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Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Day 390- • For The Dreamers •



These quotes below perfectly sum up how I feel.  I can't wait until there are no more wars, killing of animals and people unnecessarily, and weapons.

I can never stop dreaming.  


~ • ~ • ~ • ~



Imagine there's no heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today...

Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace...

You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one

Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world...

You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one
~John Lennon 
"Imagine"


~ • ~ • ~ • ~


Someday we'll find it, the rainbow connection.
The lovers, the dreamers and me. 
~The Muppets
"Rainbow Connection"






Go make a difference!


Friday, February 14, 2014

Day 389- Happy Valentine's Day From The Eles!

Happy Valentine's day!  Let's show our love to the world!!!

(CNN) -- The African elephant, one of the world's most majestic animals, is in danger. In the early 1900s, 5 million elephants roamed the African continent. Then the ivory trade drove them to the brink of extinction, with 90% of African elephants killed for the ivory in their tusks.
In 1989, the world reacted, imposing a ban on the international trade in ivory passed by the U.N. Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. Elephant populations stabilized. But today, driven by growing demand for ivory ornaments and carvings in Asia, particularly in China, elephant poaching has returned with a vengeance.
Rob Portman
Rob Portman
The largest slaughter in one year since the 1989 ban was passed happened in 2012, with up to 35,000 elephants killed. This adds up to nearly 100 a day. Tens of thousands are killed every year. Without action, the day may come when this magnificent creature is known only in history books.
Estimates say if elephants continue to be slaughtered at today's rates, the creatures could be extinct in a decade.Not only do elephants die. The wildlife rangers who try to protect them from poachers are being killed.
The illicit trade in ivory -- "white gold" -- is a billion dollar industry, and because it is illegal, it tends to attract some very bad actors. It is blood ivory: Al-Shabaab, a wing of al Qaeda based in Africa that is responsible for continued instability in Somalia, is known to finance its operations through the poaching of elephants. Al-Shabaab raises an estimated $600,000 a month through the ivory trade. The Lord's Resistance Army, another terrorist group infamous for forcing children to fight in its ranks, also engages in poaching and trafficking of elephant ivory.
Al-Shabaab raises an estimated $600,000 a month through the ivory trade.Rob Portman
Stopping the ivory trade has become not only a matter of conservation but one of national security and international stability.
Last year, the United Nations issued a report warning that elephant poaching is the worst it has been in a decade, while ivory seizures are at their highest levels since 1989. Last summer, President Barack Obama issued an executive order recognizing that the poaching of protected species and the illicit trade in ivory has become an international crisis that the United States must take a leading role in combating.
Saving elephants and other threatened species is a cause that cuts across partisan lines and international boundaries. We all have a part to play.
It starts in our personal lives.
The ivory trade prospers because there is a demand for luxury goods fashioned from it. As consumers, we should never buy products made with ivory and should encourage others to be mindful that their purchases are not illegally sourced through trafficking. And we should continue to shine a spotlight on the problem of illegal poaching and the threat it poses to African elephants and other species.


There are actions our government can take, as well. As co-chairman of the U.S. Senate International Conservation Caucus, I have worked with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to educate members of Congress on these ongoing problems and introduce legislation that authorizes proven conservation programs and directs resources to the international effort to dismantle the machinery of illegal poaching.

The Conservation Reform Act is part of this effort. If passed, it would streamline and increase the effectiveness of our existing international conservation efforts. I am also working to reauthorize the Saving Vanishing Species Stamp, which raises funds for the protection of threatened animals and their habitat at no cost to the U.S. taxpayer.
Over the years, we have watched as the actions of a few shortsighted, malicious and greedy people have nearly destroyed whole species. If we act now, we can make sure that the African elephant doesn't become another sad entry on a long list of animals we can never bring back.
~ Rob Portman
CNN News
February 8, 2014


Go make a difference!

Friday, February 7, 2014

Day 387- Welcome to Russia


Who is as excited as me for the olympics!?!  

As we can gather as a globe for sport, surely we can gather as a planet committed to preservation of our plants and animals!





Go make a difference!

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Day 386- Words of Wisdom 2.0

Believe in yourself, and the rest will fall into place. Have faith in your own abilities, work hard, and there is nothing you cannot accomplish.
~Brad Henry
•~•~•~•
Enough said. 

