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Given our seemingly imminent demise, it is time we dial up the type of radical change these prior movements delivered. (Photo: Flickr/ChrisA1995/cc)
In May, an international group of scientists warned that over a million of the Earth's species are being driven to extinction; before that, researchers reported the climate was warming faster than even the most pessimistic projections. Worse yet, another report gave humanity just over thirty years before it could wipe itself out.
Unfortunately, human democracies aren't the best at receiving this type of news. Like large container ships, they take time to turn, especially when those who profit from staying the course have disproportionate influence over government.
It's why it took over a hundred years for women to get the right to vote, for African-Americans to free themselves from slavery, and to extract even the smallest concessions, like warning labels on cigarettes, after the first anti-smoking campaigns of the 1860's.
Given our seemingly imminent demise, it is time we dial up the type of radical change these prior movements delivered. Now. Meekness be damned.
Abolitionists and suffragists innately understood that those serving as state and federal elected officials - mostly elite white males - would never be the lead advocates for the radical changes they sought. Instead, those movements built political power from the ground up - allowing them to shift from merely asking for change, to threatening a revolution without it.
The equivalent action on global warming means having our cities, towns, villages, and counties assume that power - not by passing meaningless resolutions reminding everyone of the dangers of climate change, but by directly banning new fossil fuel projects.
That means elevating and empowering real, meaningful, local law making that addresses the crisis head on. It's already happening in dozens of places in the United States, like Mora County, New Mexico, which adopted a ban on all hydrocarbon extraction several years ago. However, in the United States, strong local bans are blocked by corporate lawsuits asserting municipalities lack the legal authority to interfere with the corporate "right" to extract.
This local law making quickly confronts core legal doctrines like corporate "personhood," which were instrumental in the fossil fuel industry's rise to global power. Therefore, uplifting and empowering these local efforts is far from a localized fight. Fighting for one, means fighting for all.
Overcoming the shortsighted legal arguments that protect fossil fuel companies' corporate "rights" as "persons" means expanding the legal authority that real people wield, within their own communities, to stop that which threatens our collective survival. It means defending local bans as an assertion of a fundamental constitutional right to govern ourselves, and laying the groundwork for the birth of a truly federalist and democratic system of government - where local governments have an actual role in expanding protections for civil rights, human rights, and ecosystems.
It means getting the courts to find, as a federal court in Oregon proclaimed several years ago, that there is a "constitutional right to a healthy, liveable climate." And when the courts strike down municipal laws as beyond the power of people to pass, we must pass them anyway, and then begin to change our state constitutions to widen our lawmaking authority at the local level.
This is, of course, about more than climate. Worker protections, economic redistribution and anti-discrimination laws are similarly hamstrung.
Finally, just as the threat of our demise due to global warming must be a catalyst for action, so, too, must our general destruction of the natural world. Just as women and African-Americans had to liberate themselves from being treated as "property," nature must also be emancipated.
The people of over three dozen U.S. municipalities, as well as the countries of Ecuador, India, and Colombia, through their constitutions and courts, have now elevated ecosystems beyond the status of property - to having legally enforceable rights of their own. Such a system, when enforced, allows nature to push back against corporate folly - permitting only those projects to proceed that do not infringe on the right of nature to exist, flourish, regenerate, and naturally evolve.
Two ideas that could save us and the planet: community democracy in the name of sustainability, and the rights of nature. The time is ripe for both. Meekness be damned.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
In May, an international group of scientists warned that over a million of the Earth's species are being driven to extinction; before that, researchers reported the climate was warming faster than even the most pessimistic projections. Worse yet, another report gave humanity just over thirty years before it could wipe itself out.
Unfortunately, human democracies aren't the best at receiving this type of news. Like large container ships, they take time to turn, especially when those who profit from staying the course have disproportionate influence over government.
It's why it took over a hundred years for women to get the right to vote, for African-Americans to free themselves from slavery, and to extract even the smallest concessions, like warning labels on cigarettes, after the first anti-smoking campaigns of the 1860's.
Given our seemingly imminent demise, it is time we dial up the type of radical change these prior movements delivered. Now. Meekness be damned.
Abolitionists and suffragists innately understood that those serving as state and federal elected officials - mostly elite white males - would never be the lead advocates for the radical changes they sought. Instead, those movements built political power from the ground up - allowing them to shift from merely asking for change, to threatening a revolution without it.
The equivalent action on global warming means having our cities, towns, villages, and counties assume that power - not by passing meaningless resolutions reminding everyone of the dangers of climate change, but by directly banning new fossil fuel projects.
That means elevating and empowering real, meaningful, local law making that addresses the crisis head on. It's already happening in dozens of places in the United States, like Mora County, New Mexico, which adopted a ban on all hydrocarbon extraction several years ago. However, in the United States, strong local bans are blocked by corporate lawsuits asserting municipalities lack the legal authority to interfere with the corporate "right" to extract.
