stepbystep wrote:As much as I hate the burn offs and have seen plenty of them, but that looks photoshopped to me.
Beth Heap : This is what it actually looked like. Only the usual minor adjustments done with a RAW image in photoshop. It was taken in the late afternoon, and the sun behind the clouds of smoke gave it the very orange colour. When you turned around the other direction, the mountains and vegetation all had a very golden hue.
gayet wrote:I asked Beth what she had done with the image. Her responseBeth Heap : This is what it actually looked like. Only the usual minor adjustments done with a RAW image in photoshop. It was taken in the late afternoon, and the sun behind the clouds of smoke gave it the very orange colour. When you turned around the other direction, the mountains and vegetation all had a very golden hue.
GetUp wrote:Here's the deal:
After years of negotiation and campaigning (including by GetUp members) there's finally a deal on the table to protect large tracts of Tasmania's ancient forests. It's supported by unions, environmentalists and industry.
The Tasmanian upper house is the final hurdle - but they're one vote short of passing the deal.
One local election will decide whether progressive, pro-deal candidates replace the incumbent, who voted against the agreement (and education reform, and Australia's first same-sex marriage laws)!
But many voters don't know about his stances, and last election 26% didn't turn up to vote.
We can change both. We've put together a scorecard showing where the candidates stand, and have a direct mail, social media and doorknocking campaign ready to go.
Nuts wrote:I mean 'get-up', claiming no political affiliation.. thinly veiled- c'mon, why not just allow direct campaign funding.
Clusterpod wrote:
Is that willful ignorance?
Nuts wrote:I mean 'get-up', claiming no political affiliation.. thinly veiled- c'mon, why not just allow direct campaign funding.
Nuts wrote:Of course the parties aren't (they can only be as far left or right as politics allow can't they?), attitudes seem to be as much so as ever.Clusterpod wrote:
Is that willful ignorance?
Probably, though sometimes i'd swear some people need reminding that is a democratic privilege (Lol)
taswegian wrote:All I can say is its time to wake up and get real, take a long look about, stop blaming everyone else (common problem these days) and start to do the right things for our forests and our future.
walkinTas wrote: I've stated my position before! I believe that as long as we (society) use paper and timber products, we will continue to need forestry. I also believe that the best place for that forestry is in the temperate zones - not the tropics (for environmental reasons, not silvicultural reasons). If you don't have managed forestry, then you will automatically have unmanaged forestry. That unmanaged forestry is always very, very environmentally damaging. Australia (with its tiny population and massive resource) is a bulk importer of timber and paper - so, by definition, a failure at self-sufficient, managed forestry. Therefore, Australia is a contributor to the world-wide problem of deforestation - we buy timber and paper that could go to other markets because we aren't self-sufficient. There is no viable, less environmentally damaging, alternative to timber that is readily available to the world's 7 billion people - except maybe building houses out of recycled rubbish.
So, if one wants to talk about the 'right thing for the future', one needs to talk about a sustainable, viable forestry industry.
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