Puerto Rico solar power

Although I don’t think the long term future of islands like Puerto Rico looks good because of rising sea levels and stronger hurricanes resulting from climate change, there is obviously a humanitarian crisis now.  And it will probably be years before all of the millions of people leave the island.  Over 80% of the people still don’t have power now four weeks after the storm, and it will take months to restore power to most of the island.

The destruction of the energy infrastructure, which previously produced fossil fuel generated electricity at very high cost (monthly electric bills of over $200), is an obvious opportunity to create a solar power/battery storage electrical system.

“We build solar panels to withstand 150-mile-an-hour winds — if the roof stays on your house, the solar panels stay on your roof,” Sunrun’s Fenster said in an interview at Bloomberg’s San Francisco office Thursday. “And batteries are real-life safety equipment. From a broad perspective, solar and storage can strengthen grids everywhere.”  https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-10-06/solar-s-headed-to-puerto-rico-in-show-of-the-power-s-resilience

Following is the twitter exchange between Puerto Rico governor Ricardo Rossello and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

Puerto Rico Gov Musk solar

Tesla has built solar energy grids for islands before, such as Kauai island in Hawaii.

 

 

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U.S. doesn’t care about endless war

I have been upset since reading this article: How We Learned Not To Care About America’s Wars, Sixteen years of autopilot wars, but who’s counting?  by Andrew Bacevich.  Published on the Common Dreams website.

As a Quaker and someone who believes in nonviolence, and has worked for peace during my life, I realize I, too, have become desensitized to our country’s endless wars.  I see the truths in this article.

Consider, if you will, these two indisputable facts.  First, the United States is today more or less permanently engaged in hostilities in not one faraway place, but at least seven.  Second, the vast majority of the American people could not care less.

Americans don’t attend all that much to ongoing American wars because:

1. U.S. casualty rates are low.
2. The true costs of Washington’s wars go untabulated.
3. On matters related to war, American citizens have opted out.
4. Terrorism gets hyped and hyped and hyped some more.
5. Blather crowds out substance.
6. Besides, we’re too busy.
7. Anyway, the next president will save us.
8. Our culturally progressive military has largely immunized itself from criticism.

Reading through the online readers’ comments, people expressed appreciation, or wanted to be told what to do about it.  Most cited ways they had been involved in protests, but when those didn’t achieve any change, they gave up.

In 1650, George Fox (Quaker) wrote “I told them I knew from whence all wars arose … and that I lived in the virtue of that life and power that took away the occasion of all wars, that I was come into the covenant of Peace which was before all war and strife.”  This expresses one of the fundamental principles of Quakers, that we look at our own lives, and live them as consistently as we can with our spiritual/moral beliefs, both for our own integrity, and as probably the only real way we have of influencing others.

Quakers believe God or the spirit continues to be present in the world today, and that if we listen closely we can discern what we should do, especially when we can’t find an answer by ourselves.  We worship in silence together, listening for guidance.  We routinely consider, together, answers to sets of questions about how we are living our lives, called queries.  As an example, the queries about peace and nonviolence are:

• What are we doing to educate ourselves and others about the causes of conflict in our own lives, our families and our meetings? Do we provide refuge and assistance, including advocacy, for spouses, children, or elderly persons who are victims of violence or neglect?

• Do we recognize that we can be perpetrators as well as victims of violence? How do we deal with this? How can we support one another so that healing may take place?

• What are we doing to understand the causes of war and violence and to work toward peaceful settlement of differences locally, nationally, and internationally? How do we support institutions and organizations that promote peace?

• Do we faithfully maintain our testimony against preparation for and participation in war?

This article is a reminder that I need to consider these queries more carefully.

Quaker education is important as a way to teach our children how to examine their lives and live according to moral principles and spiritual guidance.  Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative) operates Scattergood Friends School and Farm, near West Branch, Iowa.

