People feel good about giving money to Greenpeace.

Also a portion of my sales go directly to Greenpeace.

I've been a member of Greenpeace since I was a teenager.

Greenpeace has a fast ship that could stop the whalers cold.

The planet doesn't require saving, and actually hasn't asked Greenpeace to save it.

I will not watch a whale die. I've not seen a whale die since I left Greenpeace in 1977.

When I was in high school, I started organizing fundraisers and other events for people like PETA and Greenpeace.

Greenpeace is the world's largest feel-good organisation now, and I can say that 'cause I am one of their co-founders.

I'm an old member of Greenpeace. I worried intensely, as I think most of my friends did, that the world was coming apart.

I have heard that the Saudi Arabians are paying Greenpeace to campaign against Nuclear Power. It wouldn't surprise me at all.

I'm very involved with PETA - People for Ethical Treatment of Animals - and Greenpeace and a lot of women's shelter and clothing giveaways.

Does Greenpeace think it can stop whaling in Antarctica by publicly eating whale meat and declaring it delicious? What are these people thinking?

My grandmother was a Greenpeace supporter. We've always done that sort of thing; we've always believed in helping others - it's part of our ethos.

I meet many people, I talk with them, like a TV show host. I show what's going on with Greenpeace, interesing political things, I have artists, musicians and bands.

Then, there was Greenpeace, I remember that when they first started out with the boats in the waters, and the guys in the boats between the whales and the boats that will hunting the whales with spear guns.

I am involved in Greenpeace. And I just recently completely switched my diet over to near-veganism. So you try to do little things that you can. I recycle every single day. Every single thing in my house that can be recycled is.

Transparency, accountability and sustainability have become the slogans of the market leaders. Companies carry out environmental and social audits to court the consumer, and even the bluest chips woo organisations such as Greenpeace and Amnesty.

I think it's great that we have organisations like Greenpeace. In a pluralistic society, we want to have people who point out all the problems that the Earth could encounter. But we need to understand that they are not presenting a full and rounded view.

I think I was the first executive to ever speak at a Greenpeace business conference, in London in 2001. That didn't play well here at Ford, but I thought it was an important signal to send internally, that these were the kind of issues we needed to be grappling with.

Share This Page