Monthly Archives: November 2014

Tell your friends about Britain’s greenest energy and we’ll send you both £50 of vouc hers

One way to combat the frackers!

Begin forwarded message:

From: Ecotricity <home>

Subject: Tell your friends about Britain’s greenest energy and we’ll send you both £50 of vouchers

Date: 5 November 2014 10:30:11 GMT

Can’t see the email? View it in your browser
Dear Mr Andrew Chyba,

As an Ecotricity customer benefiting from our 100% Green Electricity, award-winning customer service and stable, ethical pricing we thought you might like to know about our latest refer-a-friend offer.

We know our customers are our biggest fans and the best people to promote what we do. It’s a simple truth that the more people that join us, the more we can do. We call this People:Power.

Simply invite your friends to join us using your unique code below. You will both then receive vouchers worth £50 to spend at Ecotopia – when they switch their energy supply to us.

There have never been so many good reasons to join Ecotricity:

  • One simple 100% Green Electricity tariff
  • Britain’s Greenest Gas with a ‘frack-free’ promise
  • Stable & Ethical pricing (we haven’t increased our prices since January 2013 and you’ll always receive our latest, best price – however you pay your bill)
  • Award winning Customer Service voted #1 in the 2014 Which? energy company survey of consumer satisfaction

As always, we take the money our customers spend on their energy bills and use it to build new sources of green energy – turning ‘Bills into Mills’.

Invite a friend to join Ecotricity and, when they sign up, you’ll each receive vouchers worth £50 to spend at Ecotopia* as a thank you.

Three ways to invite a friend:

email_smileys.png Forward this email to your friend.
email_smileys.png Pass on your unique invitation code, shown below, and tell your friend to quote it when they switch to Ecotricity either online or on the phone.

Your invitation code

RAFE-F4J1G
email_smileys.png Or share your invite on Twitter or Facebook!

Facebook icon Share this offer with friends
Tweet this offer
Mr Andrew Chyba thinks you deserve more from your energy supplier.

Why join Ecotricity?

email_smileys.png The satisfaction of seeing your energy bills used to create new sources of green energy.
email_smileys.png It costs less to be with us than the standard Big Six tariff in your region, for the average customer.
email_smileys.png Great customer service – the best you’ll find, in fact.

We’ll send you (and the friend who referred you to us) vouchers worth £50 to spend at Ecotopia when you join us.

To find out more, simply call our Welcome Team on 08000 302 302 or visit us online.
find_out_more.png

* Terms & Conditions apply. View the full terms and conditions here.

Ecotricity - Turning bills into windmills
We’d love to hear from you, contact us with your questions & comments. And of course you can unsubscribe.

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greenleftdiscuss My journey from Christianity to Humanism

A lot of people forget that Peter Tatchell has been a member of the Green Party for quite a few years now. HE keeps a relatively low profile within the Party (which I feel is a pity) but continues to devote immense amounts of time, effort and integrity campaigning for many causes.

I flag this article up because it is a journey I can relate to in many ways. Andy Chyba.

My journey from Christianity to Humanism

How I made the transition from dogma & superstition to rationalism

By Peter Tatchell, Director, Peter Tatchell Foundation

Published in Humanism Ireland, November-December 2014, under the title: My Journey from superstition to rationalism

Organised religion is the world’s greatest fount of obscurantism, prejudice, superstition and oppression. It has caused misery to billions of people for millennia, and continues to do so in many countries. So how come I was once in thrall to it?

Nowadays, I am a human rights activist motivated by love and compassion for other people. I do evidence-based campaigning, based on humanitarian and rational values.

But I once had a very different perspective. Indeed, I grew up in a devout evangelical Christian family in Melbourne, Australia, in the 1950s and ’60s. My mother and stepfather (with whom I spent most of my childhood) were prim and proper working class parents, with very conservative views on everything. The Bible, every word of it, was deemed to be the actual and definitive word of God. Their Christianity was largely devoid of social conscience, more Old Testament than New. It was all about personal salvation.

According to our church, some of the worst sins were swearing, drinking alcohol, smoking, dancing, sex outside of marriage, communism, belief in evolution, not praying and failing to go to church every Sunday. All my extended family was of the same persuasion. Naturally, I also embraced God.

But in secondary school, aged 13, I began to think for myself. I remember a rather smug religious education teacher who one day gave us a lesson in faith. He argued that when we switch on a light we don’t think about it; we have faith that the room will light up. He suggested that faith in the power of God was the same as faith in the power of electricity to turn on a light.

Bad analogy, I thought. What causes a light to go on when one flicks the switch is not faith; it

is man-made electricity and wiring – and this can be demonstrated by empirical evidence. The existence of God cannot. This set my mind thinking sceptical thoughts.

This nascent doubt was not, however, strong enough to stop me, at the age of 16,

from becoming a Sunday school teacher to six year olds. Being of an artistic persuasion, I

made colourful cardboard tableaux of Biblical stories. The children loved it. My classes

were popular and well attended.

The first serious cracks in my faith had begun to appear the previous year, 1967, when

an escaped convict, Ronald Ryan, was hanged for a murder he almost certainly did not commit. At age 15, I worked out that the trajectory of the bullet through the dead man’s body meant that it would be virtually impossible for Ryan to have fired the fatal shot. Despite this contrary evidence, he was executed anyway. This not only shattered my confidence in the police, courts and government, it also got me thinking about my faith.

According to St Paul (The Bible, Romans 13:1-2), all governments and authorities are ordained by God. To oppose them is to oppose God. But why would God, I asked myself, ordain a government that allowed an apparent injustice, such as Ryan’s execution? If he did ordain it, did God deserve respect? And what about other excesses by tyrannical governments? Did God really ordain the Nazi regime? Stalin’s Soviet Union? Apartheid? And closer to home, the 19th century British colonial administration which decimated, by intent or neglect, the Aboriginal peoples of Australia?

I began to develop my own version of liberation theology, long before I had ever heard

the phrase. During the 1960s, the nightly TV news was dominated by footage of the black civil rights struggle, led by the Baptist pastor, Martin Luther King Jr. His faith was not mere pious words; he put Christian values into action.

This is what Christianity should be about, I concluded. Accordingly, at 14, I left my parents’

Pentecostal church and started going to the local Baptist church instead. Alas, it was

not what I expected – not even a quarter as radical as Martin Luther King’s Baptist social

conscience. A huge disappointment.

Undeterred, I began to articulate my own revolutionary Christian gospel of “Jesus

Christ the Liberator”, based on ideas in the Sermon on the Mount and the parable of the

Good Samaritan.

This soon led me into Christian-inspired activism for Aboriginal rights, as well as against the death penalty, apartheid, the draft and the Vietnam War. I linked up with members of the radical Student Christian Movement. In 1970, aged 18, I initiated Christians for Peace, an inter-denominational anti-war organisation which organised a spectacular candlelit march through Melbourne, calling for the withdrawal of Australian and US troops from Vietnam.

At the age of 17, I had realised I was gay. From the first time I had sex with a man I felt

emotionally and sexually fulfilled, without any shame at all. This positive experience overwhelmed all the years of anti-gay religious dogma that had been pummelled into me.

Amazingly, I never experienced a moment’s doubt or guilt. I reasoned: how could something so wonderful and mutually fulfilling be wrong? Instantly, I accepted my sexuality and was determined to do my bit to help end the persecution of lesbian and gay people.

By the time I turned 20, rationality finally triumphed over superstition and dogma. I didn’t need God anymore. I was intelligent, confident and mature enough to live without the security blanket of religion and its theological account of human life and the universe.

Accordingly, I renounced religion and embraced reason, science and an ethics based on love and compassion. I concluded: we don’t need God to tell us what is right and wrong. We humans are quite capable of figuring it out for ourselves. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is proof of this. It’s not God-given dogma and intolerance, but a fine example of high moral values, without religion. Bravo!

