Not Just Another Issue
By Ted Glick
I've been in and around the environmental movement
since the first Earth Day in 1970, which I attended while living
in Philadelphia, Pa. For many years I've been following news
reports and articles about the dangers of global warming. In
2002, during my Green Party U.S. Senate campaign in New Jersey,
this was one of my top issues. Among other things, we distributed
over 100,000 copies of a campaign brochure which prominently
featured this position: "Move towards energy independence,
reverse global warming and create jobs through a crash program
to get energy from the sun, the wind and other renewable fuels."
But the truth of the matter is that, while I've
done what I could in the context of my primary political and
life commitments, I've seen this as one of a number of major
issues, like racism, corporate exploitation, sexism, war, health
care, workers' rights, etc, I haven't felt that it needed any
special priority.
As the new year begins, however, that has changed.
My major new year's resolution is to become more directly involved
in helping to build a massive and activist movement as quickly
as possible on the issue of global warming or, to be more accurate,
catastrophic climate disruption.
This is not just another issue. It is an absolutely
central one. There is widespread agreement in the world scientific
community that unless we dramatically shift from the use of
fossil fuels to the use of clean and renewable energy, we are
facing a truly apocalyptic future. Among the likely consequences:
-The Hadley Center, a major climate research laboratory
in Britain, recently said that, "by 2040, most of the world's
forests will begin to die." (1) -The near-disappearance
of arctic sea ice. "It is 40% thinner than it was forty
years ago." (2) -"Climate change would probably exacerbate
hunger and poverty around the world. . . People who are highly
dependent on farming, fishing or forestry will see their livelihoods
destroyed." (3) -We will see heat waves worse than the
one last summer in Europe that killed upwards of 35,000 people.
-Hurricanes, tornadoes and other severe storms will become more
frequent and deadlier. May, 2003 brought 562 tornadoes to the
United States, 163 tornadoes higher than the previous monthly
high of 399, set in 1992. -Island nations in the South Pacific
are already seeing the drastic effects of global warming as
the sea rises. Many small nations face disappearance under water.
-"Results of a major study showed yesterday that more than
a million species will become extinct as a result of global
warming over the next 50 years." (4) -"New research
in Australia suggests that the amount of water reaching the
rivers will decline up to four times as fast as the percentage
reduction of rainfall in dry areas. This, alongside the disappearance
of the glaciers, spells the end of irrigated agriculture."
(5) -The melting of the glaciers and arctic sea ice could lead
to a shutting down of the Gulf Stream, "which bathes the
UK and northwest Europe in warm water carried northwards from
the Caribbean" (6) And
because the Gulf Stream is the "engine" powering what
is called the "Great Ocean Conveyor. . . a twisting, swirling
current that wends through all the world's oceans," (7)
"the possibility exists that a disruption of the
Atlantic currents could have implications far beyond a colder
UK and northwest Europe, perhaps bringing dramatic climatic
changes to the entire planet."(8)
This is much more than "another important
issue." It is hard to describe it as anything other than
the major issue of our day. Can you get more basic than the
survival of life on earth as we know it?
We won't be able to move from a world of massive
inequality, racism, war and poverty to a world of economic and
social justice unless we who are pro-justice activists-ALL of
us, not just those who are part of the environmental movement--prioritize
this and move quickly to build a powerful, visible, broadly-based
and unified movement in the United States to make this an issue
the rulers and their parties must respond to. And 2004 is very
much the year to do it. Such a campaign is a natural for those
of us who understand how tied in the Bushites are to the oil
and coal companies and who are working to mobilize the largest
and broadest vote for democracy, peace and justice in November.
The American people are with us on this issue.
"A survey in 1999 found that 62% of the public favored
renewable energy over conventional sources. . .The Sierra Club
in a similar survey showed 80% supporting change." (9)
We need a sophisticated, multi-tactical, emergency campaign
to save life on earth, one which involves everything from door
to door campaigning to full-page ads in major newspapers to
a massive march on Washington in the fall to persistent pressure
on Congresspeople, including non-violent sit-ins at their offices
if necessary. Such a campaign could begin to turn that public
opinion into concrete legislation to shift our tax money from
the subsidizing of oil, coal and nuclear into a crash program
to move rapidly towards the use of clean and renewable energy
sources and to conserve energy through the retrofitting and
weatherization of all our homes and buildings.
Such a program is also a massive jobs program.
It provides a strong argument against the plans for on-going
war and empire building in pursuit of control of oil in the
Middle East
It is "anti-terrorism" program in that
it can move us towards "energy independence" and out
of the Middle East. It can also help lay the basis for an international
plan to transfer clean energy to poor countries. "Virtually
all developing countries would love to go solar; virtually none
can afford it. [A $300 billion a year] fund could come from
a small tax on international currency transactions, which total
$1.5 trillion every day. A tax of a quarter-penny-per-dollar
on those transactions would yield about $300 billion a year
for windfarms in India, solar assemblies in El Salvador, fuel
cell factories in South Africa, and vast solar-powered hydrogen
farms in the Middle East." (10)
Perhaps Earth Day this April could become the
public launching point for such a campaign, rather than an opportunity
for polluting corporations to "swallow the ecological crisis
and regurgitate it as a PR opportunity," in the words of
Vermont environmental activist Doyle Canning.
We need to act as if the possibility of a decent
future for our children and their descendants is dependent upon
what we do this year and the next few years. Because it is.
Ted Glick is the National
Coordinator of the (US) Independent Progressive Politics Network
(www.ippn.org), although he stresses
that these ideas are solely his own. He can be reached at futurehopeTG@aol.com
or P.O. Box 1132, Bloomfield, N.J. 07003.
1) Ross Gelbspan, interviewed in the February,
2003 Z
Magazine
2) Bill McKibben, "Some Like It Hot,"
in the July 5, 2001
N.Y. Review of Books
3) The United Nations Environment Programme
4) Steve Connor, "U.S. Climate Policy Bigger
Threat to World Than Terrorism," January 9, 2004, The Independent
5) George Monbiot, "With Eyes Wide Shut,"
in the August 12, 2003 Guardian
6) Bill McGuire, "Will Global Warming Trigger
a New Ice
Age?," November 13, 2003 Guardian
7) Brad Lemley, "The New Ice Age," September,
2002 Discover
8) Bill McGuire, "Will Global Warming Trigger
a New Ice
Age?," November 13, 2003, the Guardian
9) Sidney J. Gluck, "The Necessity for a
New Energy Policy"
10) Ross Gelbspan, "Rewiring The World's
Energy," December
21, 2003, the Boston Globe