Este 22 de abril es el Día de la Tierra y la gran pregunta para todos nosotros sería ¿y qué hacemos diariamente por nuestro planeta?, ¿le damos su cuota diaria de contaminación?, si eso haces ¡qué irresponsable eres, no con la Tierra, sino con tu propia vida, la de tus hijos y generaciones futuras! (visita http://www.greendaily.com/2008/04/22/earth-day-2008/)
Dia de la Tierra
** FILE **In this Dec. 1, 2007 file photo, singer Britney Spears poses on the press line at the Scandinavian Style Mansion party in Los Angeles. A Los Angeles County Superior Court commissioner has authorized the lawyers who represent Britney Spears and her family in various legal cases to be paid more than $372,500 for their services through March 31. Commissioner Reva Goetz on Thursday, April 17, 2008, also delayed action on a motion to put Spears' companies and business entities in her trust. It will now be heard on July 31, the same day a probate court is scheduled to decide on a permanent conservatorship for the troubled pop singer. (AP Photo/Dan Steinberg, File)
AP
A thick smoke haze covers Buenos Aires, Thursday, April 17, 2008. Fires allegedly set by farmers sent clouds of smoke across Buenos Aires, disrupting air and highway travel and choking millions of Argentines. Some 270 square miles (70,000 hectares) have burned in recent days, according to Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo.(AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
AP
The River Plate is seen in Buenos Aires, Thursday, April 17, 2008. Fires allegedly set by farmers sent clouds of smoke across Buenos Aires, disrupting air and highway travel and choking millions of Argentines. Some 270 square miles (70,000 hectares) have burned in recent days, according to Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
AP
The Obelisk, background, is hardly seen through thick smoke descended on Buenos Aires, Thursday, April 17, 2008. Fires allegedly set by farmers sent clouds of smoke across Buenos Aires, disrupting air and highway travel and choking millions of Argentines. Some 270 square miles (70,000 hectares) have burned in recent days, according to Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
AP
Graphic shows statistics on displaced people around the world; 1c x 2 1/2 inches; 46.5 mm x 63.5 mm
AP
Marathoner Emily LeVan poses with her daughter Maddie near the finish line of the Olympic trial and Boston Marathon in Boston, Thursday April 17, 2008. LeVan's health problems cost her a month of training for the Olympic marathon trials. Even after she resumed her workouts, there were nights she couldn't sleep, and days she couldn't run. But this wasn't a pulled hamstring or sprained ankle; in fact, LeVan isn't the one who is sick. Maddie is stricken with Leukemia. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
AP
Marathoner Emily LeVan poses with her daughter Maddie near the finish line of the Olympic trial and Boston Marathon in Boston, Thursday April 17, 2008. LeVan's health problems cost her a month of training for the Olympic marathon trials. Even after she resumed her workouts, there were nights she couldn't sleep, and days she couldn't run. But this wasn't a pulled hamstring or sprained ankle; in fact, LeVan isn't the one who is sick. Maddie is stricken with Leukemia. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
AP
Paraguayan presidential candidate for the opposition UNACE party, Lino Oviedo, prays inside the Pantheon of the Heroes before beginning a rally to close his campaign, in Asuncion April 17, 2008. Voters will decide on Sunday whether or not to end the 61-year reign for the Colorado Party, the world's longest-ruling political party still in power. REUTERS/Rickey Rogers (PARAGUAY)
Reuters
Paraguayan presidential candidate for the opposition UNACE party, Lino Oviedo, prays inside the Pantheon of the Heroes before beginning a rally to close his campaign, in Asuncion April 17, 2008. Voters will decide on Sunday whether or not to end the 61-year reign for the Colorado Party, the world's longest-ruling political party still in power. REUTERS/Rickey Rogers (PARAGUAY)
Reuters
** FILE ** This undated file photo from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Alaska Image Library shows a polar bear. The Department of the Interior says it needs at least 10 more weeks to decide whether polar bears should be listed as threatened or endangered. In a reply Thursday, April 18, 2008 to a lawsuit filed by three conservation groups, Assistant Secretary Lyle Laverty says the proposed listing raises "significant and complex factual and legal issues." (AP Photo/U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, File)
AP
Hay animales en extinción, miles de ellos mueren a manos del hombre y no por una condición de sobrevivencia, sino por vil y vulgar comercio...
