Monday, January 31, 2022

         BEFORE THE REVOLUTION EATS ITS OWN CHILDREN,
                            IT  ENJOYS BORING THEM TO DEATH

We’ve Hit Another  Climate Dead End 
Only  Worker Power  Can Turn Us Around
BY KEITH BROWER BROWN

Democrats win control of the White House, Senate, and House. In the new president’s first year, he announces a climate bill with fanfare: it’s America’s plan to lead the world again. The largest environmental NGOs cheer and hope with bated breath. Then, against broad corporate opposition, the climate bill dies in quiet misery… at heart, the 2021 climate bill stuck with the most basic neoliberal strategy: to use government to “unlock substantial private capital,” as bill advocates at the World Resources Institute put it plainly. By November, after right-wing Democrats had whittled down the bill for months, the most generous climate measure left was an extension of hundreds of billions in tax cuts for private clean energy companies.

No Change Without Conflict

Over and over, Biden promised “good union jobs” would spring from his “clean energy revolution.” However, his climate policies left workers’ power as an afterthought in nearly every way

Pro-worker climate policy might someday earn the support of a powerful working-class army, but first, we have to help bring that army into existence.

Shop Floor Strategy and Solidarity Campaigns

Like many thousands, I helped lobby legislators, build local sustainability projects, and disseminate climate science, and I joined the grand marches and photo ops. Blockading dirty energy…

Instead of imagining ourselves as the enlightened vanguard leading the general public, serious climate activists need to get tight with the specific part of the public that could win… If they were to unite and pull the lever down — by going on strike, for example — segments of the economy would grind to a halt and capitalists’ profits would suffer. That potential gives this segment of the population enormous power to influence capitalists’ behavior.

There are plenty of real-world examples showing how workers can build power for a climate transition. The United Steelworkers (USW), a major union of oil refinery workers, is demanding to slash climate pollution from their workplaces... Since the 1970s, Australian union construction workers have often declared “green bans,” refusing to build environmentally destructive projects, a tradition started by socialists in the union. In the last few months, German autoworkers fighting to keep their jobs in the electric car transition have built alliances with climate activists to raise pressure on the boss and government alike.

By committing to work long term on the shop floor in powerful sectors, climate activists could help their coworkers step up and lead the fight for a transition. Even from outside the workplace, climate activists can wage strike support and labor solidarity campaigns to help workers win..

More union jobs in the climate transition won’t be enough to build a united working-class movement so long as who gets those jobs remains determined by race and gender. 


Tuesday, January 25, 2022

                     'THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS CLIMATE'                      

TENS OF MILLIONS WATCHED IN HORROR 
LAST MONDAY AS CLIMATE DENIAL
GAVE BIRTH TO  CLIMATE NIHILISM
JOE ROGAN IS CLEARLY THE FOUNDLING'S GODFATHER
BUT SOME CLIMAGOGUES
Of the year Dr. Roy Spencer
FEAR IT MAY BE 
 
THE LOVE CHILD OF JORDAN PETERSON &  
THIS CHANGES EVERYTHING
AUTHOR NAOMI KLEIN,
LONG PROPHESIED IN DOMINIONIST SCRIPTURE,

Monday, January 17, 2022

PLANTING MEGALITHS TO THWART WIND POWER

 The American Conservative             arTS & LETTERs, culture

Stoned In America

Stones of Contention

 by Timothy H. Ives (New English Review Press, 2021) 263 pages.

While there are many confluences of academic misconduct and racial anxiety in the contemporary West, few are so fun to read about as the phenomenon of “ceremonial stone landscape” activism in contemporary New England

Dr. Timothy Ives, principal archaeologist of the Rhode Island Historical Preservation and Heritage Commission... has written… exposing the academic fraud and political larceny of a movement that seeks to have stone piles left behind by early American farmers redesignated as pre-European spiritual temples built by Indians,

...The founding myth of the ceremonial stone landscape (CSL) movement was handed down James Mavor, a retired oceanographer who claimed... to have discovered Atlantis, and Byron Dix, a retired engineer who believed there were secret codes in megalith sites in Great Britain...set about “discovering”  the secrets of... rock piles throughout New England...

[Ives] cites no fewer than ten websites promoting the CSL conspiracy theory today… the bounty of the CSL movement came local NIMBYs looking  to prevent land development. These residents discovered “the Indian Rock Defense.” It is now a time-tested strategy for land-use lawyers in the region. Some rock or shell formations appear all of a sudden in lands slated for development.

Proposed solar farms are a favorite target of NIMBYs who resort to the Indian Rock Defense, making the CSL movement an accessory to the fossil fuel industry. 

Ives documents one triumph of NIMBYism now known as the Manitou Hassannash Preserve in Rhode Island. The site was slated for development when NIMBYs demanded a survey. Tribal leaders were bused in to declare, after a seemly pause for divination, that they had recovered the memories of the sacred stone sites. A consultancy of antiquarians and graduate students was hired to write an official report. Photos were taken of rock piles at winter solstice, suggesting a celestial purpose. Even with contrary evidence staring the researchers in the face, they insisted on ancient origins. One large boulder had “rounded drill holes…typically the result of the ‘plug-and-feathers’ method of quarrying and splitting stone, a technique developed around 1830,” the report observed. “However, the documentation of this detail is not intended to suggest a date of construction of this feature.”

The clincher came at a public forum in 2017 with Paul Loether, then Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places. Loether delivered himself of the statement that “my ancestors were New England farmers and they didn’t build these structures.” 

As Ives notes, “If everyone knew what their ancestors did and did not do, the fields of archaeology and history would not exist.” 

Sunday, January 16, 2022

                   YOU  GO  TO  THE CLIMATE WARS  WITH
                              THE LEVIATHAN  YOU'VE GOT     


Edited By
Leigh Brownhill, Salvatore Engel-Di Mauro, Terran Giacomini, Ana Isla, Michael Löwy, Terisa E. Turner

Building on the classical works that have propelled and shaped ecosocialist thinking and action and more recent political developments on the ground, the volume will provide a reference point for international work in the field, both directly political and academic.

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

IF CLIMATE CHANGE IS NOT A CHINESE HOAX,  WHY  IS IT IN
                    THE HANDBOOK OF CONSPIRACY THEORIES ?

This handbook examines where conspiracy theories come from, who believes in them and what their consequences are.
Table of Contents Part I

1. Conceptual history and conspiracy theory      Andrew McKenzie-McHarg

2Conspiracy theory in historical, cultural and literary studies
Peter Knight and Michael Butter

3Semiotic Approaches to Conspiracy Theories Massimo Leone, Mari-Liis Madison and Andreas Ventsel

4. Philosophy and conspiracy theories
Juha Räikkä¿ and Juho Ritola

5. Psychoanalysis, critical theory and conspiracy theory
NebojÅ¡a BlanuÅ¡a 
and Todor Hristov

6. Conspiracy theory as occult cosmology in anthropology
Annika Rabo...



WHOLE NINE YARDS AT

https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Handbook-of-Conspiracy-Theories/Butter-Knight/p/book/9781032173986


Monday, January 3, 2022

THE SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN GRAMMAR EXTINCTION CRISIS

CLIMATE CHANGE
Eating Less Red Meat Is Something Individuals Can Do to Help the Climate Crisis 

By Naomi Oreskes

Our climate problem is big, but a person’s diet change can make an impact