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The Coal Barons are Coming, the Coal Barons Are Coming!

Friday, April 9th, 2010

Coal sucksOn April 14th, 2009 at 9:30 AM, coal barons are finally testifying in front of Congress about the “The Role of Coal in a New Energy Age.”

Coal is the single most dangerous form of energy and, despite many claims by industry spokespeople, is not clean and cannot be cleaned. While industry front groups are spending millions of dollars convincing Americans that CO2 emissions from coal can be tucked away safely, all evidence shows the contrary, that doing so is technically dubious, extremely expensive, and environmentally disastrous.

Young people will welcome these criminals that deal in coal, the most deadly weapon of mass destruction! We will let them and anyone watching know that young people don’t want coal to have a role in the New Energy Age, that we demand fair worker transition programs for coal miners, clean energy for the nation, and stable climate for future generations!

If you live in the D.C. area, sign up here to help organize the welcoming reception. If you’d like to walk around and sign people up with some old school tabling or canvassing, you can find a handy sign-up form here.

Students Challenge “Crisis Pregnancy Centers”

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

The Feminist Majority Foundation’s Campus Program (let’s call them Campus FMF) and Change.org have teamed up on a new campaign to both expose Crisis Pregnancy Centers (CPC’s) on campus, and end federal funding for “fake clinics” and abstinence only programs.

A study by the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform in the House of Representatives found that 87% of the clinics they examined provided false or misleading information about the health risks of abortions and the effectivness of contraceptives. Despite these issues, states will be able to channel millions in federal funds to CPC’s  under the Hatch amendment, which was slipped into the health care bill.

Everyone can take action online now. Students can get even more involved, however, by joining Campus FMF’s campaign. They have put together a great toolkit that can help you find and expose less than truthful clinics that are targeting students at your campus, and push for clear “truth in advertising” policies to protect your classmates.


Time for Thanks – Climate Edition

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Call your senatorThat’s right, on Friday 22 Senators wrote to Senate Majority leader Harry Reid (D-NV) asking for the climate crisis to be the next big issue to be addressed by the Senate.

Click on your Senators’ name and give them a call to thank them  for prioritizing our future. Make sure to let them know about how you Define our Decade! (more…)

The Credit Card Bill & Your Campus

Friday, March 5th, 2010

soda for cardBy now, almost everyone has heard of the Credit CARD Act of 2009. This bill, which just went into effect, finally created some basic consumer protections for credit card borrowers. While these companies are doing their best to find new and creative ways to stick it to their customers, the bill stopped some of the worst abuses, and made sure that credit card companies could no longer treat college students, whom they courted aggressively, differently from the rest of the population.

There is a provision in the bill that many people have not heard about, however, and it could be a real help to student journalists, student government, and anyone else who is trying to make sure that colleges, credit card companies, and alumni associations are not taking advantage of students. This provision, championed by Pennsylvania Rep. Patrick Murphy, requires schools to disclose agreements that they have with credit card companies allowing them to market to students. It also allows any individual to request this information. (more…)

Gotta Keep Marchin’ Forward

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

Yesterday at noon four dedicated health care reform activists left Philadelphia, PA on foot headed for Washington DC, 135 miles south. 150 people gathered at the center of the city to cheer them on and see them off, voicing their support for health care reform. The march is named in honor of Melanie Shouse, a volunteer for Barack Obama’s presidential campaign, who suffered from breast cancer. She could not afford health care and therefore succumbed to the disease while fighting for others who shouldn’t have to endure the same tragedy.

President Obama’s healthcare forum on February 25th will be graced with the arrival of the marchers into Washington the preceding day. Anyone who feels that reform must be accomplished immediately is encouraged to join the march at any point along the way, especially the final mile from Union Station on Capitol Hill to their destination. A list of events along the trail is on the official website Melaniesmarch.com and you can follow the happenings through Twitter and Facebook as the marchers update their progress.

As the march’s finale is taking place there will also be a Virtual March for Real Health Care Reform on February 24th sponsored by MoveOn.org; a convergence on Washington of physical bodies demanding change and a mass influx of calls, tweets, emails, faxes, and facebook posts to represent the foundation of Americans who are in dire need of real action by Congress.

As the public presence of health care reform seems to dwindle every day we need to let our representatives know that we will not give up. Congress’s forum will be a good effort to bring the issue back to the forefront but that doesn’t mean they have a plan.

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Don’t Just Watch This Video, Vote It Up!

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Cross-Posted from It’s Getting Hot in Here
We are 120 votes away from being the most voted ‘Energy and Environment’ question about the State of the Union address on CitizenTube.

On Monday President Obama will be answering questions about his State of the Union address, how would you like for that question to be one submitted by young climate activists?

Right now, the most voted question is from someone promoting alternative fuels. Not clean energy. Not just energy. Not renewable energy. But alternative energy, and you know what that means right? If this question is still #1 by tomorrow, President Obama will have an open window to reiterate his support for dirty coal, nuclear, and offshore oil drilling and ignore the true solutions to our energy, national security, and climate crises.

