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Mainstream Green Groups Cave In on Climate
Dangerously Allow Industry to Set Agenda
"Governments will not put young people and nature above special financial interests without great public pressure. Such pressure is not possible as long as big environmental organizations provide cover. So the best hope is this -- individuals must demand that the leaders change course or they will lose support." - Dr. James Hansen
With climate scientists warning
that we are in a global emergency and tipping
points leading to runaway
catastrophe will be crossed unless carbon pollution is rapidly reduced, one
would expect groups identified as environmental defenders to
be shifting into high gear. Instead, we are witnessing the
unspeakably tragic spectacle of a mainstream environmental movement allowing itself to be
seduced and co-opted by the very forces it should be vehemently
opposing. At the very moment when moral leadership and courage are needed the
most, what we see is a colossal failure of both - with potentially
irreversible consequences for our civilization.
If Congress chooses an inadequate response to the crisis, policies can
get "locked in" which virtually guarantee that these tipping points are
crossed. These organizations are using their significant financial
resources to create a public impression that the
"environmental community" has given its "stamp of approval" to this
policy and to marginalize the voices of the genuine grassroots
activists
who represent the heart and soul of the climate movement. With nothing
less than the future of the planet at stake, these groups must now be
publicly challenged and held accountable for
their actions.
The stage has been set for this necessary debate by publication of Johann Hari's excellent commentary entitled "The Wrong Kind of Green". In this piece, Hari provides important insight into some of the relevant history. He describes how in the 1980s and 1990s some of the larger environmental groups began to adopt a policy often called "corporate engagement". The basic idea was that by participating in "partnerships" with corporations - some involving receipt of monetary contributions - there would be opportunity to exert positive influence.
It is not possible to look into the minds of those who promoted this shift. Perhaps
there was a sincere hope that corporations would be moved toward more
responsible behavior. Whatever the case, the critically important task
at this time is not to evaluate possible motives but rather
the real life consequences. To do so honestly, all
self-interested blinders must be set aside.
The truth is that this policy has created a "slippery slope" leading to severely compromised
stances - nowhere more apparent than in regard to the over-arching issue of climate. In
2007,
a coalition was formed between corporations and environmental
organizations called the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, or USCAP -
whose purpose was to influence U.S. climate legislation. Some of the
large groups that joined were Natural
Resources Defense Council (NRDC), Environmental Defense Fund (EDF),
the Nature Conservancy, and National Wildlife Foundation. In January
2009, USCAP presented its proposals and these became the framework of
the Waxman-Markey bill.
The
physical context is that previously projected worst case scenarios are
already being surpassed and humanity is running out of time. Ice is
melting far more rapidly than expected, releasing the "albedo effect"
where open water absorbs more heat
and accelerates further melting. The normally quite cautious National Science Foundation is ringing alarm bells about the methane - a greenhouse
gas over 30 times as powerful as CO2 - now venting from the Siberian
seabeds. According to the NSF statement: "Release of even a fraction of the methane stored in the shelf could trigger abrupt climate warming." These are only two examples of "reinforcing feedbacks" that can significantly move the process closer to tipping points.
Within a
context so dire that in reality a war-time level of
mobilization is needed, what kind of legislation is being offered? First of all,
the emission reduction targets themselves
- apart from the theoretical strategies for achieving them -
categorically ignore the science. The goals do not even aim at
stabilization at 350 ppm (let alone the lower figures more likely to be
necessary)
and the time frame for enacting meaningful reductions is not even remotely close
to the speed
needed to prevent disaster.
Beyond the issue of targets is that of reduction strategies. USCAP would like to see a trillion dollar carbon market put into place, where traders can claim "pollution rights" to the sky and seek profits from the exchange of such "rights". Such a system - which would determine whether life-supporting ecosystems survive or collapse - would be placed into the same manipulative hands on Wall Street that brought on the financial meltdown. As this commentary goes to press, several traders in the European carbon market (the world's prototype) have been arrested in connection with a massive fraud estimated at $6.75 billion. While some of us lay in the street in nonviolent civil disobedience to block this immoral atrocity (including one of the authors), NRDC and EDF are sending their own people to promote it at carbon trade conferences.
