Author Archives: Raymond Alexander Kukkee

About Raymond Alexander Kukkee

A published author and freelance writing professional, Raymond lives and writes in Northwestern Ontario.

Environmental Sell-out by Harper and G7

©2015 by Raymond Alexander Kukkee [caption id="attachment_2764" align="alignnone" width="768"]A huge pit, strip-mining with gigantic minint truck andequipment Strip-mining Oil Sands near Fort McMurray. Alberta             Photo credit Mark Ralston[/caption]

G7:  Canadians  Expected Better than an Environmental sell-0ut

In our modern, 'advanced' civilization we  expect better.  We expect advancement, betterment.  We expect our leaders to do the right things, make positive decisions, the right decisions for the benefit of all of humankind. We expect thought, logic, and leadership. We expect reasonable and appropriate decision-making with positive goals in mind.  We do not expect to be thrust backwards by a century.  Case in point,  Canadians expected better than an environmental sell-out by our so-called 'political leaders' at the G7 summit. Based on those concepts, the recent G7 Summit was a failure. The environment humanity so desperately needs to survive, just to exist, has been sold out by the G7. Imagine that, world leaders conspiring and agreeing on an environmental sell-out. A joke. Canadians and other  world citizens were expecting buzz;  some intelligent decision-making.   The burgeoning, growing problem of  the unmitigated use of fossil fuels was not resolved; wow, get this, any genuine solution was simply delayed for another 85 years. The year 2100.  We must ask 'Why?' Shamefully, an environmental sell-out took place.  Prime Minister Harper is delighted, proudly smiling like a Cheshire cat at photo-ops because his friends will become richer. Logic suggests that instead, he should be ashamed of his new legacy, and the agreement, which is a bad joke. Mr. Harper,  Prime Minister of Canada and supposedly responsible,  as has been pointed out, will retire with a disproportionately fat pension,  while the   future of our one and only planet —and  the very existence of our struggling  future great- great-grandchildren have now been brought into question. The world, it's rapidly disappearing species,  and life itself  is already slowly suffocating, struggling and attempting  to survive in an inexcusably filthy,  ever-worsening, contaminated, depleted environment. That spiraling problem has  been ignored, falling  on deaf ears of politically-expedient, feel-good, opportunistic, but rather foolish  politicians at the G7. The exuberant declaration and  environmental sell-out  by G7 nations will cost humanity big time. Ask concerned scientists. Look at the facts.  Watch the weather.  Floods, tornadoes, drought,earthquakes. Suffocating smog.  Wait,  climate deniers, Harper and Co. don't believe or bother with fact, reality,  or science, so what else is new? That figures. The  blatant failure of  bad boy Harper and his Conservatives to take meaningful action not only magnify and exacerbate, but most specifically demonstrate, even  prove Canada's failure and irresponsible lack of  meaningful commitment to the reduction of greenhouse gases, pollution, and the burning of irreplaceable fossil fuels. All else, 'deadlines', discussion, whatever— is lies. Canada's reputation is in tatters.  Hollow words, lies, and exhilaration of the G7 'agreement'  at the prospect of "success"  to be had 85 years from now--almost a century— are childish hypocrisy, dishonest,  a deception, and a betrayal of mankind. Looking childishly smug at signing an "agreement"  to "phase out fossil fuels by  2100       ( let's say that again, imagine how ridiculous this is —a "solution" proposed for 85 years from now )  is an insult to thinking Canadians.  Sadly, it also guarantees an environmental catastrophe of unbelievable proportions. Harper's decision is irresponsible and unacceptable.  Canadians must wonder if we must explore why such incompetent decisions were made, and follow the money, oh, imagine....like the systemically-rotten senate, vague rules of performance,  ad nauseum Impeach Harper comes to mind, cut the puppet strings,  who the hell is really running this country, the international petroleum industry?    Is our government brazenlyh displaying incompetence?  The loyal reader is encouraged to. Carefully. Facts speak for themselves. Americans are also encouraged look at the G7 agreement.  Sadly, Mr. Stephen Harper knows all too well what the environmental consequences of this delay entail,  but he is clearly committed  to allow, encourage, and enable  another century of  petroleum profiteering, strip-mining and  exploiting the oil sands.   Bad boyHarper  doesn't wish to admit his decision also comes at an unbelievable and horrific cost to the environment —and to all inhabitants and other sentient life forms on this earth. The environmental damage already being caused by the Canadian oil sands is   unbelievable in scope, unacceptable and inexcusable. The  G7 environmental sell-off  "agreement" allowing another 85 years of  pollution by fossil fuels is even MORE sublime, and can in no way be justified,  considering clean technology exists NOW. Let us repeat that;  clean technology exists NOW. It is very clear Prime Minister Stephen Harper has demonstrated he no longer represents, —and seemingly no longer cares —or wishes —to represent the interests of Canadians, who want fossil fuels phased out now.  

