forever,” he assures us. The Dalai Lama resigned as political leader of the Central Tibetan Administration in 2011. China first invaded Tibet in 1949. Most Tibetans do not seek independence from China, but a genuine autonomy within it that protects their religion and culture.

Genetic Roulette exposes GM food dangers as labeling initiatives go viral

Americans have been eating genetically modified (GM) food since 1996, risking their health in a giant human experiment, says Genetic Roulette. Director Jeffrey Smith makes a clear, compelling case about GM food dangers.

Smith is executive director of the Institute for Responsible Technology, and the author of Seeds of Deception and Genetic Roulette.

Watch Genetic Roulette online or order the DVD.

GM foods are bad news

Inspiring urgency and optimism, the film features scientists, doctors, activists and parents. A spinning roulette wheel and animation enliven the narrative.

Genetic Roulette reveals that:

  • Genetic engineering (GE) (also called genetic modification) transfers genes between species. The process creates DNA mutations which “can produce new allergens, toxins and carcinogens.”
  • “The inserted genes may trigger inflammation, which might promote diseases including digestive disorders, allergies, kidney disease, cancer, diabetes, Alzheimer’s, autoimmune and thyroid disease.” Rising rates of inflammation-caused diseases in the U.S. have alarmed scientists and doctors.
  • There have been no long-term, controlled human studies on how GM foods affect health.
  • Bt toxin acts as an insecticide within GM corn. Eating such corn “may break holes in our intestinal walls.”

“Experts link gut permeability to allergies, autism, premature aging, autoimmune disease, asthma, cancer, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s.”

  • Nine U.S. foods are genetically engineered. Their derivatives appear in over 70% of supermarket foods, especially those that are processed. The nine foods are: soy, corn (not popcorn), cottonseed oil, canola oil, sugar beets (for sugar), papaya (Hawaiian and Chinese), zucchini, yellow crookneck squash, and alfalfa (for hay).

GM soy and corn are often fed to conventional livestock, working their way up the food chain into conventional meat, milk and eggs. The artificial sweetener Aspartame comes from GE microorganisms.

  • The best ways to avoid GM foods are: 1. Buy Organic. 2. Buy Non-GMO Project Verified. 3. Use the Non-GMO Shopping Guide and iPhone App, or 4. Avoid completely soy, corn, cottonseed oil, canola oil, and sugar made from sugar beets. If it doesn’t say “Organic” or “non-GMO,” it’s genetically engineered.
  • Most GM plants are engineered to survive Monsanto’s herbicide Roundup. Roundup has been linked to birth defects and other reproductive disorders in animals. Its use leads to nutrient-deficient plants, animals, and ultimately humans.

The U.S. Geological Survey has found Roundup in 60-100% of air, rain and water samples. A German university study found glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, in the urine of city dwellers. In a Canadian study, Bt toxin was found in the blood of pregnant women and fetal cords.

Why are Americans getting sicker?

Since the mid-1990’s, the number of Americans with at least three chronic illnesses has nearly doubled, Smith notes. Such increases “aren’t normal,” says Don Huber, PhD, Professor Emeritus of plant pathology at Purdue University. “We didn’t see these illnesses 30 or 50 years ago.”

Michelle Perro, MD, one of America’s Top Pediatricians, is alarmed at skyrocketing rates of childhood allergies and asthma. “If there is no problem with GMO food, then why don’t you just label it?” she asks.

Doctors and nutritionists observe that patients can clear their conditions by switching to a diet of organic, GM-free foods.

FDA does not monitor GM foods

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) does not require monitoring of GM foods. A landmark lawsuit filed by Steven Druker, public interest attorney and author of Altered Genes, Twisted Truth, revealed that the FDA’s own scientists warned it about GM food dangers.

Far from a precise science, genetic engineering is “a sub-microscopic shooting from the hip,” says Robin A. Bernhoft, MD, medical director of the Bernhoft Center for Advanced Medicine. Smith explains: After making millions of copies of a gene, biotech scientists shoot a gene gun into a plate of millions of cells. The cells are then cloned into a plant.

