[blind-democracy] Re: How can we fight climate change? All out for the April 29 Climate March!

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 30 Apr 2017 15:30:38 -0400

Sorry for repeating myself. I thought that message didn't go through the first time.


On 4/30/2017 3:26 PM, Roger Loran Bailey (Redacted sender rogerbailey81 for DMARC) wrote:

It is interesting that the news report I caught did not even call them Nazis. They kept calling them national socialists and seemed to emphasize the word socialist.


On 4/30/2017 3:15 PM, Carl Jarvis wrote:
Interesting. I just checked for a report on the Nazi rally in
Kentucky, and all I found was the following article regarding the
upcoming rally:

article
Confrontation Looming As Neo-Nazi Groups To Hold Rally in Pikeville, KY

APRIL 29, 2017

Pikeville, KY – Tensions are running high as the scheduled date and
time approaches for the “Take A Stand for White Working Families”
rally planned by
the Traditionalist Workers Party (TWP), a neo-Nazi hate group with a
history of violence. Unicorn Riot is on the ground in Pikeville to
report on the neo-Nazi
gathering, antifascist opposition, and actions taken by law enforcement.

The TWP, working with other white supremacist groups such as the
National Socialist Movement (NSM), hopes to use this event to create a
“Nationalist Front”
in order to unify and strengthen racist organizing in America. Other
groups involved in the gathering include the League of the South and
the American
Freedom Party; all three are listed as hate groups by the
Southern Poverty Law Center.

block quote


“The Nationalist Front is an umbrella organization for white
nationalist organizations here in the United States and also aligned
with nationalist organizations
around the world.”  – Matthew Heimbach, TWP promotional video
block quote end


On 4/30/17, Roger Loran Bailey <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Speaking of white supremacy, did you hear about the Nazi rally in
Pikeville, Kentucky yesterday? That is not real far away from me, but I
was unaware of it until after the fact when the local television news
covered it. The counterdemonstrators outnumbered the Nazis considerably,
but the only person the news report gave any amount of speaking time to
was one of the Nazis.
On 4/30/2017 2:10 PM, Carl Jarvis wrote:
My plan was to tune in yesterday, but Life got in the way.  Cathy's
mother is becoming more and more confused and even has a struggle to
go from her recliner to the bathroom.  We spent most of the day
behaving like Care Givers.
Still, I applaud the commitment of all of the people who made the
effort, paid the price, went miles from home, to make their beliefs
known.  And so it pained me greatly when NPR spent time this morning
broadcasting excerpts of Donald Trump  ranting in front of a gathering
of cheering loyal Believers in a return to White Supremacy. He damned
the Media, calling MNBC and CNN out by name, and the Media in general,
than spreading the "truth" as dreamed up by Donald Trump. And this
herd of braying faithful believed him, despite there being concrete
facts reputing everything Donald Trump said.  This amazing ability of
a man standing at the head of a powerful nation and making up stories
designed to mislead the people, is what causes my Faith to be shaken.
I see the day when the vast majority of Americans are on one side of
the room, and Donald Trump and his Cabinet are on the other, and
Donald Trump ignores the Will of the People as he spins his Fairy
Tales and leads us to our destruction.

Carl Jarvis


On 4/30/17, Miriam Vieni <miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Carl,

I think you were listening to the wrong thing. I listened to three hours
of
the five hours of the climate march yesterday. It was on the Democracy
Now
website, but it was also broadcast by KPFK Berkley which, after great
confusion, I managed to figure out how to access on my VR Stream. Well,
I
did that last week so that I could hear the Science march which
Democracy
Now also broadcast from its website as well as KPFK. The Scienc march
was
highly controlled and choreographed and I listened only to two hours of
that. I think that the speeches were given during the first two hours of
the
climate march this week, and I wasn't listening at that point. So I got
to
hear all kinds of people from all over the country, talking about why
they'd
come to Washington to march in a very hot march, 93 degrees. Last week,
it
poured during the science march. And tomorrow, immigrants will be
demonstrating and also, staying home. But whatever kinds of
demonstrating
and talking and writing done by the people, the government, fueled by a
lust
for power, keeps grinding along. In the midst of the horrors of the
Trump
administration, we need to remind ourselves that it was Obama who set
the
stage for increased nuclear arms development, who added to the annual
military aid our country gives to Israel, who made it easier to deport
huge
numbers of immigrants without due process, and who gave in to Republican
demands to radically cut domestic spending and to Neo Con and Neo
Liberal
demands to give arms to Jihadists in Syria and to overthrow the
government
in Libya. And I was reminded by several podcast discussions that it was
Obama who taught the public to differentiate between the "good" and
"bad"
immigrants. Trump just talks as if there are more bad ones than good
ones.

Miriam

-----Original Message-----
From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Carl Jarvis
Sent: Sunday, April 30, 2017 10:52 AM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: How can we fight climate change? All out
for
the April 29 Climate March!

I listened to excerpts of Donald Trump telling a screaming crowd of
supporters how successful his first 100 days were, and how much he has
accomplished.  Although I believe that the worst is yet to come, what
Trump
claimed to have accomplished is mostly hot air. After soundly trashing
the
Mass Media, a lashing they richly deserve, but still, it's the same
Media
that sucked up his every move and trotted his name out before the public
until the name Trump was so ingrained in folks heads that they reached
out
and their hands automatically went to the Trump lever, after damning
them,
Trump then told his fans the "real facts".
What seems to be happening is that we are moving away from the
artificial
economy we've created, into an even more unreal world, created in the
head
of Donald Trump.  There is only two possible outcomes. Either Trump
will
drive this out of control presidency over a cliff and destroy the world
economy, or the working class will rise up and remove the burden of
wealth
from the billionaires.
But for the moment, the cheering, wild crowds of "True Trump Believers"
ring
in my ears.

Carl Jarvis


On 4/30/17, Roger Loran Bailey <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
https://socialistaction.org/2017/04/28/how-can-we-fight-climate-change
-all-out-for-the-april-29-climate-march/


How can we fight climate change? All out for the April 29 Climate
March!

/ 2 days ago


May 2016 Global justiceBy BILL ONASCH

On the eve of the April 29 People’s Climate Mobilization in Washington
and other cities, Bill Onasch describes what working people and the
labor movement must do in order to avoid the most catastrophic effects
of climate change.

The working class faces challenges on many fronts today. But one
crisis is overarching. On both land and sea, Northern and Southern
Hemispheres alike, our planet is getting hotter. The scale and pace of
this global warming is unprecedented in human history. The last three
years have been the hottest since precise measurements began in the
1880s.

This heat is expanding the volume of oceans. Along with melting sea
and glacial ice in the Arctic, Antarctic, and Greenland, this is
raising sea levels. If not stopped soon it will eventually inundate
coastal areas that are home to hundreds of millions. The New York City
penthouse at Trump Tower would remain dry—but by 2050 the tip of
Manhattan, including Southport, Battery Park, and much of the World
Trade Center would be submerged.

Familiar weather patterns are being disrupted, leading to severe
droughts in some areas and giant floods in others. In February, 11,743
local record warm daily temperatures were recorded just in the United
States. The world has been hit by ferocious storms, like Cyclone
Debbie in Australia, and massive wildfires such as the recent one in
Kansas that killed thousands of livestock, consumed all of the hay
supply, and destroyed hundreds of farm structures.

In some regions of the world, such as eastern Africa, this early-stage
climate change has resulted in famine—and numerous climate refugees.

Pernicious liars like the president of the United States assert that
climate change resulting from global warming is a hoax, variously
attributed to either greedy climate scientists bilking tax-payers or
the Chinese government trying to wreck our economy.

Other deniers don’t challenge the validity of thermometer and sea
level readings but insist this is a natural cycle of our planet that
will eventually get back to what we consider normal. They see no cause
for alarm or need for drastic changes. In any case, they say there’s
nothing we can do to stop Mother Nature.

But the overwhelming majority of scientists accept irrefutable
evidence that the principal cause of global warming is the release of
greenhouse gases by the ravenous energy demands of industry,
agriculture, transportation—and war.