The next immoral concession is to allow the industry to "buy" its way out of actually reducing emissions by supporting so-called "offsets" - such as forest preservation projects in the developing world. Sounding plausible in theory, offsets are actually riddled with verification issues and defects such as loggers simply moving elsewhere. But the bottomline "wrong" here is that any form of offsetting should never be looked at as an alternative to reducing emissions. It should only be seen as an additional action to take.
Then there is the unbelievable capitulation represented by the removal of EPA
authority to regulate coal-burning. Now that the EPA has finally been
empowered by the Supreme Court to act against a carbon-fueled ecocide,
this ability has been effectively stripped from the House bill without
a murmur from the USCAP "greens". The result of all these concessions is
a pathetically weak bill that the Congressional Budget Office estimates
will not even begin to reduce emissions until 2018. Other studies
indicate that if all available offsets are used, reductions could
actually be postponed an astonishing 19 years until 2029.
The USCAP "greens"
proclaim that their positions are being driven by "political
expediency". But there is a stunning "disconnect" which these groups have been reticent to address. How does one
negotiate with a melting iceberg? Can the inexorable laws of physics be placed "on hold" while emission reductions
are scuttled in a process of political "horse-trading"?
What is the meaning of "expediency" when it leads to the collapse of
society as we know it? John Schellnhuber, director of the Potsdam
Institute for Climate Impact Reseach, stated at the "4 Degrees and
Beyond" conference at Oxford that "political reality must be grounded
in physical reality or it is completely useless".
The Sierra Club is experiencing what may be a positive change in
leadership and to its credit has not adopted the policy of "corporate
engagement" described, yet it has failed to truly mobilize its base
against the dangerous shortcomings of the USCAP endorsed legislation.
In 2008, the Sierra Club bestowed its highest honor - the John
Muir Award - to climate scientist Dr. James Hansen. In
presenting the award, Sierra Club President Allison Chin said: "He is
truly a hero for
preserving the environment". How does the Sierra Club reconcile the
honoring of this man for warning the world and then essentially ignore
his core message that present climate legislation is based on false solutions that will waste precious time?
NRDC and EDF, on the other hand, have gone far beyond mere silence.
While their websites claim a dedication to public service ( NRDC's motto is "The Earth's Best Defense"), they have been actively promoting the USCAP accomodation. If they had not lost sight of their original missions, they
would have sought out members of Congress willing to stand up to the
fossil fuel industry and used their resources (in 2008, NRDC had an
operational budget of 87 million dollars) to throw weight behind them.
Instead of emboldening this kind of voice, they have done the exact
opposite by allowing industry to define what is "feasible".
The real climate movement - the one with its backbone intact
and composed of grassroots activists and principled groups like Friends of
the Earth and
Center for Biological Diversity - is already in a "David versus
Goliath" situation as it tries to confront the most powerful lobby in
the country. But that task has been made infinitely more difficult by
these big budget groups using their money to isolate and "box in" the
smaller ones.
We close this commentary with the following direct appeal to both the leadership and the members of these groups that have chosen the path of accommodation:
The verdict is in. Your experiment in "corporate engagement" has resulted in a disastrous failure that now threatens the planet. We fully expected the massive campaign from the fossil fuel industry to strip any substance from this legislation. But you have blindsided those of us who are fighting with all our hearts for the future of the earth. Your coffers have grown and now you are using this money to drown us out.
Your stance does not represent those in the grassroots movement, many of whom are young and see the disasters that are looming within their own lifetimes. In your comfortable offices, you do not speak for those willing to put themselves on the line and engage in nonviolent civil disobedience against the very forces you seek to accomodate. The rationale for your corporate "partnerships" was the issue of exerting influence. But the question begging to be asked is who influenced whom? Though your treasury is more full, what truly has been gained and what has been lost?