Spider genes in goats

“They’re completely swapping genes between the normal species barriers, creating new organisms (GMOs) that were not part of the evolutionary process,” he warns.

“There can be hundreds or thousands of mutations up and down the DNA,” Smith adds. “This creates unpredicted side effects.”

Monsanto, which sells Roundup and most GM seeds, asked for government regulation of GM technology in 1986, according to Seeds of Deception. President George H.W. Bush turned down Monsanto’s request as business de-regulation flourished.

Both parties fail consumers

“Unfortunately, the Obama administration has not been better than the Bush administration, possibly worse” on this issue, Smith told NPR. Michael Taylor, a former vice president and attorney for Monsanto, now serves as the Obama administration’s food safety czar.

In October 2012, California Right To Know, Move On and the Organic Consumers Association delivered over 200,000 signatures to Michelle Obama via Obama headquarters in Oakland. They’re calling on the President to honor his 2007 campaign promise to label genetically engineered foods.

GM food labeling arrives

“The GMO labeling issue is on fire in the United States,” says Smith. California’s Proposition 37 has an excellent chance of passing because “it’s a ballot initiative, and people vote directly. So we finally have a chance to get what nine out of 10 Americans have wanted for more than a decade: mandatory labeling of genetic foods.”

“Bills have been introduced in 19 states, although none have yet gotten past Monsanto’s lobby and influence peddling,” Smith adds.

Success stories

“We’ve created a tipping point of consumer rejection which is slowly kicking rBGH [recombinant bovine growth hormone] out of the market now,” says Smith. The engineered hormone’s link to cancer caused public uproar. Walmart, Starbucks, Yoplait and Dannon have banned the use of rBGH in their products.

Consumers have defeated GE tomato, potato, wheat, rice and biopharmaceuticals, points out Andrew Kimbrell, executive director of the Center for Food Safety.

Follow the money: who profits?

Promises that GM crops would increase farmer profits, increase U.S. exports and require less herbicide use have all been broken, the film asserts.

The Union of Concerned Scientist’s Failure to Yield study showed a 79% increase in crop yields when sustainable agriculture was practiced.

GM foods are a money-making scam, believes Michael Hansen, PhD, senior staff scientist of the Consumers Union. “It’s about chemical companies selling chemicals,” he says.

Food solutions or nightmares?

Biotech firms tout GM seeds as the best way to feed the world. That’s “a huge lie,” according to William Lee Cowden, MD, cardiologist and author. “It is a bad idea because we don’t know the adverse effects on health. It is not worth a slight increase in crop production or longevity on the shelf in order to sacrifice that from human health.”

“The evidence does not exist to support the claim that GMOs are going to be the best way forward to feed the world in a way that’s sustainable and equitable,” says Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, PhD, senior scientist for the Pesticide Action Network. Sustainable agriculture methods produce higher yields, experts say.

“There’s over 1½ times more food on the planet than we need for every man, woman and child,” says Eric Holt-Gimenez, executive director of Food First. The problem is that many people can’t afford food, he notes.

Proposition 37 raises hope

Consumers eagerly await the passage of California’s Proposition 37. Europe, Australia and Asia label GM foods. “Yet here in the U.S., we’ve all just been blissfully ignorant,” says Robyn O’Brien, founder of the Allergy Kids Foundation and author of The Unhealthy Truth.

“I don’t want to be a human lab rat,” says one mother. “I certainly don’t want my 2-year-old daughter to be a human lab rat.”

We have a right to know

Pamm Larry, who started California’s GMO labeling initiative, says, “There have been no long-term human studies on this. And I as a grandmother and mother am outraged that our agencies are not taking care of this for us. . . . We have a right to know what we’re putting inside our bodies.”

