SD Rallies on Friday January 31. 2014 - International Day of Action against Trans-Pacific Partnership

San Diego On Friday, January 31stSan Diego to Rally Against theTrans-Pacific Partnership in Continent-Wide Day of Action:  Over 40 Cities Say NO More NAFTAs! Insolidarity with communities across North America and the world, San Diegans will participate in an Intercontinental Day of Action against the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), and the fast-track legislation that would rush the deal through Congress without meaningful debate. This action coincides with a conference in Mexico City reviewing the catastrophic impact of 20 years ofNAFTA on Mexico, and emphasizing the need for a radically new trade model for the continent and the world.  Congress members Susan Davis and Darrell Issa have not joined their San Diego delegation colleagues Duncan Hunter, Scott Peters and Juan Vargas in opposing FastTracking the TPP through Congress.

This Rally calls upon ALL of our San Diego County House Delegation to join with 178 of their colleagues from BOTH PARTIES who publicly oppose Fast Tracking, and Vote NO on “Fast Track” Trade Promotion Authority or any other mechanism that continues to exclude Congress from its constitutional role in the formative stages of trade agreements and throughout negotiating and approval processes. 

WHAT:    Rally for Congress to Vote NO! On Fast Track for the TPP
WHEN:   Friday, January 31, 2014, 11:30a-1p PST
WHERE:  Infront of San Diego Federal Building-Courthouse, 880 Front Street             

January 2014 marks the twentieth anniversary of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), a pact that has had devastating consequences for working families,small farmers, indigenous people, small business, and the environment in all three countries. The effects of NAFTA’s extreme investor “rights” chapter which lets corporations sue governments for public policies they don’t like, has been felt far beyond the continent since these “rights” have become a common feature of next-generation trade deals. The pending TPP expands this pro-corporate regime across this hemisphere and the Pacific Ocean. Leaked texts prove the TPPis another corporate bill of rights that threatens to: Destroy livelihoods and accelerate the global race to the bottom in wages and working conditions:

  • Further commodify agriculture, trample food sovereignty, hurt small farmers and contribute to forced migration
  • Enable new corporate attacks on democratically-enacted environmental and consumer protections
  • Undermine global economic stability by prohibiting effective regulation of financial markets
  • Reduce access to life-saving generic medications, increase the costs of prescriptions, and restrict freedom on the Internet                   

We will have several speakers, starting around Noon, including: Rabbi Laurie Coskey, Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice of San Diego County
Al Shur, retired Business Manager of International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Local 569, and former VP/Executive Council member of the California Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO
Virginia Franco of the San Diego Maquiladora Workers Solidarity Network[1]
Rob Nathoff, Policy Analyst with the Center on Policy Initiatives
Jean Costa, representing the San Diego Chapter of the Sierra Club
Christina Imhoof, TPP Lead for Women Occupy San Diego
 
Women Occupy San Diego's popular choral group, the Occupellas, will perform after the speakers.  WOSD member and poet, Jeeni Criszenzodel Rio, will also perform.  BilingualEnglish/Spanish speaker. 

International Association of Amusement Parks & Attractions (IAAPA): SEA WORLD'S CAPTIVITY KILLS!

WHAT: Light Brigade for IAAPA Evening Reception at Sea World
WHEN: Tuesday, January 28, 2014, 6-7p PST
WHERE: Sea World Drive at Sea World Way (signalized intersection)

The International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions (IAAPA) bills itself as “the largest international trade association for permanently situated amusement facilities worldwide and is dedicated to the preservation and prosperity of the amusement industry.” From January 26-31, 2014, it is hosting with its academic partner, the L. Robert Payne School of Hospitality Management at San Diego State University (SDSU), an Executive Education program “tailored to meet the needs of today’s senior-level leaders in the worldwide attractions industry. The program will focus on one central theme: making you and your business more successful.”1 Tuesday evening, January 28, features an “Evening reception at Sea World”.

The San Diego Light Brigade will be on hand to shine the light on how SeaWorld prospers: We will hold Lighted Letters along Sea World Drive spelling out “CAPTIVITY KILLS.”

Sea World's prominence in the International Association of AMUSEMENT PARKS AND ATTRACTIONS and this Executive Education program, with a former Sea World California executive as one of the instructors, gives the lie to Sea World's protestations that its captivity of intelligent marine mammals with sophisticated family and social networks, including orcas and dolphins, is based in its commitment to wildlife conservation and public education. Sea World is dedicated to its own preservation and prosperity as an amusement industry leader. As reported by the Ocean Preservation Society:2

  • SeaWorld Entertainment claims $1.5 billion in annual revenue, yet has spent only $9 million on conservation in the past decade – or just 0.0006 of this corporation's net revenue going into research and conservation annually. For every $100 made by a Sea World park, less than 1 cent is put into research benefiting wildlife.
  • More orcas have died under Sea World's care than are currently alive in all of its parks. A growing body of scientific evidence shows that orcas die an early death in captivity, with an annual mortality rate at least 3x higher than in the wild. The few animals in Sea World's collection who have lived closer to their natural average life expectancy are featured as successes for the captivity industry. Instead they should be seen as extraordinary survivors.
  • As Jacques Cousteau famously observed: there is as much educational benefit in studying dolphins and whales in captivity as there is in observing prisoners in solitary confinement. Sea World has published very few scientific papers, and what it has contributed was already learned some time ago. Sea World contributes almost no information today that addresses the protection of wild marine mammals such as orcas and dolphins.

###
1 http://www.iaapa.org/events-education/events/iaapa-institutes/executive-education.
2http://www.opsociety.org/PressReleases/SeaWorldOpenLetterRebuttal-OPS.pdf

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