Go to CitizenTube and upvote this question from Energy Action. We are only 120 votes away from the top, so every vote counts. Please spread the word and RT this:

RT @energyaction: Vote up youth leader question to #Obama! Why dirty energy when clean is smarter & creates more jobs? http://bit.ly/bGNR8R

Copenhagen – One Month After The Climate Conference Prospect of Climate Bill Doesn’t Look Good

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

It is hard to feel optimistic about solving the climate crisis these days. The media’s take on the Copenhagen international climate treaty negotiations is that they were an absolute failure. Their reporting on the federal climate bill is similarly macabre. Acc stuck somewhere between incompetence, cowardice, and straight-out corruption.

On the other hand, think tanks of ideologies continue releasing highly ideological analyses that are hard to believe. Nonetheless, somewhere between the mainstream media’s alarmism and the think tanks’ platitudes there is a grain of truth about the extremely challenging times ahead of us.

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Is There Any Doubt Left That Action Is Necessary and Urgent?

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Is there any doubt left? The website where I found this cool image has more of these great visuals demonstrating the vast scientific consensus around climate action. As Van Jones said at the 2009 Campus Progress National Conference, if you went to 10 doctors because of a pierced lung and one of them (a Psychologist) told you you were fine while the other 9 said you desperately needed surgery, what would you do?

Unfortunately, scientific certainty isn’t the only contentious issue we are facing in the climate debate. Naysayers and fossil fuel enthusiasts consistently blurt out noise about how taking action on the climate crisis would bring about an economic disaster. Needless to say, those lies have no basis. To a certain extent, much of what is required in climate action (especially in the short term) is to level the playing field between energy efficiency and renewable energy and fossil fuels.

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Trail of DREAMs Makes National Headlines

Monday, January 4th, 2010

On New Year’s day, a small group of students started a their journey—on foot—from Miami, FL to Washington, DC to raise awareness about the DREAM Act and other progressive immigration reforms. These courageous students, who were brought to the US as children, did not want to see their futures, and those of their classmates, put in jeopardy because they lack a viable path to citizenship.

Despite the silence of Congress on immigration so far, people are paying attention to their efforts. Their campaign, which they are calling the Trail of DREAMs, was recently featured in the New York Times, the Washington Post, Univision,  the Miami Herald, and other news outlets.

The students are working with a group called Students Working for Equal Rights (SWER), which is asking for help with this effort (especially if you live in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, or DC). They need people to organize a reception, donate, offer places to stay, etc.

You can find out how to get involved by visiting: http://www.trailofdreams.net/How_YOU_can_help.php

SWER has received an Organizing Grant from Campus Progress as part of the Action Alliance program. The program awards $200-$1,500 to youth-led organizations that are working on progressive issue campaigns or projects that will help build the progressive youth movement.

You can learn more about the DREAM Act and take action at: http://campusprogress.org/dreamact

Top 5 Climate New Year’s Resolutions

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

resolutionsI typically hate these cheesy, often-pretentious, holier-than-thou lists of things people should commit to doing if only they were smart/benevolent/disciplined/healthy enough. I promise that this one is different.

When 2009 begun, it seemed to many of us that all cards were stacked in our favor. We had a President and a congress that fully understood the problem of the climate crisis and had plans to do something about it right away. But after one year of running against the wind and getting all of our progressive hopes and dreams shattered by ConservaDems and suicide-pact-signing Republicans, we need to send a message to Congress that young people don’t just turn out to vote for a charismatic president, but we turn out for the issues that define the survival of our species.

So here are my top 5 Green/Sustainability/Climate Resolutions for 2010 that have the highest effort-to-outcome ratio:

  1. Register to vote! (If you are a fellon and/or not a citizen skip to step #2)
  2. Register everyone you know and everyone in your community to vote.
  3. Have everyone you register send a letter to all the candidates running in your district saying “I’m voting for environmental justice/renewable energy/an end to the climate crisis” .
  4. Campaign for your most climate friendly* candidates and let them know that’s why you picked them.
  5. Vote and take 5 friends who wouldn’t have gone otherwise to the polls with you!

As Brad Johnson from the Wonk Room says, it took 30 years for the radical right to make their issues something few moderates would ever dare oppose (i.e. eliminating the right to choose, allowing just about anyone to carry weapons, etc). Electoral engagement isn’t a one-time fling that was cool last year cause we elected a charismatic dude, it’s a long-term effort to make our issues something that most candidates can’t get elected without supporting.

Commit to doing these 5 things in 2010 and you will help build a system that takes the urgency of the climate crisis seriously, but if you choose to ignore these resolutions and go for this list instead you’ll just be an environmentally friendly person living in a VERY warm world (do both and you are a trooper!).

* Climate friendly doesn’t necessarily mean that their platform is equal to ours, it means that they understand the issue and are committed to doing something about it. We can’t expect everyone to be on our same page, especially given the current atmosphere of confusion and distrust brewed by fossil fuel operatives and our gullible media. Even though it seems like an unfair burden, it’s up to us to educate people around us about the urgency of the climate crisis with out passion and hard work. If there are no candidates that come close to being climate friendly, find someone you support in your community (including yourself) and encourage them to run for office.  It might be crazy, but you can influence the dialogue on the local level, build up local support, and maybe even get elected!