Genetic Roulette: Take Action

For more resources, information and updates on genetic engineering, please visit the the Institute for Responsible Technology website, where you can join the Non-GMO Tipping Point Network and the Non-GMO Click and Send Revolutionary Army.

If you like Genetic Roulette, you might enjoy:  WHY in the World Are They Spraying?, Dirt! The Movie.

 

Genetic Roulette  /   2012  /  PG-13  /  1 hour, 51 min

Cast Overview:  Robin Bernhoft, Don Huber, Ashley Koff, Dennis Kucinich, David Bronner, Steven Druker, Lawrence Plumlee, Tom Newmark, Arden Anderson, Martha Grout, William Lee Cowden, Robyn O’Brien, Michelle Perro, Dan Skow, Shiv Chopra, Russell Marz, Eric Holt-Gimenez, Marcia Ishii Eiteman, Andrew Kimbrell, Bill Witherspoon, Vandana Shiva, Pamm Larry

Directors: Jeffrey Smith

Genres:  Documentary

 

Humanity can be saved in The Road to Q’ero: A Journey Home

Honoring the Earth can save humanity, Western visitors learn as they visit an ancient Incan community. The Road to Q’ero: A Journey Home is an experiential documentary with a gentle message of fierce love.

Directing are Iva M. Peele, Jack Peele and Beth Bornstein Dunnington. It is now available streaming (password: qeroayni13 ) and on DVD.

The people ascend

The group climbs the Andes to reach Q’ero (altitude 16,000 feet) with their guide, the shaman Lorenzo Ccapa Apaza. There’s a feeling of ascent while diving into ancient mysteries.

Iva, her son Jack, his girlfriend Julie, and friend Katherine participate in never-before filmed rituals, or karpays, performed by don Lorenzo. The karpays release “heavy energies” and increase understanding.

An era of new consciousness, or pachacuti, can begin if humans are willing to create it, says John Perkins, a chief economist, shaman and author of Confessions of an Economic Hitman. “We the people must make it happen,” he says. “We cannot look to our leaders.”

Condor and eagle meet

In this sustainable, just and peaceful world, the Eagle (science, industry and “male” energies) will live in harmony with the Condor (the heart, intuition and “female” energies), Perkins explains.

Every indigenous culture has similar prophecies about this time of potentially “extreme, radical, beautiful change,” he adds. Love, service and wisdom are already emerging and expanding in each one of us, says Jorge Luis Delgado, a shaman and author of Andean Awakening.

It is vital “to completely be human on the planet” with fierce, real love, says Iva. The Q’eros “don’t separate themselves from Nature. They completely express their spirituality through a relationship to being on the planet.”

Healing for humanity

Reaching Q’ero, the visitors discover that don Lorenzo has initiated them into the karpays. Rituals are offered to the spirits of water and mountains. Despachos (prayer bundles) of coca leaves, flower petals and sweets are burned as gratitude offerings to Pachamama, Mother Earth.

Don Lorenzo urges everyone to offer Earth rituals in order to save humanity from shortages of food and water, and from disease. “The only way that we can correct this balance in the external is by first correcting the balance within,” says Rita Rivera Fox, a master teacher and coach.

For messages and wisdom from the film, visit The Road to Q’eros messages from the Andes.

If you like The Road to Q’ero: A Journey Home, you might enjoy:  Dreaming Heaven; Timewave 2013.

 

The Road to Q’ero: A Journey Home  /   2012  /  NR  /  1 hour, 25 min

Cast Overview:  Lorenzo Ccapa Apaza, Iva M. Peele, Jack Peele, Julie Kunz, Jorge Luis Delgado, John Perkins, James Wanless, Rita Rivera Fox

Directors: Iva M. Peele, Jack Peele, Beth Bornstein Dunnington

Genres:  Documentary

 

Geoengineering controls our weather, fills skies with heavy metals

Geoengineering now controls our weather. Jets spray heavy metals across our skies. Government and private investors pay for it. It’s been happening since the mid-1970s.

