by Graeme » Thu 10 Jan 2013, 19:50:57
Climate Protests Erupt Across the Nation -- Expect More
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')onday, from Texas to Maine, Americans converged on the offices of TransCanada and its affiliates in protest of the company's proposed Keystone XL pipeline. The protests were coordinated by members of the Texas-based Tar Sands Blockade and other groups.
The centerpiece of this week's actions was a sit-in at TransCanada's office in Houston, Texas, where protesters took over the lobby of the Keystone XL headquarters and staged a die-in. More than 100 demonstrators were present.
In Detroit and Portland, Maine, protesters rallied outside TD and Chase banks, both of which are investors in the pipeline.
In Massachusetts, eight youth activists locked and glued themselves into TransCanada's Westborough office as part of a sit-in. The participants in the action were students and recent graduates from Brandeis, Boston University, Harvard, Tufts, and the University of New Hampshire.
"The activities of corporations like TransCanada threaten the future of my entire generation," Benjamin Trolio, a senior at the University of New Hampshire, explained before the action. "We need our political leaders to do their job by standing up for us and taking action to solve the climate crisis. They can start by drawing a clear line in the sand and stopping the Keystone XL pipeline."
The Keystone XL is the export pipeline proposed by TransCanada to carry tar sands oil from Northern Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico. The proposal has drawn intense criticism for its risk to waterways and local environments, its displacement of homeowners, and its staggering implications for global climate change.
These risks, combined with evidence that the pipeline would kill more jobs than it creates, have united opposition from across the political spectrum -- from leftist Occupiers to Texas Tea Partiers and everything in between. Students, landowners, environmentalists, indigenous peoples, and scientists in particular have made their objections heard loud and clear.
huffingtonpostMore On a Quest for Common Ground on Climate Change$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J')ust to be clear, while Emanuel was long a registered Republican (he switched to independent status last spring, he told me) and Frumhoff is straight from Central Casting if you’re seeking a scientist who’s also a liberal Democrat, they have both long been calling for action to curb emissions of greenhouse gases. So this video hardly represents some “Hannity and Colmes” style collaboration (that one didn’t do too well, I recall).
But I still think their message is well worth conveying in this new medium. There’s nothing more conservative than the conservation of finite resources.
Their notion that the atmosphere is the ultimate global commons echoes Matthew Fontaine Maury, the American oceanographer who once wrote this line, which I cited in my 1992 global warming book and many times since:
It is only the girdling encircling air, that flows above and around all, that makes the whole world kin.
Just to be clear, I think it’ll be far easier to find common ground on climate-smart energy choices by focusing directly on energy steps that make sense for both environmental and economic reasons and that have been shown to have incredibly wide support. That’s the most important message I’ve taken from the continuing “Six Americas” surveys done by researchers at Yale University and George Mason University. Click through the three slides below — which I titled “Energy Agreement Hidden by Climate Disputes” — to see what I mean: