Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Step It Up On Global Warming

by Bill McKibben
StepItUp 2007

Dear Friends,

This is an invitation to help start a movement--to take one spring day and use it to reshape the future. Those of us who know that climate change is the greatest threat civilization now faces have science on our side; we have economists and policy specialists, courageous mayors and governors, engineers with cool new technology.

But we don't have a movement—the largest rally yet held in the U.S. about global warming drew a thousand people. If we're going to make the kind of change we need in the short time left us, we need something that looks like the civil rights movement, and we need it now. Changing light bulbs just isn't enough.

So pitch in. A few of us are trying to organize a nationwide day of hundreds and hundreds of rallies on April 14. We hope to have gatherings in every state, and in many of America's most iconic places: on the levees in New Orleans, on top of the melting glaciers on Mt. Rainier, even underwater on the endangered coral reefs off Key West.

We need rallies outside churches, along the tide lines in our coastal cities, in cornfields and forests and on statehouse steps.

Every group will be saying the same thing: Step it up, Congress! Enact immediate cuts in carbon emissions, and pledge an 80% reduction by 2050. No half measures, no easy compromises-the time has come to take the real actions that can stabilize our climate.

As people gather, we'll link pictures of the protests together electronically via the web-before the weekend is out, we'll have the largest protest the country has ever seen, not in numbers but in extent. From every corner of the nation we'll start to shake things up.

By its very nature, this action needs all kinds of people to help out. We can't make it happen-it has to assemble itself.

Sign up to host an action. We'll coordinate the responses, introducing you to others from your area, and give you everything you need to be a leader, from banners to press releases.

You don't have to have ever done anything like this-you're not organizing a March on Washington, just a gathering of scores or hundreds in your town or neighborhood.

We need creativity, good humor, commitment. If you are active in a campus group or a church or a local environmental group or a garden society or a bike club-or if you just saw Al Gore's movie and want to do something-then we need you now.

And by now, we mean now.

The best science tells us we have ten years to fundamentally transform our economy and lead the world in the same direction or else, in the words of NASA's Jim Hansen, we will face a "totally different planet," one infinitely sadder and less flourishing.

The recent elections have given us an opening, and polling shows most Americans know there's a problem. But the forces of inertia and business-as-usual are still in control, and only our voices, united and loud, joyful and determined, can change that reality.

Please join us.

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Dear Green Prudence, the sentiments you are expressing are precisely the same as our embyonic but rapildy growing organisation CARBON EQUITY GROUP which is based in Melbourne Australia.
We are collectively very concerned over the recent scientific research and are in the proces of mobilising various community organisations and unions around the 'post Stern' research.
While Global Warming is a major issue in Australia, this is entirely due to drought conditions in much of the country, rather than from having a general public well-informed about what the research is really showing.
The need to properly educate the community around a Co2 reduction program which is fair and equitable as well as effective based around:
-Carbon rationing,
-high growth of renewables,
-rapid transition away from trucks cars,planes to rail,
-quick phasing down of coal-based electricity,
is critical for the planet's survival.
We are getting together a major document that pulls all the recent research together, getting some analyses out to major media organisations, and speaking to influential figures in academia, green groups, journalists, churches and unions.
Hopefully, we will soon look at initiating a major mobilisation into the streets of concerned citizens to press our major parties and governments for real rather than token action.
Geoff Lazarus
geofflazarus@aol.com

Wednesday, January 24, 2007 6:50:00 AM  

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