Your intentions may have been honorable, but the agenda of "defending earth" has been hijacked. Along the way, your vision became blurred and you lost sight of this mission. In this "experiment', you are the ones who have been "had". It now appears to have been a terrible Faustian bargain, and we are all paying the price. At the very moment of greatest need for an empowered public advocacy in the face of the most overwhelming threat in human history, your leadership is not to be found.Your accommodation and your defense of abominably weak Congressional legislation has already had a destructive global impact. It was this legislation that set the bar intolerably low in Copenhagen and instigated a "race to the bottom". The entire world-wide movement for climate sanity has become blocked by the denial, blindness, and paralysis embodied in U.S. climate policy. When you take this stance in the name of "defending the earth", you are actually creating an insidious and dangerous deception.
For the sake of the planet, we appeal to your organizations to reclaim the integrity of your original visions. The position you presently advocate will squander the precious little time we have to implement true reductions before the irreversible tipping points are crossed. The stakes could not be higher. We ask that you join hands with the grassroots activists and groups and support the following eight points:
1) Officially recognize that we are truly in a global emergency and that irreversible tipping points are likely to be crossed if humanity does not act in time;
2) Officially recognize that this emergency is of such a magnitude that a war time level of mobilization is needed in order to effectively deal with it;
3) Stand squarely for the necessity that climate legislation be based on the setting of emission reduction targets and a time frame which are defined by the science;
4) Due to the severe ecosystem damage that will ensue in response to a 2 degree (celsius) rise, an overall goal of no more than one degree (celsius) rise must be sought;
5) Clearly renounce cap and trade and offsets as false solutions that will squander precious time;
6) Stand squarely against any attempt in Congress to strip EPA of its authority to regulate carbon;
7) Support a comprehensive approach to the crisis that combines elements of legislation, regulation, and public investment;
8) Support a legislative component based on a continually rising carbon fee with a 100% distribution of the proceeds to U.S. citizens, with the amount of the fee determined by an emission reduction schedule driven by science.
We also ask the members of these groups to withhold their organizational support until their leadership recognizes the necessity of these changes. On this defining issue of our time, may we strive to remove the barriers that divide us and work together.
- Posted in

27 Comments so far
Show Alltough talk, but, again, no mention of private property...
just 'someone needs to do X'...
doing X will have huge impacts because:
we are all complicit in the current scenario...
because we need money to live...
because we live isolated from nature...
because the land was stolen from us, reconstructed, and resold to us...
because we allowed it...
because we were ignorant, or trusting, or afraid...
we must stop allowing...
the opening quote is wrong...individuals must not demand their leaders change, they must remove their leaders...
they must retake the right to the land beneath them...
on Global Start Date: September 22, 2012...
What's "Global Start Date?"
just my idea of the day to make the changes we need to make together...
too many facets of our world are beyond our individual reach...
only together can we bring the beast to its knees...
so, I'm calling the day we do that Global Start Date, and suggesting September 22, 2012...
so many of our ideas require the actions of distant, unknown, and frequently corrupted others...they are doomed to failure upon utterance...
we need plans that rely on us...I was hoping we could directly change things, all at once...
Dubet,
I strongly agree with your opinions on private property.
I am very interested to hear your thoughts on how we move away from a system of private property ownership and where we go from there.
I grew up in a city suburb and have been exposed to nothing but our current model. I am having a hard time envisioning what we would do to move away from the model.
Many thanks,
Mike
Hey, Rastaman!
Thanks for asking!
I don't have alot of time at this moment, nor do I wish to sound like I have everything figured out...
All I do know is: what we are doing now is killing everything...(a whale washed up on a local beach the other day...they found alot of garbage in this whale's tummy...towels, garbage bags, various things)
when I consider stopping, I run up against my mortgage...
my other fear is violent opression...this is facilitated by technology and energy use...
the only way I see to avoid ecological devastation AND violent opression is to unplug and dismantle the modern world and start over...