With the stated goal of cooling our planet, geoengineering is implicated in widespread weather extremes, crop failures, and global warming.

WHY in the World Are They Spraying?

Michael J. Murphy’s important documentary, WHY in the World Are They Spraying?, studies how geoengineering affects climate, crops and health. Former government experts, a meteorologist, scholars and geoengineers reveal what’s going on.

The film is now streaming at YouTube. The filmmakers urge anyone who buys the DVD to copy and share it freely. This is the most comprehensive documentary about chemtrail/geoengineering and its effects to date.

Big secret in plain sight

What is geoengineering? Look up at a blue sky. You’ll often see jet trails crisscross. Skies grow hazy as the trails spread. Dangerously high levels of aluminum, barium and strontium are recorded on land after this aerial spraying.

Murphy takes us behind the scenes at scientific conferences. Chemtrails are really happening. They’re big business.

David Keith, one of the world’s leading geoengineers, notes that even small states and private investors can afford chemtrailing. He sees this as “dangerous.”

Keith admits that no studies have been done on the human health effects caused by spraying these heavy metals. Asthma, autism, attention deficit disorder and Alzheimer’s disease rates have risen dramatically in recent years, says solar power expert and climate researcher Dane Wigington. “There’s a mountain of metal raining down on us.”

Bizarre weather endangers crops

Drought, flooding, hurricane activity and crop failure can be caused by weather modification, scientists and geoengineers acknowledge. It’s happening in the U.S. and around the globe, the film notes. Farmers notice a decline in their crops when chemtrails appear.

Bizarre weather exploded when weather engineering began in the mid-70s, according to former TV meteorologist and founder of Weatherwars.Info Scott Stevens.

“Potentially two billion people could have their food disrupted by such interventions,” warns professor Martin Bunzl, founding director of the Rutgers Initiative on Climate and Society.

Government, corporations play God

For example, chemtrailing over California promotes drought there, says Francis Mangels, a former U.S. Department of Agriculture biologist. Excessive moisture is later dumped in the Mississippi Valley where it causes hurricanes and flooding, he explains.

That’s not all. Radiofrequencies (known as H.A.A.R.P.) are aimed at chemtrails, says defense department consultant Mark McCandlish. This enhances their effects, producing hailstones the size of baseballs or even softballs.

H.A.A.R.P. boils the upper atmosphere, says Dr. Nick Begich, author of Angels Don’t Play this H.A.A.R.P. Weather modification continues even though the U.S. has signed international treaties that forbid manipulating the environment.

Agribusiness cleans up

When crops fail, Monsanto Corporation sells its drought- and disease-resistant genetically modified seeds to desperate farmers in the U.S. and abroad, says Barb Peterson, radio host at Farmwars. Monsanto’s sterile “terminator” seeds don’t reproduce. This compels farmers to buy expensive seeds each year.

Africa’s severe drought of 2011 was caused by chemtrailing, Peterson believes. Meanwhile Monsanto is promoting its drought-tolerant corn there. Agribusiness is buying up small, bankrupt farms in order to grow genetically engineered crops.

Corporations are racing to patent aluminum-resistant crops, says Rosalind Peterson, president of the Agriculture Defense Coalition and formerly with the U.S.D.A. Farm Service. Chemical companies and Monsanto “are working together to make us totally dependent on their products” for agriculture, she maintains.

Monsanto owns 90% of the seed companies in the world, says GMO-free lecturer Karoline “Kory” Muniz. Genetically modified foods harm humans and life, studies show.

True agendas pondered

Motives for spraying range from greed to geopolitics. Controlling the weather “enables certain individuals to consolidate an enormous amount of both monetary and political power,” Murphy warns. “If you control the weather, you’re going to control the planet. It’s that simple,” says Stevens.

“It’s unlimited profit potential if you could control the weather,” says independent commodities trader Michael Agne. Hundreds of billions can be made playing with derivatives. Companies profit greatly from collecting insurance on failed crops, Agne explains.