One of the root causes of our ongoing wars is materialism, and more specifically, protecting resources, mainly oil, both in the Middle East, and in places like North Dakota.  The enormous energy demands of our lives–often more than one personal automobile per family, large homes, even travel by air, are what drive our wars for energy resources, at home and abroad.

The stunning commitment to nonviolence and prayer by the water protectors at Standing Rock against the Dakota Access Pipeline, and those around the world supporting them, is an example of how we can begin to change this.

Another root cause is fear of “others”.  Feeling our way of life is threatened by those who aren’t exactly like us.  That life is zero-sum, when helping someone else takes away something from us.  This is used as another justification for wars, targeting “terrorists”, and inhumane policies related to immigrants within and beyond our borders.  This is rapidly becoming a major issue as millions of people will be displaced by rising sea levels, devastating storms, fires, significant areas of desertification, and increasing areas where the air temperature is simply too high for life.  This is happening now, and all of these things will get much worse very quickly.

We were recently reminded of a visit to our Quaker meeting in 2001 by a delegation from North Korea.  Meeting member Herbert Standing said at the time, “We must tell people that it is not through missiles and bombs that we find security and peace, but rather through the one-on-one sharing with persons of different countries, cultures and experiences.”

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Herbert Standing at Scattergood Friends School

As an example of another way to reduce the chances of war, Bear Creek meeting has extended an invitation for another visit by people from North Korea.

One of the things you can do to help is to tell your representatives that you do not support the gigantic amount of money in our budget for the military.  https://www.fcnl.org/search?q=military+budget

One of my dreams is that one day the U.S. will no longer have a standing army, as Costa Rica decided in 1948:

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My cousins in Costa Rica–NO ARMY

This article is a reminder that I need to look more carefully at my own life and re-energize working for peace.

 

 

 

 

Posted in #NDAPL, civil disobedience, climate change, Indigenous, integral nonviolence, peace, Quaker Meetings, Uncategorized | Tagged | Leave a comment

Reactions to Invitation to North Korea

As discussed here, Bear Creek Friends meeting wrote a letter to the Des Moines Register inviting another visit from a North Korean delegation to discuss agricultural practices.  I was wondering what the reader comments would be.  Following are what have appeared so far.

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Harley Erbe

Kim Jong Un lives a life of luxury that arguably exceeds that of any other country’s leader. He has seventeen palaces. His people starve while he lives a dream life. Pyongyang also makes tens of millions of dollars annually through insurance fraud schemes. North Korea can easily afford to feed all its citizens. It chooses not to. It doesn’t need a lesson in food production. It needs a lesson in humanity. But let’s keep pretending that breaking bread with a few North Koreans will have any impact on their murderous, horrific regime. By the way, when sharing “stories” with the North Koreans (at least one of which will almost certainly be a North Korean intelligence agent), why don’t you ask for some stories about the generations of people imprisoned and left to be tortured and die in the labor camps?
George Koetters

Yes, please regale us with those stories where your fearless leader feeds his enemies to starving dogs. I’m especially interested hearing about some of the enemies of the state that are tied to the business end of a cannon and obliterated with a 105 mm shell. What a great country.
Antonio Gambino ·

Good gawd….the Hippy moron is strong in this one.
Larry Leighton ·

I would have thought at least one person would have been interested in this letter of friendship. Sadly, we have too many a** holes who sound as bad as the country they berate.
John Hughes ·

Works at Chemist
Hello again, Larry. “Friends” are Quakers who are extreme pacifists. I am glad that we have people like this in our country. Sadly, if they were in North Korea they would be executed as a Christian Sect. I agree they should not be belittled. Their viewpoint should be respected, heard and considered, but ultimately rejected in the case of North Korea.
John Burns

These are the same Quaker peaceniks who live in a democracy defended by those willing to pick up a gun and die in the process of defending those who want to make nice with the world’s murdering psychopaths such as communism and orthodox Islam.
Bob Vander Beek ·

A myth in democracies is that most governments are representative of their people. I think Harley summed up well that state especially of the rural people. They have been told their entire lives that the U.S. is out to destroy them. In interviews with a Chinese reporter most believed that and others said they must at least say they do. Any people to people contacts is at least helpful to reaching the North Korean people.

