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» Annie Leonard, democracy and the environment
I'm a bit of an Annie Leonard fan - I love the way she can turn very complex
topics into interesting and engaging short videos we can all understand. I
should also give kudos to the animation team as their talents are crucial in
driving the messages home.
Annie's (and her team's) latest effort is the
The Story of Citizens United v. FEC. It's basically about the story of democracy
gone awry. While very U.S.-centric, there are lessons for all countries that
claim to have a democracy.
No, I'm not going all political on you here -
there is a very strong tie to environment. I've mentioned in the past that
governments don't run countries, big business does. We should never
underestimate their power or the potential for it being misused.
In my
article "Triple
Bottom Line" I mentioned a very unsettling point - of the 100 largest
economies in the world, 51 are businesses; the other 49 are
countries.
That is a lot of power tied up in very few entities and it's
behind some of the biggest environmental disasters of our time. We might
sometimes shake our heads and ask "why does the government let this happen?" -
it's because sometimes government has been bought. Sad as it is, it really is
that simple.
Anyway, Annie explains it far better than I can:
Democracy - for the people and by the people? Perhaps in a perfect world. I
pretty much lost what remaining faith I had in the system when Australia joined
the Iraq invasion. Australians said "no", our government ignored us. 100,000
dead Iraqi citizens later, the people were right and the government proven
wrong. We should never, ever forget that. If 100,000 Iraqi lives can be brushed
off, how much easier is it to create and brush off environmental catastrophes
when it suits?