rebel-nana2.bsky.social
@rebel-nana2.bsky.social
The Amazon's powerful ability to regulate climate is under threat

Illegal mining and industrial-scale agriculture are cutting and burning down vast areas of forests for a quick profit.

Add your name to demand global leaders #RespectTheAmazon act.gp/4c12sje
Respect the Amazon - Greenpeace International
Add your name today to demand global leaders #RespectTheAmazon and protect its forests, wildlife and its people.
act.gp
November 27, 2025 at 1:03 PM
Reposted
🔥 10 Interesting Facts About Art Nouveau
👉 patreon.com/go4know

🔥 Get prompts, styles & tutorials. Learn how to create Midjourney images/videos for FREE!
👉 Join me: patreon.com/ai_art_tutor...

#ai #aiart #midjourney #meta #photo #photography #artnouveau #architecture #design #nature #art
November 21, 2025 at 6:30 AM
Reposted
So much for "Canada is back!".
🇨🇦 now seen as a global pariah state when it comes to climate action.
Canada Receives Fossil of the Day Award at COP30 Climate Summit www.theenergymix.com/canada-recei...
Canada Receives Fossil of the Day Award at COP30 Climate Summit
Canada received Tuesday’s Fossil of the Day award at the COP30 climate summit in Belém, Brazil. The award, bestowed by Climate Action Network International, recognizes the country deemed to have done ...
www.theenergymix.com
November 20, 2025 at 5:55 PM
www.cbc.ca/news/health/...
Ultra-processed foods engineered for overconsumption. High in bad fats, calories, salt - drive cravings
Experts call ultra-processed foods a threat to public health. Why can't Canadians stop eating them? | CBC News
Researchers have linked ultra-processed foods to chronic diseases like obesity, Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. But helping Canadians make healthier choices comes with obstacles, experts ...
www.cbc.ca
November 20, 2025 at 2:00 PM
These caribou need urgent action to prevent extinction. To give them the best chance at survival, Minister Parmar must stop approving old growth logging in caribou habitat. Add your name now.

act.stand.earth/page/84645/p...
Tell Minister Parmar to protect caribou by putting old growth forests immediately off limits to logging
These caribou need urgent action to prevent extinction. To give them the best chance at survival, Minister Parmar must stop approving old growth logging in caribou habitat. Add your name now.
act.stand.earth
November 19, 2025 at 9:40 PM
Reposted
Here's how we propose to eliminate seniors' poverty in Canada and still have money left over to help younger generations with housing, tuition, child care and the climate crisis. Join us in advocating for this fix to OAS: action.gensqueeze.ca/fix_oas #cdnpoli
November 18, 2025 at 4:00 PM
www.cbc.ca/radio/the-do...
Dermatologist Dr. Julia Carroll recommends her patients use three core categories of skin-care products: cleansers, moisturizers and sunscreen.
- recommends that people avoid makeup that contains fragrance.
Canadians spend billions on cosmetics each year, but dermatologists say only a fraction of products are needed | CBC Radio
Dermatologists agree that sunscreen, face wash and moisturizer are the three most useful products most people can buy, and suggest that consumers should be skeptical of products claiming to offer resu...
www.cbc.ca
November 18, 2025 at 1:32 PM
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...
Sea wolves: so smart! Researchers have captured video footage of wild wolves in British Columbia pulling crab traps out of the sea by their lines to eat the bait inside, in the first evidence of possible tool use by the animals.
B.C. wolves use line to pull up crab traps in first possible tool use by species | CBC News
Within a day of the cameras being set up in the Heiltsuk First Nation last year, researchers  captured footage of a sea wolf emerging from the water with a buoy hanging from its mouth. The footage the...
www.cbc.ca
November 18, 2025 at 1:23 PM
In 1990s, “Native extremism” was categorized under the umbrella of “domestic terrorism” or “domestic extremism,” one of CSIS’s four broad categories of “terrorist groupings.”

- a lot of this language itself is racist. It's highly colonial,”
How investigating Indigenous activists became a CSIS priority for at least a decade | CBC News
Canada's spies subjected Indigenous activists to a series of “Native extremism” investigations for at least a decade beginning in 1988, in what internal documents show was a countrywide surveillance p...
www.cbc.ca
November 18, 2025 at 1:17 PM
Reposted
It's not just ambition on climate action that's being run down, but nature.

Planet Earth is in the fight of its life and, on balance, those of us who are its allies are losing.

It's our duty to work out why, and act on it.
share.google/N0QU31GX4Znw...
Conservation projects abandoned as rich countries retreat from climate fight | The Observer
share.google
November 15, 2025 at 8:44 AM
Reposted
$170,000 a minute: why Saudi Arabia is the biggest blocker of climate action
$170,000 a minute: why Saudi Arabia is the biggest blocker of climate action
Desert kingdom depends on oil dollars but its people already face a climate ‘at the verge of livability’. What’s going on?
www.theguardian.com
November 15, 2025 at 6:32 PM
The top 1% capture more wealth than 99% of the world. A wealth tax on the richest 0.5% of Canadians would allow $30 billion in gains/yr, while supporting tax cuts to middle- and low-income workers and raising money for public goods. #NoMoreBillionaires #TaxTheRich act.gp/4qNIIXs
Tax the super-rich
Sign the petition to say no to billionaires and demand a wealth tax on the super-rich.
act.gp
November 14, 2025 at 7:20 PM
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...
Inequality
“They (Inuit) were forced into negotiation using the laws of non-Native people that they never dealt with ... but they were already [disadvantaged] in terms of how they were going to negotiate, because it should have been on an equal basis, which it wasn't.”
Different nations, different outcomes for Cree and Inuit signatories of James Bay Agreement | CBC News
Fifty years after its signing, Cree and Inuit communities wonder whether the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement has lived up to its promises.
www.cbc.ca
November 13, 2025 at 3:38 PM
www.cbc.ca/news/indigen...
According to Canada, at least 3,000 First Nations members enlisted during the Second World War and an unknown number of Inuit and Métis soldiers, though the numbers are thought to be higher.

“Even though they weren't considered Canadian citizens, they still fought."
How a tight-knit Mi'kmaw community honours its veterans for Remembrance Day | CBC News
Eel River Bar First Nation, a small Mi'kmaw community in northern New Brunswick honours its veterans by hanging banners each year.
www.cbc.ca
November 13, 2025 at 3:30 PM
www.cbc.ca/news/canada/...
The Cree Nation of Chisasibi, home to about 5,000 people, is the largest community in Eeyou Istchee. Chisasibi is home to eight of the 11 Hydro-Québec dams and according to House, made the greatest sacrifices to support the rest of the Cree Nation.
Cree gather in Chisasibi to mark 50 years of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement | CBC News
Hundreds of Cree from across Eeyou Istchee gathered on Tuesday in Chisasibi, Que. — the largest Cree community — to reflect on 50 years since the signing of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement...
www.cbc.ca
November 13, 2025 at 3:28 PM