Trump stating what the Jung dynasty has claimed only appeared that propaganda. Those who snear at the intent of this letter should consider that it would be impossible to rain his fire as described without 10 million residents of Seoul including American Troops, businesspeople, and students. Then add the lives of those in Japan and China.

Harley Erbe

Bob Vander Beek Very true. North Korean children learn very early on what a B-52 looks like and and are shown pictures of the results of American bombing. They’re conditioned to hate the United States. But they’re also misled into believing that North Korea didn’t start that war and that Pyongyang didn’t completely underestimate the potential American reaction to the North’s invasion of the South.
John Burns

Kim has no interest in “friendship”. He’s a doctrinaire marxist thug who is singular in his desire to unite the Korean peninsula and turn it into another communist hell-hole.

Korean War Memorial, Washington, DC

 

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Help KI Win Funding for Food Coop

UPDATE: Click on the green arrow next to the Empowered to Serve box to go to voting for Community Food Initiative

The Kheprw Institute (KI) youth empowerment community in Indianapolis that North Meadow Friends and I have been involved with has a chance to win some significant funding to support their work, and you can help by voting for them tonight.

Last year large parts of downtown Indianapolis became food deserts when one of the last food market chains closed their stores.  The KI community responded by creating a community controlled food cooperative http://kheprw.org/ccfi/

As explained below, the American Heart Association is sponsoring the online event this evening where various organizations tell the story of the work they are doing.  The winning prizes are $30,000, $20,000 an $10,000.  Your vote can help KI win!

More information available on the Facebook page:

https://www.facebook.com/events/1412128058841039/?active_tab=about

LIVESTREAM LINK: https://app.sli.do/event/fsiuinwr/

On October 17, Diop Adisa will represent Kheprw Institute and We Run This (CCFI) at the EmPowered to Serve Urban Business Storytelling Contest put on by the American Heart Association. He is one of 10 finalists with the chance to win $30k, $20k or $10k to support their projects.

The livestream party will start at 6:30pm and the livestream will start around 6:50pm.

He will represent our work to increase access to healthy food in Indianapolis and develop a toolkit and training curriculum to help leaders from around the country create community-powered food generators using our model.

KI to DC

On the way to DC! Diop’s been practicing on the car ride and we’re all excited! Don’t forget to vote for us and tune in tomorrow!

 

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Monteverde and Environmental Injustice

I was glad to receive this good news from Rick Juliusson from Monteverde Friends School in response to the recent blog post, Monteverde Friends suffer severe damage from storm.  “Thank you so much for your support, Jeff. We appreciate the messages, prayers and donations we have been receiving from so many friends around the world.”  Continued support is needed.  http://mfschool.org/donate/

The New York Times just published (Oct. 14, 2017) a great article about Monteverde, Quakers, and the storm damage:  In Costa Rica, Loss in the Clouds, by Joseph Heithaus.

Unpleasant as it is to think about, this is an occasion to consider the consequences of irresponsible environmental practices in developed countries, and the injustice represented by others suffering as a result.  As climate scientists say, it is not possible to say a particular storm is caused by climate change.  But climate change is creating conditions that make storms that may have occurred anyway, much more severe.  I think it is highly likely the severity of tropical storm that impacted Monteverde was worsened because of the environmental effects of burning fossil fuels.  The greenhouse emissions from developed countries affect the entire planet.

I recently wrote about this in Angry About Climate Change.

It is time to take a really hard look at our environmental practices.  There are not only the environmental implications, but moral ones as well.  As Chief Arvol Looking Horse says below, “You alone – and only you – can make this crucial choice, to walk in honor or to dishonor your relatives. On your decision depends the fate of the entire World.”

