[blind-democracy] Connecticut activists assemble at Climate Justice Teach-in

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 16 Mar 2018 10:57:34 -0400

https://socialistaction.org/2018/03/14/connecticut-activists-assemble-at-climate-justice-teach-in/


Connecticut activists assemble at Climate Justice Teach-in

/ 2 days ago


March 2018 Jacqui Patterson
Jacqui Patterson,  director of the national NAACP’s Environmental and Justice Program, addressed the issue of environmental racism in her speech at the Climate Justice Teach-in in West Hartford, Connecticut.

WEST HARTFORD, Conn.—On Feb. 24, around 170 crowded into the Elmwood Community Center here to hear, as the promotional material described the event, “Experts and activists exploring some of the toughest questions facing the climate movement.”

Jacqui Patterson, the director of the national NAACP’s Environmental and Justice Program, told the stories of individual people of color whose bout with climate change was inextricably intertwined with issues of income and racism. Anne Hendrixson, who teaches a course called “Beyond the Population Bomb” at Hampshire College, worked to try to dislodge the audience’s conviction that reducing population would mitigate climate change.

Sean Sweeney, the coordinator of Trade Unionists for Energy Democracy, brought down the house with his explanation of the failure of a strategy of private investment and the necessity to move quickly to the social ownership of energy systems and their control by democratic means.

Alexis Rodriquez of the Connecticut Puerto Rican Agenda won the crowd to an understanding that without decolonization, true recovery on the island was impossible. Workshops put activists on the road for organizing a Sept. 9 state demonstration for a transition to a 100% renewable energy system and numerous other climate-related campaigns. The teach-in opened with the following remarks by Christine Gauvreau of 350 Connecticut:

Why are we here? In Todd Miller’s new book, “Storming the Wall,” he says that when the Berlin Wall fell in 1988, there were 16 border fences around the world. Now, he says, there are 70. What we are looking at is what one geographer called “a situation of border fortification in a warming world.”

In India, one such militarized border wall is meant to keep out the millions of Bangladeshis whose farmland is increasingly falling into the ocean. In the U.S. the administration hopes to keep out farmers from Honduras, where the climate extremes that are disrupting agriculture are the greatest in the hemisphere. Wars for oil and gas in the Middle East have displaced incredible numbers. Over 5 million people from Syria are now living outside the country in camps.

The new expanded border regimes around the globe are meant to enforce a division, in the face of extreme climate change, between—as the title of another book terms it—“The Secure and the Dispossessed.” While we in the climate movement in the U.S. and Europe are organizing to stop the flow of fossil fuels and demand an emergency transition to renewables, military think tanks here and around the globe are churning out white papers on the kind of security regimes necessary to defend the major industrialized nations from the hundreds of millions of people they expect to be on the road by 2050.

Like economic refugees in general, those forced to roam due to displacement by climate extremes have no legal status. A resident of the South Pacific whose island has been inundated has no national rights anywhere on the globe. Climate change is underway, and its reality can be increasingly measured not only in parts per million but in human lives. A third of the world’s population lives on the coasts, and much of the remainder will face weather extremes.

In one of the most dystopian responses to climate change, major foundations and the U.S. AID are pushing reactionary population control measures in Africa, Latin America, and India—all to nip those unruly populations in the bud, all in the name of defending the globe from climate change. On the level of brute force used by extractivists and their governments, we can cite the Guardian newspaper, which tells us that today there are four environmental activists assassinated each week.

In the U.S. we have survivors of Katrina and Sandy, let alone Harvey and Maria and the fires out West, who remain abandoned by the system. Today, in Connecticut, we must rally against the cruel decision of FEMA to kick Puerto Rican climate refugees out of their hotels. In the U.S., fear of the dispossessed and the future dispossessed is used to justify every more powerful surveillance and police powers. And all this comes on top of a legacy of environmental racism whose virulence and scope continues to astound.

The point is that the climate movement is faced with a momentous choice. Without the concerted intervention of people with a sense of justice and humanity, the response of the powers that be to climate change is clearly a very dark and very reactionary one. It is a vision of walls, wars, policing, displacement, dispossession, gentrification, populationism, and an ever increasing effort to separate the secure and the dispossessed. Such a future is unacceptable.

Shaping an alternative future is up to us. To challenge this dystopia, we cannot limit ourselves to demanding lower parts per million.

We must somehow create a social power greater than theirs. We must create a view of the future more powerful than theirs. We must find a way to create a majority movement against the fossil fuel enablers but also against the dystopian world that they envision in the wake of climate change.

A majority movement would have to admit the role of the Pentagon in stoking fossil fuel wars and spreading environmental destruction. A majority movement must be fortified by the powerful moral legacy and combativity of the civil rights and African American nationalist struggles and the youth of Black Lives Matter. It must have the power of organized labor, which however threatened and diminished, starts and stops the trucks, the trains, the construction, and all production every morning.

It must have the imagination and grit of the immigrant rights movement that just 12 years ago, in 2006, put millions into the streets and shuttered the doors of businesses around the country in the largest U.S. demonstration to date. It must have the determination of the Dreamers, who made their cause one of the most well known in the country. And can a movement flourish today that does not appear as allies to women and gender non-conforming people?

So, our teach-in today is meant to challenge us to think about how we create a climate movement that is seen by all as about justice and about emancipation. Our speakers and workshop presenters are extremely well equipped to lead us in that discussion. What we  in Connecticut do with these new insights and knowledge is up to us.




