person:james park

  • A Global Energy Shift

    http://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/198-natural-resources/52101-a-global-energy-shift.html

    By James Parker
    The Diplomat
    November 28, 2012

    The International Energy Agency (IEA) has published the World Energy Outlook report in which a large shift in global energy production through 2030 is predicted. North America will undergo a “supply boom”, leading to lower global energy prices, following the extraction of shale gas and unconventional oil. However, these extraction processes, including oil from tar sands, raise environmental concerns. Simultaneously, in China, Japan and India the demand for natural resources will soar. This monumental shift in the world’s energy supply and demand could increase tensions in the Asia-Pacific and in the Middle East as the world’s largest economies are shifting their geopolitical focus according to their energy needs.

  • Mayor of Reykjavik: Homophobes aren’t scared, they’re just assholes
    By James Park
    18 November 2012, 1:08pm Jón Gnarr’s assholes message is a simple one

    Jón Gnarr’s assholes message is a simple one

    The Mayor of Reykjavik, Jón Gnarr, a long time advocate of equality, has spoken out online at the protest yesterday in Paris against equal marriage rights for gay couples.

    Sharing a link to online coverage of protest, Mr Gnarr posted the simple statement: “Homophobia is not a phobia. They are not scared. They are just a bunch of assholes.”

    On Saturday evening, between 70,000 and 100,000 people took to the streets of Paris to protest, as well as demonstrations taking place in the cities of Toulouse, Lyon and Marseille. Protesters carried pink and blue balloons, and rallied under signs saying, “pro-marriage, not ant-gay.”

    On 7 November, French President Francois Hollande’s government approved a bill to legalise equal marriage and allow gay couples to adopt.

    Yesterday’s protest included members of the Catholic church, as well as other advocates of “traditional” marriage and family rights.

    In Reykjavik, there was little opposition to the introduction of equal marriage when in 2010, the parliament unanimously passed legislation to change the law. It is the only country in the world to have introduced equal marriage legislation with no parliamentary opposition.

    In August, with just a week to go before the verdict in the Pussy Riot trial, Mr Gnarr donned a pink dress and danced to the band’s music on a float at his city’s gay pride festiv

  • US: Synagogues terminate relationship with Boy Scouts of America over homophobic policies
    by James Park
    17 November 2012, 12:46pm
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    Jewish leaders are now questioning if Scouting really serves the Jewish communityJewish leaders are now questioning if Scouting really serves the Jewish community

    Synagogues and other Jewish organisations across the United States are terminating their relationships with the Boy Scouts of America over its policy of discriminating against gay members and leaders.

    One example of the strained relationship between Jewish organisations and the Boy Scouts around homosexuality will be seen next week. Turo Synagogue in New Orleans has for a decade hosted an event for Boy Scouts to learn the virtues of the Ten Commandments over a Thanksgiving Day festival organised with local churches and mosques. But this year, for the first time, the synagogue withdrew its support because of Boy Scouts discriminatory policies towards gay people.

    Back in July, after a two year review, the Boy Scouts of America announced it would retain its ban on gay members, volunteers and staff.

    Rabbi Alexis Berk, who used to host the Boy Scouts at her Reform Synagogue told the Religious News Service: ““Maybe it would be one thing if this were a long-standing policy and they’d never revisited it — but the fact that they freshly revisited it and rendered a freshly bigoted opinion, well, I freshly feel like I can’t participate,” she said.
    “I can’t participate in religious experience that uses religion as a hook on which to hang bigotry.”

    Jewish scouting leader Alan Smason told the newswire: “My personal opinion is the Scouting policy in place now is wrong. They’re discriminating, and there’s no way to justify discrimination in this day and age.”
    Meanwhile, the Chairman of the National Jewish Committee , A.J. Kreimer told the Religious News Service: “This position has taxed Scouting’s relationship with the Jewish community. Our committee’s motto since 1926 has been’Scouting Serves the Jewish Community’ — and that relationship has been strained.”

    Last week, UPS became the latest corporate sponsor of the Boy Scouts of America to end its association with the organiation.

    In a statement, UPS said: ““The UPS Foundation seeks to support organisations that are in alignment with our focus areas, guidelines, and non-discrimination policy.

    “UPS and The UPS Foundation do not discriminate against any person or organisation with regard to categories protected by applicable law, as well as other categories protected by UPS and The UPS Foundation in our own policies. These include, but are not limited to race, gender, national origin, disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, veteran or military status, pregnancy, age and religion.”

    Intel announced that it would block all donations to any Boy Scout troop that upheld the organisation’s discriminatory policies.

    The issue of the policy has been prominent in the media of late, as Ryan Andresen, now 18, who joined the scouts when he was six, completed all of the requirements for the Eagle Scout Badge, but was refused the badge, once the work was completed.

  • Christian Institute: There aren’t enough gays in UK to justify giving them equal rights
    By James Park
    29 September 2012, 1:58pm


    The Christian Institute doesn’t believe that God loves homosexuals

    The Christian Institute doesn’t believe that God loves homosexuals

    Just 2.6 per cent of people questioned by the Office of National Statistics have said that they are either lesbian, gay or bisexual, leading the Christian Institute to question whether such a small populous should be given the right to marry.

    Although charities such as Stonewall have long estimated the LGB population to be between six and ten per cent of the population, the findings of the Office of National Statistics survey were that 1.5 per cent of men say they are gay, 0.7 per cent of women say they are lesbian, and 0.4 per cent of people say they are bisexual.

    The Christian Institute believe that the figures showed that the gay population is ‘tiny’, and therefore not worthy of being given equal rights to marry. Mike Judge of the organisation told the Daily Mail: “It is staggering that such a monumental change is being carried out on behalf of a tiny proportion of society.”

    But Benjamin Cohen of Out4Marriage said: “Quite aside from the fact that many have questioned the accuracy and usefulness of the ONS’s surveys, even if the lesbian, gay and bisexual population was as low as is claimed, why should that therefore mean that LGBT people are entitled to less rights than heterosexual people?

    He continued: “Jewish people make up less than half a per cent of the UK population. Yet as a Jew, I have the legal right to get married, for that marriage to be conducted by a Rabbi and recognised by the state, although obviously only currently to someone of the opposite sex. By the Christian Institute’s interpretation of population data, the Jewish population is presumably even more ‘tiny’, so presumably the Christian Institute believe that Jews should, like gay people, be denied the right to marry.”

    Ben Summerskill of Stonewall criticised the Office of National Statistic’s research methods telling the Daily Mail: “People are not answering truthfully.

    “There are genuinely good reasons for having accurate figures. For example, you do not need to have so many primary schools in Brighton as in Shrewsbury, because there are a lot of gay people in Brighton and, although some have children, they are likely to have fewer children. This is about public money.

    “We reckon 6 per cent, the figure the Treasury has used for some time, is a sensible estimate.”

    Despite protests, the official census does not include a question on sexuality.

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