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Environment

Powershift: Action this Weekend Mobilizes Youth and Green Energy Activists

By Jeff Biggers, Huffington Post. Posted February 27, 2009.


A mind-boggling network of organizations is gathering this weekend in DC at Powershift09 to take on climate change.
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This weekend, over 10,000 students and young green energy activists will converge on Washington DC, for a historic national youth summit, Powershift09 Organized by the Energy Action Coalition and a mind-boggling network of nationwide student organizations, Powershift09 will present 72 non-stop hours of panels, workshops, concerts and speeches with a take-no-prisoners message: It's time for the White House and US Congress to stand up to the dirty energy lobby and pass the energy and climate policies we truly need.

Twenty four million young voters helped to put President Barack Obama into office. Powershift is about stirring, educating, training, and mobilizing these young voters into a vibrant movement to keep Capitol Hill accountable to a sustainable green agenda -- to feel the urgency of the moment to pass bold, comprehensive energy and climate legislation.

In a time of naysaying and foreboding crisis, the phenomenon of Powershift should be an inspiring bolt of energy for anyone in the green movement, regardless of age. "Being young is a state of mind,'' my hero Ella Baker, the legendary Civil Rights organizer, once declared, "and young people are the people who want change.''

We need that change now.

Last spring, NASA climatologist James Hansen and a group of leading scientists published a paper in Science magazine that spelled out the future projections of carbon dioxide emissions and climate destabilization in clear terms: "If humanity wishes to preserve a planet similar to that on which civilization developed and to which life on earth is adapted, paleoclimate evidence and ongoing climate change suggest that CO2 will need to be reduced from its current 385 ppm to at most 350 ppm."

"What we do in the next two to three years will determine our future," Rajendra Pachauri, Chairman of the UN's International Panel on Climate Change, has declared. "This is the defining moment."

On Monday, March 2nd, another historic event is planned at the Capitol Power Plant, to symbolically take this message to Washington, DC. As the first massive act of civil disobedience, thousands will cross the line to demand an end to our nation's denial of the spiraling impact of dirty coal and old coal-fired plants. Rallied by a clarion call from our beloved farmer-poet laureate Wendell Berry and pioneering climate change author Bill McKibben, this historic action is organized by Greenpeace and Rainforest Action Network and sponsored by a broad alliance of citizen groups.

As a 100-year-old relic, the Capitol Power Plant spews over 60,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions to keep government buildings warm. Not far away, the Potomac River Plant operates on coal hauled from mountaintop removal strip mines that have left parts of Appalachia in ruin.

For many of us, the March 2nd action will not be our first time to cross the line. In fact, the historic act of civil disobedience at the Capitol Power Plant follows in the tradition of the Civil Rights Movement and the Free South Africa Movement.

On a cold fall day in 1984, at the age of 21, I sat in the holding tank of a Washington, DC precinct jail, listening to my jailmate describe his recent visit to South Africa. The impoverished black townships were aflame. In the face of widespread strikes, the repressive Botha administration had unleashed its police and military with brutal force. Over 6,500 striking laborers at the Sasol coal-to-oil plant had been dismissed. The apartheid system withheld political rights for the majority black population. Nelson Mandala remained in prison.

The Reagan administration chose to deal with this horrific situation through a policy of "constructive engagement," which effectively turned a blind eye to the atrocities of apartheid, and rejected any calls for economic sanctions on South Africa as an instrument of diplomacy.

"Constructive engagement is another slogan for a state of denial," my jailmate, the Rev. William Sloane Coffin, told me.

For Coffin, who was the head minister at the Riverside Church in New York City (where I served as his aide in the mid-1980s), the journey to a Washington jail cell had not resulted from a whimsical decision to protest. As part of the Free South Africa Movement, launched that fall by several organizations such as TransAfrica, we had blocked the doors of the South African Embassy in Washington, DC, as an act of civil disobedience.

Civil disobedience, Coffin reminded me, was a non-violent act of drawing attention to an ignored crisis taking place in an administration beset by crisis management. In the spring of 1961, as the chaplain at Yale University, he had boarded the bus in the volatile Freedom Rides to Montgomery, Alabama, to test the desgregation laws on transit.

The troubling facts about dirty coal demand a similar movement for a new generation.

It's time to end our constructive engagement with dirty coal.


