Archive for January 29th, 2007


Free Kenny!

Free Ken Krayeske

That would be Ken Krayeske who was arrested for standing on the sidewalk photographing the governor of Connecticut (pictured here) as she walked by on her inaugural march. The state police seemed to have gone to quite a bit of trouble to target him. His bail was an outrageous $75,000 and his case has got major attention not just from activists but also from mainstream media as well as legislators.

His case goes to trial tomorrow. In a bizarre coincidence, he was the campaign manager for the Green Party candidate for governor who Governor Rell, a Republican, refused to debate. Instead, it appears he ended up on a political enemies list.

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Global warming: The frog jumps free of the hot water

Jumping frog

The Viridian Design Movement started eight years ago, focusing on global warming and how do we get people to realize it’s happening. I was an original member. Back then, global warming was a fringe issue indeed and the group was and is an eclectic bunch of visionaries, geeks, designers, etc. from all over the planet.

There have been 487 newsletters on the listserv and numerous contests over the past eight years. Yesterday our Pope Emperor and chief instigator, (sf author Bruce Sterling) announced the obvious, that the war is over and we won.

We are winning because we were ahead of the curve: we Viridians were an avant-garde who understood, almost ten years ago, that something like this was bound to happen. That does not make us the proper people to actually carry it out. First, we don’t have the scale, the resources, or the ability. Second, and let me be very clear to you here: the primrose path to sustainability, even it is construed as sexy, trendy and stylish, will be dark and thorny. Behind Corporate Green is its darker, bloodstained cousin, Khaki Green, and we’ll be seeing a lot of that. Sustainability will be a comprehensive revolution in the tenor of daily life. There will be blood on the hands of the people who bring it about. Not because they are bloodthirsty. But because there is so much blood.

Yes, what happens when one area runs out of water and there’s no longer enough water to grow crops. Especially if, say, a somewhat nearby area suddenly has more water and the land becomes more fertile. Political unrest and war can and will be the outcome.

Genuine climate mayhem is underway. It is intensifying fast. People are going to die: of heat, of disease, freezing, starving, drowning and dying of thirst. Not in mere tens of thousands as they did in the Paris heatwave, but in hecatombs. We have a global climate crisis. A real one, not a futurist speculation. People are going to make agonizing sacrifices in increasingly frantic efforts to ameliorate that and redress that crisis. Then, next year, they will discover that the situation is vastly worse than then imagined, and the spillage of blood and treasure and sacred honor that they thought would surely help is a fraction of what was necessary.

Nevertheless, the frog will jump from that hot water. We are winning.

From the fringe to mainstream in eight years, the global warming movement is now front and center and being taken seriously planetwide. Even Dubya The Denier now (grudgingly) admits it’s a problem.

We have much to do. All of us. Yes, Sterling is right, to stop this will require huge scale and the resources of the huge corporations and governments. We can do it, we must do it. The politics of global warming will now be a major theme here at Polizeros.

Jump, froggie, jump.

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Antiwar movement goes mainstream

The antiwar protests on Saturday were a watershed event of sorts. The media covered it well and mostly favorably. Left-of-center bloggers and sites who previously ignored antiwar demos paid attention this time, sometimes sympathetically, sometimes a bit snidely. As with global warming (see above post) the message has been delivered and the mainstream is, at long last, onboard.

As one who has helped organize antiwar marches and rallies since before the Iraq invasion began, the movement has gone from screaming in the wilderness and being marginalized to the front pages of major newspapers and websites. It was radicals who sparked it, who provided the impetus and the organizing chops, who worked countless hours building demos for little or no money. Think about it, who else but radicals would have done it?

So now it’s gone mainstream, just like antiwar protest did in the Vietnam war. We’ve won the battle for the attention of the mainstream, and they overwhelmingly oppose the war. Now let’s all work to end it.

The real message is the Iraq War wasn’t an aberrant event but rather a quite logical continuing of the decades-long policy of US imperialism. That’s what needs to change.

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World running out of water: UN adviser

River

Delhi has “no more rivers to take water from.”

“The Ganges [in India] and the Yellow river [in China] no longer flow. There is so much silting up and water extraction upstream they are pretty stagnant”

The Colorado and Rio Grande rivers in the US no longer reliably flow into the sea because some much water has been used up.

Scary, huh?

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