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Created: Sep 11, 2007
Updated: May 05, 2008

Andrew Capen

GroovyAC
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User Info 

Email: andycapen [at] yahoo.com
Address: Amherst, New Hampshire
United States
I Speak: English
I Am: Activist, Student
Member Since: September 11, 2007
Local Time: Sun Oct 12 22:56:31
My Groups: Greenwashed

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Areas of Focus 

Arts Activism (1412 people)  |  Democracy and Civil Society (1389 people)  |  Gender Equality (1235 people)  |  Indigenous Rights (1283 people)  |  Fair Trade (1910 people)  |  Environmental Justice (1525 people)  |  Environmental Health (1115 people)  |  Natural Capitalism (1769 people)  |  Renewable Energy (2652 people)  |  Militarism and Violence (418 people)  |  Natural Resource Conservation (1121 people)  |  Child Labor (589 people)  |  Cultural Diversity (1792 people)  |  Ethnic Equality (730 people)  |  Arms Trading (300 people)  |  Sustainable Energy Development (2673 people)  |  Socially Responsible Investment (1944 people)  |  Alternative Medicine (1960 people)  |  International Humanitarian Law and War Crimes (411 people)  |  Health Care Access (759 people)  |  Sustainable Building (2141 people)  |  Global Food Supply and Sustainability (1738 people)  |  Globalization Impacts (1543 people)  |  Nuclear Disarmament (447 people)  |  Human Rights and Natural Law (602 people)  |  Protected Areas, Individuals, Objects and Property (330 people)  |  Transnational Corporations (741 people)  |  Global Beef Industry (231 people)  |  Rights and Equality of LGBT (501 people)  |  Consumption and Green Consumers (1675 people)  |  Waste Management (936 people)  |  Human Trafficking and Slavery (553 people)  |  Affordable Housing (1135 people)  |  Human Rights and Civil Liberties (1478 people)  |  Alternative Fuels (2101 people)  |  Sustainable Living (2548 people)  |  Sustainable Forestry (1391 people)  |  Sustainability, Religious and Spiritual Issues (1910 people)  |  Ecolabeling and Certification (962 people)  |  Social Development (1411 people)  |  Pollution Prevention and Reduction (886 people)  |  Poverty Alleviation (1220 people)  |  Human Population Growth and Impacts (1067 people)  |  Peace and Peace Building (2237 people)  |  Endangered Plant Species Protection (728 people)  |  Sustainable Agriculture (2490 people)  |  Conservation Policy (546 people)  |  Wildlife Habitat Conservation (1571 people)  |  Democratic Reform (795 people)  |  Women's Rights (959 people)  |  Journalism and the Press (1106 people)  |  Sustainable Production (1859 people)  |  Climate Justice (908 people)  |  Climate Change (3177 people)  |  Indigenous People and Culture (1961 people)  |  Environmental Law and Policy (855 people)  |  Performing Arts (1282 people)  |  Military Disarmament (364 people)  |  Human Rights Protection (802 people)  |  Indigenous Lands (935 people)  

About

I am currently a student in the Environmental Advocacy and Organizing Program at Antioch New England Graduate School in Keene, NH.  As you might see from my Areas of Focus, my interests at this time are many and diverse.  My introduction to activism came in 1998, during the run-up to a U.S. bombing campaign in Iraq.  I was a sophomore at the University of Connecticut (UConn) in Storrs, CT, and took a class called Global Militarism and Human Survival.  The course opened my eyes to the injustices being perpetrated around the world in the name of democracy and freedom, and gave me my first real glimpse at environmental issues and a look at the U.S. political/corporate power structure.  I became appalled by the fact that my government, in my name, was advocating bombing a country with so little infrastructure left due to the suffocating U.N. sanctions imposed on it.  I couldn't believe how severely Iraqis were suffering in terms of mortality, nutrition, and health due to sanctions.  It was absolutely disgusting to me.  This revelation about U.S. military intervention abroad gave me pause.  It made me realize that my government was not the "good guy on the international block" it espoused, and pretended, to be.  The more I learned, the more outraged I became.

My activism was enhanced by my involvement with UConnPIRG (Public Interest Research Group).  I was an active member of the campus group for five semesters, during which I learned about hunger and homelessness issues, environmental issues, and clean elections.  The group taught me a lot.  I learned how to run meetings, develop a project plan, and speak persuasively on different issues.

My activism since 2000 has been concerned mostly with the run-up to war in Iraq and the war itself.  I was outraged, once again, seeing my country go to war with a country that posed no visible threat.  And preemptively, too!!!  I became active as a dissenter, going to rallies and marches, both before the war and since it began.  I got to know people who were actively organizing in the movement.  I myself did not do much organizing during this time, but I believe that as I learned more about the war and shared this information with those close to me, I helped to open some minds up to what was happening.  I am thrilled that the movement has come so far, and as I learn more about organizing now, in my courses, I am hopeful for ever more involvement and cooperation among other sectors of the movement aiming for global justice and environmental protection.  It is imperative that we create positive change in the world, and the more I learn about how broad and diverse the movement is, the more excited I get!  Change really is happening!

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