“This is a new opportunity. It’s a new tool for investors,” says Larry Oxley, author of Extreme Weather and Financial Markets.

Director looks forward

While this film focuses on the U.S., other countries conduct geoengineering too.

Murphy also produced What in the World Are They Spraying? (2010). He told Farmwars that his next goal is to produce a television commercial about the dangers of chemtrail/geoengineering programs. (5 out of 5 stars)

WHY in the World Are They Spraying? ~ Take Action

To learn more and to take action on geoengineering, please visit: Thrive Movement Solutions Hub; Coalition Against Geoengineering, and Geoengineering Watch.

If you like WHY in the World are They Spraying?, you might enjoy:  What in the World Are They Spraying?; Thrive.

 

WHY in the World Are They Spraying?  /   2012  /  NR  /  1 hour, 12 min

Cast Overview:  Dave Wigington, Francis Mangels, Barb Peterson, Rosalind Peterson, Mark McCandlish, Scott Stevens, Dr. Nick Begich, Dr. James Fleming, Michael Agne, Larry Oxley, Sherrie Klappert, Joel Gilcoca, Karoline “Kory” Muniz, Daisy Agne, Horace Ross

Director: Michael J. Murphy

Genres:  Documentary; Environment; Ecoactivism

Tapped: bottled water challenges tap water as consumers pay

Tapped shows bottled water competing with public water systems as consumers pay the price. Stephanie Soechtig directs.

Americans bought 29 billion bottles of water in 2007. Bottled water reaped $11.5 billion in profit that year.

Tapped is now streaming at Netflix, and can be downloaded at iTunes and Amazon.

Intelligent water policies needed

In fact, 40% of bottled water is drawn from municipal water sources, filtered and sold back to consumers at 1900 times the price of tap water, the film contends. Investing in local water infrastructure would benefit consumers immensely.

“We really don’t have good, comprehensive policies in most places to deal with water supply and water quantity,” says Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D) Oregon. Water is “blue gold” to corporations, says Ruth Caplan, national coordinator of Defending Water for Life, Alliance for Democracy.

World water supplies in peril

Although 75% of the Earth is covered by water, only 1% of that water is drinkable. “Water is the next empire” as pollution and waste threaten precious supplies.

Aquafina (owned by Pepsi), Dasani (owned by Coca Cola) and other corporations regard water as “just a source of profit,” Caplan believes. “They don’t see it as a fundamental right, as something essential for people and for nature.”

Reclaiming water

Fryeburg, Maine residents have challenged Nestle, the owner of Poland Springs. Antiquated “absolute dominion” laws allowed Nestle to pump as much as they wanted.

“If they really were interested in us, they could come into town and really pay taxes,” says Jim Wilfong, a Fryeburg resident and assistant administrator for international trade during the Clinton Administration.

“The people of Maine have spent a lot of money publicly and privately to make sure this [spring] water was cleaned up, and is clean, and will stay clean for generations,” Wilfong adds.

“Collision of moral values”

At the height of a severe drought in North Carolina, Pepsi continued its water bottling operations. “They were draining over 400,000 gallons a day,” says Eugene Brown, Durham city council member. As Atlanta suffered its second-worst drought in history, Coca Cola kept pumping from a local lake.

There’s a “collision of moral values” when private enterprise lays claim to public water supplies, says Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D) Ohio.

Industry spokesmen say that very little water is pumped by the corporations. Elizabeth Royte, author of Bottlemania, says that may be true. Yet water is mined from “very few and very specific places. Many people have linked their over pumping of groundwater with lower stream levels, dried up wetlands, depleted or decimated fish populations,” she explains.

“Plastic soup”

Oceanographers have discovered a “plastic soup” in five major ocean gyres (rotating currents). In the North Pacific Gyre, the Eastern Garbage Patch measures twice the size of Texas, oceanographers say.

Reducing pollution means reducing plastic use and recycling.