 

Important Message from Keeper of Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe

Chief Arvol Looking Horse

I, Chief Arvol Looking Horse, of the Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota Nations, ask you to understand an Indigenous perspective on what has happened in America, what we call “Turtle Island.” My words seek to unite the global community through a message from our sacred ceremonies to unite spiritually, each in our own ways of beliefs in the Creator.

We have been warned from ancient prophecies of these times we live in today, but have also been given a very important message about a solution to turn these terrible times.

To understand the depth of this message you must recognize the importance of Sacred Sites and realize the interconnectedness of what is happening today, in reflection of the continued massacres that are occurring on other lands and our own Americas.

I have been learning about these important issues since the age of 12 when I received the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe Bundle and its teachings. Our people have strived to protect Sacred Sites from the beginning of time. These places have been violated for centuries and have brought us to the predicament that we are in at the global level.

Look around you. Our Mother Earth is very ill from these violations, and we are on the brink of destroying the possibility of a healthy and nurturing survival for generations to come, our children’s children.

Our ancestors have been trying to protect our Sacred Site called the Sacred Black Hills in South Dakota, “Heart of Everything That Is,” from continued violations. Our ancestors never saw a satellite view of this site, but now that those pictures are available, we see that it is in the shape of a heart and, when fast-forwarded, it looks like a heart pumping.

The Diné have been protecting Big Mountain, calling it the liver of the earth, and we are suffering and going to suffer more from the extraction of the coal there and the poisoning processes used in doing so.

The Aborigines have warned of the contaminating effects of global warming on the Coral Reefs, which they see as Mother Earth’s blood purifier.

The indigenous people of the rainforest say that the rainforests are the lungs of the planet and need protection.

The Gwich’in Nation in Alaska has had to face oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge coastal plain, also known to the Gwich’in as “Where life begins.”

The coastal plain is the birthplace of many life forms of the animal nations. The death of these animal nations will destroy indigenous nations in this territory.

As these destructive developments continue all over the world, we will witness many more extinct animal, plant, and human nations, because of mankind’s misuse of power and their lack of understanding of the “balance of life.”

The Indigenous people warn that these destructive developments will cause havoc globally. There are many, many more indigenous teachings and knowledge about Mother Earth’s Sacred Sites, her chakras, and connections to our spirit that will surely affect our future generations.

There needs to be a fast move toward other forms of energy that are safe for all nations upon Mother Earth. We need to understand the types of minds that are continuing to destroy the spirit of our whole global community. Unless we do this, the powers of destruction will overwhelm us.

Our Ancestors foretold that water would someday be for sale. Back then this was hard to believe, since the water was so plentiful, so pure, and so full of energy, nutrition and spirit. Today we have to buy pure water, and even then the nutritional minerals have been taken out; it’s just empty liquid. Someday water will be like gold, too expensive to afford.

Not everyone will have the right to drink safe water. We fail to appreciate and honor our Sacred Sites, ripping out the minerals and gifts that lay underneath them as if Mother Earth were simply a resource, instead of the source of life itself.

Attacking nations and using more resources to carry out destruction in the name of peace is not the answer! We need to understand how all these decisions affect the global nation; we will not be immune to its repercussions. Allowing continual contamination of our food and land is affecting the way we think.

A “disease of the mind” has set in world leaders and many members of our global community, with their belief that a solution of retaliation and destruction of peoples will bring peace.

In our prophecies it is told that we are now at the crossroads: Either unite spiritually as a global nation, or be faced with chaos, disasters, diseases, and tears from our relatives’ eyes.

We are the only species that is destroying the source of life, meaning Mother Earth, in the name of power, mineral resources, and ownership of land. Using chemicals and methods of warfare that are doing irreversible damage, as Mother Earth is becoming tired and cannot sustain any more impacts of war.

