The World’s Local Wisdom Bank – CopperWiki

A storehouse of knowledge on sustainable living

An invisible smog linked to depression, miscarriage and cancer

New research has shown that fields from electrical wiring and devices in the home and office should be considered to be a form of pollution. Recent studies are finding that many cancers and other diseases may be directly related to exposure to these electrical fields.

Cell phones linked to cancer

Recent research has linked radiation from cell phones to cancer and to brain damage. And many studies have found disturbing symptoms in people near masts.

The UN’s World Health Organisation (WHO) calls the electronic smog “one of the most common and fastest growing environmental influences.” Everyone in the world” is exposed to it and that “levels will continue to increase as technology advances”.

Even when nothing is turned on

Wiring creates electrical fields, one component of the smog, even when nothing is turned on. And all electrical equipment – from TVs to toasters – give off another one, magnetic fields. The fields rapidly decrease with distance but appliances such as hair dryers and electric shavers, used close to the head, can give high exposures. Electric blankets and clock radios near to beds produce even higher doses because people are exposed to them for many hours while sleeping.

Perhaps strangest of all, there is increasing evidence that the electronic smog causes some people to become allergic to electricity, leading to nausea, pain, dizziness, depression and difficulties in sleeping and concentrating when they use electrical appliances or go near mobile phone masts. Some are so badly affected that they have to change their lifestyles.

Refer to:
Electronic Smog

April 23, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | , | Leave a Comment

Ahimsa Products – Promoting Veganism in Diet and Lifestyle

Ahimsa is a Sanskrit word that refers to the Hindu, Buddhist and Jain doctrine of non-violence and peace.

Statistics reveal that an average person utilizes the skin of 1.5-2 buffalo only for the sake of foot wear. Apart from that pollutants derived from the making of a shoe could include dioxin, volatile organic compounds, solvents, chromium, hide waste effluent, and isocyanates.

Life begins in the slaughterhouse

It is true that the life of all leather products begin in the slaughter house. Every year, the global leather industry slaughters more than a billion animals and tans their skins and hides. Even exotic animals like alligators are plucked from their habitat and factory-farmed for their skins.

Our soccer shoes come from kangaroo skin. Kid goats may be boiled alive to make gloves and the skins of unborn calves and lambs—some purposely aborted, others from slaughtered pregnant cows and ewes—are considered especially “luxurious.”

An estimated 2 million dogs and cats are killed in China to meet the demand for their skin.

Source: Ahimsa Leather

Ahimsa Silk

In the Ahimsa product category silk is manufactured, unlike in the traditional process, without killing large numbers of silkworms. Silk made by this method is termed as Ahimsa Silk. In India, Ahimsa Silk is produced in many parts, including Benares, Jharkhand, Murshidabad, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

The process of silk-culture or sericulture is one in which silk is harvested by boiling the pupae, thereby killing them to obtain their cocoons that are filled with silk. For instance, 1 gram of silk is produced by killing nearly 15 silkworms and 1,500 silkworms are sacrificed for a mere metre of silk cloth. While silk is produced by many insects, such as bees, ants, wasps and spiders, textile silk can only be manufactured from the silk of moth caterpillars.

Under sericulture, silk moths are made to lay eggs on specially prepared paper. The eggs hatch to produce caterpillars who are fed fresh mulberry leaves for nourishment. After a period of 35 days and some four moltings, the silkworms turn 10,000 times heavier due to their active spinning of the cocoon.

Straw frames are placed over the trays of silkworms to prevent them from moving, as the spinning requires the worms to move their heads inside the cocoon. Liquid silk produced in the silkworms’ glands is forced through spinnerets. This liquid silk is then coated with sericin, a water-soluble gum that solidifies when in contact with air. In one or two days, a silkworm easily spin a mile’s length of filament, all of which is encased within the cocoon.

At the end of this process, the silkworm metamorphoses into a moth, but is usually killed using heat before it turns into a moth. Moths are cultivated separately for breeding more silkworms. About seven days before maturity, the cocoons are collected and put into heat chambers with temperatures varying between 70°C and 90°C for about four hours. The worm is killed and the cocoon filled with silk is collected for spinning.

To manufacture a five-yard, hand-woven silk sari, for instance, you would need to boil about 50,000 silkworms.
More in Ahimsa Silk

April 21, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | , , , | Leave a Comment

The World’s Local Wisdom Bank – CopperWiki

Copperwiki is a collaborative platform to share information, create awareness and offer choices for leading a balanced and sustainable life. It will focus on local practices, green and organic living, traditional knowledge, scientific research, and global issues at regional level.

The idea is to familiarize individuals with the lifecycle of their actions, the cost and impact of each decision, and the choices available to them.It is not about the information; it is about wisdom (‘judicious application of knowledge’). Wisdom is knowledge with a utility. Our emphasis will always be on utility. Wisdom is often defined in utilitarian sense, as foreseeing consequence and acting to maximize the long-term common good. It will be replete with “insights” into the human condition and about the means and ends of a good life.

Strong regional lens

It will take a strong regional lens, and work more like a map to document the untapped knowledge, in untapped world pockets.

Copperwiki could very well be a project out of the east (& subsequently a lot of developing nations) which is increasingly providing a lot of answers to a world out of balance. Eastern philosophy in food, community living, social structures, healing systems, and its emphasis on the role of nature at the heart of the world’s political and social debate are being increasingly sought by the western world for answers. We might look for “country focus” in coming days as the platform matures.

  • It will work like the world’s local wisdom bank
  • Everybody deposits, everybody withdraws
  • You deposit in your own account, withdraw through everybody else’s
  • What you take out will always be more than what you put in

Visit
Copperwiki

April 21, 2008 Posted by | Uncategorized | , , , | 1 Comment

   

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.