Showing posts with label common. Show all posts
Showing posts with label common. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Call for Mass Civil Disobedience Against Coal

Our friends at Common Dreams have reposted this article from Yes! Magazine:

by Bill McKibben & Wendell Berry

Dear Friends,

There are moments in a nation's-and a planet's-history when it may be necessary for some to break the law in order to bear witness to an evil, bring it to wider attention, and push for its correction. We think such a time has arrived, and we are writing to say that we hope some of you will join us in Washington D.C. on Monday March 2 in order to take part in a civil act of civil disobedience outside a coal-fired power plant near Capitol Hill.

We will be there to make several points:

Coal-fired power is driving climate change. Our foremost climatologist, NASA's James Hansen, has demonstrated that our only hope of getting our atmosphere back to a safe level-below 350 parts per million co2-lies in stopping the use of coal to generate electricity.

Even if climate change were not the urgent crisis that it is, we would still be burning our fossil fuels too fast, wasting too much energy and releasing too much poison into the air and water. We would still need to slow down, and to restore thrift to its old place as an economic virtue.

Coal is filthy at its source. Much of the coal used in this country comes from West Virginia and Kentucky, where companies engage in "mountaintop removal" to get at the stuff; they leave behind a leveled wasteland, and impoverished human communities. No technology better exemplifies the out-of-control relationship between humans and the rest of creation.

Coal smoke makes children sick. Asthma rates in urban areas near coal-fired power plants are high. Air pollution from burning coal is harmful to the health of grown-ups too, and to the health of everything that breathes, including forests.

The industry claim that there is something called "clean coal" is, put simply, a lie. But it's a lie told with tens of millions of dollars, which we do not have. We have our bodies, and we are willing to use them to make our point. We don't come to such a step lightly. We have written and testified and organized politically to make this point for many years, and while in recent months there has been real progress against new coal-fired power plants, the daily business of providing half our electricity from coal continues unabated. It's time to make clear that we can't safely run this planet on coal at all. So we feel the time has come to do more--we hear President Barack Obama's call for a movement for change that continues past election day, and we hear Nobel Laureate Al Gore's call for creative non-violence outside coal plants. As part of the international negotiations now underway on global warming, our nation will be asking China, India, and others to limit their use of coal in the future to help save the planet's atmosphere. This is a hard thing to ask, because it's their cheapest fuel. Part of our witness in March will be to say that we're willing to make some sacrifices ourselves, even if it's only a trip to the jail.

With any luck, this will be the largest such protest yet, large enough that it may provide a real spark. If you want to participate with us, you need to go through a short course of non-violence training. This will be, to the extent it depends on us, an entirely peaceful demonstration, carried out in a spirit of hope and not rancor. We will be there in our dress clothes, and ask the same of you. There will be young people, people from faith communities, people from the coal fields of Appalachia, and from the neighborhoods in Washington that get to breathe the smoke from the plant.

We will cross the legal boundary of the power plant, and we expect to be arrested. After that we have no certainty what will happen, but lawyers and such will be on hand. Our goal is not to shut the plant down for the day-it is but one of many, and anyway its operation for a day is not the point. The worldwide daily reliance on coal is the danger; this is one small step to raise awareness of that ruinous habit and hence help to break it.

Needless to say, we're not handling the logistics of this day. All the credit goes to a variety of groups, especially EnergyAction (which is bringing thousands of young people to Washington that weekend), Greenpeace, the Ruckus Society, and Rainforest Action Network. For more information: http://www.capitolclimateaction.org/

Thank you,

Wendell Berry, Bill McKibben

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/02/27-10

Friday, February 13, 2009

Non-profit Organization Common Cause Expounds Upon Pay-to-Play


Pay-to-play is a term used to describe an all too common occurrence in our political system: when money is exchanged directly for political favors, such as generous campaign donations for a lucrative government contract, or Superbowl tickets in exchange for a legislative favor.

The phrase began dominating headlines in late 2008, when former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich was arrested on corruption charges that included trying to sell the Senate seat of then President-elect Barack Obama to the highest bidder.

Ironically, in the closing arguments of his impeachment trial on Jan. 29, Blagojevich stumbled on a kernel of truth about politics today, when he defended his actions by saying, "Those are conversations relating to the things all of us in politics do in order to run campaigns and try to win elections."

“You guys are in politics,” Blagojevich added to the senators. “You know what we have to do to go out and run elections.”

Blagojevich, who also tried to withhold funds for a local children's hospital as ransom for campaign contributions, deserves no defense. But he demonstrates how deep the pay-to-play problems go.

“The American people know too, and they want it stopped,” said Bob Edgar, president and CEO of Common Cause. “It’s time to end pay-to-play politics in America and give people the government they deserve.”

There is no question that our system is broken. Blagojevich is just one story and yet, through his actions, he has shined a spotlight on a much deeper rot in our politics that needs to be fixed.

Common Cause is proposing a major reform package that, if enacted, will strike at the heart of this corrupt system and culture. Our “Clean Government for Change” package would:

· Ban lobbyist contributions, bundling and fundraising for members of Congress and the President

· Adopt pay-to-play laws at the state level modeled after a successful Connecticut law that bans campaign contributions and fundraising by lobbyists and government contractors

· Create a new campaign finance system that enables candidates who swear off special interest money to run vigorous campaigns on a blend of small private contributions and public funds.

Please join Common Cause in its work. Visit www.commoncause.org to learn more.