This local law making quickly confronts core legal doctrines like corporate "personhood," which were instrumental in the fossil fuel industry's rise to global power. Therefore, uplifting and empowering these local efforts is far from a localized fight. Fighting for one, means fighting for all.
Overcoming the shortsighted legal arguments that protect fossil fuel companies' corporate "rights" as "persons" means expanding the legal authority that real people wield, within their own communities, to stop that which threatens our collective survival. It means defending local bans as an assertion of a fundamental constitutional right to govern ourselves, and laying the groundwork for the birth of a truly federalist and democratic system of government - where local governments have an actual role in expanding protections for civil rights, human rights, and ecosystems.
It means getting the courts to find, as a federal court in Oregon proclaimed several years ago, that there is a "constitutional right to a healthy, liveable climate." And when the courts strike down municipal laws as beyond the power of people to pass, we must pass them anyway, and then begin to change our state constitutions to widen our lawmaking authority at the local level.
This is, of course, about more than climate. Worker protections, economic redistribution and anti-discrimination laws are similarly hamstrung.
Finally, just as the threat of our demise due to global warming must be a catalyst for action, so, too, must our general destruction of the natural world. Just as women and African-Americans had to liberate themselves from being treated as "property," nature must also be emancipated.
The people of over three dozen U.S. municipalities, as well as the countries of Ecuador, India, and Colombia, through their constitutions and courts, have now elevated ecosystems beyond the status of property - to having legally enforceable rights of their own. Such a system, when enforced, allows nature to push back against corporate folly - permitting only those projects to proceed that do not infringe on the right of nature to exist, flourish, regenerate, and naturally evolve.
Two ideas that could save us and the planet: community democracy in the name of sustainability, and the rights of nature. The time is ripe for both. Meekness be damned.
In May, an international group of scientists warned that over a million of the Earth's species are being driven to extinction; before that, researchers reported the climate was warming faster than even the most pessimistic projections. Worse yet, another report gave humanity just over thirty years before it could wipe itself out.
Unfortunately, human democracies aren't the best at receiving this type of news. Like large container ships, they take time to turn, especially when those who profit from staying the course have disproportionate influence over government.
It's why it took over a hundred years for women to get the right to vote, for African-Americans to free themselves from slavery, and to extract even the smallest concessions, like warning labels on cigarettes, after the first anti-smoking campaigns of the 1860's.
Given our seemingly imminent demise, it is time we dial up the type of radical change these prior movements delivered. Now. Meekness be damned.
Abolitionists and suffragists innately understood that those serving as state and federal elected officials - mostly elite white males - would never be the lead advocates for the radical changes they sought. Instead, those movements built political power from the ground up - allowing them to shift from merely asking for change, to threatening a revolution without it.
The equivalent action on global warming means having our cities, towns, villages, and counties assume that power - not by passing meaningless resolutions reminding everyone of the dangers of climate change, but by directly banning new fossil fuel projects.
That means elevating and empowering real, meaningful, local law making that addresses the crisis head on. It's already happening in dozens of places in the United States, like Mora County, New Mexico, which adopted a ban on all hydrocarbon extraction several years ago. However, in the United States, strong local bans are blocked by corporate lawsuits asserting municipalities lack the legal authority to interfere with the corporate "right" to extract.
This local law making quickly confronts core legal doctrines like corporate "personhood," which were instrumental in the fossil fuel industry's rise to global power. Therefore, uplifting and empowering these local efforts is far from a localized fight. Fighting for one, means fighting for all.
Overcoming the shortsighted legal arguments that protect fossil fuel companies' corporate "rights" as "persons" means expanding the legal authority that real people wield, within their own communities, to stop that which threatens our collective survival. It means defending local bans as an assertion of a fundamental constitutional right to govern ourselves, and laying the groundwork for the birth of a truly federalist and democratic system of government - where local governments have an actual role in expanding protections for civil rights, human rights, and ecosystems.
It means getting the courts to find, as a federal court in Oregon proclaimed several years ago, that there is a "constitutional right to a healthy, liveable climate." And when the courts strike down municipal laws as beyond the power of people to pass, we must pass them anyway, and then begin to change our state constitutions to widen our lawmaking authority at the local level.
This is, of course, about more than climate. Worker protections, economic redistribution and anti-discrimination laws are similarly hamstrung.
Finally, just as the threat of our demise due to global warming must be a catalyst for action, so, too, must our general destruction of the natural world. Just as women and African-Americans had to liberate themselves from being treated as "property," nature must also be emancipated.
The people of over three dozen U.S. municipalities, as well as the countries of Ecuador, India, and Colombia, through their constitutions and courts, have now elevated ecosystems beyond the status of property - to having legally enforceable rights of their own. Such a system, when enforced, allows nature to push back against corporate folly - permitting only those projects to proceed that do not infringe on the right of nature to exist, flourish, regenerate, and naturally evolve.
Two ideas that could save us and the planet: community democracy in the name of sustainability, and the rights of nature. The time is ripe for both. Meekness be damned.