In my dream, we divide around watersheds (of all sizes), and we do everything we can to revegetate with locally sustainable (a now-moving target) food...
if we actually have a day where the world comes together to say 'enough', we will need to defend ourselves against the powers, and feed ourselves...
I suggest September 22, 2012, because The Plan requires, most of all, an actual changing event...discussion is not action...my hope is we will use the intervening time for the actions of relocating, dismantling, cleaning, planning and planting...
Finally, I hope that a life without industry and electricity might be made more palatable via increased sexual expression, marijuana use, music and dance, theater, sport, etc.
we cannot sit and watch tv while everything, including us, chokes on our effluent...
peace, Rastaman!
How about some MEANINGFUL volunteer work, for a change?
On PBS last night, they had a reasonably good documentary on the origins of Earth Day. But it was followed by a "panel discissions with teh CEO of Duke Energy, various corporate consultants, and a NYT Envoronmental reporter.
They all proceeded to agree that street-level environmental activism is obsolete, becasue all our big environmental probelms are being addressed just fine, thank-you, in the corporate boardrooms and by professional consultants (they actually said this) or are of international scope, and therefore part of statecraft and activists should butt out. There was no mention of ongoing activism around MTR and coal power, gas well fracking, or the the ongoing Cochabamba, Bolivia peoples environmental conference.
It was classic memory-holing - at PBS, the modern environmental movement simply doesn't exist. In such an environment mainstream enviro. orgs. end up selling out for a bit of visibility.
The Sierra Club actually facilitated the building of a harmful coal-burning power plant near Morgantown, WV, through some sulfur-swap shennanigans with a distant plant in Utah - as if reduced sulfur emissions in Utah will help the wild areas downwind of the WV plant.
"The real climate movement - the one with its backbone intact and composed of grassroots activists and principled groups like Friends of the Earth and Center for Biological Diversity - is already in a "David versus Goliath" situation as it tries to confront the most powerful lobby in the country."
As I've commented here many times, David Brower left his seat as president of the Sierra Club to form the honest and steadfast Friends of the Earth. The rift was over Sierra Club's support of nuclear power. Yeah, the industry got to them. IMO, Sierra Club is now just a slick operation, providing cover for polluters. They switched their opinion of nuclear when the public did but they did not lead, as did Friends of the Earth.
For a profile of David Brower, a man with his "backbone intact," read "Encounters with the Arch Druid," by John McPhee.
The big environmental organizations have sold out, along with the Democrats.
"Whenever we compromised, we lost." the Arch Druid, David Brower
The organizations that compromised during the 70s are now capitulating. Rather than starting a discussion at a progressive position, they now start the discussion at a center-right position and end up giving the forces of evil everything they want and then some.
Obama epitomizes this strategy.
While Bill Clinton was called the great communicator, Obama will be known as the great capitulator.
As Sierra Club volunteer leaders some of us have been trying to influence the Sierra Club's Global Warming & Energy Committee to oppose this Cap N Trade fraud and forest biomass energy for years now but they just ignore our emails like politicians ignore us.
I sent an email to Mrs. Chin right after the Copenhagen debacle regarding the Sierra Club's position on the Waxman Markey Bill and Cap N Trade and she did not respond. I have sent numerous emails to the Chair of the Sierra Club's Global Warming Committee and he no longer responds.
They are in lockstep with the Democratic party. They are an arm of Democratic party as far as I can tell. They will not criticise any Democrat regardless of how bad they are on the environment.
To add, I was removed from my Chairpersonship of a local Sierra Club group through a coup because I was publicly exposing through our local newsletter the inconvenient truths of biospheric collapse and the human caused biological holocaust to members and local politicians.
It's going to take a lot of volunteer leadership and upheaval to change the Carl Pope cabal.
" I was removed from my Chairpersonship of a local Sierra Club group through a coup ..."
Me, too.
It might be edifying to know what constitutes a coup in the Sierra Club. I'm not doubting you or being sarcastic. It's just that I am fairly certain that you do not mean that club officers seized the SC comm, congress, military, and executive, as one would do in a coup. And, I suspect that these kind of soft coups seem a natural extension of the infiltration and agent-provocateurship that has so undercut solidarity.
I quit the Sierra Club after decades of membership. I found that it had just become a hiking club. In its later years, it seemed to attract zero-population-growth adherents. These folks seemed clueless about how corporate control is wrecking the planet. So, I'm not surprised to see the Sierra Club compromise its principles and sell out.
-TIA
Since there are so many examples of the corrupting effect of corporate engagement (for example, Big Pharma sponsored medical conferences that discuss their products, corporate advertising in MSM, corporate-university alliances) that it's almost inconceivable that mainstream green organizations ever let themselves believe that, regardless of all the moola they receive from corporations, this won't compromise their independence and integrity. Yeah, don't know how many times I've heard that from physicians who accept freebies from Big Pharma reps, yet studies have shown that these freebies do influence doctors' prescribing patterns. And now we have corporate engagement turning mainstream green organizations into accomplices of the corporate polluters that are intent on doing us all in. And as if that's not scary enough, our government has gone beyond engagement into the realm of actual corporate takeover. Which leaves us, what with time running out, with but one option - That we rise up en masse and change the world. Otherwise? Otherwise, someone who's just a child today will grow up having to answer the call, "Will the last one out please turn off the lights." Surely preventing such an outcome has to be the rallying cry of the save the earth movement.
The Green groups are not focusing on balanacing out both the pocketbooks and the environment. Hence, they're failing. Climate change is inevitable but they're not targeting the sources of climate change:
1. Prohibition on industrial hemp.
2. Oil companies buying out algae which could produce the sequel "Who killed algal oil technologies?". Note: Big Oil is LYING about pouring money into "researching" algae for oil. They want wars and drilling to keep the war machine going.
3. Businesses poorly setting up their office locations and thereby forcing traffic congestion to and from work.
4. Fewer businesses capitalizing on existing technologies that could help employees work remotely as another way of cutting down on traffic congestion and thus pollution.
5. Lack of serious improvements on fuel efficiency thanks to Big Auto being given the power to "voluntarily improve it when they feel like it and the 'free' market says so"
My God, are we too late?
This is God: yes. (Actually, we'll know the answer to your question WHEN it really is too late. But try convincing the Beckian sheep out there, who won't believe anything that isn't put in front of their faces. I fear bad things, perhaps not the worst. But, if it isn't the worst, it won't be because of anything humankind did. It'll be by God's grace. Honestly, should we really be hanging our entire human civilization on such grace? I'm rather convinced God has better things to do, and would give up this human mess in a heartbeat. Just this podunk galaxy is filled with Earths, and its just one of 100 billion such galaxies. God's been pretty creative, it appears. Human's may just be the last of God's concern.)
We often read in the CD forum complaints that authors are too critical of the status quo. For example yesterday people were complaining that Noam Chomsky, as reported by Chris Hedges, was far too critical of the status quo. And another article, Inclusiveness Without Accountability, received similar complaints.
Then we read yet an article like this one that re-affirms yet again that we have too much inclusion, too much sleeping with the enemy, the elite monsters, trying to enslave us to their monstrously destructive enterprises, pushing us to consume more, more, more, making us unwitting accomplices in the plunder of the earth, while depleting us of our rights and dignity.
So I'm personally satisfied with my conclusion that the far-left is the only place to be on the political spectrum. (The far-left representing truth/justice, the far right representing power/privilege.) Centrist triangulation has failed miserably, for reasons that should be obvious.
Radical goooooood!
Yes left is the right direction :-) far left even better..
This article is true, and it's been true for about 10 years. Organizations such as the NRDC, NWF and EDF have long sought preemptive capitulation with corporations, especially with regard to this "cap-and-trade" pollution credit selling scam. Under cap-and-trade, pollution just gets shifted to the poor, which is something that is already done.
As far as the Sierra Club is concerned, it has tended to become less radical over the years. Possibly, its members started conceiving of it as just a hiking club. It attracted people on the right who see no connection between corporations and the destruction of the earth, or it got populated by mainstream Democrats. I'm not really sure how it went bad.
Anyway, find a different environmental organization to support. Let these others die. You need to cut back on your charity budget anyway as you get squeezed by Goldman Sachs and Dem-Repug policies.
-TIA
Every two weeks I receive a packet of junk mail from the Sierra Club, trying to solicit my "membership" -- that is, my cash. Each packet contains a nonrecyclable plastic calendar strip for my computer keyboard, nonrecyclable plastic decals, and glossy inserts telling me about all the nice schwag I'd get for "joining" the Sierra Club. Oh, and lots of paper. Lots and lots of paper.
I mail it all back in the postage-paid envelope they so thoughtfully provide. Let them recycle their own garbage -- I bet they don't.
Ohh…they are becoming more "progressive".
Yet another liberal principle – protection of the environment – being co-opted, re-framed, repackaged, and destroyed, by the triangulating beltway "progressives".
Someone's laughing, Lord, kumbaya
Someone's laughing, Lord, kumbaya
Someone's laughing, Lord, kumbaya
O Lord, kumbaya.
FREE AMERICA
DIRECT DEMOCRACY
Having worked in the environmental non-profit sector for several years, I can say that this level of compromising is definitely an issue and something that disillusioned me about mainstream green groups. With the climate bill, it is exceptionally frustrating because Waxman-Markey bill is completely counter-intuitive to what we really need to be doing. And the green groups know it, but they have been following the "something is better than nothing" philosophy for so long, they can't see that there are times when that isn't true. When it's simply selling out (like when they are willing to go along with bills that promote "clean coal"). And the thing that really gets me, is that there is ANOTHER climate bill being considered in Congress that is actually much more progressive--cap-and-dividend!! Why, why, why aren't green groups on board? I can't help but think it's because the bill puts the interests of people before corporations....I wrote about this issue in the context of cap-and-trade v. cap-and-dividend in my new blog project, "Writing for Survival," which you can view at http://www.survivalwriter.blogspot.com/. Please check it out!
Perhaps the only way to get these groups, and the gov't off the dime is to make a few PREDICTIONS...
But, first you have to read my hairball theory:
In light of the recent earthquakes and volcanic eruption in Iceland, I respectfully reiterate my (if there are others, all welcome) theory that:
Since we know we are very near the top of an Inter-glacial warm period.
The change in location of water mass as high latitude land-borne ice melts and spreads progressively to the earth's equatorial bulge, and the slower rebounding of unburdened mantle, change the forces of torque and momentum on the tectonic plates. This results in seismic activity which produces undersea volcanism (adds heat to oceans), tsunamis (may loose CH4 sequestered on the ocean floor), and, so far, a couple volcanoes (add heat, but also shade from dust/ash).
The net result is that we are not waiting for a long-term, steady temperature rise from GHG-induced solar gain to bring us whatever havoc the hydrologic cycle will go through at the top end of this interglacial warming period. We face a rapid build-up of temperature which will stoke the atmosphere and oceans with the energy and water vapor sufficient to trigger (tipping pt) the massive storms which must replace the water mass to the upper latitudes as ice/snow. (In turn, continuing to disturb the balance of forces on the tectonic plates. The earth is indeed in for a rough ride, as McKibben says.)
This theory describes a mechanical clockwork that has defined climate change over the last 650ky. The difference this time is that humans have super-charged the process with massive burning of mined and drilled hydrocarbons.
Nice to know, but what to do?
The above, along with secondary and unknown effects, will create survival situations for most humans. Societal and economic systems larger than regional will become inoperative, as they are the most fragile of human efforts. So, it seems that we should break up the mono-cultural and global to build self-sustaining regional and local islands based on lowtech, alternative and diverse shelter, food, energy and security. We may be backed up (advanced?) to the modes of existence of some of the First Nations within a generation of the tipping point.
Sounds scary, but, I'm not into scaring people. We are on a small ship, and, like Gemini Control telling astronaut Glenn that his heat shield was questionable, WE MUST BE MADE AWARE OF THE CONDITION OF OUR SHIP.
TOP-DOWN EFFORTS are ineffective because they are primarily concerned with protecting the status quo. Grass-roots efforts are the most effective because the changes that we CAN make consist of essentially the same activities that result in successful survival on the local/regional level. It's a shame so many societal resources are squandered on the top-down approach and other useless activities (war, golf, etc ;-)
It seems odd that the nations of the Northern Hemisphere are not more focused in their efforts to meet this challenge.
My sources include USGS, NWS, National Geographic, IPCC/Gore; Drury, Chapman, etal; P. Ward, J Lovelock, J G Speth, J Hansen, Mc K, of course, to name a few. Other and additional aspects of the scenario I've posted in these pages over the last three years. I welcome your comments and any info you may have.
We are all children of the last Iceage...the hope is that we have not juiced this cycle fatally out of natural limits by our ignorance and poor choices.
Thank you. Now the predictions ( I have nothing to lose but the dubious distinction of having been one of the few who connected the dots and was fool enough to say anything. )
The 2d sister Icelandic volcano will erupt within 6 months and shut down the northern hemisphere for air travel and associated activities.
Within a year, Greenland will be evacuated as too unstable to live on. Fear of ice sheet collapse.
The string of major earthquakes will continue at reduced intervals of time, about 6 months apart.
Oceanic cables and satellite communication will be disrupted.
Within 2 years, 2 ocean-going ships will be lost due to rogue waves or sinking over methane bursts. (Homeland Sec, please, just read the words.)
But, after these, will they act ? Probably not to curb further climatic effects, but they will hustle to find gated safe havens as the shhit hits the fan.
(Relax, I have no capital letters after my name. Maybe nothing will happen...)
I just renewed my EDF membership, knowing their policies are hopeless, but thinking it is too late to do real reform.
Hi Cory and Gary thanks for a fine article targeted on exposing the foundation funded engo approach that is now compromising and undermining the environmental movement.
"...The basic idea was that by participating in "partnerships" with corporations - some involving receipt of monetary contributions - there would be opportunity to exert positive influence. It is not possible to look into the minds of those who promoted this shift. Perhaps there was a sincere hope that corporations would be moved toward more responsible behavior..."
But honestly, the policy of foundation funded collaborative engagement in which our environmental movement is now mired was not an accident, it was the intended result of corporate strategy to engage the staffed engo part of our movement and convert its principal focus from environmentalism to corporate sustainabilism. Many of us in BC call this strategy FakeEnvironmentalism in recognition of the invention of ForestEthics as a nucleus for constructing well funded collaborative coalitions for presenting illusory "solutions" in which an environmental threat to corporate interests could be contained, neutralized and prevented from attracting expanding emulation.
The unprincipled people who invested our organizations into "sustainabilism" were remunerated with celebrity careers and they still wrap themselves in green flags when on behalf of their corporate funders they speak down to us.
Governments and corporations were enamoured of collaborative engagement because it converted engo's into public relations tools through which media apparent environmentalism could be harnessed to achieving public consent for environmentally inimical developments. Without these corporate domesticated engo's working to manufacture consent, our public deliberations and democratic participation in industrial project review would need to be much more robust and vastly more difficult to predict and manipulate.
As you state, we are in a global emergency, but our emergency response tools have been compromised and sabotaged sufficiently to make the outcome of the emergency more predictable and manipulable. By managing for appearances and making outcomes predictable and manipulable our apparent democratic society is harnessed to the corporate carriage on which capital rides and from which the illusion of incremental progress is projected.
We are not going to become effective at responding to environmental threats until we understand how and why we are compromised.
Thank-you for helping to make our corporate entanglement apparent and therefore reparable.
Michael Major\\