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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Down To Earth

Friday Quote: “What The Environmental Movement Can Learn From The Environmental Zombies”

Wandering around on Wall Street and other protest sites these past few days, you have a sense that we live in a country filled with people in search of a movement. Organic, powerful, urgent, spontaneous, cathartic, honest and fun are words protesters use to describe the nascent movement and their experience in it. Donald Trump may have inadvertently added to that vocabulary and helped send thousands more to the event by commenting on Fox News yesterday that it looked like a great place to get a date.

In other places around the planet, several attempts have been made by the environmental movement to launch a global and national climate movement, meeting with only modest success.

In contrast to the so-called Wall Street zombies, labeled as the result of dressing like Wall Street scions, their mouths stuffed with Monopoly money, our efforts have been hierarchical in nature; well-organized and decently funded efforts, but lacking spontaneity. Protests are staged and include planned arrests, with paid musical performances, and speeches from the rich and famous, driven by leaders who have a penchant for hyperboles about whose action was the largest, most effective, etc. -- probably desperately hoping they can create something out of nothing.

And despite pronouncements to the contrary, the numbers of participants have been small, and these efforts, while well-intentioned, simply do not mark the beginning of a movement that will force global leaders to act on climate.

Self-proclaimed leaders, a number with ties to the media, just cannot seem to convince the public that our issues deserve their outrage and action. And perhaps, as a result, the government seems immune to these efforts.

Our “armchair” activism has led to a culture where buying “carbon offsets” helps us feel good about our vacations, and our “actions” are limited to sending an occasional email as part of an orchestrated campaign.

It’s time to rethink our tactics.

We need to ask ourselves why, given our extraordinarily long list of scientific facts about the likelihood that we are destroying our planet, can we not engender the type of reactions and feelings that are certainly everywhere on Wall Street.

Read the rest of the post HERE from Kathleen Rogers of the Earth Day Network and Daniel Rosenberg who is currently occupying Wall Street.

The rally and march for Occupy Spokane is at 4pm today at Riverside and Monroe. See you there.

 



Down To Earth

The DTE blog is committed to reporting and sharing environmental news and sustainability information from across the Inland Northwest.