These emissions are still growing. The damage this causes to the
fragile biosphere that has nourished human civilization is
irreversible. While its worst effects will be felt by future
generations, climate change has been advancing faster than expected
and requires urgent and far-reaching countermeasures.

How capitalism fouls things up

After steam engines fueled by wood and coal gave a big boost to the
18th-century Industrial Revolution, the capitalist economy became
increasingly addicted to fossil fuels. Since the first modern oil
wells began pumping in Oil Creek, Pennsylvania, in 1859, the United
States, Britain, and other major powers have been exploring and
conquering on land and in the sea to satisfy the thirst of diesel,
internal combustion, and jet engines, as well as for raw material for
production of petrochemical products like plastic.

For some time now, the U.S. has had more registered cars and trucks
than licensed drivers. Big new markets have been carved out for
products like snowmobiles, all terrain vehicles, and motor homes. Once
serene lakes are now battered by racket and wakes of ubiquitous
motorboats and jet skis. And we shouldn’t forget those dirty, noisy
two-stroke engines commonly used to mow lawns.

While plug-in electric cars are now starting to appear, nearly 99
percent of the auto industry is still cranking out fossil-fueled cars
and trucks. More than 900,000 American workers are directly involved
in making parts and assembling these vehicles. Millions more earn a
paycheck by selling, maintaining, repairing, insuring—and ultimately
scrapping them. Hundreds of thousands of others are employed in
building and maintenance of highways and city streets. And, of course,
auto is a prime customer for the steel, rubber, and glass industries.

With zero redeeming social benefit, the fighters, bombers, tanks,
cruise missiles, and drones used in constant wars of intervention to
advance the interests of capitalist Globalization are also a huge
greenhouse polluter.

Of course, it has never been the intention of the capitalists to wreck
our biosphere. That’s collateral damage in the class war they wage,
which has made today’s American ruling class the richest in history.
Some of them favor measures they hope will slow down global warming so
that the next generations can figure out something better.

The bosses and bankers mainly promote ineffective schemes like carbon
price, carbon tax, and carbon offsets, which have been widely used
since the Kyoto Accords were adopted in 1997—but never implemented by
Clinton or Bush II.

Obama’s much hailed “Clean Power” initiative—which Trump is now trying
to dismantle—was the first American contribution to world efforts to
adopt goals to reduce carbon emissions. It was mainly based on
inducing many power plants to convert from coal to somewhat less
carbon-polluting natural gas. This hasn’t happened out of climate
concerns by the utilities. Gas has become cheaper than coal—mainly
because of Obama’s promotion of environmentally destructive hydraulic
fracturing (fracking.)

“Clean Power” also relied on the cooperation of states to develop
carbon markets and quotas—much like Obama’s Affordable Care Act
counted on states doing the right thing. And because this “historic”
plan was introduced through an executive order, it can be modified and
perhaps even nullified by order of the current Denier-in-Chief.

Real solutions are available

Since burning fossil fuels is the main culprit in creating the
greenhouse effect driving climate change, a total solution is simple
and obvious—quit burning them, leave them in the ground. We in fact
don’t need them. There are clean, renewable energy sources available
free for the taking everywhere on Earth—sun, wind, and water.

We can replace dirty, inefficient internal combustion and diesel
engines that consume fossil fuel with electric motors. We can conserve
energy and reap many other ecological benefits by reversing urban
sprawl, reclaiming the forests, wetlands, and farm lands that once
surrounded and nurtured many of our cities before being wrecked by
irresponsible “development.”

To facilitate population return to our depleted, long neglected urban
cores will require using craft workers now building pipelines and
fracking wells to be put to work rebuilding and renovating quality
affordable housing and a sustainable infrastructure. Safe, reliable,
electric-powered mass transit would be a high priority project.

Climate change is a global crisis. No country can escape its
impact—not even the U.S., the richest country in history. A large part
of this American wealth—of which the lion’s share is controlled by
about one-tenth of one percent of our population—is accumulated
through exploitation of other nations, leaving them “underdeveloped”
and polluted. There is not only a moral obligation but also a vital
self-interest for the world economy to finance climate stabilization
projects in the poorest countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America.

