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The Night the Lights Went Out

By Maya Schenwar, AlterNet. Posted February 13, 2006.


In solidarity with Iraq's acute power shortages, a group of Chicagoans are going on a month-long electricity fast.

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In the middle of February, while most people are dialing their thermostats up to the max, microwaving multiple cups of hot chocolate and huddling around their television sets, a few dedicated Chicagoans will give up electricity in order to draw attention to the electricity shortage in Iraq. These folks really mean it: Their electricity fast, "Lights Out Chicago," starts Feb. 15 and will last to March 20. They seek to experience some of the hardships and confront the difficulties that Iraqis are experiencing since their power has been cut short.

"My hopes for this fast are simply that many conversations will be sparked, and that people will stop and think for a moment about how their actions affect such crucial elements of Iraqis' daily life," said Laura Gardiner, one of the fast's organizers. "When I tell friends, family and acquaintances that I will be participating in an electricity fast, they are often dumbfounded as to how that is possible. This is exactly the response that I hope to challenge; to show others that what we see as difficult or nearly impossible is the reality for many people."

The electricity fast forms a part of the Winter of Our Discontent, a 33-day food fast taking place in Washington, D.C., organized by the Chicago-based group Voices for Creative Nonviolence (VCNV). The fasters will call for an end to the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq, reparations for the damage done by the war, and full funding for the reconstruction of Iraq, among other demands, according to Jeff Leys, one of the action's coordinators. In addition to fasting, VCNV activists will participate in civil disobedience and nonviolent resistance at the Pentagon, the White House, the Capitol and the World Bank, with quite a few risking arrest.

"Through creative actions, both the Winter of Our Discontent and Lights Out Chicago will press for the payment of war reparations by the U.S. to Iraq, for the damage inflicted by the past 15 years of economic and military warfare," said Joel Gulledge, an organizer with VCNV who will participate in both fasts.

As the Voices crowd abstains from food to call attention to the widespread hunger in Iraq, Gardiner and her co-organizers hope that Lights Out Chicago will provide the American public with a glimpse of the grim physical realities caused by Iraq's electricity shortage, which the Bush administration has no plans to alleviate.

Electricity shortages have increased dramatically since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, which critically damaged at least four power plants. The closure of a major oil refinery this past December has caused conditions to deteriorate further. Before the war, Baghdad residents had access to electricity 24 hours a day, while most rural areas followed a consistent schedule of four hours with electricity, then four hours without, says Gardiner. Today, according to IRIN, a U.N. humanitarian news service, people in Baghdad have power for less than eight hours a day. Moreover, access is fickle; Iraqis don't know when electricity will come on or shut off. In 14-degree Fahrenheit weather, that unpredictability is no small matter.

U.S. officials originally decided to build Iraq's new electricity plan on a foundation of natural gas, installing gas generators in many Iraqi power plants. However, according to a December report in the Los Angeles Times, the pipelines to transport that gas power were never built.

The United States has made clear that filling the electricity gap is not a priority. Of the 425 projects originally planned to improve Iraq's power situation, only 300 will be completed, according to a report in late January by the office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

"Even though it may seem like there have been gains in Iraq's power supply, those gains are not reliable," Gardiner said. She noted that many hospitals cannot function for lack of the electricity needed to power essential equipment.

The month of Lights Out Chicago will include several workshops to encourage those not participating in the fast to try out the electricity-free lifestyle in smaller doses. Mehmet Ak, chef and proprietor of the Chicago raw-food restaurant, Cousins Incredible Vitality, will lead a workshop on cooking sans electricity. Gardiner, Gulledge and others will also host a series of community-building get-togethers featuring electricity-free activities for fasters and non-fasters alike.

"I hope that both those who choose to abstain from electricity and others who find out about our project can't help but empathize with the millions of ordinary people in Iraq who are unable to rely on electricity," Gulledge said. "I also hope that people living in Iraq will learn of what we are doing, and know that the problems they face aren't going completely unnoticed."

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Maya Schenwar is a Chicago-based freelance writer and an editor for Publications International.

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Just plain silly.....
Posted by: Poe on Feb 13, 2006 4:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
....these people with nothing to do with their lives.

If any of these "fasters" are renters, are they going to foot the bill if the pipes burst?
Do they have children...pets?

Why a month? Why not do this for a year?

What is the point, anyway??

