Home
Archive
Columnists
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
100 words for 100 days: submit your 100 word essay and get published on AlterNet
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Register to Vote: Rock the Vote, powered by Working Assets Wireless
Advertisement
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Environment

Hi, Tech

By Bill McKibben, Grist.org. Posted February 27, 2007.


Understanding the power of the Internet for progressive organizing.
Advertisement

Bill McKibben, an AlterNet guest columnist, is spearheading the Step It Up 2007 campaign. A scholar-in-residence at Middlebury College, McKibben's newest book is the forthcoming Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future. His column is reprinted by permission from Grist. For more environmental news and humor sign up for Grist's free email service.

By now, the six people doing most of the work of national organizing for stepitup07.org have introduced themselves on the website. Will Bates, Phil Aroneanu, Jeremy Osborn, May Boeve, Jon Warnow, and Jamie Henn are all recently minted college grads (well, one of them has a thesis still to complete). You can take any two of them, add them together, and come up with a number slightly less than my 46 years.

You would think that this would make for a vast gulf in terms of skills, abilities, and talents. And indeed it does -- when it comes to technology, at least, each of them is forced to treat me like a slightly dim child who needs to be reminded several times a day how to do what needs doing.

I'm not bad at email (though I've not fully mastered the whole I'm-out-of-town-on-business automatic reply thing). But blog-posting and setting up Skype accounts and using the web for videoconferencing is, for the moment, beyond me. It's a failing I'm more and more aware of, because this entire campaign has been organized on the web. We're building the biggest grassroots environmental protest in many years, and so far we've done it almost without a single story in the conventional press.

It's been fascinating to sense the power of this tool. E-Magazines like Grist, of course, have long been in the vanguard of electronic environmentalism. For most of us, though, the new mental models that go with web organizing are only now developing.

To be honest, we hatched the idea of a widely distributed protest in part because we knew we lacked the financial and organizational muscle to stage a march on Washington. We worried about the carbon emissions, too. But we also sensed that such distributed action fit more easily with the ethos of the moment, a real internet ethos.

I'd define that ethos this way: it's easy to both put in and take out. Instead of massive centralized systems (TV networks, agribusiness, huge coal-fired power plants, and indeed marches on Washington), there's now the possibility for widespread local systems of all kinds.

The solar panels on my roof tie into the grid; when the sun shines, I'm a utility. Similarly, the April 14 demonstration in my small Vermont town will be a good thing in and of itself -- and it will tie into a vast network (nearing 750!) of such protests that we can link together electronically. In this way, we will make them more than the sum of their parts.

We're about, I think, to get some more conventional publicity for Step It Up -- newspaper and TV attention, which is already starting to show up at the local level thanks to organizers in each community, will soon be coming from national outlets as well. That will help, because there are still all sorts of people who are still not fully immersed in the web.

But it's been fascinating to see that conventional media attention is no longer the absolutely necessary oxygen of political organizing -- and that the alternative structures the web is building are suggesting a whole different way of thinking about doing politics.

I'm awfully glad Martin Luther King Jr. was at the Lincoln Memorial instead of on a webcast. And I'm also glad that the April 14 rallies will be in the real world -- in fact, it's the connection with actual physical place that will make them so powerful. But I'm glad, too, that all of us, even the 40-something geezers, are learning to make full use of these new tools.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: global warming, climate change, stepitup2007, bill mckibben

Bill McKibben is the author of "The End of Nature" and "Enough: Staying Human in an Engineered Age."

Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from Environment! Sign up now »

Advertisement
Advertisement

 

Comments Turn comments off sitewide Give us feedback »
Comments closed.
The comments for this story have been closed. Thank you to everyone who participated.
View:
Hold on to your hat, then.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Feb 27, 2007 8:23 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The newspaper is a dinosaur floundering in a tar pit. Television as we know it will, thank...well, thank whomsoever you choose without judgment from little ol' me...follow suit in short order. The internet will fragment--and that will be a good thing. In a few years all you will need is a dish (more likely an array) and a server, and you will be able to serve an entire community low-cost, high-speed internet, that will only be dependent on the number of entrepreneurs willing to invest the time and money into sending satellites into orbit. It won't matter if the satellites are U.S., Taiwanese, or from Bejing, as long as you've got the ability to pay a relatively cheap price for access to it.

Wireless data (read "palm pilot-ish") devices will become the unified de facto communication standard. Ma Bell may have birthed baby Bells, and the baby Bells might have come into their own, but they will adapt to the new market or drop dead, finally.

There will certainly be a place for renewable power--and that place will grow by leaps and bounds as oil becomes more scarce over the next hundred years. I'm particularly excited about what is being done with algae--arguable an almost ideal combination of solar ("food") and water power that can be used to harvest energy as heat, and excess algae can be used as edible nutrient matter.

Best of all, we won't be going down the idiotic road of being the first nation in the history of the world to subsidize the burning up our food supply in our gas tanks.

The tone of this article was great. There should be more like it.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

VERY important
Posted by: paschn on Feb 28, 2007 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That you GUARD the unbiased truth spreading of the net!! Protect it from doughy, corporate swine like McCain et al. For example, I had NO idea his old man was key in hiding the Israeli attack on and murder of U.S. service men in '67! Further, was it not for the web, their, (Israel's), terrorist murders of peace activists in the occupied territories, sniping of children, the amazing power they wield which allowes them to get laws passed in many eastern/western European, hell, even Canada and soon the USA, that put people in PRISON FOR YEARS for even SAYING the holocaust "history'"(s) not accurate, ( Mr. Zundel, 5 years ), would still be a safe, nasty little secret. So, okay drones, when McCain and his corporate pimps start feeding you "horror stories" about it hamstringing homeland insecurity or handing over our innocent youth to predators don't, for goodness sake fall for it!
Because when Bush and Israel do their version of the Gulf of Tonkin incident to get "our boys" to invade and murder for them in Iran, then declare Marshall law to enable his removal of people like us who SEE what they do and move us into Haliburton Hotels, our families and friends will NEED it free and clear for a last attempt at waking up the public to their evil.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» Zundel the Neo Nazi... Posted by: lessbread