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Will Gore Get Arrested?

Posted by Mark Hertsgaard at 12:00 PM on October 25, 2007.


Mark Hertsgaard: Al Gore is apparently considering an invitation from a prominent environmental group to engage in civil disobedience against the construction of new coal-fired power plants.
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This post, written by Mark Hertsgaard, originally appeared on Mark Hertsgaard.com

Fresh from winning the Nobel peace prize for his climate change evangelism, Al Gore is apparently considering an invitation from a prominent environmental group to engage in civil disobedience against the construction of new coal-fired power plants.

Rainforest Action Network issued the invitation to the former U.S. vice president, according to RAN executive director Michael Brune. The San Francisco-based group has a twenty year history of protesting against destructive logging practices and other causes of climate change; it specializes in targeting corporations as much as governments.

"We came across a quote from Gore in an interview with [New York Times] columnist Nicholas Kristoff back in August, saying he didn't understand, quote, 'why there aren't rings of young people blocking bulldozers and preventing them constructing new coal-fired power plants,'" said Brune. "We thought, 'Great idea!' That's the kind of activism we do at RAN. So we decided to invite Gore to join us."

Gore's office confirmed that the former vice president had received RAN's invitation and was considering it, though no decision has been made. "He has not accepted any of their offers to date," Kalee Kreider, a spokeswoman for Gore, said of the RAN offer. Kreider did not deny that this phrasing leaves open the possibility of Gore saying yes down the road.

RAN plans a national day of protest against coal on November 16, according to Brune.

If Gore did end up getting arrested during a protest against coal-fired power plant, it would make front page news throughout the world and put a spotlight on what some climate scientists and activists consider the single most important priority in the fight against climate change: halting the use of coal as the world's top source of electricity production.

Coal is the most carbon-intensive of the three major fossil fuels (the others are oil and natural gas) whose combustion produces most of the carbon dioxide that is helping to raise temperatures and change climatic patterns on earth.

NASA scientist James Hansen, the man who first warned during testimony before the U.S. Senate in 1988 that man-made greenhouse gas emissions were warming the planet, has called for a complete ban on new coal-fired power plants "until we have the technology to capture and sequester the CO2." That technology, Hansen estimates, is "probably five or ten years away." Any plants built without that technology "are going to have to be bulldozed," argues Hansen, if the earth is to avoid "dramatic climate changes that produce what I would call a different planet."

John McCain, the Arizona senator and Republican presidential candidate, reportedly told a crowd in New Hampshire this week that he would consider supporting a ban on new coal-fired power plants if he could be shown possible alternatives. McCain was responding to a question from activists with Step It Up, a grassroots organization pushing for bolder federal action against climate change, including a total ban on coal. Step It Up plans a national day of demonstrations on november 3, exactly one year before the 2008 presidential election.

The state of Kansas recently denied a permit for construction of a coal-fired power plant due to concern over the plant's CO2 emissions. "I believe it would be irresponsible to ignore emerging information about the contribution of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases to climate change and the potential harm to our environment if we do nothing," said Roderick Bremby, the secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and the Environment, in explaining his rejection of the permit for the Sunflower Electric Power company.

In neighboring Iowa, Hansen is offering expert testimony in a lawsuit aiming to halt construction of the Sutherland Generating Station Unit 4 coal-fired plant. "Coal will determine whether we continue to increase climate change or slow the human impact," Hansen testified.

A native of Iowa, Hansen contended that a decision by his state to reject coal-fired power plants could be an important tipping point that would trigger broader shifts in public opinion and institutional behavior. "If the public begins to stand up in a few places and successfully oppose the construction of power plants that burn coal without capturing the CO2, this may begin to have a snowballing effect, helping utilities and politicians to realize that the public prefers a different path, one that respects all life on the planet."

Asked why he is focusing on Iowa when China is building many more coal-fired power plants, Hansen replied that China and other developing nations "must be part of the solution to global warming, and surely they will be, if developed nations take the appropriate first steps." The United States, Hansen noted, is responsible for three times as much of the excess CO2 in the atmosphere as any other nation.

True enough. But if China keeps building new coal plants at a rate of one every ten days, it won't much matter if U.S. companies turn away from coal. The campaign against coal must be global if it is to succeed.

Al Gore could launch this campaign with a bang if he joined activists in facing down the bulldozers. But a word of advice, Mr. Gore: make a US power plant your first target, but don't leave out China and the rest of the world. Carbon is a climate killer, wherever it originates.

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Tagged as: coal, al gore, global warming, climate change

Mark Hertsgaard is an independent journalist and author based in San Francisco. He blogs at Mark Hertsgaard.com.


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View:
Hmm..
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Oct 25, 2007 1:01 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... gee.. maybe that will start to get folks to see anyone and everyone who bothers to actually take any actions on their own rather than depending on government and politicians to do it all for them as something less than radicals and extremists.

but, of course... Gore will never do it.

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Celebrity protests
Posted by: aka_bozo on Oct 25, 2007 4:59 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Exactly what the American Fascist Party would want, showing on Faux News, to the teaming masses of dumb-ass “middle `merican” peasants, that those liberal celebrities are protestin’ agin. “All they want to do is take your cars away from ya. They want a controlled economy! You figure it out!”

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Protesting under the RENDITION REGIME
Posted by: Prairie Waif on Oct 26, 2007 4:43 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
David Crosby and Graham Nash have been making the publicity tour pondering why today's youth aren't marching in the streets against today's wars the way they did during the Vietnam War. They hypothesize that it is due to lack of a draft.

Coal-fired power stations most certainly deserve protest to halt their construction, however, we must remember who's AMERICA we are living in today as opposed to the days of civil rights and Vietnam protests.

