May 12, 2013

Film Screening: Finally Got the News

finally Got the News
Join us for this free screening of 'Finally Got the News', a documentary about the League of Revolutionary Black Workers, active in the Detroit auto plants in the late 60s and early 70s. It wasn't just the Black Panthers scaring the white establishment.

Thursday, May 16th @ 7pm
UVM Campus, MLK Lounge
near the Billings Ira Allen lecture hall
From Icarus Films:
FINALLY GOT THE NEWS is a forceful, unique documentary that reveals the activities of the League of Revolutionary Black Workers inside and outside the auto factories of Detroit. Through interviews with the members of the movement, footage shot in the auto plants, and footage of leafleting and picketing actions, the film documents their efforts to build an independent black labor organization that, unlike the UAW, will respond to worker's problems, such as the assembly line speed-up and inadequate wages faced by both black and white workers in the industry.
Beginning with a historical montage, from the early days of slavery through the subsequent growth and organization of the working class, FINALLY GOT THE NEWS focuses on the crucial role played by the black worker in the American economy. Also explored is the educational 'tracking' system for both white and black youth, the role of African American women in the labor force, and relations between white and black workers.
Film showing sponsored by the ISO
RSVP on Facebook

May 6, 2013

Unequal by design

The capitalist system must maintain inequality as a function of the drive for profits.
http://socialistworker.org/2013/05/06/unequal-by-design