But we need to offer more than money—it’s also essential to lead by
example in action. Sustainable restructuring of the world’s biggest
economy can convince the whole world that there is now a road to
development far superior to our history marked by unintended
ecological destruction.

But we need a plan—pronto

When American capitalism decided to go all-in for the Second World
War, they didn’t try to induce industry to build unprecedented numbers
of ships, planes, and tanks through tax credits or other fiscal and
market measures. Instead, the government essentially took control of
the entire economy and dictated products and production quotas. This
project of Big Government was the most successful crash mobilization
of economic resources in history.

To be sure, this is a far from perfect analogy. The end use of that
production led to 70 million deaths and the beginning of the era of
nuclear war. We want to end wars and war spending, not make them
bigger or more efficient.

Nor is it realistic to expect a capitalist government to carry out
such planned economy to combat climate change. The capitalists were
rewarded handsomely for their compliance with the government’s World
War II plan, and the U.S. victory led to opening up vast new markets to
U.S.
domination—which from their point of view made the slaughter and
destruction more than acceptable. They will not make any sacrifices to
eliminate the most important sources of profit.

The only force in society with both the potential power and material
interest to challenge destructive capitalist rule is the working-class
majority. With the same sense of wartime urgency, our class that does
nearly all the work, in alliance with scientists and
environmentalists, can take charge of a planned rapid restructuring of
a sustainable economy and run it democratically.

Some hopeful signs from labor

The only class-based mass organizations in the USA are the trade
unions.
This movement has long been divided over climate and environmental
issues. But today a number of important national unions are educating
and mobilizing their members around climate as well as class justice.
Those making that connection include the Amalgamated Transit Union,
American Federation of Teachers, American Postal Workers,
Communications Workers of America, National Nurses United, Service
Employees International Union, and the United Electrical, Radio &
Machine
Workers.

Some of these unions are part of the labor/environmental Blue Green
Alliance. All are affiliated with the Labor Network for
Sustainability, which is doing valuable work in hammering out a
program for “Making a Living On a Living Planet.”

Most have also joined the global Trade Unions for Energy Democracy.
Among other demands, TUED favors socialization of all energy under
worker management—a goal Socialist Action heartily supports. But to
secure the needed massive restructuring plan, we think socialization
will need to also include at the very least the financial and
transportation sectors and, because of its central importance, the
auto industry as well.

Both the LNS and TUED strongly support the application of Just
Transition—a topic of an article in the February issue of this
newspaper. This long standing working-class principle holds that when
workers lose their livelihood for the better good of society we have a
collective obligation to give them income, retraining, and relocation
support until they can find suitable new jobs.

Unlike Trump’s phony promise of putting miners back to work digging
coal, we can honestly and confidently guarantee Just Transition to the
millions of workers who will be affected as we replace
climate-wrecking jobs with sustainable ones. At the same time as we
save our biosphere, we will generate full employment with a decent
standard of living for generations.

As the working class replaces the present capitalist ruling class, we
can use some of their ill-gotten wealth to also provide generous
solidarity grants to nations exploited by the old rules, so that they
too can be part of making a decent living on a healing planet.

This, of course, won’t be done overnight. While climate change
relentlessly advances, the struggles for both climate and class
justice are in their early stages. There are no short cuts. We need to
continue to educate and motivate around the urgent need for climate
action while helping the working class recover from class identity
theft. Periodic mass demonstrations, along with education in union
halls and workplace break rooms, and teach-ins on college campuses,
remain essential

Scientists and environmentalists have done their job well in
explaining the climate crisis and offering ways to satisfactorily
resolve it. But the necessary alternatives require taking political
power away from the climate-wrecking class. That won’t be done until
the working class breaks the two-party political monopoly that allows
this tiny destructive minority to rule. The need for a mass
working-class party in the United States—likely arising from our
unions—is every bit as urgent as the climate crisis itself.








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April 28, 2017 in Environment, Labor.


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