Feb Fourth Friday – Doubting the Merchants of Doubt

It was an overflow crowd for the Feb Fourth Friday showing of Merchants of Doubt, an outstanding film about how a tiny group of cynical manipulators has been able to succeed over and over again in spreading disinformation and undercutting efforts to address climate change and other major health and environmental issues.

Special guest Dr. Phil Duffy answered questions about his role as climate scientist and activist, and spoke of the complexity and urgency of the challenge we face.

All the more reason for all of us to step up our involvement in this “year of engagement”!

 

A discussion about climate action and civil disobedience

Inspired by Tim DeChristopher’s Fourth Friday talk in January, a discussion group met February 16 to share thoughts and consider what meaningful climate action can be.

Facilitator Debbie Mytels posted several questions for the group:

What was one thing that DeChristopher said that’s stuck with you?
Have you ever felt a conflict between your moral values and your actions?
Are you inspired to further action?  Of what sort?

Here is some of what participants expressed.

What stuck with you from Tim’s talk?

  • Tim’s presence was elevating and inspiring.
  • Importance of bringing heart and soul into the movement
  • It’s time for bold, courageous acts
  • Willingness to become vulnerable is powerful
  • If people push on a wall in many places, some will find a soft spot, then others can gather there to push the wall down together.
  • We must be disobedient, disobedience can be sacred.
  • Tim: “I could live with gong to prison, but couldn’t live with doing nothing”
  • Love and anger can both fuel activism, sometimes at the same time.
  • Tim wasn’t a martyr. His imprisonment was a different experience, where he met different people, and it changed his life, gave it more meaning.
  • Music (from Tim’s friend Brian Cahall) speaking to the soul
  • We need to do something real, not let Tim down

Ideas and questions from the group:

  • What does a “win” look like?
  • What is an effective outlet for civil disobedience?
  • Think about other movements, like women’s suffrage. Acts that seem spontaneous are often a long time in coming. Rosa Park prepared for years before her “spontaneous” act.
  • A challenge now is that we’re short of time.
  • What actions are authentic and meaningful to each of us?
  • We need more people willing to take risks
  • What might be most effective? Price on carbon? stopping oil trains, marching, pushing electric vehicles, education, personal choices, protests against Koch brothers and others?

The group expressed interest in additional follow-up. Debbie will create a Google Group, and a future meeting will be held. Please contact Debbie (dmytels@batnet.com) if you’d like to participate.

Fourth Friday/Films of Vision and Hope Merchants of Doubt

with Dr. Phil Duffy, President and Executive Director of the Woods Hole Research Center
NOTE TIME FOR THIS MONTH! – 7pm

Inspired by the acclaimed book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, Merchants of Doubt takes audiences on a satirically comedic, yet illuminating ride into the heart of conjuring American spin. Filmmaker Robert Kenner lifts the curtain on a secretive group of highly charismatic, pundits-for-hire who present themselves in the media as scientific authorities, yet have the contrary aim of spreading maximum confusion about well-studied public threats ranging from toxic chemicals to pharmaceuticals to climate change.

Introducing the movie and answering questions will be Dr. Phillip Duffy, President and Executive Director of the Woods Hole Research Center, an internationally renowned climate research facility on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.  Dr Duffy was at the Paris Climate Summit in November.

Unitarian Universalist Church of Palo Alto – Fireside Room
7pm (note the special time)
505 E Charleston Rd, Palo Alto, CA 

Getting Involved – fighting oil trains

Inspired by Tim DeChristopher’s call to push against the wall of power, looking for a soft spot that will give way to change, Transitioner Victoria Armigo traveled to San Luis Obispo with other activists to attend hearings on the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for a proposed the Phillips 66 oil train rail spur in San Luis Obispo County.

Victoria writes:
It was amazing to bear witness to the process yesterday. Barb Fukimoto and I took the Forest Ethics & 350 Silicon Valley bus from San Jose at 5:45a headed to San Luis Obispo. San Jose council member Ash Kalra greeted us, gave us goodie bags, and sent his staff member to go with us to speak on his behalf. Another San Jose city staff member joined us. We picked up more people in Gilroy on the way.

