Fellow Activists✊,
The climate crisis is fueled by few, and it’s time to change the global narrative. Right now these people are lauded as the great business men of our time…yet we should see them as what they truly are: the great destroyers of our time—purposely leading us towards a scary future for personal gain.
Meanwhile, Salvador is building a sustainable “Bitcoin City” and students have invented water filters made from food waste.
Climate Criminals
The Global Climate Crimes Project will bring a “dirty-dozen” political, industrial, and cultural leaders, recognized as purveyors of climate annihilation, before the International Criminal Court (ICC) for Crimes Against Humanity.
What we love about this project is that we’ve been manipulated into thinking that the climate crisis is somehow an individuals’ choice. Certain politicians, financiers, big oil men and media moguls are the real issue. Their empires rely on the current system and they have led us to believe that if we all took shorter showers we could somehow overturn the current system…
It’s time to call them out for their crimes against humanity. Their corrupt and dirty game is costing us our future. So take two seconds to go through the dozen dirty list and if you know anyone connected to them perhaps it’s time to shame them—aka hurt them where they care the most: their egos.
Bitcoin City
El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele is set to build an urban area based on Bitcoin—lest we remind you that El Salvador was the first country to adopt bitcoin as legal tender last September.
This new city will be aptly named “Bitcoin City” and will have zero emissions. The city will be developed between the base of the Conchagua volcano and by the ocean. This location will allow it to harness geothermal and kinetic energy to power the city and all of its crypto transactions.
Bukele announced that Bitcoin City will have almost total exemption from taxes—only a value-added tax will be charged 13%. Bukele plans to build Bitcoin City by attracting foreign investments interested in a blockchain future.
“This is not just a nice idea. It’s the evolution of humankind.”—Bukele
What are your thoughts? Feel free to comment them below!
Water Filters Made From Food Waste
Two graduate students at Pratt University—Charlotte Böhning and Mary Lempres— developed a new home water filter that could make Brita obsolete. Traditional water filters rely on coal and petroleum, both for the activated carbon and for the plastic cases.
The Stom design turns food waste into carbon-rich biochar, then they combine it with natural resins to create a home-compostable encase.
"Fundamental to our interest in biochar is the ability to create circularity by turning waste into a functional, carbon-sequestering material"—Böhning
This amazing innovation could keep millions of water filter cartridges from landfills.