Share this:

Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
23Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)23
Click to share on Google+ (Opens in new window)


March 14, 2018 in Connecticut, Environment, Uncategorized. Tags: climate


Related posts





Climate activists call for end to fossil fuels





Calif. climate activists gear up for Nov. 21





Bonn talks underway; scientists see grim future for climate


Post navigation

← Stop Gaël Quirante’s firing! Unite against repression at La Poste!

Socialist city council member & fighter against police violence assassinated in Rio de Janeiro →















Get Involved!
Donate to help support our work
Get email updates
Join Socialist Action


Newspaper Archives
Newspaper Archives Select Month March 2018  (10) February 2018 (14) January 2018  (13) December 2017  (13) November 2017  (13) October 2017  (16) September 2017  (15) August 2017  (16) July 2017  (17) June 2017  (16) May 2017  (17) April 2017  (14) March 2017  (13) February 2017  (19) January 2017  (13) December 2016 (12) November 2016  (19) October 2016  (12) September 2016  (10) August 2016  (10) July 2016  (14) June 2016  (14) May 2016  (9) April 2016  (12) March 2016  (14) February 2016  (8) January 2016 (11) December 2015  (11) November 2015  (9) October 2015  (8) September 2015  (10) August 2015  (7) July 2015  (13) June 2015 (9) May 2015  (10) April 2015  (12) March 2015  (9) February 2015 (11) January 2015  (10) December 2014  (12) November 2014  (11) October 2014  (9) September 2014  (6) August 2014  (10) July 2014 (11) June 2014  (10) May 2014  (11) April 2014  (10) March 2014 (9) February 2014  (11) January 2014  (11) December 2013  (10) November 2013  (11) October 2013  (17) September 2013  (13) August 2013  (10) July 2013  (11) June 2013  (15) May 2013  (14) April 2013  (14) March 2013  (12) February 2013  (10) January 2013  (17) December 2012  (7) November 2012  (8) October 2012  (19) September 2012  (2) August 2012  (27) July 2012  (18) June 2012  (3) May 2012  (19) April 2012  (14) March 2012  (17) February 2012  (19) January 2012  (17) December 2011  (3) November 2011  (33) October 2011  (14) September 2011  (13) August 2011  (34) July 2011  (24) June 2011  (19) May 2011  (19) April 2011  (15) March 2011  (15) February 2011  (15) January 2011  (15) December 2010  (17) November 2010  (1) October 2010  (6) September 2010  (3) August 2010  (8) July 2010  (7) June 2010  (2) May 2010  (9) April 2010 (3) March 2010  (8) February 2010  (3) January 2010  (9) December 2009  (6) November 2009  (5) October 2009  (16) September 2009 (3) August 2009  (2) July 2009  (5) June 2009  (2) May 2009  (7) April 2009  (6) March 2009  (16) February 2009  (9) January 2009 (10) December 2008  (11) November 2008  (8) October 2008  (16) September 2008  (14) August 2008  (18) July 2008  (12) June 2008 (3) May 2008  (2) April 2008  (3) March 2008  (14) February 2008 (11) January 2008  (11) December 2007  (8) November 2007  (1) July 2007  (1) June 2007  (1) April 2007  (1) March 2007  (1) February 2007  (3) December 2006  (11) November 2006  (11) October 2006 (13) September 2006  (15) August 2006  (11) July 2006  (18) June 2006  (7) May 2006  (14) April 2006  (6) March 2006  (14) February 2006  (5) January 2006  (2) December 2005  (9) November 2005  (8) October 2005  (13) September 2005  (12) August 2005  (9) July 2005  (16) June 2005  (16) May 2005  (16) April 2005  (12) March 2005  (14) February 2005  (19) January 2005  (15) December 2004 (14) November 2002  (17) October 2002  (19) September 2002  (22) August 2002  (21) July 2002  (15) May 2002  (21) April 2002  (21) February 2002  (15) January 2002  (15) December 2001  (17) October 2001  (24) September 2001  (18) July 2001  (19) June 2001  (18) October 2000  (17) September 2000  (21) August 2000  (19) July 2000  (16) June 2000  (26) May 2000  (21) April 2000  (22) March 2000  (28) February 2000  (18) January 2000  (20) December 1999 (20) November 1999  (26) October 1999  (25) September 1999  (18) August 1999  (40) July 1999  (38) June 1999  (24) May 1999  (27) April 1999  (25) March 1999  (26) February 1999  (29) January 1999  (24) July 1998  (12)

Search

View socialistactionusa’s profile on Facebook
View SocialistActUS’s profile on Twitter
View SocialistActionCT’s profile on YouTube


Subscribe to Our Newspaper


Upcoming Events

No upcoming events


Category Cloud

Actions & Protest Africa Anti-War Arts & Culture Black Liberation Canada Caribbean Civil Liberties Cuba East Asia Economy Education & Schools Elections En Español Environment Europe Immigration Indigenous Rights International Labor Latin America Latino Civil Liberties Marxist Theory & History Middle East Police & FBI Prisons South Asia Trump / U.S. Government Uncategorized Women's Liberation


View Calendar


Blog at WordPress.com.









Follow





































Other related posts:

  • » [blind-democracy] Connecticut activists assemble at Climate Justice Teach-in - Roger Loran Bailey