I ask you to join me on this endeavor. Our vision is for the peoples of all continents, regardless of their beliefs in the Creator, to come together as one at their Sacred Sites to pray and meditate and commune with one another, thus promoting an energy shift to heal our Mother Earth and achieve a universal consciousness toward attaining Peace.

As each day passes, I ask all nations to begin a global effort, and remember to give thanks for the sacred food that has been gifted to us by our Mother Earth, so the nutritional energy of medicine can be guided to heal our minds and spirits.

This new millennium will usher in an age of harmony or it will bring the end of life as we know it. Starvation, war, and toxic waste have been the hallmark of the great myth of progress and development that ruled the last millennium.

To us, as caretakers of the heart of Mother Earth, falls the responsibility of turning back the powers of destruction. You yourself are the one who must decide.

You alone – and only you – can make this crucial choice, to walk in honor or to dishonor your relatives. On your decision depends the fate of the entire World.

Each of us is put here in this time and this place to personally decide the future of humankind.

Did you think the Creator would create unnecessary people in a time of such terrible danger?

Know that you yourself are essential to this world. Understand both the blessing and the burden of that. You yourself are desperately needed to save the soul of this world. Did you think you were put here for something less? In a Sacred Hoop of Life, there is no beginning and no ending.

Chief Arvol Looking Horse is the author of White Buffalo Teachings. A tireless advocate of maintaining traditional spiritual practices, Chief Looking Horse is a member of Big Foot Riders, which memorializes the massacre of Big Foot’s band at Wounded Knee.

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Monteverde and Iowa Quakers’ peace concerns

Yesterday I briefly described how Quakers decided to leave the U.S. and move to Costa Rica because of increasing militarism.

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One of my cousins in Monteverde wears a shirt about Costa Rica not having an army

At the same time (late 1940’s) that Eston and Marvin Rockwell and Wolf Guindon were imprisoned for resisting peacetime conscription for the military draft from Fairhope Meeting in Alabama, nearly twenty men from Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative) were, too.  Some of those men were Roy Knight, John Griffith, Don Laughlin, Herbert Standing and Don Mott.

 

My mother remembers that Don Laughlin was on the staff of Scattergood Friends School at the time of his arrest when she was a student there.  His wife Lois was the librarian at the school when I was a student.  I worked with Don in his medical electronics lab at the University of Iowa Hospitals the summer before my senior year at Scattergood and we kept in touch the rest of our lives.  Don died last year.  At the time I was helping him collect stories of Quaker men who were war resisters.

The examples of these men and the families that supported their decisions had a profound effect on my life.  To see that people would make such sacrifices in order to live according to their beliefs showed me that was the way I wanted to try to live as well.  Inspired me.

I struggled a great deal about my own decision.  I turned 18, when we were required to register for the draft, while at Scattergood in 1969, at the height of the Vietnam War.  While I was trying to get up the courage to resist the draft, I applied for, and was granted, conscientious objector status as a backup plan.  Don Laughlin was one of the people who wrote letters to my draft board for me.

DonnLauughlinLetterfor Jeff

I was finally able to come to terms with the possibility of a prison sentence, and turned in my draft cards.  In the end a related Supreme Court case meant I was not arrested for draft resistance.

The photos above include one of David Mott, who was at Scattergood when I was.  Like his father, he also refused to cooperate with the Selective Service System (military draft).

This is something I’ve written about quite a bit in the past.  Some of those stories can be found here: https://kislingjeff.wordpress.com/?s=draft

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Midyear meeting, Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative), Bear Creek

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Monteverde Friends suffer severe damage from storm

“Tropical Storm Nate created a state of emergency in Costa Rica and here in Monteverde. Cut off from the main town of Santa Elena by a washed out bridge, no electricity/internet/telephone, limited water and food supplies, and uncertainty about future landslides and safety of our persons and houses, our community has come together to support each other and safely navigate the challenges.”