The Political Cost of Harper's Environmental Sell-out

We say to Mr. Harper:  Naughty, naughty, naughty Stephen,    Shame on you.  Your legacy may have satisfied the greedy international petroleum industry and your rich friends,  but  coupled with the sell-off of Canada and betrayal of all Canadians, your environmental sell-out has precipitated the loss of  trust —and votes —of many millions of Canadians.  We now suggest you take responsibility for the ugly reality you have created.   Please resign. —If you believe in it, go live YOUR   legacy. For your retirement,  go up there and live in the barren, polluted environmental disaster, the millions of acres of stripped,  oily lands you have now so callously committed Canadians to suffer —for centuries to come.  Show Canadians how we are all wrong wanting our leaders to  care about the environment. Don't forget your cute little white HazMat suit, goggles, rubber gloves, rubber boots, and ventilator for the photo ops you'll need at your 'primary residence'. Canadians not only expected better—but deserve better —from 'leaders'. What do YOU think?   #   Is that Incoming I hear? 
Posted in Civilization, Economic issues, Environment, Ethics, Humanity, Major Issues, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Writing life: Playing with Writer’s Block

©2015 by Raymond Alexander Kukkee  

Let's Play with Blocks.

[caption id="attachment_3375" align="alignleft" width="150"] Writers Blocks
Writers Blocks[/caption]

Yes,  block(s) as in 'more than one'  because yes, there are more than one.  You have a pile directly before you.  Invisible. Not  the pile-up kind of wooden blocks little kids play with, letters printed on bright, coloured cubes, multi-coloured backgrounds. We humbly and perhaps numbly  pile those  up repetitively, the little ones giggling, and reveling in the empowerment of destruction, making castles fall down with outrageous laughter, enjoyment, a wondrous sense of accomplishment seeing our smiles.

Destruction of castles  we may have built so carefully, so endlessly, at times so painfully—is inevitable. It happens. Smile. Get used to it, Jack.

"Writer's block unreasonably prevents the reasonable assembly of words."

Wordsmiths tangle with writer's block in various forms.   We ponder, construct sentences, build paragraphs,  preview pages, even hold collections of  captive words in chapters for ransom at the point of a sharp pencil.

If piles of words work, Jack, they must stand tall and worthy and proud;   if they do not we may release them,  exiling them to dull, musty dictionaries.   We trade words thoughtfully,  and then wonder why.  We trash them,  experiment, or hit the delete key.  Jack be nimble, Jack be quick, before you change your mind.  Laugh raucously, go for coffee,  and  wonder why we didn't  order an expensive latté and  become plumbers instead.

Imagine. We could be turning on the tap, voila!  Water, ma'am, yes, now the pool shower works,  oh, lovely pool, by the way,  yes, and the bikini, I am blinded, you are a beautiful woman, ma'am—no,  alas, I cannot stay, I must not dally; duty calls, there are water pipes to be repaired at the  old orphanage —but alas,  writer's block unreasonably prevents the reasonable assembly of words.   Being  bears for punishment and reality, we have remained writers, so we start over, numbly rewrite, over,  over, and over; we must persist.

The trash can overflows, thought streaming, mind screaming,  the tap works, the bikini-clad nymph  objects tearfully to our parting, please come back after you rescue the waifs, my handsome plumber-man, your dinner can wait... as  the team spirit lags, disillusion swells, but we slog on.

Put them together,  Jack, the words, the 'what ifs',  no matter how long it takes; writer's block conspires like nameless, stony-faced three-dimensional chessmen to halt imagination and  word play; perhaps they delight in turning us into three-dimensional  Scrabblephobes with blank faces, blank spaces in every direction offering cobbled, unlikely words,  and tiny, annoying page numbers keeping score.  Motion ceases; writer's blocks prevent even the most diminutive  progress at times. We go screen-blind,cursor-numb  wordless, even  under the abated breath —and wonder why?

Challenging Writer's Block

We're going big time here, challenging writer's block, the bane of the writing universe, many variations of which affect all bloggers,  scribblers, poetic persons short storytellers, and writers of all genres. The block. 

What has it become, discovery of the most stubborn?  The muse leading a rebellion;  a refusal to cooperate with reluctant writers as creativity disappears on vacation to dally in sand, watch clouds, listen to pick-up-sticks chatter,  plant the garden, cut tall grass, and do the mundane, —the most mundane work possible, picking up stones, sticks, piling blocks.  Blocks. I blink.

It happens to everyone at one time or the other. Another angle. New. Better.        I see the blinking cursor, the blank screen, a pile of blocks, free of letters, words, sentences and paragraphs. Writer's blocks. Waiting to be filled in and re-piled.     I laugh.  Let the kid knock them down.   Writer's blocks are a joke. We persist.   Tomorrow is another day. You'll see.

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Is that Incoming I hear?

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Posted in Life, Reflections, Uncategorized, Writing Life | Tagged , , , , , , | 7 Comments