Recycling capacity lags

One way to encourage recycling is by passing state bottle bills that cover bottled water. The Bottle Bill Resource Center reports 11 state bottle bills in 2012. Only five states – Connecticut, Hawaii, Oregon, Maine and New York – include bottled water.

Our country’s recycling capacity cannot keep up with the bottled water industry, says Betty McLaughlin, former executive director of the Container Recycling Institute. About half of Americans don’t have curbside recycling, she adds.

At the time of filming, international recycling rates averaged 50%. The U.S. average was 20%.

PET concerns

PET (paraxylene), a primary ingredient in plastics, is derived from refining crude oil. It is in the benzene family. Benzene causes cancer, says Suzie Canales, director of Citizens for Environmental Justice.

The Flint Hills refinery in Corpus Christi is the nation’s largest privately owned oil refinery. The plant manufactures PET. Disabled Corpus Christi residents say that they have been poisoned by the chemical.

PET in the groundwater, air and soil acts as a “slow poison,” says Canales. “It’s the perfect crime.”

Living near oil refineries is linked to higher levels of cancer, birth defects and other illnesses, says Melissa Jarrell, assistant professor of criminology at Texas A&M University. Birth defects in Corpus Christi are 84% higher than the state average, she notes.

Soechtig interviews the FDA’s sole employee concerned with national bottled water safety. “The FDA is filled with good people who are trying to do their best, but they are overwhelmed,” says David Michaels, professor of environmental and occupational health at George Washington University.

Investing in tap water

Think bottled water is safer? The National Resources Defense Council (NRDC), in an independent study, found arsenic, plastic and bacterial contamination in bottled water.

The bottled water industry must do quality testing, but is not required to share results with the FDA or the public. Tap water is monitored by municipalities, and regulated by the FDA and the EPA. It is tested many times a day, depending on the size of the population served.

Independent water study

The filmmakers commissioned an independent study of bottled water at two separate labs. Stephen King, toxicologist and epidemiologist, says that “you’d be horrified at what they found.”

The samples included: styrene (a cancer-causing agent linked to adverse reproductive outcomes); benzene (linked to cancer); toluene (a neurotoxic agent used in gasoline and paint thinners, linked to adverse reproductive outcomes); and phthalates (can cause dysfunction in the fetus and are linked to adverse reproductive outcomes).

Polycarbonate plastic (often used in baby bottles, sports bottles and five gallon water coolers) are composed mainly of BPA (bisphenol-A). BPA has been linked to obesity, cancer, liver disease, attention deficit disorder and diabetes.

Nestle, Coke and Pepsi declined to be interviewed for this film.

What you can do

The film’s website shares updates and activist groups including Food and Water Watch. One action step is to use stainless steel water bottles (Klean Kanteen makes lightweight, colorful models).

Home water filters can provide added protection from chlorine, VOCs (volatile organic compounds including benzene), pesticides, heavy metals and sediment in tap water.

Documentaries investigate water

Tapped is the best produced and directed contemporary documentary about water.

Blue Gold: World Water Wars (now streaming at Netflix and Amazon) gives a grim perspective on international water conflicts. Featuring excellent speakers, it portrays water as a human right. A new film, Bottled Life, centers on Nestle. It is now appearing at film festivals.

Soechtig’s next film, The Big Picture (2013), studies child obesity in America.

If you like Tapped, you might enjoy:  Dirt! The Movie; Food Matters.

 

Tapped  /   2009  /  NR  /  1 hour, 16 min

Cast Overview:  Jim Wilfong, Wenonah Hauter, Bridie McGreary, Dennis Kucinich, Ruth Caplan, Cat Warren, Eugene Brown, Shirley Franklin, Sally Bethea, Amanda Brown, Joe Doss, Elizabeth Royte, Earl Blumenauer, Barbara Lippert, Adriana Quintero, Suzie Canales, Robert Bullard, Melissa Jarrell, Lauren Robin, David Michaels, Stephen King

Director: Stephanie Soechtig

Genres:  Documentary, Water, Earth