Monteverde Friends School’s web page is the best way for you to learn about what has happened in Monteverde, Costa Rica, and how you can help.   http://mfschool.org/nate/

“For the many friends who have asked how they can help, the most tangible support is financial donations to the school. We will have many families needing more financial support, as their livelihoods in the tourism industry are affected by the immediate close-down of visitors and possible longer-term reduction in tourism. We may also need to introduce new programs such as lunch, transport or daycare to continue supporting families in their recovery. Our commitment to provide access to bilingual Quaker education to ALL local families regardless of their financial situation remains strong; we will need more assistance to make this a reality.
Visit mfschool.org/donate to see donation options, and please consider a monthly pledge to provide ongoing support for families in need.”

http://mfschool.org/donate/

Facebook update

The Monteverde Friends community was created when a number of Quakers, mainly from Fairhope, Alabama, were lead to leave the United States because of increased militarism.  In 1949 four men were sentenced to prison for refusing to register for the military draft.  Upon their release, in 1950 a number of members of the meeting decided to move to Costa Rica.

“They chose this tiny Central American country largely for its farming potential and pleasant climate, but they had also read the words of Pepe Figueres, the Costa Rican president at the time, inviting foreigners to come and help develop this country. Perhaps most attractive for the Friends though was the fact that Costa Rica had just abolished its own army and these pacifists felt they could live in peace here.”  https://monteverdetours.com/history-of-monteverde.html

My family, and many others in Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative) have close ties with Monteverde Friends.  Lucky (Standing) Guindon, my mother’s cousin and constant companion during their childhood, was one of the original group and lives there today.  On October 14,1950, (67 years ago today) she and Wolf Guindon had a double wedding with my mother and father at Bear Creek Meeting.

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Wedding Burton Kisling Alberta Standing Lucky Standing Wolf Guindon, Bear Creek, Oct. 14, 1950

In 2010, Mom, Dad, my sister Lisa and her children and I were able to visit Monteverde to celebrate the 60th wedding anniversary of the two couples.

 

Posted in climate change, peace, Quaker Meetings, Uncategorized | Tagged | 1 Comment

Building an environmental action movement

After venting my frustration about environmental inaction, I thought it could be helpful to hear about some of the ways you can get involved in fixing environmental problems.  Following is the story of how I got involved with the Rainforest Action Network (RAN), which was how I got started in community building and organizing in Indianapolis.

I first began working with RAN in 2013 when the Keystone Pledge of Resistance #NOKXL campaign began.   http://nokxl.org/wp-content/kxl_pledge.html

This turned out to be a brilliant organizing campaign. Even better, it became the first successful resistance against the power of the fossil fuel industry, resulting in President Obama denying the permit to build the Keystone XL Pipeline.

The idea (from the Rainforest Action Network, CREDO, and The Other 98%) was to post the following pledge on the Internet, that people could sign:

“I pledge, if necessary, to join others in my community, and engage in acts of dignified, peaceful civil disobedience that could result in my arrest in order to send the message to President Obama and his administration that they must reject the Keystone XL pipeline.”

The idea was to build a movement based upon the nonviolent civil rights and peace movements of the 1960s.  To use nonviolent civil disobedience as the method for social change. Eventually over 97,000 people signed the pledge.

The brilliant part of the campaign was that it provided checkboxes on that web page where each person could indicate ways they wanted be engaged with the campaign.

I will participate in a peaceful civil disobedience action in my community
I can take the lead in organizing an action in my community
I am an attorney and could volunteer to provide legal assistance to an action
I am not comfortable with the risk of being arrested, but would volunteer to support those able to do so

The contact information of anyone who wanted to be involved was collected.  This is how the movement was built.

The next step was to provide training to those who indicated they would take the lead in organizing in their community.  RAN identified 25 cities in the United States where the most people had signed the Pledge.  On a series of weekends in the summer of 2013, RAN activists who had experience in organizing held training sessions in each of these cities for the people who had indicated they would be local action leaders.

Indianapolis was not one of those 25 cities, but I was going to be in Iowa to attend Iowa Yearly Meeting (Conservative)’s annual meeting near the time of the training in Des Moines.  Below is our group, including Gabe (left) and Todd Zimmer (right) from RAN.  Todd and I continue to be in contact and have worked on some other things since then.  Our group also included Frank Cordaro of the Des Moines Catholic Worker Community.  The training was excellent, with Saturday devoted to the background of the Keystone Pipeline, theory and practice of nonviolent civil disobedience, role playing, legal and media issues, how to select a target, all of the roles that need to be filled, and how to build and train your local movement.  The following day we then went through the process of doing the things we had been taught the day before.  This was very effective training.

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Keystone Pledge of Resistance Training, Des Moines 2013

RAN continued to support us as we built our local movements.  When I returned to Indianapolis, RAN put the those of us who had been trained in other cities (Ted Wolner, Jim Poyser, John Gibson, Wayne Moss and I) in touch with each other, and provided the contact information of those who had indicated they wanted to be involved in our area.  We identified our target as the Federal Building in downtown Indianapolis and organized our action.

One of the interesting parts of this was delivering a letter of intent to the people at the Federal Building, so they would know ahead of time what we planned to do, and why.  There were several reasons for that.  One was we knew this information would be shared with others in the Federal government, increasing the knowledge of our campaign where it might have some real impact.  It was also a further step in the journey for us.  We were a bit nervous about doing this, but it was a humanizing event.  We were politely received and it felt like we made a connection with the people we talked with there.

We held six training sessions, training nearly 50 people. Across the United States around 400 local action leaders were trained, who in turn trained about 4,000 people in their local communities how to engage in nonviolent direct actions.

Raising awareness about the Keystone Pipeline and the detrimental effects of tar sands extraction was one of the primary goals of the campaign.  We held numerous demonstrations in downtown Indianapolis.

During our weekly peace vigil, which is held in front of the Federal Building that was our Keystone target, I began to bring Keystone Resistance signs.

When Indiana Senator, Joe Donnelly, indicated his support for Keystone because it would create jobs, I wrote the following letter that was published in the Indianapolis Star

donnelly keystone

My friend Derek Glass and his intern, Andrew Burger, helped me create this video as another way spread awareness about the Keystone Pipeline and tar sands

I’ve also written about the Kheprw Institute (KI) community that I’ve been involved with.  They allowed us to hold a public meeting at their building, where each of us local action leaders talked about what we were doing in Indianapolis, followed by a community discussion about environmental action.

President Trump has since approved the Keystone XL permit.  But because of these years of delay and the changing dynamics of the energy market, it is unclear if Trans Canada will go ahead with the pipeline now.  And the Justice Department was required to appear in a Federal District Wednesday to defend approving the pipeline without an adequate environmental assessment of the project.

Here in Indianapolis our Keystone movement was able to provide assistance to those who have built a similar movement to support the water protectors at Standing Rock, and oppose the Dakota Access pipeline.

 

Posted in #NDAPL, civil disobedience, climate change, Indigenous, Keystone Pledge of Resistance, Kheprw Institute, revolution, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Angry about climate change

I don’t often get angry, but I am so frustrated because even after this incredibly destructive year, most people in our country refuse to believe in climate change and how we are destroying our environment.

  • Over 50 inches of rain in Houston in four days with massive flooding.
  • Total devastation of Puerto Rico by Hurricane Maria.
  • Multiple fires out of control in California right now with thousands of homes and many square miles of earth destroyed and lives lost.
  • Major cracks in Antarctic glaciers and melting ice in Iceland
  • Increasingly hot ocean temperatures and dying coral reefs
  • Melting permafrost
  • Increasing rate of increasing concentrations of heat trapping greenhouse gases

If  these things won’t convince people, what will?  People act bewildered by the incredible fires burning today, by the fury of hurricanes, and yet refuse to acknowledge they are the DIRECT result of ALL the years of driving ALL those cars.

