Chloe Maxmin and Extra Credit write
Why Divestment is Changing the Climate Movement:
A new movement to convince colleges and universities to divest from fossil fuel companies that own the majority of global carbon reserves has taken off across the nation. The inspiration for this wave of activism originated in a Rolling Stone article by Bill McKibben last summer. Coordinated by 350.org, divestment is spreading like wildfire. With cities, religious groups, individuals, and 210 campuses already involved, divestment has brought climate change to the forefront of local and national dialogues.
I became an environmental activist at the age of twelve, and my commitment has never wavered. Still, I have been frustrated by fragmentation and insularity within the environmental movement. Now as a student leader of Divest Harvard, I have seen how divestment is engaging more students than any similar campaign in the past twenty years. Why is it so successful?
Today, people live in a cloud of mistrust. Only 6 percent of Americans claim much confidence in Congress, 7 percent in Wall Street, 13 percent in big companies, and 19 percent in the White House. Individuals withdraw into personal social networks and communities to shield themselves from institutions of which they’ve grown skeptical. Past environmental campaigns focused mostly on changes that target those very institutions in which people have lost faith. They were exhorted to pressure politicians to “vote climate” or to use their consumer power to curb large corporations like Exxon. Such campaigns required persuading people to set aside their mistrust. It was always an uphill road.
Divestment has opened up the climate movement to many new participants because it has found a way to bypass mistrust and hopelessness while forging a more inviting road to optimism and concrete action.
Here’s how:
The divestment movement effectively creates a sense of “us” by welcoming everyone: the only qualification needed is to be a member of the planet. [...]
The divestment movement has not only helped more people understand that they’re all in the same boat, it has also highlighted the naked facts about the fossil fuel industry. [...]
The divestment movement exposes the coercive tactics of the fossil fuel industry and challenges its free market mythology.
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Blast from the Past. At Daily Kos on this date in 2003—Saddam's WMD: oil:
Nothing better than to wake up to this.
A senior U.S. Central Command official will provide a background briefing regarding Iraq's potential use of oil as a terror weapon.
Sounds like an Onion article, doesn't it?
Reader BZ, who brought this beauty to my attention, summed it up perfectly:
What's next? Sand as WMD?
Update: Upon further thought, this strategy starts making more and more sense. If Bush and Co. can pull it off, why stop with Iraq? It would provide ample justification to go after administration thorn-in-the-sides Venezuela and Iran. And at that point could we really ignore Saudi Arabia's "arsenal"? |
Tweet of the Day:
One day, the Earth will be on fire & it will be raining dinosaurs & razorblades. And there will still be people saying Climate change is BS.
— @Wolfrum via web
On today's
Kagro in the Morning show, it's a Guns N' Filibusters encore! That's still where the big news is for us.
Greg Dworkin brought us the latest polling on gun policy proposals. Interest and intensity both remain high, post-Newtown.
Armando took the reins for a few minutes, and stayed with us to discuss the filibuster's state of play. Want to know what I think about the deal before I write it? Listen to the podcast!
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