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in reply to AJ Sadauskas

I am always surprised at the outrage of somwone throws paint on some plasric protecting some oil on canvas in a museum or some flour on a rock at Stobehenge protein srobg tje acrual desriction of tje biosphere upon qhich all life deoends. The outrage... is deeply disturbing.

Blow up artworks that are some of the oldest on the planet tonexrract more fossil fuels or iron ore ? No big deal

As an old white man, I have no solutions, personally I think we should all fuck off and give it back, all we've done is fuck the country up conplelty... As I stare out my window in Tasmania at the sickening horror that is the bucolic countryside, cleared for farming cattle and dairy and hills cleared for plantation timber

in reply to AJ Sadauskas

it's vandalism perpetrated by governments. I saw this area before it was destroyed but was too young to understand it's significance. The peninsula should have been protected - the industry could have been located many other places.
in reply to gaz

And since it's fossil fuel, it should stay in the ground.

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in reply to AJ Sadauskas

It's "World Heritage" but the rest of the world isn't protective of it either.

I didn't even know about it. I don't know what I can do to help, but being aware is the first, essential, step, so thank you.

in reply to sunflowerinrain

The problem: normal people often don't know all global sites (even not their own ones), about the #UNESCO #WorldHeritage center, and even their list of #endangered world heritage. If it's not yet in the list, you can inform them directly : whc.unesco.org/en/danger/

But action is quite complicated: UNESCO acts with the political state party involved. So only pressure on the national politicians could help!
Australia is well-known for a bad lobbyism: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_He…

@aj

in reply to Petra van Cronenburg

The case above is especially difficult because Watt already changed regulations - that's a national problem, other countries can't influence national politics. It's not yet on the endangered list (at least I didn't find it), here are the Australian documents: whc.unesco.org/en/list/1709/do…

@aj

This entry was edited (2 months ago)
in reply to Petra van Cronenburg

I suspect many fedizens have friends and family in various countries and will pass along information, so people may have some influence beyond our place of birth and country of residence.

I have family (and friends) in Australia, and will spread the word.

in reply to Petra van Cronenburg

Sadly true - even those of us who are interested don't find it easy to get information about them.
in reply to sunflowerinrain

I work with cultural heritage in France and can only say: It's quite easy to find the informations of UNESCO etc. via internet.

But for acting, it's politics. Even a small museum is dependent on so many political groups: local, regional, national ones.

The responsables in Australia are well-known (politicians and LNG company). So protests can be adressed. The next is voting/elections.

@aj

in reply to AJ Sadauskas

Woodside's response is complete rubbish, what are they talking about? The research on the effects of acid emissions on Sydney's colonial sandstone buildings from was done in the early 1980s and the results implemented. The cure was expensive. (Pyrmont and White Bay power stations were shut down for one thing.) The science is now well-known, feasible and cheap to implement. Why is colonial worked-stone heritage worth protecting but (infinitely more valuable) Aboriginal worked-stone heritage not? Pure bloody racist double standards, that's what. What a bunch of hypocrites. “Not technically feasible” – that is complete and utter shite, a blatant lie.
BTW, the rock art in the picture is beautiful, but it is not Australian. Never mind.

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Unknown parent

Today is Orange Shirt Day in Canada, which is supposed to be a day of reflection and education about our devastating colonial history. I encourage people in central AB & SK to visit the Viking Ribstone petroglyphs today for some reflection and education. (Your presence also helps prevent vandalism...as does refraining from posting about the last remaining petroglyphs on X/Meta/tictoc/etc)

hermis.alberta.ca/ARHP/Details…

#OrangeShirtDay #AbPoli #SkPoli #CdnPoli