These things are not anomalies and not a surprise to anyone who has studied environmental science.  Not “one in X number of year events”.  These are the new normal, and will only get worse and quickly.

More people are beginning to talk about climate change, but they don’t really believe it if they think they can still burn fossil fuel.  If they still use airplanes.  If they still rely on personal automobiles.  If they still live in huge houses requiring so much energy to heat and cool.  If they allow pipelines to be built.  If they allow fracking.  If they do not believe Puerto Rico and the Florida Keys will be hit with more hurricanes and flooded by rising ocean waters, along with Miami, New York City, Los Angeles….

All this is climate denial.  It is not a matter of what people say, but what they do, or CONTINUE NOT to do.

The point here is not to make you feel guilty about the past.  The point is I still have hope and faith that you will stop living with disregard for Mother Earth, and raise your voice, which is desperately needed now.  We have to make some very difficult choices.  We have to speak up for mass transportation systems and responsible urban planning now.  We have to stop building fossil fuel infrastructure and wasteful housing.  We have to stop poisoning the earth with tar sands extraction and fracking.  We have to build renewable energy sources.  We have to help people from ocean islands and coastal cities relocate now, not after disaster has struck. We have to figure out where we will get food and water when vast areas of the earth turn to desert and clouds of dust fill the sky.

There is talk about how people refuse to face these things because they are paralyzed by fear.  Future generations need us to get over it, now.  Be courageous.

 

 

 

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US-Korea Exchanges Possible

Daniel Jasper, the Asia Public Education and Advocacy Coordinator for the American Friends Service Committee has just published the article Opening More Channels in US-North Korea Relations, explaining that there are exceptions to the travel ban that still allow exchanges between the two countries.  From the article (DPRK is Democratic People’s Republic of Korea):

“With so little communication and such high stakes, Washington ignores the humanitarian channel to the DPRK at its own peril. Currently operating assistance programs are having enormous impacts on the lives of ordinary North Koreans, and these programs often unearth viable opportunities in bilateral relations.

For instance, I work for the American Friends Service Committee, an organization that currently has an agricultural program that is helping to improve food security for up to 72,000 North Koreans. Although this impact alone is a sufficient case for humanitarian work, the on-the-ground and consistent nature of these programs creates a space in which U.S. and North Korean organizations can identify opportunities for engagement.”

He describes an assessment that was done by an AFSC delegation in 2016, which can be found here https://www.afsc.org/document/engaging-north-korea:

“The assessment found that not only are government-sponsored exchanges between the U.S. and DPRK legally and logistically possible, they are one of the lowest-risk, highest-yield tools the U.S. has in its diplomatic toolkit. Existing programs such as the International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP) offer existing mechanisms to bring North Koreans to the US. Even Trump’s travel ban—which now includes the DPRK—makes carveouts for participants in government-sponsored exchange programs. And in 2004, Congress made funds available to the State Department for conducting such exchanges with the DPRK—a provision that stands today.”

 As I understand it, this means the visit the Des Moines Register is suggesting would indeed be possible.

http://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/opinion/editorials/2017/10/05/north-korea-kim-iowa-khrushchev-farm/735104001/

You can write to the Register to support this visit: letters@dmreg.com, and here’s an online link http://static.desmoinesregister.com/submit-a-letter/

Jon Krieg, AFSC Des Moines, also shared this letter Jeffrey Weiss sent to the Register:

Letter to the editor:

The Chinese government proposed a deal to defuse tension in the Koreas: The United States and South Korea end their war games on the border of North Korea; in exchange, Pyongyang ends all missile testing.

North Korea has signaled they may be amenable to this; if nothing else, it should be explored.

In the meantime the war of words places millions of innocent lives in the balance.

Jeffrey J Weiss
Catholic Peace Ministry
Peace Education Director

 

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