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It is time for our nation to move forward...
Posted by: beyondgreen on Feb 27, 2009 2:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There could be no better investment in America than to invest in America becoming energy independent! We need to utilize everything in out power to reduce our dependence on foreign oil including using our own natural resources.Create cheap clean energy, new badly needed green jobs and reduce our dependence on foreign oil.The high cost of fuel this past year seriously damaged our economy and society. The cost of fuel effects every facet of consumer goods from production to shipping costs. After a brief reprieve gas is inching back up.OPEC will continue to cut production until they achieve their desired 80-100. per barrel.If all gasoline cars, trucks, and SUV's instead had plug-in electric drive trainsthe amount of electricity needed to replace gasoline is about equal to the estimated wind energy potential of the state of North Dakota.There is a really good new book out by Jeff Wilson called The Manhattan Project of 2009 Energy Independence Now.

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South Africa is no model of success for how to achieve environmental change.
Posted by: edgar1 on Feb 28, 2009 5:26 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Since the end of the Afrikaner dominated regime in South Africa, and the ascent of the ANC, South Africa has declined economically and even worse has become a battlefield between some of the world's worst street criminals and the public, both black and white.The criminals are winning.

In the violent plagued anarchy of South Africa, there is no real freedom. Yet the author hails the disinvestment program in South Africa as having been successful, and urges civil disobedience. He would have disruption of power production to generate support for climate change legislation. Given the makeup of the current Congress however, and the pro-carbon controls President, why would one call for chaos in the streets when the ill-informed members of Congress like Barbara Boxer, John McCain and Nancy Pelosi are willing to swallow the climate change myth despite any evidence that shows statistical correlation between climate change and CO2 levels?

Yes, smash the production of inexpensive energy that can never be replaced in significant quantity by the "sun" or wind-just what we need as we plunge into depression and economic chaos here.

In addition, the carbon controls Obama and Gore would force upon the American people would shrink their paychecks even more, cause small businesses to close, spike unemployment, and further ensure that the US is not competitive in world markets, particularly in Asia which has sucked our jobs and wealth away(with American stupid cooperation, for sure).

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All the green weenie stuff has long smelled like
Posted by: AMERICAN VETERAN on Feb 28, 2009 8:11 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
BULLSHIT scare tactics for money and an addiction to power by the green weenies.
They KNOW that the easiest ones to suck in are the young children.
Let them wipe their collective asses with gravel.

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Be Socially Disobedient
Posted by: PaulK on Feb 28, 2009 10:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What's more powerful than a letter to Congress? HA HA.

Getting arrested? OK, the DC cops have streamlined the arrest process. Here's your ticket. Now, what's more powerful than getting arrested?

Saying "global warming" but getting dragooned into picking up some trash?

No. Here's the deal. Take your entire life ahead of you. Say to yourself, "I'm part of a movement to stop global warming. In five or ten or twenty years I'm going to be a certain piece of the movement that we absolutely need, but which is getting ignored right now."

Mother Teresa had advice, saying (I'm paraphrasing) that if you run for public office they're going to call you a crook. Run (and prepare to run) anyway. If you get into invention they're going to call you a fool who wasted your life. Invent (and learn to invent) anyway. Be the planner, the architect, the organizer. If you believe in God, go render unto God what is God's. That's you. If you believe in people, get ready to work with them. George Bailey needs to turn down that $20,000 a year job because he's morally outraged.

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Keeping Our Democratic Leaders Closest
Posted by: jimswanson on Feb 28, 2009 2:24 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
James A. Swanson, Los Altos, CA
www.bushleagueofnations.com [for FREE download of entire $25.95 book]

Electing Obama was the easy part. The real work begins today, and again each new day.

Here a key question, the answer to which will largely determine Obama’s success or failure: Will the millions of young progressive activists who helped elect Obama stay engaged over the long haul?

Their energy during the 2008 presidential campaign was reminiscent of that during the 70’s and the late 60’s.

Powershift09 and the network of student organizations behind it are an encouraging sign, which I applaud.

True progressive transformation of our nation must be driven from the grassroots up, not from the top down by corporate-business-as-usual career politicians.

We know what to expect from Neanderthals in the GOP and in the Republican Wing of the Democratic Party. They are thus “reliable.”

As for our Democratic leaders, we trust them at our peril.

We must stay engaged, take names, and never give up. Let’s redouble our efforts.

We must keep our friends close, our enemy closer, and our Democratic leaders closest.

Jim Swanson, Los Altos, CA
“The Bush League of Nations” [for FREE download of entire $25.95 book]

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» Clink, clink. Posted by: edgar1
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