Maybe of interest.

Steve
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Mark Dubois
International Coordinator

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A CALL TO ACTION

We are at the threshold of a new millennium  -- faced with a rare
opportunity.

We invite you to join us in making Earth Day 2000 the beginning of a new
chapter in the environmental history of the Earth.

Human history is full of important accomplishments.  Our ancestors have
left awesome achievements, material and spiritual, for us to enjoy.

Yet we have also inherited enormous challenges.  For the first time in
history, humans have the power to alter the entire planet. We are changing
the climate, triggering an epidemic of extinctions, drilling holes through
the ozone layer, reproducing and consuming beyond the world's carrying
capacity, and maintaining an arsenal of weapons capable of causing more
destruction than an asteroid collision.

Now it is our turn to choose our legacy.  Working together, we can end the
world war we are winning against the planet and ourselves.  A vibrant,
healthy planet with flourishing human communities can be our gift to future
generations.

We invite you to begin organizing for the largest demonstration on the planet.

On April 22, 2000, the millennial Earth Day, hundreds of millions of people
will join in actions to create a sustainable global environment.  Earth Day
2000 will call for tangible results and far-reaching policies to protect
the environment. It will enlist a new generation of environmental
activists, building alliances that transcend the boundaries of countries,
continents, and cultures.  It will galvanize the sort of broad, deep
support that makes tough choices politically possible.

We cannot afford to waste time complaining, avoiding, denying, or fighting
each other.

Together, we can create a positive future.

Earth Day's Precedent

Earth Day began in the belief that people, working together, can accomplish
extraordinary things. Earth Day is unique in that it links citizen
activists around the world with each other while inspiring action on
personal, community, national, and international levels.

On the first Earth Day in 1970, 20 million citizens in the United States
came together to create a national environmental agenda. Within two years,
the country's main environmental agency had been created.  Important laws
to clean the air and water and to protect rare species had been adopted.

On Earth Day 1990, over 200 million people in 141 countries on every
continent participated in celebrations in their communities. The
mobilization of citizen groups that started with Earth Day 1990 empowered
citizens, linked non-governmental organizations (NGOs) globally, and
pressured heads of state to participate personally in the UN Earth Summit
in Rio de Janeiro.

Since 1990, Earth Day has been embraced by citizen groups the world over as
an international citizens' day.  In Canada, Japan, France, and many other
countries, national offices coordinate Earth Day activities.  In Eastern
Europe, the Regional Environment Center reports that most of its 2300
affiliates organize yearly for Earth Day.  We look forward to connecting
with those groups who have already been using Earth Day as an organizing
tool, and with those who are ready to begin doing so.

Earth Day Celebrations and Actions

Earth Day is celebrated in diverse ways.  In 1990, Earth Day ignited
environmental imaginations in France, where participants formed a 500-mile
human chain along the Loire River, stretching across the country, to honor
one of Europe's last clean rivers.  In Asia, an international team of
mountain climbers from China, the Soviet Union and the U.S. picked up the
more than two tons of trash left on Mount Everest by earlier expeditions.
Five thousand Italians staged a roadway lie-down to protest car fumes.  In
Haiti, Earth Day was officially declared a National Holiday.  In Jordan,
10,000 students joined a national cleanup.  In Tokyo Bay, 35,000 Japanese
environmentalists gathered on Dream Island, an island made of garbage, to
set up a temporary recycling center.  To learn more about Earth Day in 1990
and years since, see http://www.sdearthtimes.com/edn/calendar.

Join Earth Day 2000

Earth Day 2000, the 30th anniversary of Earth Day, will use grassroots
organizing and cutting-edge technology to educate, empower, and inspire
actions that protect the public interest.

Earth Day will create global networks that connect activists together.  It
will prod organizations to think more ambitiously about the immensity and
urgency of their work.

Connect your efforts with those of other activists to create a global force
for change.

Join Earth Day 2000.


Please return the following important contact information so we can
collaborate

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Earth Day 1999 Plans


Earth Day 2000 Plans


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