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W
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ar and its
contribution to climate change will be discussed during the Anzac Day gathering
Beneath the Wisteria in Shepparton.
Supporters will meet Beneath the Wisteria at the northern
end of Shepparton’s Maude St Mall on Saturday, April 25, at 11:00am, that is
this Saturday.
The event is free to anyone keen to talk and learn more
about the implications of climate change and the environmental cost of war.
Some public seating is available, but those attending are
encouraged to bring a folding chair. Weather forecasts suggest it will be
rather chilly on Saturday and those planning to attend are advised to bring
some warm clothes.
Robert McLean (0400 502 199) can answer questions about
Saturday’s gathering.
A friend, who is a climate change denier, argued that if
ever we were ever to see carbon dioxide increases because of human activity it
would have been during World War Two when nearly all the developed world was on
a war footing and fossil fuel-powered machines were almost ceaselessly in use.
He pointed to the Battle of Britain when huge fleets of
aircraft, including massive four-engine bombers, flew almost with stop over
Britain and Europe.
Co-incidentally it was just a few weeks after he made that
comment that, by accident, a historical chart of carbon-dioxide emissions passed
my gaze and there it was, a small blip in emissions in in the mid-1940s.
That war had made a difference to emissions and conflicts around the
world continue to do that.
Not only is the obvious cost, the burning of fossil fuels to
power the war machines obvious, but the embedded energy in destroyed buildings
is doubled when they are rebuilt or replaced.
Yes, “War, what is it good for? Absolutely nothing.”

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