JAYNE AND Charles have a lot in common--except for pretty much everything.
Jayne DeWitt began working at the Georgia Pacific paper mill in Bellingham, Wash., in the 1970s. When it closed down in 2001, she made a 136-mile roundtrip commute to work for Kimberly-Clark in Everett. That mill closed down last year. The 64-year-old should be thinking about retirement. Instead, she's looking for a new job.
Charles Koch also has a history at Georgia Pacific--he owns it. Along with his brother and fellow ultraconservative libertarian union-buster David, Charles runs the multibillion-dollar Koch Industries. Forbes magazine put the pair at the Number 41 spot on its list of the world's most powerful people, a couple positions above North Korea's Kim Jong-un.
At 77, David Koch is also at retirement age. But with a net worth of $34 billion, he'd be a fool to quit "working" (if you can call it that).
That picture is one way to understand the scale of the gap between the rich and rest of us in the U.S.--a gap that has been growing larger and larger over the last four decades. Another way is the numbers.
According to journalist David Cay Johnston in an article written for Tax Analysts, the average income for the top 10 percent of Americans (after adjusting for inflation) rose by $116,071 between 1966 and 2011.
The rest of the population--the other 90 percent--made out differently. Our incomes grew on average by $59.
$59. That's maybe a tank-and-a-half of gas, or half a visit to the grocery store. And it's 0.000000017 percent of Charles Koch net worth. And $116,071? Koch dropped at least twice that much on the 2012 elections alone.
Johnston also points out that as the economy recovered, incomes and tax revenues grew between 2009 to 2011. But a whopping 149 percent of the increased income went to the top 10 percent. For the bottom 90 percent, income fell in those years.
In other words, if we're experiencing an economic recovery, as the media endlessly claims we are, it's a recovery at the expense of workers and the poor.
For Blacks and Latinos, the gap is even starker. According to the Urban Institute, as of 2010, white families earned on average about $2 for every $1 that Black and Latino families earned--a ratio that has remained roughly constant for the last 30 years.
This statistic by itself is a shameful enough comment on our so-called "equal" society. But it's not as bad as the Institute's other findings. When the Urban Institute measured wealth, rather than income--which includes factors like insurance, tuition, homes and savings for retirement--it found that before the recession, non-Latino white families were about four times wealthier than non-white families. By 2010, they were about six times wealthier.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
WHEN THE Great Recession took hold in earnest--detonated by the crash on Wall Street in the fall of 2008 economy started crashing--the solution of the economic "experts" was to pump money into the coffers of Corporate America--bailouts for the bankers, and big tax giveaways to corporations. Rather than this wealth "trickling down" to workers, there's an ever-growing reservoir gathering at the top--because while U.S. business has returned to record profitability, they aren't sharing it with workers.
On the contrary, the drive to squeeze more from fewer workers has only accelerated. Despite the fact that U.S. workers are 30 percent more productive than they were a decade ago, their wages have stagnated or worse.
Some of the bonanza for Corporate America is sitting around unused--U.S. companies are sitting on a cash hoard variously estimated between $1.4 trillion and $5 trillion, depending on how you count the cash.
But plenty is being put to use--or, more accurately, to non-use. According to the New York Times, the Wall Street banks and investment firms are back to gambling on the same complicated "structured financial products," like collateralized debt obligations, that brought the world finanical system to the brink of Armegeddon in 2008.
"Banks are turning out some types of structured products as fast or faster than they did before the bottom fell out," reported the New York Times. "So far this year, for instance, banks have issued $33.5 billion in bonds backed by commercial mortgages, slightly more than they did in early 2005, when the real estate market was flying high, according to data from Thomson Reuters."
As analyst Tad Philipp told the Times, "The players in the business are generally the same as they were before. Because it's the old players, they know how to push the boundaries."
And if the return of casino capitalism on Wall Street weren't enough to illustrate the upside-down priorities of the system, then there's the fact that the wealthy aren't satisfied with the gap between rich and poor at the current record levels. They want more--and they want workers to do without so they can get it.
Research by three Northwestern University political scientists that New York Timescolumnist Paul Krugman cited in a recent article illustrates how the views of the extremely wealthy diverge from the rest of us, especially around basic economic questions for the rest of us, like jobs and social programs.
When asked whether "the government should provide a decent standard of living for the unemployed," just 23 percent of the wealthy individuals polled said yes, compared with 50 percent of the general population. As to whether "the government in Washington ought to see to it that everyone who wants to work can find a job," 19 percent of wealthy respondents said yes, compared to 68 percent of the general public.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
IT'S PRETTY obvious, but we'll say it anyway: The super-rich think differently than we do. But this isn't merely because someone like David Koch is a jerk who despises the working class--though that's true. The bigger point is that the capitalist system is organized to make the rich richer and richer, at our expense.
The great U.S. socialist leader Eugene Debs called capitalism "a social order in which it is possible for one man who does absolutely nothing that is useful to amass a fortune of hundreds of millions of dollars, while millions of men and women who work all the days of their lives secure barely enough for a wretched existence."
The numbers today may be greater than anything Debs could have imagined a century ago, but the inequality he observed is still around--and flourishing.
Inequality is at heart of capitalism because the central dynamic of the system is the scramble for profits by a minority ruling class that controls the product of the labor of the vast majority.
Because profits come before human need, capitalism is just as liable to devote resources to destructive ends as constructive ones. If there is money to be made off producing life-saving medical technology, then the capitalists will produce that. But by the same token, if it's profitable to produce the weapons that kill ever-more people more effectively, then Corporate America will go about producing the "supply" to meet that "demand."
Along with these warped priorities comes a warped ideology, with an army of "experts" to explain why this is all perfectly normal. Taking their cue from the "conventional wisdom," politicians chastise the poor for their poverty and compliment the wealthy for their skill in accumulating wealth, no matter the source of their riches.
The same upside-down logic is applied throughout society. For example, the supposedly evenhanded U.S. criminal justice system harasses and warehouses the poor and working class, with a disproportionate number of its victims being Black and Latino--while CEOs and government officials responsible for workplace injuries and deaths go free.
And millions of people go without a home or food in a country where foreclosed homes stand empty and the production of food is strictly limited because it isn't profitable to produce enough for everyone who needs it.
Hunger, homelessness, environmental devastation, poverty, crime--these are not aberrations under capitalism, but the hallmarks of a society that must maintain inequality as a function of the dynamic at its very core.
By contrast, the most basic promise of a socialist society, run democratically by the working majority, is a world where profit is swept aside in order to devote all the resources of society to meeting human needs.
On June 27-30, left-wing thinkers and activists from around the country and the world will meet in Chicago for Socialism 2013, a long weekend of discussion and debate about our ideas and strategies for winning a new world.
Participants in the struggles against low-wage employers, rank-and-file activists organizing for strong unions, students coming together against budget cuts, victims of police brutality and their families standing up to the New Jim Crow, activists speaking out against sexism, anti-LGBT discrimination and racism--all will be at Socialism to talk about the struggle today and the fight for a future where inequality and injustice is abolished.
We hope you'll be there, too.

