Green Party members should take a look at the “National Vision Survey” that the GPUS has put up on its website. It’s a good chance to express your opinion on the future direction of the party.
Green Party members should take a look at the “National Vision Survey” that the GPUS has put up on its website. It’s a good chance to express your opinion on the future direction of the party.
Without any press conferences, grand announcements, or hyperbolic advertising campaigns, the Exxon Mobil Corporation, one of the world’s largest publicly owned petroleum companies, has quietly joined the ranks of those who are predicting an impending plateau in non-OPEC oil production. Their report, The Outlook for Energy: A 2030 View, forecasts a peak in just five years.
In the past, many who expressed such concerns were dismissed as eager catastrophists, peddling the latest Malthusian prophecy of the impending collapse of fossil-fueled civilization. Their reliance on private oil-reserve data that is unverifiable by other analysts, and their use of models that ignore political and economic factors, have led to frequent erroneous pronouncements. They were countered by the extreme optimists, who believed that we would never need to think about such problems and that the markets would take care of everything. Up to now, those who worried about limited petroleum supplies have been at best ignored, and at worst openly ridiculed.
All the more reason that the public should heed the silent alarm sounded by the ExxonMobil report, which is more credible than other predictions for several reasons. First and foremost is that the source is ExxonMobil. No oil company, much less one with so much managerial, scientific, and engineering talent, has ever discussed peak oil production before. Given the profound implications of this forecast, it must have been published only after a thorough review.
This assessment is somewhat ominous. OPEC has not expanded production capacity much at all recently. Moreover, such production increases are only possible from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. For these countries, and indeed for most OPEC members, petroleum and petroleum products are their only significant export. As such, they have a vested interest in obtaining the best possible price for their non-renewable resources. OPEC nations would be quite unlikely to increase production as rapidly as needed unless compelled to do so. To put this shortfall in perspective, in 2003 Algeria produced 1.1 million barrels per day; a new Algeria would need to be brought on line in the Persian Gulf each and every year beyond 2010 just to keep up with the projected increase in demand. Consequently, once non-OPEC production reaches a peak, conventional world oil production could peak shortly thereafter, and prices (never explicitly mentioned in the Outlook) would rise in accordance with the laws of supply and demand.
What all this means is that the petroleum industry is approaching a turning point. Conventional petroleum production will soon–perhaps in five years, ten at best–no longer be able to satisfy demand. For their part, American consumers would do well to take a cue from their Western European counterparts, who enjoy a comfortable lifestyle despite a per capita use of petroleum that is half of that in the United States. The sooner the United States begins this transition away from oil, the easier it will be. That’s a far more attractive option than trying to squeeze oil from stone.
I attended the Going Green at Home festival yesterday at Wheaton Regional Park sponsored by the Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission. The tables and presentations covered a wide variety of subjects including green building materials, green homes (energy self sufficient!), organic farming, making your home more energy efficent, and so on (nothing about corn stoves though–we needed Mary there!)
One thing that I was only vaguely aware of was the Capital Cresent Trail, a bike trail converted from an old, unused train track, that runs from Silver Spring all the way down to Georgetown–a potential model for alternative commuting!
There was a decent number of people moving through the exhibits. I found two who were interested in the Green Party and wanted to change their registration (woo hoo!) although a large portion of the crowd consisted of hard core democrats who don’t especially like the Green Party.
But the interesting thing for me was to see the such a thriving example of grass roots green economics at work. Unlike many European government, U.S. governments don’t give significant aid to sustainable economics (except for California.) As a result, these technologies can only spread through grass roots efforts like the Going Green festival, which, while admirable, will probably not effect rapid, large scale change. But they are evidence that green sentiments are there, percolating under the surface, ready for somebody to mobilize them.
You can download the brochure. Nicely done, Tyrtle!
Click here to download: Why Vote Green brochure (70K pdf file)
Andrew put the issue of Instant Run Off voting very well in a recent Village Green Posting–adam
Hi folks,
What has been pretty successful as far as I can tell face to face with
voters (and maybe in large groups, but haven’t experienced that one) is
to point out that the current voting system allows a non-majority
winner. Greens offer a “majority winner” voting system; i.e., a system that
REQUIRES that the winner receive more than half the votes.
The classic example I’ve used most recently is Will Campos, District 2,
PG County Council. He won the Democrat nomination (with 90K from Al
Wynn in a 19% turnout special election) with 33% of the vote, while 7
other candidates split the other 67% of the vote. With our system, the
other seven, choosing each other in no particular order as the “next
choice” candidate, would have easily defeated Will Campos. The
non-corporate candidates can indeed “gang up” on the corporate candidate with
ranked choice voting. I think explaining this fromt he point of view of
“majority winner” elections might be effective. Maybe some of us can try
it and see what response we get.
My sense of things is that people respond to the notion of “majority
winner”, and even the weakest majority, 50% +1, is not guaranteed by
current election systems, but is guaranteed by the democratic reforms in
the voting systems Greens support.
More on this soon but gotta go…
100-mile-per-gallon barrier broken
by karma432Over 60 hybrid, electric and biofueled vehicles from throughout the U.S. and Canada competed in the 2005 Tour de Sol - the 17th annual sustainable-energy and transportation festival and competition, demonstrating that we have the technology today to power our transportation system with zero-oil consumption and zero climate-change emissions. Each vehicle showed new ways to reduce our dependence on foreign oil while reducing harmful pollutants.
“Each year, the Tour de Sol highlights the largest innovations in alternative-energy technology and advanced fuel vehicles, showcasing the future of the clean-energy and transportation industry,” said New York State Gov. George E. Pataki. “Over the last 10 years, we’ve invested unprecedented funding into the research and development of clean-fuel technology and currently deploy more than 4,300 clean-fuel vehicles in our state-operated fleets. I’m proud that many of the cars and components featured in this year ’s Tour de Sol are being developed right here in New York State, creating new markets and jobs for the 21st century while helping to clean our air and reduce our dependence on foreign oil.”
“The students, businesses, New York State government officials, auto companies producing advanced vehicles, and people using new hybrid and biofuel vehicles in the Tour de Sol are the new American heroes of the 21st century,” said Nancy Hazard, executive director of the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association in Greenfield, MA, organizer of the Tour de Sol. “Every American is a winner because of their efforts to design, build and use advanced vehicles that aim to reduce imported oil and climate-change emissions today - offering an alternative solution to the energy and climate-change crises that threaten life as we know it”
The most interesting overall vehicle was the novel “plug-in” hybrid demonstrated by Valence Corp. and EDrive in Monrovia, CA. This is a modified Toyota Prius with a much larger battery pack than the normal Prius, and charged with external grid power. On a 150-mile run, this vehicle achieved 102 MPG on the gasoline used, but also used 9 kilowatt-hours of electricity required to charge the special lithium-ion batteries, which cost less than $1 to recharge. Although this vehicle would be relatively expensive to buy if available today (due to extra battery cost) plug-in hybrids may become a viable future technology.
Three top-placing teams — West Philadelphia High School, Quebec Advanced Transportation Institute (ITAQ) in St. Jerome, Quebec, Canada, and Western Washington University in Bellingham, WA — demonstrated incredibly low greenhouse-gas emissions by running their vehicles on biodiesel. The ITAQ entry got 67 MPG in a diesel Mercedes SMART vehicle.
Sam Smith’s Talk to the Green Party of Montgomery County, MD, May 14, 2005
by adamThis is a transcript of Sam Smith’s remarks at Banning and Low, Saturday night. I think I can speak for everyone attending that we found Sam’s words inspiring and visionary.
Ten years ago next month a small group of us staged a conference of third party activists that led to several other meetings culminating in this country’s first Green presidential campaign in 1996 and, in suitably confused order, a few weeks later in the formation of a national association of Green parties.
Thus we can soon celebrate with a peculiar mixture of pride and disappointment the first decade of the American Green Party. The pride includes being part of a diaspora of the first great political idea since social democracy to spread across our globe without force of arms or even supranational organization. Upon meeting with a Green from, say, Tasmania or Africa, I am quickly reminded of how little borders interfere with our conversation for the only geography that limits us is the endangered atmosphere above our heads rather than some imaginary line drawn on a map.
