Power Shift 07 Continues to Spread
It was amazing to have the
opportunity to experience the energy of 6,000 students converging at the
University of Maryland at Power
Shift 07 to demand action on global warming--but even better has been to
see the ripples that are spreading.
For those that couldn't
experience it firsthand, the NWF Campus Ecology staff wants to share some of
the great stories and images that are emerging. When you need a shot in the arm, just click on one of these links for
some inspiration:
Immediate Impact:
Power Shift made some folks
awfully nervous--the right wing attack machine was brought out in full force:
· Rush
Limbaugh attacked NWF's own Charlie Lockwood, a student leader from the Alaska
Youth for Environmental Action (AYEA). She gave an incredibly powerful and
courageous testimony before the House Select Committee on Energy and Climate
Action on his radio show.
· And poor Pat Buchanan never
knew what hit him when the Energy Action Coalition's Co-Director Jesse Tolkan
came out swinging on Hardball
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Rep.
Ed Markey, Chair of the House Select Committee on Energy and Climate Action
addressed students and responded positively to chants of, "We want
more!" (as in stronger climate action). In a follow up letter to Power
Shift, Speaker Pelosi pledged, "Combating climate change and working
toward energy independence are flagship issues for my Speakership and top
priorities of this Congress."
News Highlights: (For a full media round up, check out the Power
Shift newsroom.)
· Discovery and MTV - aired video clips highlighting the energy of the
lobby day, which many say was the largest yet on climate change--more than
2,000 students visited Members of Congress.
· NPR - An article dismantling Thomas Freidman's concern that
this is "The Quiet Generation."
· Time magazine online - An article quoting Jesse Tolkan:
"For the Millennials, climate change is emerging as the defining issue of
their time, just as civil rights or Vietnam might have been for the generation
before. 'This is a new generation that sees itself at the forefront of a great
movement, just like the greatest movements of the past,' says Tolkan."
· Grist - "They've Got the Power"
· It's Getting Hot in Here
- a youth climate blog has loads of dispatches.
· Wildlife Promise - NWF's invited people to send messages to
students attending Power Shift, and got great comments from people
"passing the torch" from one generation to another.
Pictures and Video
Hundreds of pictures have
already been uploaded to FlickR
with the "Powershift07" tag. Also, the "I Shot Power
Shift" project put video cameras in the hands of more than 100
students and the footage is just starting to come in. They include:
· The "Green Jobs Not
Jails" rally cry was one of the most powerful of the weekend. This "Green for All" video captures some of the
incredible diversity of Power Shift and you can't help but get excited about
the future by watching Van
Jones who lit up crowd each time he spoke.
· And former NWF Campus Ecology
Fellow Summer Rayne Oakes put together the coolest video called "We
Are One" featuring the Faces of Power Shift.
Thanks to everyone who
contributed to the success of Power Shift 07!


Almost all wars and terrorism in the world can be stopped. Almost all dictators and tyrants can be rendered powerless. All we have to do is to stop paying them. An alarming amount of the money Western nations pay for oil is going into the coffers of people who terrorists and dictators. All we have to do defund the world’s most violent criminals is to become energy independent.
In the first phase of energy independence we get as much energy as possible from resources which we own or which are in the hands of friendly, stable nations. First we build new nuclear power plants in every state. If the French can make nuclear work what excuse do we have? In addition, we drill for oil off all our coastal waters and we build new refineries and pipelines in every state. Existing energy companies are making plenty of money in the current climate of false scarcity. We will have to find away around them. Usually way around greedy energy companies would require political will. However, almost all existing politicians are in the pocket of the energy companies. This includes democrats and republicans. So every politician currently in office needs to be thrown out. Anyone who works for or who owns an existing conventional energy company is in my view disqualified for public office. We already know from the Bush/Cheney experience that such politicians will work in a way contrary to the national security of the United States and will start pointless wars for oil.
Merely having new politicians willing to clear the legal minefields laid down by oil bought senators and congressmen might not be enough. We might have to get a little bolder. Therefore I suggest that we build terawatts of new nuclear power plans and miles of new oil refineries in Mexico and that we send the power back to the states via pipelines, power lines, hydrogen, or whatever works. This will provide work for Mexicans and energy for us. The Mexican government will have a large incentive to make the plants secure and this increased security might even spill over to the borders and make our borders more secure.
While phase one is going on we need to start on phase 2. In this phase we bring online as many green and renewable technologies as are currently viable and put as much money as is needed into producing more. I would suggest that the model cities be built in the west and south—anywhere that it does not get cold enough to snow. The idea is to build small towns or cities that will go cold turkey. There will be no fossil fuels of any kind allowed in these cities. All vehicles and houses will be powered by wind, solar and bio-mass. The best locations would be those that have year around wind, sun and enough farming in the area to produce the bio mass. These experimental towns would be off the power grid. The only way to get power to them would be to make the green and renewable technologies work. Volunteers who truly believe that the future is green would be invited to apply for residency. We would probably take engineers and farmers over other types because we would need people who were skilled in keeping the power conversion machinery going and others who don’t mind the get your hand dirty hard work of farming.
Posted by: poetryman69 | November 25, 2007 at 02:50 PM