Tuesday, 16 Jan 2007
MIDDLEBURY, Vt.
There are probably people with such overriding social confidence -- Martha Stewart, Donald Trump -- that they can plan a party without ever worrying whether or not people will want to come. I'm not like that.
When we tossed up our website for StepItUp2007 last Monday, we didn't know how people would respond to the invitation to put together a climate-change rally in their community for April 14. Seven days later, we have a pretty good idea.
It's been a remarkable and moving week. From the very start, the responses have been flowing in: I'll organize one on a bridge over the Charles River. I'll put together a march to the Hollywood sign. Here's my bookstore -- it's the perfect place to start a rally. Twin Cities. Tampa Bay. The Poconos. Utah. Alabama. Iowa. New Orleans. The Bronx River. Fort Collins. Reno. They've come in so fast and furious -- way over a hundred in the first five days -- that we're having to work hard to get them completely nailed down. Should we merge the five (so far) New York City rallies into one bigger one? We're working on it! But we need many, many more people to step up and start planning actions in their neighborhoods -- I think April 14 will see many hundreds of rallies, from big cities to small suburbs. It's already clear that it's going to be by far the largest climate-change demonstration in American history -- and we've only been going a week.
What's amazing, too, is who's responding. The League of Women Voters of Cape Ann. The Sierra Club. Rev. Billy and the church of Stop Shopping. Real churches. The Natural Resources Defense Council. Some reef divers in Key West. Religious Witness for the Earth. Interfaith Power and Light. The Orion Grassroots Network is mobilizing its thousand member organizations. Everyone we've asked has said yes, from writer friends like Terry Tempest Williams and Brooke Williams (who are staging one of the more amazing actions, complete with skiers descending a dwindling glacier toward Jackson Hole) and Ross Gelbspan and Paul Hawken to veteran organizers like Kenny Ausubel of Bioneers. Laurie David is sending out 600,000 emails to her virtual marchers. The National Wildlife Federation. The student climate movement, through Energy Action and on dozens of campuses. You name it. Many more will be profiled here, and on our website, in the weeks to come. It's just such fun to see the environmental movement, in all its many scales and across its many divisions, working together. You were mourning the death of environmentalism? Whistle a slightly happier tune.
The reason, I think, is clear. There's all kinds of pent-up energy -- people who have been obsessing about global warming for decades, or years, or the months since they saw An Inconvenient Truth. But it's been hard to know what to do about it, beyond the obvious things in your own home. Given an opening, people are pouring in. The education that leaders like Al Gore have been providing has sunk in, and the time for action has arrived. This will be just the first of what I'm sure will be many big escapades in the next few years.
And they will work, because they represent the latent worry and hope of most Americans, a force now rumbling loud enough that some politicians can register it on their exquisitely sensitive seismographs. Just last week, Sens. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) announced a revamp of their old and tepid do-very-little global-warming bill. The new one is not tough enough, but it's a far sight better -- two-thirds cuts in carbon by 2050. And Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) signed on the first day as a cosponsor. By now, most of the leading presidential candidates are on the record advocating somewhat realistic policies. Things are starting -- starting -- to come unstuck.
But the only real solvent is public involvement. If there are rallies on April 14 in most of the country's congressional districts, then by April 15 there will be more cosponsors for the best legislation, like the bill Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) reintroduced into the Senate today. There will be more chance that obstructionists like Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.) will feel the heat from colleagues and move bills out of committee. For 20 years this issue has been wedged immovably in Congress, and it will take a mighty shove from all of us to really get it moving again. ExxonMobil will be shoving back, of course, but we'll see who has more tigers in the tank.
Which is a long way of saying: Come to our party. Go to StepItUp2007 and register a rally for your community. It's not hard, and we'll even make it easier for you: You don't have to be "an organizer." You just have to be someone who's ready to take a stand.
Comments
View as Flat
garynick Posted 8:47 pm
08 Jan 2007
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poprocks Posted 5:10 am
09 Jan 2007
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Peggy Farabaugh Posted 11:59 am
09 Jan 2007
Thanks for all your wonderful work up at Middlebury! We'll check tomorrow at my sons school and see if we can get a group of students and parents together down here in Vernon Vermont to join you on April 14.
We appreciate all the good work you do. We also love and have worked with Jim Andrews at Middlebury to try and help save the reptiles and amphibians of Vermont.
Best of luck with the project,
Peggy Farabaugh
Vermont Woods Studios
Fine Furniture from Sustainable Sources
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Delay And Deny Posted 2:46 am
11 Jan 2007
I've started a movement to promote and enjoy climate change. Balmy weather, lower energy costs and more arable land being available are just some of the key advantages.
Land in Alberta: For years, the entrenched Liberals have bought up the warm coasts and jacked up prices to keep themselves rich. Now the huge central areas of North America will open up and make land cheaper and cheaper. Buying a house will no longer be something done in a life time, or even a decade, but in a single transaction ($20,000 for a 4 bedroom in Saskatchewan? Here you go, put it on my Visa!
Warm Weather: All the money I save in electricity will go to letting me drink more lattes and have more time off to enjoy the Internet as Me: The Time Man of the Year.
Paint It Black: I see the girls go by in their summer clothes. Yeah, and now it will be all year round! No more long months looking at big puffy winter suits...now micro-skirts will be de rigeur fasion. Hoo-rah!
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Billhook Posted 5:32 pm
08 Feb 2007
I'd make a few points that I hope may be helpful.
1st, many Americans don't seem to realize that they cannot commandeer developing nations' co-operation in the supremely urgent task of halting greenhouse gas emissions -
A global framework for the allocation of national emission-rights for this century is requisite to any serious change on the issue.
Without that framework, which must be equitable to be negotiable, and must be scientifically stringent to be effective, we will remain in the present "After you, Claude" catch-22, where no nation will risk its economy by making serious cuts in its emissions.
The title of that framework (which was first presented to the UN back in 1990) is Contraction & Convergence",
and, put succinctly it is about
Contraction - of global GHG emissions to respect Earth's capacity,
and
Convergence - of all nations' emissions-rights to global per capita parity.
This framework is open to negotiation as to the dates by which a given global cut is made and by which per capita parity is achieved.
Further information is at the website of Global Commons Institute - http://www.gci.org.uk
So I really hope that the masses of people you motivate to come out and demonstrate will do more than call just for the US gubmint to "do something useful".
Best of luck,
Billhook
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MikeF Posted 4:25 am
15 Feb 2007
Is this a step forward or too little too late?
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