April 20, 2013

Join Greenwald, Abunimah, & Kumar at Socialism 2013

Socialism 2013 | June 27-30 | Chicago
http://www.socialismconference.org/

Download the conference brochure here:
http://www.socialismconference.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Socialism-2013-brochure.pdf

Come to the info session organized by Vermont socialists on Monday, the 29th, at 5:00 PM on UVM Campus in Lafayette Hall room 100. Check out the Facebook event here.

Millions of people have come to the understanding that capitalism is no longer working. From extreme weather caused by climate change and the relentless drive to slash workers’ living standards to the epidemic of police brutality, the signs of a society in crisis are all around us. The question isn’t whether society has run amok; the question is what to do about it.

The Socialism 2013 conference will bring together hundreds of activists from across the U.S., and around the world, to tackle the many discussions and debates that confront anyone interested in changing the world. How can women’s liberation and LGBT equality be won? What will it take to win real justice for immigrant workers? Can organized labor make a comeback? What lessons can be learned from the revolutions of the Middle East? What are the next steps in the struggle for Palestine? Why is Marxism relevant today?

Featured speakers include teachers on the front lines of the fight to defend public education, anti-racist fighters against police brutality and the New Jim Crow, trade unionists, Marxist authors, radical historians, and much more. Start making your plans to attend.

Socialism 2013 will have a whole range of lectures and series on a wide range of topics, designed to offer ideas about strategies in our movements as well as theory to guide the fight for a better future. 

Here are some examples of the series and topics we will be offering: The changing working class—do workers have the power to change society? | The worldwide fight against rape culture | Marxism and women’s liberation: social reproduction and the family | Black feminism and intersectionality | Racism in a “color-blind” society: fighting the New Jim Crow | The history and politics of Black liberation | The history of radicalism in the US labor movement | The Chicago Teachers’ strike and lessons for labor | Capitalism since the “Great Recession”—the continuing crisis | The new environmental movement | Indigenous struggles, past and present | The US-China rivalry and imperialism today | Crisis and resistance in the Eurozone | The US left since Occupy | The abolitionists and the fight against slavery | From Arab Spring to Arab Winter? What has happened to the Middle East revolutions? | Zionism and the Palestinian struggle for freedom | The debate over Political Marxism | Capitalism and disability oppression | The limits of postcolonial theory | Anarchism, autonomism, and prefigurative politics | Introductions to the ideas of great Marxists, from Marx to Lenin to Rosa Luxemburg | The socialist alternative and how to get there

Featured speakers include: Abbie Bakan, Ahmed Shawki, Ali Abunimah, Antonis Davanellos, Brian Jones, China MiƩville, Dave Zirin, David McNally, Deepa Kumar, Glenn Greenwald, Ian Angus, Jennifer Roesch, Jesse Hagopian, John Riddell, Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor, Lee Sustar, Liliana Segura, Michael Smith, Paul Kellogg, Paul Le Blanc, Richard Seymour, Sarah Jaffe, Scott Mclemee, Sharon Smith, Sherry Wolf, Sue Ferguson, Suzanne Weiss...and many more

Follow us on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/socialismconf

Register today
http://www.socialismconference.org/register

Please email info@socialismconference.org with any questions about the conference. 

Visit WeAreMany.org to view and listen to all of the meetings from last year’s conference!

Socialism 2013 sponsored by: Center for Economic Research and Social Change (publisher of International Socialist Review and Haymarket Books). Cosponsored by: The International Socialist Organization (publisher of Socialist Worker and Obrero Socialista).

April 4, 2013

The EcoSocialist Conference April 20 in NYC

ecosocialist conference

This conference brings together several socialist and red-green groups to present the case for sustainable, socialist society, as well as to further organize against fossil fuels and false solutions to climate change. For more info on transportation and housing, contact vermontiso@gmail.com.

April 2, 2013

Michael Klare on Global Resource Wars: The Race for What's Left

Download the poster

April 11, 2013 — 7 pm
Silver Maple Ballroom
Davis Center, 4th floor, UVM Campus

Free and open to the public

With the world facing an unprecedented crisis of resource depletion, the desperate hunt for supplies is igniting new conflicts and territorial disputes.The crucial task ahead, according to Klare, is to alter our consumption patterns altogether.

Michael Klare is a professor in the Program in Peace and World Security Studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Massachusetts. He has written widely on U.S. military policy, international peace and security affairs, the global arms trade, and global resource politics.

You can read more about Michael at his website or read a recent CounterPunch interview with Michael.

Sponsored by the Will Miller Social Justice Lecture Series

March 26, 2013

Divest! Social Solutions to Climate Change

Channel 17 coverage of the event.

system change not climate change
Saturday April 6th, 5pm
UVM Central Campus, Lafayette Hall room 210


Drought, wildfires and super-storms are becoming the norm. The environmental poisoning by oil spills and mountain-top removal is becoming harder to hide. And yet the 1% continues to push for more fossil fuel extraction through fracking, deep sea drilling, and tar-sands exploitation. We must resist!

This meeting is a place to learn, teach, and get involved.

Chris Williams, author of Ecology and Socialism, will speak on the political economy of energy and the social solutions to climate change.

Ruth Shafer, student and climate activist, will speak on the state of the divestment campaign at UVM.

Endorsed by 350 VT, Green Mountain College Activist Club, Haymarket Books, International Socialist Organization, Student Climate Culture, United Academics, UVM’s Environmental Program, and more

RSVP on Facebook

The Fight Against Rape Culture & Sexual Violence



Jen Roesch from the ISO NYC

March 24, 2013

Three Pillars of Injustice and a Battle for Reproductive Rights


by Hayley Archer - FedUp Vermont, a grassroots women’s rights coalition, organizes around three main pillars of inequality: reproductive injustice, gendered violence, and economic inequality. Recently, we hosted panel of three speakers, each one focusing on one of the pillars and tying together the acceleration of the attacks on women with the absence of an organized grassroots movement to fight back.

Our upcoming battle is taking on Carenet, the anti-choice “Crisis Pregnancy Center”, part of a widespread network of religious centers which pose as pregnancy clinics and are listed phonebooks under “abortion services”. Their abstinence-based program distributes misleading and untrue “facts” about abortion, as well as anti-condom and anti-birth control propaganda.

Our two-pronged approach: in the state house and in the streets. We are pursuing legislative measures which would require Carenet to post a sign identifying the services they do not provide, including (but not limited to) abortions, abortion referrals, and STI screenings (in fact, they have scare-tactic pamphlets with anti-condom propaganda). Baltimore, New York City, Austin, and other cities around the country have already passed or are in the process of passing such laws. To rally support for our side and to educate people on the dishonest practices of “Crisis Pregnancy Centers” we will continue to build a grassroots fight, including pickets, educational campaigns, and speak-outs, among other tactics.

If you would like to get involved, please email us for more info! FedUpVT@yahoo.com

March 20, 2013

What's in the climate change bill?

by Steve Ramey and Alan Maass

DAYS BEFORE last month's climate change demonstration on the doorstep of the White House, two Senate Democrats introduced legislation that they say would put the U.S. on the path to cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent by 2050.

But questions remain among environmentalists about shortcomings in the bill--and even more, whether the Obama administration and Democratic leaders in Congress will fight the uphill battle necessary to turn the proposal into law.

Sens. Barbara Boxer and Bernie Sanders announced their proposal to the media on February 14, while flanked by liberal environmental activists like Bill McKibben. The founder of 350.org had been arrested the day before outside the White House in a civil disobedience action organized in conjunction with the larger rally to come against the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.

Boxer and Sanders' legislation contains many features that McKibben and other activists support:

Read More

Peace, love and occupation?

Ben & Jerry's on sale in Israel
by Nolan Rampy
BEN & JERRY'S Ice Cream is widely known and respected for its socially conscious business practices and donations to social-justice movements like Occupy Wall Street. It is less well known, however, that Ben & Jerry's is complicit in Israel's illegal settlement activity in the West Bank.
A compelling new report fromVermonters for a Just Peace in Palestine/Israel (VTJP) reveals that Ben & Jerry's "is making ice cream in Israel and selling it in illegal settlements in Occupied Palestine."
Read More

Divest to save the planet

CLIMATE-JUSTICE campaigns focused on divestment from fossil fuel companies are hitting colleges and communities across the U.S. There are more than 250 campaigns underway, with Hampshire College in Massachusetts, Sterling College in Vermont and Unity College in Maine already agreeing to divest.

The rapid spread of these campaigns shows the growing urgency that many feel about climate change--along with frustration at government inaction and broken promises. Activists are working together through informal networks and the website of the Power Up! Divest Fossil Fuels conference that took place at Swarthmore College in late February.

Read more

March 19, 2013

Tackling the jobs vs. the environment myth

by Michael Ware
THE AFL-CIO's boneheaded support for expansion of the U.S. petroleum pipeline network is an implied endorsement of the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline--and it perpetuates an oil industry myth that we must choose between good jobs or protecting the environment.

Nothing could be further from the truth--as a pipeline disaster from the recent past illustrates.

On July 25, 2010, a 40-foot segment of a pipeline operated by the Canadian-based Enbridge burst near Michigan's Kalamazoo River, eventually spilling nearly a million gallons of Canadian tar sands "oil." The $1 billion cleanup still isn't complete, nearly three years later--the heavy slurry of tar sands and chemicals needed to make the mixture flow sank to the bottom of the river.

Incredibly, it took 17 hours before Enbridge knew the pipeline had ruptured. Why? Automation. Pipelines require few permanent employees to run them. Enbridge's office in Edmonton saw the pressure drop on the line and, thinking it was a bubble, increased the flow, causing an even worse spill. Eventually, a Michigan utility worker--not anyone employed by Enbridge--alerted the company.

Read More

March 17, 2013

Stop Obama's Drone Wars!

Welcome to the drone wars, a world of black ops and remote-control
death made possible by the world's most high-tech weaponry. More
protests will be essential to making sure the U.S. Government knows
the whole world is watching!

A public forum with the International Socialist Organization
http://www.facebook.com/events/399308816833616/

Thu. March 21
7:00pm
UVM, Lafayette Hall 210

March 6, 2013

Ecology and Socialism Study Group


Part One: Why Capitalism Can't Solve the Problem

Thursday, March 7th @ 7pm
Community Room at IAA (the Wheeler School)
6 Archibald Street, Old North End, Burlington
Readings: chapters 1-4


Part Two: What Would a Sustainable Society Look Like?

Thursday, March 28th @ 7pm
same location
Readings: chapters 5-Conclusion

More than 40,000 travelled to Washington this month to protest the mounting climate crisis and to demand that President Obama refuse approval of the Tar Sands Keystone XL Pipeline. Despite rhetoric promising to protect future generations from a warming planet, the Obama administration is set to approve the pipeline in the coming weeks. The Climate Justice movement must now up the ante and embrace a more radical vision of change. Key to that vision is a questioning of the system and an investigation into the root cause of environmental destruction: capitalist production.

Chris Williams' Ecology and Socialism examines these questions and more. Part 1 (March 7) will cover chapters 1-4, part 2 (March 28) will cover chapter 5 through to the conclusion. If you don't have the book, you can also read Williams' two-part Hothouse Earth article from the International Socialist Review, linked below.

Ecology and Socialism at Haymarket Books:
http://www.haymarketbooks.org/pb/Ecology-and-Socialism

Hothouse Earth: Capitalism, climate change, and the fate of humanity
part 1: http://www.isreview.org/issues/62/feat-hothouseearth.shtml
part 2: http://www.isreview.org/issues/64/feat-hothouse2.shtml



March 5, 2013

Capitalism is Killing the Planet: How Can We Fight Back

Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein joined Chris Williams (ISO) and Nick Davenport (Solidarity) before the February 17th march in DC. The room quickly overflowed and the event had to move to a larger space. The EcoSocialist Contingent marched with 40,000 other activists to demand that Obama reject the Keystone XL. He was busy playing golf with oil executives, but I'm sure he's sympathetic.

Photos from the Forward on Climate Rally

The Burlington ISO helped build the EcoSocialist Contingent at the February 17th rally in DC. Click the photo to see the album.

February 8, 2013

The Largest Climate Rally Ever

Nebraska's Gov. Heineman has removed previous roadblocks to the construction of the Tar Sands XL Pipeline from Alberta, CA to the Gulf of Mexico. The last hurdle for the oil companies  is the issue of a Presidential permit for the pipeline to cross the US border. In his second inauguration, President Obama went on record saying that we must do something to stop climate change. If either Obama or the new Secretary of State John Kerry say no to to the permit, the XL construction must stop. However, Obama has signalled that will approve the pipeline and pursue a domestic all-of-the-above strategy for oil, tar sands, fracked gas and offshore drilling. The only thing that will stop him is an international grassroots movement for climate justice.

Let's take to the streets!


Climate Forward Rally to Stop the Tar Sands XL Pipeline

Sunday, February 17th @ noon
Washington Monument (near Constitution Ave.)
Washington D.C.

Several socialist groups have collaborated to form an EcoSocialist Contingent for event to highlight how the climate crisis is rooted in our economic system.
What do we want? System Change, not Climate Change!

EcoSocialist Contingent will gather @ 11am at 12th & Jefferson just inside the park and march to the main rally. Visit the EcoSocialist Contingent website for the latest details. Email vermontiso@gmail.com to endorse or find out more.


The ISO is hosting a Saturday night panel in DC, featuring Chris Williams, author of Ecology and Socialism, Nick Davenport from Solidarity, as well as other ecosocialist activists and writers.

How to Stop Climate Change: a Socialist Response

Saturday, February 16th
All Souls Church, Unitarian
1500 Harvard St NW, Washington, DC 20009
RSVP on Facebook
More info coming soon.

Get on the bus from Vermont to DC!
350VT.org has organized 3 buses to get us rowdy Vermonters down to DC. Buses will leave Burlington at 8:00am on Saturday, February 16th.  The buses will be making stops in Burlington, Montpelier, White River Junction, Brattleboro, Middlebury and Rutland. We'll spend the night in DC to rest up for a day of action on the 17th, and return home on the bus Sunday evening.  We will leave DC after Sunday's action and after we've had time to grab some food for the road.  Estimated arrival time back in Burlington is 5:00am on Monday.   Minimum donation of  $25. The bus costs $75 so please donate more if you can.

Sign up for the bus!

For more info, email vermontiso@gmail.com or call 802-490-3875.

January 23, 2013

The world's filthiest fuel

Originally published by SocialistWorker.org
ACTIVISTS IN Ontario, Quebec and New England are organizing a week of action in late January to protest the expansion of a pipeline to pump the world's dirtiest fossil fuel across North America.
Pipeline companies Enbridge and TransCanada are building a North American network to pump oil drawn from Canada's tar sands in Alberta to ports in the Pacific, Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico, cheered on by an international pool of oil companies invested in mowing down boreal forests, strip-mining and drilling on a quarter of Alberta's land mass in order to keep the fossil-fuel party going.
As part of the week of action, 350 New England and Tar Sands Free New England haveissued a call for all forces to converge on Portland, Maine, on January 26 to demand a halt to pipeline approval. Anyone who can should mobilize as many climate allies for both the regional protest as well as local actions like pickets at ExxonMobil stations or fossil-fuel flash mobs.
The national organization 350.org has also called for a national demonstration against climate change in Washington, D.C., on Presidents' Day, February 17.
These actions are especially timely considering that the past year marks a new era of environmental extremes for North America. 2012 was the hottest year ever in the continental U.S., topping the record set in 1998 by a full degree. Arctic sea ice is at its lowest levels since measurements began, disappearing at an alarming clip.
Super Storm Sandy pummeled the East Coast in late October, while drought and extreme heat scarred the South and Midwest. Crops failed, wildfires spread. Some are calling 2012 the "new normal," as four out of the five hottest years have occurred since 1990. Clearly the climate is changing for the worse, and at a faster rate than anticipated.
Many fear we have reached a tipping point for the climate, or are very close. As 350.org founder Bill McKibben pointed out in a widely read Rolling Stone article called "Global Warming's Terrifying New Math," if we want to stay below 2 degrees Centigrade of global warming and avoid catastrophe for life on earth, we can only burn 565 more gigatons of carbon. And yet, fossil fuel companies hold five times that amount in reserve and plan on selling every last dribble of it.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
THE ALBERTA tar sands represent the latest and most lethal portion of those reserves. Their full exploitation will certainly roast the planet, as James Hansen and others have observed.
The process of strip-mining two tons of tar sand from what was a boreal forest and superheating it with water produces a barrel of bitumen, a gritty, low-grade oil substitute that must be mixed with other chemicals to make it flow. In total, it emits three times as many greenhouse gases as conventional oil. Investment in the Tar Sands is estimated at $200 billion (Canadian) and is considered the world's largest energy project, construction project and capital project, all rolled into one.
Any sane person would ask why we are not putting these resources to better use. Any oil corporation executive would ask how to increase production.
At a moment when all the world knows that we must reverse course, curtail the burning of carbon for fuel, and build a diversified energy infrastructure based on solar, wind, tidal and geothermal energy, the oil companies and the politicians who do their bidding are putting the pedal to the metal.
Instead of a moratorium on any fossil-fuel development, these corporations are expanding it, encouraged by the perverse logic of capitalism: the higher the price of oil, the more potential to extract for a profit the dirtiest, most expensive and toxic hydrocarbons from the most extreme locations.
The growing scarcity of sweet light crude oil easily drilled from vast fields in Saudi Arabia--and the price of crude oil hovering around $100 per barrel--means that unorthodox methods like cooking tar-heavy sands into synthetic oil, previously too resource-intensive to even consider, are now viable. Along with these more extreme forms of carbon come the greater likelihood of disasters, like the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico or the 2010 bursting of the Enbridge pipeline in Michiganthat spilled 877,000 gallons of tar sands oil into the Kalamazoo River.
For years, the Canadian government has strongly supported the oil industry and is now the world's sixth largest oil producer. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper is a tar sands stalwart and has recently tried to steamroll any opposition to pipeline construction. Enbridge has made rapid progress in recent weeks, hoping to win approval for a west-east-flowing pipeline running from southern Ontario to Montreal, then down through Vermont and New Hampshire to Portland, Maine.
The oil companies are eager to get the tar sands oil to port in order to sell on world markets, where they can get $20 to $30 more per barrel from buyers in China and India. Enbridge learned from TransCanada's woes as TransCanada sought to build the Keystone XL pipeline across the Midwest to Texas and met serious opposition from environmental activists. So Enbridge has decided to break up its projects into smaller phases with the goal of eventually linking them into a vast network that could deliver more than a million barrels per day.
Regardless, environmental activists, many of them from First Nation groups, have strongly resisted Tar Sands pipeline projects, like Enbridge's Northern Gateway in British ColumbiaEnbridge, which has an abysmal safety record, wanted the pipeline to cross over 800 rivers and the territories of 40 First Nation groups on its journey to the Pacific.
More than 100 First Nation groups have signed the Save the Fraser Declaration that opposes all pipelines that cross indigenous territories. Large protests mounted byDefend Our Coast this past October and continued resistance by the Idle No Moremovement have led some to declare the Northern Gateway near dead.
As Saik'uz First Nation Chief Jackie Thomas declared, "I have news for you Mr. Harper: you're never going to achieve your dream of pushing pipelines through our rivers and lands. We will be the wall that Enbridge cannot break through."
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
IN AUGUST 2011, 350.org led a series of civil disobedience actions against the Keystone XL pipeline at the White House gates, followed by a 12,000-strong encirclement of the White House later in November, forcing the Obama administration to temporarily halt the pipeline's construction.
TransCanada, which operates the pipeline, started by working on the southern section and building up from Texas, where they expected little opposition. They were wrong.Activists from Tar Sands Blockade have stood in front of bulldozers and chained themselves to machinery in order to impede construction. While their actions may not have stopped construction yet, they have drawn unwanted attention to the tar sands and inspired many to take up this fight against the worst and most politically vulnerable wing of the fossil-fuel industry.
Many activists hold out hope that Obama's second term will free him from re-election concerns and allow him to champion progressive causes and fight climate change. But Obama's environmental track record is so sorry that it's hard to take this hope seriously.
Soon after temporarily halting the permitting process for the XL Pipeline, Obama reaffirmed his commitment to fossil fuels in a March 2012 campaign speech in Cushing, Okla., a gas-and-oil pipeline hub where the middle and lower legs of the XL Pipeline will join:
[T]he problem in a place like Cushing is that we're actually producing so much oil and gas in places like North Dakota and Colorado that we don't have enough pipeline capacity to transport all of it to where it needs to go--both to refineries, and then, eventually, all across the country and around the world. There's a bottleneck right here because we can't get enough of the oil to our refineries fast enough...
Now, right now, a company called TransCanada has applied to build a new pipeline to speed more oil from Cushing to state-of-the-art refineries down on the Gulf Coast. And today, I'm directing my administration to cut through the red tape, break through the bureaucratic hurdles, and make this project a priority, to go ahead and get it done.
Word on the street in Washington is that Obama's first-term Environmental Protection Agency head Lisa Jackson is resigning in part due to insider knowledge that the administration will soon declare its full support for the XL Pipeline.
While this is still speculation, no one should be surprised if Obama takes the wrong side. For American and Canadian politicians, ensuring energy security and the lowest possible energy costs for the corporate executives they serve are top priorities. Stopping global warming is simply an empty campaign promise.
But if indigenous, climate and labor activists make it too politically and economically painful, politicians can be compelled to do the right thing. Morality will play no part in their conversion--other than as a superficial explanation for their change of heart. Pressure is the only thing they respond to besides cash and favors.
At a November convergence of 350 New England in Boston, activist David Stember asked participants, "What would winning look like?" It is a question we should all ask each other because it clarifies our demands and points the way forward.
We should demand that politicians on both sides of the border reject all permitting for the pipelines and respect indigenous sovereignty, including the right to forbid the construction of any pipelines on their territories. And we should demand the heavy taxation of the fossil-fuel industry to finance the transition to a renewable energy economy.
To do this, we will need the continued growth of the climate justice movement, but we will also need a reinvigorated and forward-thinking labor movement that sees the movements for climate justice and indigenous rights as natural allies. We need international solidarity and support for any group or individual that refuses to strip-mine the forests for tar, load oil tankers, build pipelines, or drive trains and trucks that carry the seeds of their own destruction.

