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    Biggest Civil Disobedience Against Global Warming In American History

    DESPITE SNOW -- AND IRONY -- A CLIMATE PROTEST PERSISTS
    By Bryan Walsh / Washington
    Time
    March 3, 2009

    Original Link

    The call rang out through Washington early on the morning of Mar. 2: the biggest act of civil disobedience against global warming in American history would not, in fact, be snowed out.

    Environmental groups, led by Greenpeace and the Rainforest Action Network, had enlisted eco-celebrities like Robert Kennedy Jr. and Bill McKibben and registered over 2,000 youth protesters from the around the country for a march on the coal-fired Capitol Power Plant, which supplies electricity to Congress. They planned to shut down the plant by peacefully blocking the entrances, a textbook act of civil disobedience for which many expected -- perhaps eagerly -- to be arrested. The message was simple: the burning of coal, which accounts for some 40% of U.S. carbon emissions, "is destroying the planet through global warming," as Kennedy put it. America needs to get off coal -- which supplies nearly half the country's electricity -- if it wants to have any hope of controlling its greenhouse gas emissions, and it should start with the Capitol plant.

    As it turned out, the action may have been almost too successful. On Feb. 26, just a few days before the protest, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader called for the 103-year-old plant to switch from coal to cleaner burning natural gas, a move environmentalists had long pushed for but had been blocked by representatives from coal-heavy states. Protesters claimed an early victory. "Getting the plant to switch shows the power of popular pressure," says Steven Biel, the director of Greenpeace's global warming campaign. But there was no doubt that by responding before the protesters hit the street of the capital, Congress was simply moving one set of goalposts off the field.

    But then came the snow. As over two thousand young activists -- according to the organizers -- gathered in the Spirit of Justice Park near the Capitol, bystanders were greeted with the surreal sight of a global warming protest that was occurring in the middle of a freak March snowstorm. They chanted slogans like "Who is hot in here / There's too much carbon in the air" while huddling for warmth from the wind chill. The greatest risk to the protesters wasn't aggressive cops -- the D.C. police, just as cold as the activists, had little interest in confrontation -- but frostbite from the hours of marching and standing in the cold. "It's icy out there, so be careful," organizer Joshua Kahn Russell told the crowd before the march began. (There were no reports of injuries, winter-related or otherwise, although after six hours in the elements this reporter is still waiting to feel his face again.)

    The joke was not lost on the media: FoxNews.com noted that it was "snowing irony in Washington." Nor did the protest end quite as expected. After the high-spirited and very well-organized marchers left the park and circled the nearby Capitol plant, groups locked arms in front of the three entrances to the facility, fully expecting to be arrested by the dozens of police monitoring the event. But the arrests never came -- the police simply waited and watched as speakers and musicians climbed a mobile soundstage and addressed the increasingly frigid crowd. After nearly three hours in the cold, with activists beginning to wonder what it took to get arrested in this town anymore, the protest's leadership decided that it was time to declare victory and go home. "We won!" Russell told the cheering crowd. "We shut this coal plant down!"

    Well, not exactly. Plans are for the Capitol plant to open on schedule tomorrow, still powered for the time being by coal. It would be heartbreakingly easy to mock a global warming protest that was nearly snowed out, but what happened in Washington could be a significant step in the climate change movement. For all the attention paid to it in the media, global warming remains an amorphous issue for many Americans, one with consequences that are far-off and unconnected to their daily lives. If that is ever going to change, warming advocates need to make climate change a matter of justice, appealing to Americans' sense of fairness -- just as social movements like civil rights once did.

    As speaker after speaker addressed the crowd -- from African-American activists whose cities are blanketed by pollution to protesters from Appalachia, where coal mining has stripped the land bare -- the message wasn't about polar bears or sea level rise, but the essential injustice of climate change. Unjust because in the U.S. and around the world it is those who are least responsible for climate change who will suffer the most from warming, and because it is a form of "generational theft," as one activist put it, with the young standing to inherit a ruined Earth. "My generation has blown it," said Rocky Anderson, the former mayor of Salt Lake City, one of several politicians who joined the march. "But this power is going to be fueled by the young people."

    The young people were fully present, both at the Capitol plant march and over the weekend at the Power Shift conference, which brought together more 11,000 college-age activists from around the country to strategize and rally over climate change. For this generation -- post-Cold War, post-9/11, perhaps post-prosperity -- global warming is emerging as their issue. Averting dangerous climate change is going to take smart policy, vast technological change and brave entrepreneurs — but it will also require a popular social movement that can alter American values. Global warming is far from inspiring that kind of change -- the Capitol plant protest still only attracted a few thousand people -- but it is beginning and it is growing, and a snowstorm isn't likely to stop it.

    ............

    NHNE's Climate Change Resource Page

    NHNE's 1000 Most Recent Climate Change Articles

    posted @ Thursday, March 05, 2009 12:53 AM by David

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