Nuestro planeta agoniza con toda la contaminación que día a día generamos, nos dan medidas sencillas para ayudar (como las de la galería abajo) y nadie hace naaaaada....
Medio Ambiente y Ecología
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.Retaining walls are built on slopes beneath the cities and towns along the Yangtze River, 27 November 2007, as a man crosses between cabins of a boat plying upstream from the Three Gorges Dam outside of Yichang in central China's Hubei province. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.A boat plying the Yangtze River upstream from the Three Gorges Dam outside of Yichang in central China's Hubei province arrives in the city of Bai Di, 27 November 2007, as passengers wait to board from a riverbank steeply below the city. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.A woman prepares her seating arrangement to view th shiplocks at the Three Gorges Dam outside of Yichang in central China's Hubei province, 26 November 2007. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better is the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.Cargo boats cruise downstream on the Yangtze River in Xiling Gorge, near the Three Gorges Dam outside of Yichang in central China's Hubei province, 26 November 2007. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better is the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.Tourists on a tour bus see the Three Gorges Dam (L) on a hazy day outside of Yichang, 26 November 2007, in central China's Hubei province. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better is the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.A man photographs the Three Gorges Dam on a hazy day outside of Yichang, 26 November 2007, in central China's Hubei province. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better is the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
TO GO WITH China-dam-environment-engineering by Dan Martin.Railway technician Liu Xia stands at a lookout point overlooking the Three Gorges Dam on a hazy day outside of Yichang, 26 November 2007, in central China's Hubei province. From the ancient emperors to today's Communist Rulers, China has an age-old penchant for grand engineering projects, the bigger the better is the mindset, often in disregard for human and environmental costs and benefits. The government ignored warnings building the dam would trap pollution, silt, and disrupt the lives of millions of people relocated away from the reservoir and flooded scenic Three Gorges, but it has recently admitted some of these problems for the first time, including a heightened risk of dangerous landslides caused by the reservoir. AFP PHOTO/Frederic J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
French President Nicolas Sarkozy delivers his speech at Beijing's prestigious Tsinghua University, on the third day of a visit to the Chinese capital 27 November 2007. Sarkozy urged China, one of the world's major polluters, to join in a worldwide "ecological and economic New Deal" to fight global warming. AFP PHOTO/ERIC FEFERBERG (Photo credit should read ERIC FEFERBERG/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
A combo photo shows French President Nicolas Sarkozy delivers his speech at Beijing's prestigious Tsinghua University, on the third day of a visit to the Chinese capital, 27 November 2007. Sarkozy urged China, one of the world's major polluters, to join in a worldwide "ecological and economic New Deal" to fight global warming. AFP PHOTO/ERIC FEFERBERG (Photo credit should read ERIC FEFERBERG/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
French President Nicolas Sarkozy waves as he poses with a Chinese student who asked him to autograph a magazine article on him, after his speech at Beijing's prestigious Tsinghua University, on the third day of a visit to the Chinese capital 27 November 2007. Sarkozy urged China, one of the world's major polluters, to join in a worldwide "ecological and economic New Deal" to fight global warming. AFP PHOTO/ERIC FEFERBERG (Photo credit should read ERIC FEFERBERG/AFP/Getty Images)
AFP/Getty Images
Links relacionados con el tema:
- Día de la Tierra en inglés
- Noticias sobre el Día de la Tierra en AOL Latino
- Blog Medio Ambiente
- Blog Mundo Animal
- Organizaciones en favor del medio ambiente
- Organizaciones en favor de los animales
Recuerdan la película llamada 'Cuando el destino nos alcance', ¿estamos a punto de llegar a eso?, ´¿qué haces tú en favor del medio ambiente?
El Mundo está en peligro
Imágenes que no debemos ignorar
Las siguientes frases e imágenes pueden no importarte ni en un presente ni en un futuro... pero a tus hijos les importará más que nunca
El Mundo está en peligro
¿La calidad de vida ambiental?
¿Has visto esto, lo que aparece en la imagen, antes?
El Mundo está en peligro
Calentamiento global y contaminación
Has notado que hace más calor.
AOL Latino
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