Peter Tatchell is Director of the London-based Peter Tatchell Foundation. To find out more and to receive his campaign e-bulletins click on Join Us via: www.PeterTatchellFoundation.org

Sustainable Wales Ethical Christmas Feast Date

Hi EveryoneThe date is friday 12th December at The Olive Tree, in Pyle Garden Centre http://www.thepylegardencentre.co.uk/olive-tree-cafe
Its a new restaurant – looks good and they are preparing a local and fair trade menu for us now . There will be some entertainment as well. Will send on menu later.
I look forward to seeing you all.
best
M
Margaret Minhinnick
Director
Sustainable Wales Cymru Gynhaliol
4/5 James St.
Porthcawl
Bridgend
CF36 3BG
01656 783962

http://www.sustainablewales.org.uk/

Donate

Sustainable Wales is an environmental charity. Committed to sustainable development, we focus on society, economy, jobs, creativity and the arts and their inter-connection with the natural world.

Bridgend Green Party news and next meeting agenda

Dear Members and Supporters of Bridgend Green Party,

What exciting and interesting times are upon us!

In line with the rest of the country, we have been experiencing the ‘Green Surge’ and I have just updated this email list with 40% more names since last month (although admittedly a few should have been added last month, so apologies for this to those affected). It is hard keeping up with you all now!

To those that have joined or got involved recently, first and foremost, welcome!!
Ordinarily I would look to contact you individually to welcome you in person, and I will still try to get round to that asap. I will try to telephone you in the coming weeks to introduce myself, but please don’t wait for that to happen before getting more involved. we have had a few issues with wrong contact details coming through (you won’t be reading this if we have the wrong email, but you get a call if we have the wrong phone number either!

Feel free to contact me at any time, via this email address or using my mobile number 078 1066 3241.

Also consider coming along and introducing yourself at one of our regular monthly meetings. This month’s is on Thursday – details below. We have held the last few at the Pencoed Social Club as the Hendre ward is our current target ward. Several new members are in the Porthcawl area so we might go down there next month, but if you would like us to come to avenue near you, please just ask and we will see what we can do.

The alternative is to return to a central venue near the bus and train station, and parking, in Bridgend town centre. We have used the Railway PH quite often, but did not seem to get people from out of town coming very often, so hence trying out ‘going on tour’ around the county. Please let me know your feelings about this. What would make you more inclined to come to meetings?

If you are on this email list, you should get the meeting agenda and minutes every month (and not much else other than occasional information about special events and the like). If you do not want to receive these, please let me know and I will get you taken off the list.

You can, of course, keep up to date with what is going on online.

The Bridgend Green Party blog is one of the most successful local party blogs in the country. I have just revamped it and given it a makeover. Too much of the content is still just from me. It is your blog too, so if you have anything you want to flag up, or want to develop your writing skills, please forward content to me and I will put it up for you. Don’t worry about the quality of your English. I am an adult literacy and numeracy teacher by profession, so I will tidy up spelling and grammar before posting it – not that I am foolproof!

Feedback on the new look would be welcome: http://bridgendgreens.net/ is the new address (old one still works and redirects here).
The blog is also linked to Twitter so if that is your medium of choice follow bridgendgreens on there.
You would also be welcome my personal page on Facebook.
This is 90% political, and I am happy to share a few personal interests too. Send me a friend request!
I would also recommend that you check out the Wales Green Party page.
and the South Wales West page (our Wales sub-region).

Finally, let me just point out, in case you are not yet aware, that I am contesting the position of Wales Green Party spokesperson/leader later this month. All full national members (not local members or registered supporters/volunteers) should receive a ballot peer towards the end of this month.

Andy Chyba

Chair

AGENDA FOR NEXT MEETING: 7.00pm Thursday 6th November 2014 at The Pencoed Social Club, Hendre Rd. Pencoed (1 minute walk from Pencoed station – across the level crossing)

ALL WELCOME (Especially new members!)

Pencoed Social Club – Hendre Road

AGENDA:

  1. Welcome and Introductions
  2. Apologies for Absence
  3. Minutes and matters arising
  4. Officers Reports – including membership update
  5. Councillor feedback
  6. Campaigns Update- fracking/bedroom tax in particular
  7. Elections – General Election candidates/ Council target seat/ WGPC & leadership elections
  8. Wales Green Party AGM and leadership hustings
  9. AOB
  10. DoNM

REMINDER – If anyone needs a lift to any of our meetings, let Andy know (andy.chyba@icloud.com) and we will organise it for you.

Venue location map