Duncan Macleod on the Gold Coast

We Can Be Exploring Be Attitudes

Wednesday, August 23rd, 2006

Dave Andrews, author of Christianarchy, and a founding member of The Waiters Union, has teamed up with friends around the world to start a web site, www.wecan.be

We Can Be Header

The site links people up with the beatitudes taught by Jesus in his sermon on the mount, helping restore a lifestyle centred around what Jesus lived and evoked in others.

  1. I will identify with the poor ‘in spirit’.
  2. I will grieve over injustice in the world.
  3. I will get angry, but never get aggressive.
  4. I will seek to do justice, even to my enemies.
  5. I will extend compassion to all those in need.
  6. I will act with integrity, not for the publicity.
  7. I will work for peace in the midst of violence.
  8. I will suffer myself, rather than inflict suffering.

The domain was donated by a Belgian resident who had already registered the name and was waiting for a good use for it.

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Pitman says Mary River Dam a Human Disaster

Thursday, June 15th, 2006

This last week four of my Uniting Church colleagues have been exploring the human impact of the Queensland Government’s decision to flood the Mary River for Brisbane’s water supply. The Mary River is inland from the Sunshine Coast, south of Gympie.

Last week David Pitman (Queensland Moderator) and Heather den Houting (Synod Social Justice Advocate) visited the Mary Valley with David Fanning, Presbytery minister and Iain Watt, local minister. They met with about 60 people in the Imbil Uniting Church Hall and the following day visited the Mary Dam Information Centre set up at Kandanga, and several properties that will be inundated or become unusable if the dam project proceeds.

Here’s what David had to say on his return.

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David PitmanIn all, about 850 homes and/or farming properties will be resumed to make way for the dam. However, that is only the beginning of the impact this project will have on the local community and beyond.

Let me briefly summarise the issues as I now understand them.

For some time now, the Government has had on its agenda the construction of a new dam on Amamoor Creek and the raising of the existing dam at Borumba to increase its capacity. The land required for these projects has already been acquired and their implementation would have minimal impact on the community. While some people are opposed to any further dam construction, most of the residents in the Valley have long since adjusted to the possibility of these projects and are willing to accept them.

However, while the possibility of a dam at Traveston on the Mary River has been investigated and rejected on two previous occasions, there has been no hint that the Government was considering this option yet again. Consequently, the announcement regarding the construction of a mega dam at Traveston, coming as it did without prior knowledge or consultation, caused shock and dismay in the community.

It is not really possible to appreciate the depth of pain and trauma this announcement has caused without personal contact with those most directly affected. The Premier, whose public statements have been particularly insensitive and uncaring, did fly over the region a few weeks ago, but has chosen not to visit the area or meet with local residents.

Telephone help-lines that have been set up are a joke! People are being asked to put their concerns in writing and are waiting for up to three weeks for a response. Financial compensation is being promised but the emotional pain and distress being experienced remains ignored and unaddressed.

Some of these families have been on the land in this area for more than 100 years. Others have moved there just recently, expecting to spend the last years of their lives in peaceful retirement in a lovely rural environment. Business people face financial ruin. Unemployment will increase greatly as farms and businesses are forced to close.

Even if it was decided right now not to proceed with the dam the adverse impact on the community has already been very significant.

Now all of this has happened while the current process of investigation into the suitability of the site is still in its early stages. Notwithstanding the commitment by the Government to undertake thorough geological research, along with environmental and community impact studies, the Premier has repeatedly declared that the dam must and will be built! I would like the Premier to explain the basis on which he can commit to this project before any such significant investigation has taken place, and in the absence of any prior consultation with those most directly and adversely affected. I find his attitude and the intention both mystifying and irresponsible.

Read the rest of David’s post at Journey Online.

Mary River Catchment Map

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Christians connect with Earth Day

Tuesday, April 18th, 2006

Tom and Christine Sine’s Seed Sampler email this last week gives some online hints on how to connect in with Earth Day.

Part six of the BBC Environmental Report: Climate Change: Uncharted Waters?

NPR Terry Gross interview of Tim Flannery, Australian scientist and author of Weather Makers.

Restoring Eden is about a conversation and a community that lives out the biblical mandate to “speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves” (Proverbs 31:8) as advocates for natural habitats, wild species and indigenous subsistance cultures.

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