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» Just plain silly..... Posted by: Spot
» RE: Just plain silly..... Posted by: liberalibrarian
» RE: Just plain silly..... Posted by: Dirtman
It might be more useful
Posted by: orwellwasn'tdreaming on Feb 13, 2006 5:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
if we could pull the plug on the White House and Congress. Oh, and K Street, too.

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drink and be merry
Posted by: killskin on Feb 13, 2006 9:08 AM   
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to paraphrase platoon 'you gotta be rich to think like that'.
There's a bunch of homeless people in my town who have been living without electricity for longer than a month, maybe it was a protest?
I'm sure the iraqis are really touched by the symbolic pseudosacrifice. Now if they were gonna spend a month without water or food, trapped in their house with the bodies of their grandparents and children, maybe it would mean something.
Light yourselves on fire.

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» RE: drink and be merry Posted by: shanaza
We have more in common with the Iraqis than we think.
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Feb 13, 2006 11:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Turning off your lights...big whoopdie doo. How many of us this year had to go without lights that we're protesting anything,except maybe not enough money. This Country lives under the thumb of a ruler that makes Hussien look like a pussy. Sure he used WMD's on folks,but WE SOLD THEM TO HIM. That means the U.S Govt should be on trial also for the deaths caused by the use of those WMDs. Instead, the Govt walks and invades his country,takes our Liberty away as if it were a child's allowance,turns a deaf ear to victims of natural disaster and laughs all the way to the bank. These people are CRIMINALS! We have been lied to every step of the way. The election,9/11,Bin Ladin,every energy crisis,every threat,
every war. All the while BOTH Parties continue to give us the 'appearance' of domacracy while perpetuating the actions
of Tyranny.
There's hundreds of thousands of Iraqis without power,descent food, good water and safe housing. In THIS
Country there are MILLIONS. The Govt has FAILED the People of this Country. Their preoccupation with 'WAR FOR PROFIT' has given them an 'Every man for themselves' rational.
There are 80 million Americans that are forced to live in the low income brackets,another 20 million are in the 'premanate
underclass' never to know the simple luxury of having the bills paid. In Iraq it's bombs and bullets you have against you,here it's the tyranny of inequitable taxation and compound intrest rates, so instead of houses and whatnot being blown to bits, we're just watching our prespective bottoms dropping out. The Tyranny, however, is the same.
We are already in solidarity with the People of Iraq. We both hate Bush and we're both being screwed by him.

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solidarity at home?
Posted by: ckayfus on Feb 13, 2006 2:47 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Certainly it's important to show solidarity with the people of Iraq. I wonder, though, if these Chicago activists might also show solidarity with the thousands of Chicago families who are currently going without light and gas this winter. I wonder also why such families make a much less attractive press story than their Iraqi counterparts.

These low income Chicagoans aren't direct victims of our war on terror. Yet they are victims of our war on welfare and public housing. For them, darkened and chilly apartments aren't a choice, but rather a result of soaring energy costs, cuts in energy assistance programs, sluggish code enforcement, and a prodded transition into the private rental market.

Symbolic gestures of solidarity are inspiring. Yet seems to me that as Chicago's mild winter takes a cold turn, the activists featured in this story might also, more practically and politically, work on local and municipal levels to demand that nobody in their own city goes without heat and lights.

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About time we turned out the lights
Posted by: librocubicularist on Feb 13, 2006 8:11 PM   
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It has become so rare for an American to consider how much energy they're using, probably because there aren't any valid excuses for most of our excesses. I live in the deep south without heat or AC, by choice, because that's how everyone 60 years ago lived by default. My house is older and was designed without AC in mind, keeping me relatively cool in hundred-degree weather, June through August. Aside from that, my roommates and I take whatever measures we can afford to reduce our energy usage, including energy-efficient bulbs, etc. I feel like my quality of life isn't any less than many of my peers who use much more energy than I could imagine using. Not only do Americans abuse our energy resources, we don't even recognize that our selfishness deprives others of their basic energy needs. Energy (in non-renewable forms) isn't infinite; when we use more than we really need, we're preventing someone else from using it at all.

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glorybe
Posted by: glorybe on Feb 14, 2006 8:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We normally do destroy enemy nations. Sadly the terrorists claim no homeland while friends and families of terrorists fail to turn them over to authorities. The yield from those actions is to wipe out nations sheltering terrorists. Iraq is just one. Several more may soon be at war with us. I have no problem keeping them in misery and poverty until they no longer shelter terrorists.
And New Orleans is an example of just how stupid our government can be.

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