Corporate Accountability on Sustainability

The corporate business model for International trade, as it is now, is not sustainable nor respectful of human dignity and environmental sustainability.   As John Erik Meyer of “The Social Contract” and “The Perfect Currency”, states “Free Trade and Globalization are centred on the concept of maximizing consumption. They strive to narrow the base of national economies to the few sectors in which they are most competitive internationally. Although consumption and international trade are both maximized under the current approach, globalization increases social and economic instability along with international interdependence.”

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The True Source of Canada’s Carbon Emissions

The Kyoto Accord was an international treaty signed in 1997 at a climate change convention to fight global warming. Our commitment to the Kyoto Accord took the form of a pledge to reduce Canada’s carbon emissions by the year 2012 to 560 megatonnes, which would have been 6% lower than our emissions in 1990. In the past, Canada has enjoyed a reputation in the world as a nice guy, working towards the goals of human betterment and world peace from a base of a just and progressive society. But Canada’s status has been undergoing a massive downgrade, due to our policy of rapid growth and reckless exploitation of our natural resources.

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Understanding Population Cycles

Human history tells the story of a series of population cycles . The names and locations change but the basic pattern is this: A small group of humans comes across a resource base (in most civilizations up until 1900, this was soil) and builds a thriving civilization. This civilization develops impressive art, social, commercial and military capabilities. Either the population grows too large for the resource base or the resource base is ruined by human overuse or natural disaster. The civilization starts to show the strain of decline, with the more privileged people drawing further away from the main body of society. This distance and disparity, along with the shortage of resources, leads to civil conflict, making it even harder for the society to deal with its fundamental resource crisis. The resource crisis forces large numbers of the population to either migrate or starve. Typically, birth rates plummet while mortality increases. The population declines, either gradually or abruptly.

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