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danbloom

danbloom
Birthday
April 07
Bio
Danny Bloom is a global citizen who helped midwife, er, midhusband, Jim Laughter's new cli fi novel titled POLAR CITY RED, now for sale worldwide, google the title to find ordering info. In the distant future—some say the near future—North America, northern Asia and Europe will see millions of climate refugees from southern lands trekking northward, and the entire Lower 48 might be under threat from the devastating impacts of “climate chaos” —from rising sea levels to a scary scarcity of food, fuel and shelter. Polar City Red is set in an imagined Alaska in the year 2075. But it could just as well be Tokyo or Oslo or Berlin. Global warming is borderless, and so are our fears. “A thought experiment that might prod people out of their comfort zone on climate.” —New York Times “Planning a good retreat is always a good measure of generalship. The retreat will be toward the poles.” —New York Times “We cannot regard the future of the civilized world in the same way as we see our personal futures. The planet may have already passed the tipping point on global warming. Is it already too late? Are the well-intentioned preservation campaigns just feel-good window dressing?” —James Lovelock, CBE, FRS, author of Gaia: A New Look at Life on Earth (2000) “We’re seeing the collapse of the Arctic sea ice. This year (2011) alone, planet Earth lost an area of Arctic sea ice twice the size of British Columbia. The impact on the entire global climate system will be enormous—the Arctic sea ice is the canary in the coal mine, and the canary is almost dead.” —Dr. Michael Byers, Professor of Politics and International Law at the University of British Columbia

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Salon.com
FEBRUARY 10, 2012 7:02AM

'Baby in Womb' bumper sticker goes viral worldwide

Rate: 0 Flag

Baby in Womb

Remember those old "Baby on Board" signs placed on car windows and
bumper stickers? Sometimes they said "Baby in Car" and their message,
which went worldwide in over
35 languages, was to drive carefully and pay attention to the cars
around you, especially this car with a baby infant seated inside. Now
comes the "Baby in Womb" bumper
sticker, as an environmental and climate action protest targetting the
ridiculous and deadly amount of carbon dioxide emissions our car and
factory culture belch out each day, 24/7, day and night.

Rewind to 1984: The "Baby in Car" messages were usually placed on
square decals or horizontal bumper stickers and were intended, of
course, be placed either in the back window of an automobile or on the
rear fender to encourage safe driving. First marketed in September of
1984 by Safety 1st Corporation, the signs became popular, flourishing
worldwide
throughout the 1980s and 1990s. In some nations, the signs read
"Princess on board" or "Little Person on board."

The signs have entered the American lexicon. In 1993, an episode of
the Simpsons TV show titled "Homer's Barbershop Quartet" featured a
barbershop quartet tune called "Baby On Board". The song was written
by Homer Simpson in a flashback to 1985 when Marge bought a sign,
hoping it would stop people "intentionally ramming our car."

There's an urban legend which claims that the actual death of a baby
led to the creation of the signs.  The founder of Safety 1st, Michael
Lerner, claimed to have heard about similar signs in Europe, when in
fact, he entered into a partnership with Patricia and Helen Bradley of
Medford, Massachusetts, to market the signs. The Bradleys had been
trying to market the signs since Patricia brought them back from
Germany, where her husband was stationed. Lerner eventually bought
PHOB, the company set up by the Bradleys, for approximately
US$150,000, and changed the name to Safety 1st.

Someone else created a warning decal similar to the "Baby on board"
signs. The purpose of the sticker is to let people know that there is
a ''child with autism'' in the car who may not respond to emergency
personnel.

Now fast forward to 2012 and meet the artist who created the "Baby in
Womb" sign as a car decal targetting co2 emissions worldwide, which
may very well be putting
the future of the human species, let alone new-born babies, in great
peril. An artist in southern Taiwan, a woman named Huang Pei-chi, made
the sign as a window
and bumper sticker attention-getter and climate activist organizing tool.

"I just wanted to create something that might be useful for climate
activists and climate protest groups around the world," Huang, 35 and
the mother of three, said. "If
this sign can help people in the world focus better on what our carbon
dioxide emissions are doing to the future of this planet, and
humanity, then I will feel
I accomplished something. The decal is for sale and there is a
copyright, but all the money is being plowed back into climate protest
groups around the world. I
didn't make the sign to make money. I don't intend to sell the rights
to it for $150,000. It's free and available for anyone to copy and use
and distribute. It's my little
gift from Taiwan to the world."

Go little sign and find your world, before it is too late.

 

http://pcofftherails101.blogspot.com/2012/02/baby-in-womb-car-bumper-stick-and-rear.html

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