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Green politics

Green politics is considered by its advocates to be an alternative to both left and right views and parties, although adherents to both views tend to view Greens as "on the other side". These views are complex and contradictory, but certainly it is true that Green parties advocate measures that appear to conventional politicians to appeal to, or repel, different groups than those conventionally grouped into "left" (or "labour") and "right" (or "capital") by economic interests.

Some of these views include:

Because it lacks clear identification with powerful interest groups, and tends to appeal more to a world-view or mindset, Green politics tends to grow slowly but also not to easily lose ground to other views or parties over time. In developed nations Greens have typically stood at 3-12% of the vote for long periods of time without making breakthroughs, usually participating in government as a minority partner, or working at municipal or regional levels.

Basic statements of Green political values include the Four Pillars of the Green Party originally adopted by the European Greens[?], the Ten Key Values of the Global Greens[?] adopted by most English-speaking Greens in the 1990s, and the six core Green principles[?] accepted in 2001.

Greens often refer to productivism, consumerism and scientism as examples of "grey" views, which implies age, ashphalt and obsolete ideas of human social organization, including globalization of economic relations. Many Greens are important players in the anti-globalization movement. This involvement includes the full spectrum from street protesters[?] to those building local alternatives to global economic monoculture[?].

Green politics is usually said to include the green anarchism, eco-anarchism, anti-nuclear[?] and peace movements - although these often claim not to be aligned with any party. Some claim it also includes feminism, pacifism and the animal rights movements. Most Greens support special policy measures to enable women especially mothers, to oppose war and de-escalate conflicts and stop proliferating technologies useful in conflict or likely to lead to conflict, and such unusual measures as Great Ape personhood to end ape genocide, which they see as akin to genocide of primitive human populations, e.g. Stone Age Amazon[?] tribes.

External links

Global Greens Charter, Canberra 2001 (http://www.global.greens.org.au/charter.htm)

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump