Somewhere around thirty-five to forty thousand people came to the
National Mall in Washington, DC, for one of the largest climate rallies
in history. Those demonstrating demanded that President Barack Obama
honor his inaugural pledge and take action on climate change. They also
called on Obama to reject the Keystone XL pipeline being built by
TransCanada.
The major rally came days after forty-eight were
arrested in front of the White House in a planned civil disobedience
action. Though the Sierra Club weakly floated a disclaimer that they
were not here to be critical of Obama, their executive director,
Michael Brune,A ridiculously low price on this All-Purpose solar lantern
by Gordon. and president, Allison Chin, broke a ban on civil
disobedience the environmental organization had in place for 120 years.
Bill McKibben, Julian Bond, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Connor Kennedy and
Daryl Hannah were arrested as well.
It seems like post-Obama’s
re-election the environmental movement is renewing its energy and it is
worthwhile to consider the movement to stop the pipeline’s impact so
far and the likelihood that it stops the pipeline from finally being
approved.
In the months of August and September in 2011, over a
thousand were arrested in sit-ins that occurred for two straight weeks
in front of the White House. The actions organized by Tar Sands Action
effectively called attention to construction of the pipeline and why it
should not be constructed. And then, on September 17, 2011, Occupy
Wall Street began and the Occupy movement erupted. Many involved in
Occupy protests took up the cause of stopping the pipeline.
On
January 18, 2012, the Obama administration decided to not issue a
permit before February 21 after Congress imposed a 60-day deadline on a
“process for the permit as part of a deal to extend a payroll-tax
break and unemployment benefits for two months.” This was largely viewed
as a victory by leaders like McKibben, who reacted, “What you’ve done
these past eight months is quite amazing—and against all the odds.
We’ve won no permanent victory (environmentalists never do) but we have
shown that spirited people can bring science back to the fore.”
However,
just over a month and a half later, Obama held a rally for his
presidential re-election campaign in Cushing, Oklahoma, an oil town,
where he boasted,Welcome to the premier industrial source for Custom IInjection Mold
Plastics in New York. “Under my administration, America is producing
more oil today than at any time in the last eight years.” He said he
directed his administration over the last three years to open up
millions of acres of land for gas and oil exploration across 23
different states. “We’ve added enough new oil and gas pipeline to
encircle the Earth and then some. So, we are drilling all over the
place.”
Obama addressed the “glut” of oil, how there wasn’t
enough pipeline capacity to move it to the Gulf of Mexico for refining.
He added, “Right now,Online shopping for bobbleheads
Figures from a great selection. 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. Today, I’m
directing my administration to cut through the red tape, break through
the bureaucratic hurdles and make this project a priority.” He issued an
executive order to expedite construction and the permit process for
the pipeline.
If the denial of a permit in January was a
victory for the movement, this executive order, rally and speech by
Obama was a loss. Yet, with his re-election looming, established
environmental organizations opted to weakly point out how Big Oil has
great influence over the political process instead of returning to the
White House fence for another round of civil disobedience action.
The
Tar Sands Blockade mobilized in August 2012. Dozens of people engaged
in direct action chaining or locking themselves to TransCanada’s
construction equipment at various points along the planned pipeline
route. They formed a “tree blockade” and built wooden platforms in the
trees to disrupt TransCanada’s ability to destroy forest to construct
the pipeline. Activists sought to form relationships with landowners
that had been bullied by TransCanada into giving up their land for
construction. And, for the most part, it had the effect those taking
action wanted because TransCanada decided to file a lawsuit to bully
individuals and groups mobilizing into halting their activity.
The
nearly 500-mile long pipeline crosses into the United States from
Canada so the ultimate decision involves the State Department. The New
York Times published a story over the weekend outlining “the choice”
Obama has to make: “a choice between alienating environmental advocates
who overwhelmingly supported his candidacy or causing a deep and
perhaps lasting rift with Canada.”
The Times framed the story
as a false choice, which establishment media often do. Setup this way,
Obama’s final choice would also not involve domestic considerations.
Obama has himself made this about energy security. The decision could
be a choice between alienating the oil industry or environmental
activists.
Regardless, Obama is likely to choose to alienate
environmental activists. The cold-blooded cost-benefit analysis that
this pragmatic politician is relying upon probably does not favor the
Sierra Club,Home Ventilation system gently and naturally ventilate your home with fresher. 350.org,Our precision manufactured lasers and laser marker
systems deliver the highest possible laser marking performance. the Tar
Sands Blockade, the indigenous people of Canada and the US,
landowners, farmers and/or other concerned citizens who have engaged in
demonstrations.
The State Department has been found to have
close ties to a lobbyist for TransCanada. A cable released by WikiLeaks
from October 2009 showed diplomatic interest in helping to improve
“oil sands messaging” to make dirty oil production less controversial.
The Los Angeles Times reported in October 2011 that Obama’s re-election
campaign had had “hired a former lobbyist for the controversial
Keystone XL oil pipeline as a top adviser.”
That does not mean
that environmental groups and concerned Americans cannot have an impact
and, perhaps, even stop the pipeline that will significantly
contribute to climate change from being built. What it means is
everyone involved in protesting has to recognize that Obama has
actively engaged in moving the proposed pipeline project closer to
approval by trying to address some of the environmental concerns. He
does not see the oil pipeline itself as the environmental risk. He
thinks that TransCanada can build a pipeline that will not impact the
health or safety of Americans and the environment.
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