Hello everyone! Hey to Taka and Group B! To Yoko, Yoshiko and Mr. Ohmori and Atsuko and everyone in Japan! This is Slater from Canada! It's been over a month since we were together in Japan, discussing how to make our Future a green and sustainable one and I can't get over how much I miss it. I look back to my time there and wish that everyone had the same chance that I did. To be able to look at others without labels such as religion, race, gender, age, wealth or social status, But to see them as the wonderful human beings they are. We, on one hand, discussed how to save our future and work together, and then we also hung out and laughed together, creating friendships that will Last for years. I miss the openness of the summit, where we can love and laugh together without seeming To our fellow peers "uncool" or "emo" or something stupid like that. We opened up our hearts and selves without fear. I came back to Canada, and it seems that it is such An important thing in our society, the ability to label others without question and I wondered why. We need to accept everyone for who they are, because how are we going to work together To change our current environmental situations if we are too busy categorizing and looking at each others Credentials? How are we going to move forward if our thinking is backwards? I remember one very fun day. The day where we all got a really cool camera. It was like Christmas, seeing Everyone's faces light up at the gift. For about 20 minutes, all you could see were flashing lights from all the pictures being taken! But the cameras weren't only for saving our dear friend's faces in our minds, we also had the task of taking pictures of environmental problems in our home countries. I personally found this hard, because I am relatively sheltered from pollution in my country. I don't experience massive flooding or famine or overflowing garbage. At the same time, we are home to one of the biggest CO2 producers on the planet, the Oil Sands of Alberta. I see my friend's countries being flooded and polluted and I look at my country, a rich country, and see how disconnected we are. We have man-made environmental disasters, and yet there are areas that are pristine. We hide our pollution from ourselves, and the world. We don't seem to want to deal with the problems that we face and how our problems affect the world. They make too much money. My film speaks to the frustration and disappointment my friends and I feel about the world we are creating for ourselves. Thank you for the wonderful opportunity you gave myself and the other delegates to speak up about our future. Thank you for re-inspiring me to fight for a green and sustainable world that I can be proud to leave my children.