January 19, 2013

No Tar Sands Oil! Support First Nation Sovereignty

Tar Sands Oil is Blood Oil

Thursday, January 24th @ 7pm

IAA Community Room at the H.O. Wheeler School
6 Archibald Street, Old North End, Burlington

Speakers:
Ruby Perry, 350 Vermont
Will Bennington, Rising Tide Vermont
Michael Ware, International Socialist Organization

To anyone outside of oil industry board rooms the Tar Sands in Northern Alberta are a calamitous nightmare. Oil Industry giant Enbridge (parent company of Gaz Metro, Green Mountain Power's owner) wants to send bitumen from Alberta to Portland, ME through New England in an attempt to open Asian markets for tar sands exports. Enbridge has already caused a massive spill in the Kalamazoo River in 2010 which allowed tar sands crude to flow into the river for 17 hours before shutting the pipeline down.

The First Nations' Idle No More movement in Canada has risen in response to appalling governmental rollbacks on workers' rights and environmental protection. Idle No More has sprung up all over the country with protests, flash mobs and sit-ins.

Join us for a discussion on how we can best take our struggle forward.

Sponsored by the International Socialist Organization

Throwing away the biosphere in the name of profit
Map of proposed Tar Sands Pipelines

January Days of Action

Keep New England Tar Sands Free Flash Mob

Wednesday, January 23rd, 12:30pm - 1pm
Church and Main
RSVP on Facebook
Sponsored by 350VT & Rising Tide Vermont

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Stop the New England Tar Sands Pipeline
Regional Protest in Portand, ME

Saturday, January 26th from 11:30 - 4pm, meet @ Monument Square
More info here
Buses leave Burlington at 7am from Waterfront Park, returning late Saturday
Sign up for the bus!
Suggested cost: $40
Sponsored by 350 New England and Tar Sands Free New England

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Idle No More International Day of Action

Monday, January 28th
Details TBA

January 14, 2013

Rising Profits, Sinking Planet: Socialist Solutions to the Climate Crisis

Filmed by Doug Enaa Greene

Originally published by Boston Occupier

December 15, 2012 -- Authors Amity Pate and Chris Williams speak about Hurricane Sandy and capitalism's role in driving climate change.