Hope everybody has a great Friday! 



Go make a difference! 

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Day 385- Words of Wisdom


"If you can't fly, then run. If you can't run, then walk.  If you can't walk, then crawl.  But whatever you do, you have to keep moving forward."


~Martin Luther King, Jr.



The world would have been so different if Martin Luther King, Jr. didn't stand up for what he believed in.  It's different times now, but you still never know the impact you could make!


(As some of my readers know, I love coming across inspiring quotes.  I had to share this one with everybody as it's one of my favorites!)


Go make a difference!

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Day 384- Send 'Em Off To Hawaii!

Hello all!  I recieved this email today and I wanted to pass the information on to all of my readers! I encourage you all to send a letter to Hawaii!!!


DEAR ADVOCATES - PLEASE HELP HAWAII END THE IVORY TRADE!


"Hawaii, as the 2nd largest retailer of ivory in the nation, has the chance to protect elephants from their continued massacre for the blood ivory trade! Send a polite email to EDBtestimony@capitol.hawaii.gov and ask the Committee to PLEASE SUPPORT HB2183. This is a global crisis and Hawaii can take the national lead in protecting elephants!" - HSUS

We have some fantastic news to share with you, but it also came with an urgent request! Last night, the HSUS (Humane Society of the United States) learned that their Hawaii bill ending ivory sales will be heard in a committee hearing this coming Tuesday (Feb 4)! That gives us all less than three days to muster as much support as possible for this important bill.

HB2183 would end the import, sale, offer to sell, or possession with intent to sell any ivory product. It will be heard by the House Committee on Economic Development & Business on Feb 4. Here is the link to the bill text: http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov/session2014/Bills/HB2183_.pdf

PLEASE email the committee and URGE the support of State Bill: HB2183. We have less than 3 days to act, the bill will be heard in committee on the 4th! Everyone can write/email. This is an International Effort!

Please copy and paste the sample letter below and email it to the following:

EDBtestimony@capitol.hawaii.gov
reptsuji@capitol.hawaii.gov
repward@capitol.hawaii.gov
reprhoads@capitol.hawaii.gov


...and ask to support an end of the ivory trade in Hawaii through supporting HB2183



If you have questions, please write:
march.for.elephants@gmail.com (San Francisco)
OR
elephantsdc@gmail.com (DC)

Warmly, 
March for Elephants San Francisco

~ SAMPLE LETTER BELOW ~

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dear Sirs, 
 
Greetings! I hope this finds you well.

PLEASE SUPPORT HB2183! Ivory is (primarily) the outcome of poaching. The unmitigated and relentless poaching of African elephants. It is well established that poaching (also) sponsors terrorism. I am urging your committee to encourage enforcing an end to the trade and importation of ivory (whether raw or vanity) in and to the state of Hawaii. 

It is with great pride and much aloha that I support this effort by the HSUS to end the ivory trade in the Aloha State, unfortunately a "top" ivory market in the USA, possibly next only to New York and perhaps ahead of San Francisco.

I write on behalf of all victims, human and animal alike, of the horrific poaching crisis in Africa. Poaching sponsors terrorism, kills 35,000+ elephants each year, 100 a day and an astounding 1 every fifteen minutes; The elephant, a keystone species and Earth’s grandest terrestrial herbivore is slated for extinction in the wilds of Africa within 10 years. Amongst the human victims of poaching are the 1000+ rangers who were murdered in the line of duty in the past 10 years alone. 
 
It is also well established that the killing of critically endangered wild animals and the sale of their body parts is funding terrorism - which includes the recent Westgate mall attack and the killing of innocent human victims in Nairobi, Kenya. 

A compassionate, progressive and dynamic state, a state of by and for the people, I am confident the Aloha state will do the right thing by Earth's last elephants, the people of the continent of Africa, the people of the world and the people of Hawaii. 
 
As global citizens, as the gateway to the east, the Aloha state and the USA must take on a strong and unequivocal leadership role to end the ivory trade immediately. 

I thank you for your time and efforts and thank the HSUS for its initiative on this most critical issue. 

Be well and Mahalo nui loa.

Warmly.
Your name
Your Country etc.



Go make a difference!