Tag Archives: North Carolina
Dirty energy is not the answer …Robert Gardner, Greenpeace
just wanted to give you an update on our activities in North Carolina. Just minutes ago, activists greeted employees at Duke headquarters with a message: We’re not going away until you clean up your act. Duke & its CEO Jim Rogers keep claiming they support using renewable energy, and yet they’re spending their time and money by investing in more dirty coal.
Thanks, Robert
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From: Robert Gardner, Greenpeace webmaster@greenpeaceusa.org
To: ynative77@gmail.com
Date: Mon, Feb 13, 2012 at 9:35 AM
Subject: #OccupyDuke
Just moments ago activists took a stand at a coal-fired power plant in North Carolina.
Duke Energy is looking to acquire the company that owns the plant, Progress Energy. If the deal goes down, Duke will not only be the largest utility in the country but also one of the dirtiest. That’s because both companies rely on destructive practices like mountaintop removal for getting their coal and neither is making very much progress toward renewable energy.
These activists are there to send a clear message to Duke: Dirty energy is not the answer. But you don’t have to be at a coal plant to send the same message yourself.
Help back up the activists and help us reach our goal of 50,000 letters to Duke CEO Jim Rogers in the next 48 hours by sending the same message yourself right now.
Companies like Duke know they can do better and have invested a lot of money in convincing the public they are. Jim Rogers himself recently acknowledged that his company and other utilities are in a “unique position…to deploy solutions, to raise the capital and not raise the national debt, to do it at scale…”
Unfortunately, their behavior doesn’t match that rhetoric. Duke continues to rely on dirty old coal plants like the one these activists are at today in North Carolina. Polluting the air, destroying mountains, poisoning the water and killing the climate in the process.
And Duke’s planned merger with Progress Energy seems to only be leading them down more dead ends — more dangerous nuclear plants, more dirty biomass, and more coal-fired power plants. In other words, more global warming.
Duke can make a different choice if they want to. But that will only happen if we call them out. That’s why activists have taken a stand today at a coal plant in North Carolina today to get the message across, and it’s why you should take a minute to deliver the same message yourself right now.
Quit Coal,
Robert Gardner
Greenpeace Coal Campaigner
Charlotte 2012
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A message from Mrs.Obama …Charlotte, North Carolina, will host the 46th Democratic National Convention in 2012.
I am thrilled to make sure you are the first to hear some very exciting news. Charlotte, North Carolina, will host the 46th Democratic National Convention in 2012.
Charlotte is a city marked by its southern charm, warm hospitality, and an “up by the bootstraps” mentality that has propelled the city forward as one of the fastest-growing in the South. Vibrant, diverse, and full of opportunity, the Queen City is home to innovative, hardworking folks with big hearts and open minds. And of course, great barbecue.
Barack and I spent a lot of time in North Carolina during the campaign — from the Atlantic Coast to the Research Triangle to the Smoky Mountains and everywhere in between. Barack enjoyed Asheville so much when he spent several days preparing for the second Presidential debate that our family vacationed there in 2009.
And my very first trip outside of Washington as First Lady was to Fort Bragg, where I started my effort to do all we can to help our heroic military families.
All the contending cities were places that Barack and I have grown to know and love, so it was a hard choice. But we are thrilled to be bringing the convention to Charlotte.
We hope many of you can join us in Charlotte the week of September 3rd, 2012. But if you can’t, we intend to bring the spirit of the convention — as well as actual, related events to your community and even your own backyard.
More than anything else, we want this to be a grassroots convention for the people. We will finance this convention differently than it’s been done in the past, and we will make sure everyone feels closely tied in to what is happening in Charlotte. This will be a different convention, for a different time.
To help us make sure this is a grassroots convention — The People’s Convention — we need to hear from you. We want to know what you’d like to see at next year’s
convention, how and where you plan on watching it — and the very best way we can engage your friends and neighbors.
How can we make The People’s Convention belong to you and your community?
http://my.barackobama.com/PeoplesConvention1?keycode=
I can’t believe it has been more than two years since my brother Craig introduced me at the 2008 Convention in Denver. It truly feels like it was yesterday.
As I looked out at a sea of thousands of supporters that night, I spoke about my husband — the man whom this country would go on to elect as the 44th President of the United States. I spoke about his fundamental belief — a conviction at the very core of his life’s work — that each of us has something to contribute to the spirit of our nation.
That’s also the belief at the core of The People’s Convention. That the table we sit at together ought to be big enough for everyone. That the thread that binds us — a belief in the promise of this country — is strong enough to sustain us through good times and bad.
Barack talked at the State of the Union of his vision for how America can win the future. That must be the focus now, and I know so many of you will help talk about our plans with your neighbors — that through innovation, education, reform, and responsibility we can make sure America realizes this vision.
But, conventions take time to plan, so please help us make sure that your thoughts and your ideas will ring all the way to Charlotte. Get started now:
http://my.barackobama.com/PeoplesConvention1?keycode=
Looking forward to sharing this together,
Michelle
NC may constitutionally ban same-sex marriage
By Estes Gould | The Daily Tar Heel
North Carolina could soon be one step away from becoming the last Southern state to constitutionally ban same-sex marriage.
The N.C. House of Representatives passed the controversial Defense of Marriage amendment on Monday, which would make heterosexual marriage the only union recognized by the state.
The 75 to 42 vote in favor of the legislation came after more than three hours of debate, and it could be put to a vote in the Senate today. If it follows expectations and passes, the measure will be on the first primary ballot in the 2012 elections.
“It’s for the citizens to decide how they want to define their institution, the institution of marriage,” said N.C. Rep. Nelson Dollar, R-Wake.
Supporters of the amendment agree with Dollar.
“The citizens of this state really want the opportunity to vote on this, and now they’re one step closer to getting that,” said Tami Fitzgerald, the executive director of NC Values Coalition.
But Seth Keel, a gay teenager in Dollar’s jurisdiction, called the legislation “shameful” when he addressed some Republican legislators after the vote.
“No one is voting on their marriages,” Keel said. “So why does the public have a right to vote on whether or not I can get married?”
N.C. Rep. Joe Hackney, D-Orange, said the amendment would interfere with child custody arrangements and prevent same-sex couples, and unmarried heterosexual couples, from receiving treatment or counseling for domestic violence.
“This proposed constitutional amendment runs against the tide of history,” he said. “I think that’s why it’s being brought here today, in a last gasp to forestall that tide of history.”
Hackney, and other Democrats, said the procedure for the legislation was unfair and calculated — originally, the bill was to be considered in the Senate Judiciary committee on Monday. Instead, it was considered in the House Rules committee, passed, then pushed for “immediate consideration.”
Rep. Susan Fisher, D-Buncombe, said amendments are rarely ever considered immediately by the legislature, and Hackney said the procedure minimized debate about the language of the amendment.
But Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake, the House majority leader, said the procedure was not unusual.
Republican legislators said the amendment would prevent judges from overturning current law, which bans same-sex marriages.
But Democratic representatives said it was unnecessary and unjust.
“Putting the rights of the minority population up for a vote by the majority is a terrible notion and a terrible precedent,” said Rep. Pricey Harrison, D-Guilford, who emotionally defended same-sex marriage on behalf of her sister, a lesbian.
More TarHeels New …
Proposed Jobs Act could help NC colleges
Contact the State & National Editor at state@dailytarheel.com.




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