The pride also comes from something that is still unappreciated by many Greens and certainly ignored by the media - namely that based on public opinion polls, Greens - despite their meager electoral showing - are the party that best reflects the view of a majority of Americans on such issues as the Iraq war, the environment, health care, campaign financing, population growth, genetically modified foods, and marijuana use.
In short, while the public may not elect us, they agree with us far more than they do with the so called major parties on a number of major issues. That they don’t know this is a reflection of media bias, the successful agitprop of the GOP and the Democrats, the Greens’ lack of the legalized bribery that funds the major parties, but also, sadly, it reflects a willingness of Greens to accept the marginal role assigned to them by America’s establishment.
There is another poll that I can not prove we have won, but evidence is pointing increasingly in its direction - and that is the poll of history. History is always the last precinct to be heard from.
As with every great cause in American history from abolition to civil rights and women’s liberation, the final result is often on a time delay fuse. Ideas that are ridiculed today become the accepted wisdom of tomorrow. It is often better, if forced to chose, to win tomorrow’s poll rather than today’s for today’s winner often is demonstrating nothing but the will and power to delay justice. Phil Hart once said of the Senate that it was a place that did things 20 years after it ought to. This sadly also applies to politics in general.
Finally, Greens have, on average, less polluting, less violent, less authoritarian, and less myopic than those of other parties. And, as I sometimes explain to folks, I dropped out of the Democratic Party out of fear that I might become liable under the RICO anti-racketeering statutes.
But a tendency towards virtue and prescience is not always appreciated - it actually annoys many. It is true, as the Mongolians say, that those who wish to speak the truth had better keep one foot in the stirrup. Nonetheless, it is useful to occasionally remember that whatever our failings we have tried to do right and this, in and of itself, is one of the great protections against doing wrong. Not a perfect one to be sure, but infinitely better than its alternative which is setting out to do we should know is wrong.
Now to a few disappointments and problems, which I offer not in the name of ideology, certainty, or righteousness, but more in the manner of fans discussing the tactics of the last game over a beer. Too often, among the committed, the choice of pass or run is regarded as an article of faith rather than what it really is: alternative mechanical solutions towards the same end.
For example, a shocking amount of nonrenewable energy has been expended on arguing whether supporting David Cobb or Ralph Nader was the right choice. Yet together these candidates received less than one half of one percent of the vote. Looked at another way, the candidates together received 2.3 million fewer votes than Nader had in 2000.
Before the election campaign I found myself a somewhat lonely voice trying to suggest that while it was necessary for the Greens to run a presidential campaign it was not really where their future lay.
I had come to this conclusion by a close look at the history of third parties over the past one hundred years. One thing I found was that if you want to affect national politics with a third party presidential run, getting over 5% - preferably closer to 10% - is a good way to start. Otherwise, you can probably expect a far less direct impact for your efforts, coming perhaps decades in the future. And, in any case, you can expect your swing at presidential politics to be fairly short-lived.
It is also worth noting that with the except of Eugene Debs, all the most successful third party presidential candidates drew primarily from disgruntled mainstream factions. Further each of the third parties had only one opportunity to make their point in a big way in a presidential race.
That does not mean, however, that third parties - like certain insects - are merely born, have sex, and then die. In fact, some of the third parties have had long, remarkably healthy lives, but in large part because they were as concerned with local as with national results. The Socialist Party is the most dramatic example, with a history dating back over 100 years. By World War I it had elected 70 mayors, two members of Congress, and numerous state and local officials. Milwaukee alone had three Socialist mayors in the last century, including Frank Zeidler who held office for 12 years ending as late as 1960. And let us not forget Bernie Sanders who stands an excellent chance of being our first socialist senator, a fact, come to think of it, the right will never let us forget. They’re already treating it as a shocking expose.
Some highly successful third parties never ran anyone for president (except in fusion with one of the major parties). An example was the Liberal Party of New York, the longest lived third party next the to the Socialists.
My feeling is that the Greens should follow the path of the Socialists and the Populists and infuse themselves into every possible pore and precinct of this country and in every possible way. This can be called viral politics although, in truth, it predates such postmodern terminology with deep roots in traditional political behavior.
We must bear in mind that most politics today is largely based on acceptance of the tyranny of television and other forms of mass media. This is, among other things, extremely costly and a game Greens can’t afford to play even if they wished to. It is also inevitably top down politics. You can’t have a decentralized democratic movement run by TV.
But viral politics - whether done through traditional local organizing or through more modern tools such as the Internet - has not been eliminated by the media but merely obscured. It is widely used, for example, by the Christian right. And Howard Dean didn’t do badly with it, either.
It could be used far more by the Greens as well. Consider that in recent years as many as 95 congressional races and 40% of all state legislative races have been uncontested. What if Greens all over the country had been as diligent as Maine’s John Eder who not only won a seat in the legislature but won it again after being redistricted?
And while the San Francisco mayoralty may not seem as important as a Green presidential run, a few days after election it suddenly dawned on me that Gonzalez’ race was not just local; for me it meant that there somewhere in America there was a city roughly the size of my own in which 47% of the voters agreed with me. That was a remarkably cheering revelation.
If we had Matt Gonzalezes and John Eders all over America people would start talking and thinking about Greens in a different way. Whatever our results in a presidential race they would know that Greens really do matter in the ‘hood.
How do we get to this point? A good place to start is to stop thinking of the Greens so much as an ideological grouping with a literal agenda and more as a community of common spirits. Listen to how the Socialists’ own history describes their roots: “From the beginning the Socialist Party was the ecumenical organization for American radicals. Its membership included Marxists of various kinds, Christian socialists, Zionist and anti-Zionist Jewish socialists, foreign-language speaking sections, single-taxers and virtually every variety of American radical.”
It can happen without even planning. At one point the majority of the steering committee of the DC Statehood Green Party consisted of three young staffers of local labor unions. This is certainly not the image the Green Party projects. I believe they had come in part seeking a community that expressed their ideals better than their jobs did. In fact, in almost every once great progressive movement one finds a restlessness among the young. Many of these groups - civil rights, women’s, environmental - have become more bureaucratic, less imaginative, and less brave with time. The Green Party - if it thought of itself as a safe house for the idealistic, the rebellious and the active - might be surprised at how many would like to drop in.
The problem is one of style and tone as much as policy and pronouncements. Are the Greens fun to be around? Do they make my work more useful? Am I strengthened by the affirmation I feel even if we may disagree on some issues?
If, on the other hand, we take a formalistic and bureaucratic approach to our efforts we will be rewarded with formalistic and bureaucratic results. One of these results will be to signal some that they won’t feel all that comfortable amongst us.
But if the feeling is that of a community or a home, our work can be more productive, more pleasing and more inviting.
John McKnight put it well when he said that “The structure of institutions is a design established to create control of people. On the other hand, the structure of associations is the result of people acting through consent. . . You will know that you are in a community if you often hear laughter and singing. You will know you are in an institution, corporation, or bureaucracy if you hear the silence of long halls and reasoned meetings.” He added:
- Community is built around a recognition of fallibility rather than the ideal.
- Community groups are better at finding a place for everyone.
If this seems naïve, come with me for a moment to a time of when politics was so much a part of New York City that Tammany Hall had to rent Madison Square Gardens for its meetings of committeemen - all 32,000 of them. In contrast, when the Democratic National Committee decided to send a mailing to its workers some years back, it found that no one had kept a list. The party had come to care only about its donors.
One 19th century Tammany politician, George Washington Plunkitt, claimed to know every person in his district, their likes and their dislikes:
“A young feller gains a reputation as a baseball player in a vacant lot. I bring him into our baseball club. That fixes him. You’ll find him workin’ for my ticket at the polls next election day. . . I rope them all in by givin’ them opportunities to show themselves off. I don’t trouble them with political arguments. I just study human nature and act accordin’.”
In the world of Plunkitt, politics was not something handed down to the people through distant intermediaries. What defined politics was an unbroken chain of human experience, memory and gratitude.
So the first non-logical but necessary thing we must do to reclaim politics is to bring it back into our communities, into our hearts . . . to bring it back home.
We must not only make politics a part of our culture but make our culture a part of our politics. The first political campaign in which I took part - at the age of 12 in Philadelphia - featured a candidate who made ten to twelve appearances every evening on different street corners, preceded by a string band that attracted the crowd. By the time, he was finished he had held an outdoor rally for 12,000 in front of city hall and defeated 69 years of Republican rule. How often have you seen that?
I remember something else from that period - a record my father brought home of labor songs. I do not remember anything anyone said about politics from that time, but I do recall bits and pieces of those songs. As Joe Hill said, ‘A pamphlet, no matter how well-written, is read once and then thrown away - but a song lasts forever.”
Reaching out beyond our community involves some changes. For example, liberals have increasingly become openly angry at those with the very votes they need. Disparaging huge sections of the country as hopeless “red states” becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. It is indeed a frustrating time, but there are a few ways Greens can avoid this liberal trap. It is useful to remember that bad politics gets people thinking about the wrong things while good politics gets them thinking about the right things. Segregation, for example, was in no small part a successful effort of the southern white elite to keep poor whites and poor blacks from discovering what they had in common. When Lyndon Johnson and Adam Clayton Powell got what was perhaps the greatest amount of good legislation passed in the least amount of time in American history, it was not just about civil rights - it was also about poverty and education. In other words, they got the south and the rest of the country thinking about better things.
We are taught today to think of our opponents as intrinsically evil, but consider this: Of 21 currently safely GOP states, 11 have above average poverty, 12 have below average income and 8 have severe drought problems. If you didn’t know they were sacred Republican turf, you might think they were excellent organizing ground for progressives. Further, 15 of these untouchable states, allegedly impenetrable behind their walls of faith-based family values, have above average divorce rates - all of them at least 90% greater than despicable, godless Massachusetts.
What if we got these places thinking about health care, pensions, good water, and job security instead of gay marriage and abortion? Remember that Christian fundamentalists have been with us a long time; but there was a time when we called them New Deal or Great Society Democrats. These matters are not as fixed as we are told to believe.
One way to change the atmosphere is to do it like AA - one day at a time, one step at a time. Build your coalitions issue by issue. You may be amazed at what you can create this way. I remember when we were fighting freeways in Washington and I went to a rally whose two main speakers were Grovesnor Chapman of the all-white Georgetown Citizens Association and Reginald Booker, head of group called Niggers Incorporated. I looked up at the stage and thought, we’ve won. And we had.
I tell folks that if an anti-abortion, gun-toting nun wants to help you save a forest put her on the committee. You will both learning something from the experience and you will scare the opposition because what the elite hates most is to find people who shouldn’t like each other being on the same side.
Loosening up on party organization can help, too. For example, issue committees that function with considerable autonomy often develop energy far more easily. Further, if you’re looking for better diversity, such committees can provide an attraction for those who might feel uncomfortable in the larger group. Latinos, who might not have much natural affinity for hooking up with the Greens, might find a quite independent Maryland Green Immigration Task Force much to their liking.
Another way to reach out to various communities is through creative followship. If you want to make friends one of the best ways is not to try to get them to do something for you but for you to help them do what they want.
In the end, there will be plenty who stand their ground far from yours. But even here there are ways of ameliorating the situation. If someone says, for example, they don’t approve of gay marriages, I say then don’t marry a gay. I follow up by pointing out that one of the key virtues of America is your right to do what you believe is right. But in order to have that right, you have to give it to everyone else as well. This is what is called reciprocal liberty. I can’t be free unless you are and vice versa.
This doesn’t mean approval but tolerance. As my father used to say to us: you don’t have to like your relatives you just have to be nice to them. (And I always thought he was reminding himself as well)
I think this distinction has gotten lost in today’s political debate. I suspect that many Christian conservatives feel that liberals are trying to get them to approve of rather than just accept things that violate their beliefs. My response is no, you don’t have to like what other Americans do, you just have to be nice to them. And that includes not banning them from relationships and choices they have made, not disparaging them or segregating them in any way. Remember, if you can make gays do what you want, someday someone may decide to do the same to Christian fundamentalists. Your freedom is not just a right, it is a bargain you have struck with other Americans.
This, I obviously would hope, would just be a first step. But it is an important one and it is through making such distinctions that Greens can become not only the wave of the future but the mediator of past troubles.
Finally, one external factor has dramatically altered things for the Greens as well as everyone else: the end of the First American Republic following September 11. Besides all its other horrors, the developments make it even more difficult for a third party. But the war on terror is in many ways a war to protect a tiny percentage of the American elite and their capitals of politics and business. When the White House went on red alert the other day, the mayor of Washington - just a few blocks away - wasn’t even notified.
Our situation is not unlike Orwell’s 1984, in which only ten percent of the population were actually members of the party; the rest lived in a countryside with relatively normal lives.
Oddly, however, this presents an unusual opportunity for the Greens. What if the Green Party declared itself the party of the countryside, of free America, and set its sights on organizing not just the survival, resistance, and rebellion of the unoccupied homeland, but its revival, its discovery of self-reliance, and its energetic practice of democracy and decency? There is a logic to the Greens becoming the party of free America. After all Greens are the party most in the American tradition of decentralization, democracy, and cooperative communities. And they have ample precedent in the grassroots Populist Party which took on robber barons of startling similarity to those now served by the Bush regime.
The important thing, however, in discussing all these matters is for Greens to remember that they are members of the same team, selecting the next play not to prove their virtue but to improve their mutual position. The virtue they can take for granted; the position will be determined by each day’s practical choices. If there is any virtue to be consciously observed during these difficult decisions it is that of kindness towards each other.
As for the rest of America let us proceed on a course both radical and gentle, determined and patient, critical of those in power yet kind to those they have misled, and, most of all, serious in our intent, yet joyous in our manifestations of that intent, spreading the message that a green world is not only a better one, but a happier one as well.
This quote is taken from Lester Brown’s “Eco-Economy” (2001), and is attributed to Oystein Dahle, retired Vice President of Esso for Norway and the North Sea.
Socialism collapsed because it did not allow prices to tell the economic truth. Capitalism may collapse becuase it does not allow prices to tell the ecological truth.”
I think that gets to the nub of it.
Don’t Be Fooled is a project of The Green Life’s Greenwash Campaign to explain, expose and eliminate greenwash in labeling, advertising and public relations.
Top Greenwashers:
AMERICA’S TEN WORST GREENWASHERS
1. Ford Motor Company
2. BP
3. United States Forest Service
4. ChevronTexaco
5. General Motors
6. Nuclear Energy Institute
7. Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers
8. TruGreen ChemLawn
9. Xcel Energy
10. National Ski Areas Association
From the report:
In this report we run a background check, investigating whether those credentials should be accepted. On the contrary, we find, they should in most cases be revoked, for rarely do they convey a company’s true identity.
An automaker that produces dozens of models of gas-guzzling SUVs opts to market its lone hybrid as proof of far-reaching environmental responsibility. An energy company uses solar to symbolize its commitment to a post-carbon future, even as all but a sliver of its operations are stuck in oil. And a chemical company touts its donation to a conservation group, made only to silence grassroots gripes about toxic pollution.
Dealing in lies of omission, image ads belong to a business strategy known as greenwash, defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as “disinformation disseminated by an organization so as to present an environmentally responsible public image.” In addition to image ads, greenwash encompasses misleading product labels such as “all natural,” “biodegradable” and other vague descriptions used entirely at the discretion of the manufacturer, as well as improper applications of terms, for example, “organic” and “free range,” which are meaningful regarding certain products but unreliable with others.
Greenwash also covers a range of public relations tactics: front groups feigning public support for hidden anti-environmental agendas; scientists-for-hire who vouch for
industry-funded research; sustainability reports offering partial disclosure and spotty transparency; hollow mission statements and codes of conduct; contributions to innocuous nonprofits; community advisory panels that have access without influence; and sponsorship of Earth Day events, where local industry plays host to the people it poisons.
Bolstered by niche marketing inside the Beltway, voluntarism over the past decade has gained considerable political currency. However, after a trial period, it is apparent that self-regulation is no substitute for government mandates. Researchers studying voluntary environmental programs such as the chemical industry’s Responsible Care and the logging industry’s Sustainable Forestry Initiative have concluded that without concrete standards, independent oversight or the threat of enforcement, companies are not compelled to clean up their practices.
Thus greenwash is not part and parcel of environmental propaganda, boosting awareness of environmental problems in spite of its source. Instead, greenwash is itself an environmental problem, one that will persist, and likely worsen, until it no longer pays.
The entire report: DontBeFooled.pdf
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