We live in CORPORATE AMERICA supported by a REGIME that will do, and has done, all it can to support the entities that put them into office. The payment for power is PAYBACK.

You may be a United States Citizen but THAT WON'T MEAN ANYTHING if you are caught making protestations at anything that can REMOTELY be tagged "national security." Came to the USA from IRAN in the 1960's to escape the Shah? Guess what? The CIA has this plane waiting on a quiet little airstrip (it may even be in Worthington, Minnesota (tiny, out of the way places are never suspected as CIA pick-up points. The CIA has even use small airports in CANADA!) waiting to whisk you off, I mean, "EXTRAORDINARILY RENDITION" you to Syria, Kurdistan, or some other "exotic" country where "intensive interrogation" techniques practices by private contractors or foreign governments are acceptable.

The "Government of Rendition," doesn't tell your family, ask Canadian Mahar Arar (He was taken off a plane connecting him home to Canada after a family vacation and sent to Syria where he was tortured for almost two years. It took months for the Canadian Government to find out where he was as the USA denied ever hearing of him. This week, Condolezza admitted it had been handled poorly. No apologies to their fourth largest supporter in Afghanistan.). His engineering firm became as much a non-entity as he, while his wife searched for him. She was forced to sell the family home, go on welfare and live in a basement apartment while trying to raise their children and, in fright, wondered where her husband was and what was happening to him.

Arar was named one of Time Magazine's most 100 influential people. Why? Because his case exposed what the USA was doing to foreign citizens waiting on airplanes reading newspapers waiting for their connecting flight to lift off and also what had happened to the neighbor that "disappeared." It also exposed RENDITION as a means of TORTURE employed by the USA GOVERNMENT albeit by "unknown" contractors like Syria (What?! They use TORTURE?!). Patrick Leahy has tried, in vain, to have Arar removed from the "terrorist" list in the USA. NO GO. Doing that would have to admit all that had been done and that would expose the entire Rendition process and the depth of it. Mustn't do that. They have protesters to stand on watch.

The USA is populated with naturalized citizens from around the globe. They live in the urban centers where protests tend to form and make the largest impact, not in small town America where, "what will be will be" is the motto and "if we don't use coal, what will we use?" and "think of all those miners without jobs?"

Naturalized citizens are not REAL citizens anymore. They are PAWNS in Bush and Cheney's "Culture of Fear." And after all that has happened in terms of the number of "disappeared," who could excuse their fear at any act of political protest?

They may have a card that says they ARE AMERICANS but under this government? DO NOT BELIEVE IT! Only those born here REALLY ARE! Those nice young folks like Timothy McVeigh and David Koresh, and Jim Jones. Those are REAL AMERICANS. We can trust them, they were BORN ON AMERICAN SOIL. How much more deluded can this narcissisitic
government become?

As a dual-citizen, I probably would protest. I just hope they give you bread and water before they toss you out of the plane into Eastern Europes' once empty prisons.

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Paul Cardwell
Posted by: Paul Cardwell on Oct 26, 2007 8:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It seems that if Gore participates and is arrested (and probably quickly released), he will merely join a large number of Nobel Laureates: Linus Pauling, Andrei Sakharov, Lech Walesa, Elie Wiesel, Aunng San Suu Kyi, Nelson Mandela, and undoubtedely a few others of which I was not aware.

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He should invite some more Nobel Laureates to join him!
Posted by: donnambirdlady on Oct 26, 2007 9:18 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it would make a great statement that the press couldn't ignore if Al Gore got arrested along with Jimmy Carter and some of the IPCC scientist team.

How about inviting Carter, the IPCC team and other Nobel Laureates to come with him!

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If anyone knows what's most effective
Posted by: willymack on Oct 28, 2007 9:15 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Against this illegal and thoroughly corrupt and evil regime, it's Al Gore. He may ALREADY be doing all he can to bring it down. One thing for certain is that without legal action against the bushies, it won't matter WHO sits in the White House come Jan. 20th., 2009, it'll be the same old story, same old song.

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excuses
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 28, 2007 9:43 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I was wondering why Alternet's writers were so easily fooled by the following (from that other article on Alternet last week): John McCain, the Arizona senator and Republican presidential candidate, reportedly told a crowd in New Hampshire this week that he would consider supporting a ban on new coal-fired power plants if he could be shown possible alternatives.

When 'Cons do that, it's a blow-off not a crack in the door for potential changes of heart. The reality is there are plenty of alternatives, it just takes time to read them. 'Cons don't want to read (if they can even read really) and they certainly aren't interested in "alternatives." When a person has to be bludgeoned into not peeing in their drinking water, they're not rational or sane and don't deserve being dealt with as an equal partner.

As for Gore and the RAN campaign. I'd love to see it but I'm not holding my breath.

This was so telling for me--the quote from the RAN dude citing an interview with Gore where Gore allgedly said: "why there aren't rings of young people blocking bulldozers and preventing them constructing new coal-fired power plants"

A) why is it always up to "young people"?
B) why do older folk always act mystified that seemingly no one does anything to save this or prevent that when they create a brutally repressive environment and pathologically expect other people's kids to risk torture and death to do the work of undoing what the elders have wrought?

I think sometimes Boomers have this magical fairy tale version of "Youth" that they'll somehow be these fairy saints who will give everything a hug, wearing flowers and singing songs and.. oh, I forgot, that's their own fantasies about what their own youth was like... and they're projecting that onto today's "youth".... I get it now.

We're truly in a world of shite.

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well I hope he does...
Posted by: WitchyNy on Oct 30, 2007 1:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gore standing in front of a logging or mining truck and getting arrested would be taking it to the 'next step' which is where we all need to go to fight this evil corporate military-industrial-system- that is killing our world.

Let's all get arrested. At least we can tell the next generation-if there is one-we tried.

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