At the SLO county building, we were directed next door to the Fremont Theatre, which had a big screen showing the planning commission hearing in the Board of Supervisors chambers, to decide the permit for Phillips 66 Rail Spur project. Barb and I picked up our green speaker slips – we were numbers 250 and 252. We hear that 400 individual speaker slips were taken.

SLO city staff presented their report and recommendation to deny the permit, along with their EIR findings. The county attorney explained some of the complexities, and why the permit must be denied. Then the Phillips 66 attorney made a very strong presentation directing the planning commission to permit their oil train project. We felt the despair and hopelessness of the situation.

Then government folks from all over California started making their 3 minute presentations – 17 in all. Wow! They included the mayor of Santa Barbara, other mayors, city council members, staff of state representatives. They all made different and good points as to why this project must be stopped.

We took a break for lunch and fell hope returning. Then the individual speakers began making their 3 minute presentations – again folks from all over California and many different demographics. They too made different and good points as to why this project must be stopped. They only got to speakers 50-60 when we had to leave at 5p, so we wrote out planned comments on the back of the speaker slips, and turned them in to be part of the public record.

The SLO planning commission hearing continues all day today, and many of the folks we me were going back today to speak. It was an honor to participate with this diverse group of people, joining together to push against that soft spot in the wall of power that Tim De Christopher spoke of.

victoria-barb at SLO 1victoria-barb at SLO 2

 

New Economy Transition – February meeting

New Economy Transition (NET) is the group that formed after Marco Vangelisti’s Essential Knowledge for Transition talks last fall on money, economy, and investment. The group has started to look at changes that each of us can make in our own lives, as well as other efforts to move away from business-as-usual.

This is the line-up for the February 21 meeting. All are welcome!

  • Thomas Atwood will give a presentation on creating a Self-Directed IRA.
  • Marco Vangelisti will appear via Skype to explain more about SD-IRAs and present his new workshop on Aligning Your Investments with Your Values.
  • Dave Thompson will give a presentation on Cooperatives and Coffee.

February 21, 2-4pm
Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Redwood City
2124 Brewster, Redwood City

 

February Fourth Friday – Merchants of Doubt – plus special guest

NOTE THE SPECIAL TIME: 7PM, FEBRUARY 26

Inspired by the acclaimed book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway, Merchants of Doubt takes audiences on a satirically comedic, yet illuminating ride into the heart of conjuring American spin. Filmmaker Robert Kenner lifts the curtain on a secretive group of highly charismatic, pundits-for-hire who present themselves in the media as scientific authorities, yet have the contrary aim of spreading maximum confusion about well-studied public threats ranging from toxic chemicals to pharmaceuticals to climate change. Click to view the trailer.

Introducing the movie and answering questions will be Dr. Phillip Duffy, President and Executive Director of the Woods Hole Research Center, an internationally renowned climate research facility on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.  Dr. Duffy attended the Paris Climate Summit in November. 

merchants of doubt

7-9:30pm (note the special time)
Unitarian Universalist Church of Palo Alto – Fireside Room
505 E Charleston Rd, Palo Alto, CA 

Links for Tim DeChristoper talk

For those who missed the Tim DeChristopher talk for January Fourth Friday (click here and here for the blog posts) – or if you just want to hear the talk again, you’re in luck! We’ve got links to an audio recording of the event:

Click to Downloadpart1.mp3, 96 MB

Click to Download, part2.mp3, 38.3 MB

Thanks to Bill Hilton for putting this together.

And thanks to Jack Owicki for these fabulous photos of the event.

Tim DeChristopher Inspires Audience With Call for Non-Violent Climate Action

submitted by Debbie Mytels, Transition Palo Alto Steering Committee

Profiled in the award winning documentary, “Bidder 70,” shown last spring by Transition Palo Alto, climate activist Tim DeChristopher spoke to an audience of about 130 people at Transition’s Fourth Friday event Jan. 22 at the Palo Alto Unitarian Universalist Church. Since non-violently disrupting a 2008 auction set up to lease Federal lands in Utah for fossil fuel mining, DeChristopher has emerged as a leader in the climate action movement.  He’s learned a lot from his studies of history and ethics at Harvard Divinity School — AND during the two years he spent in Federal prison.

Those who heard him share his philosophy of social change last week can see that his life is following a path like other great non-violent leaders such as Gandhi and King. Citing the success of movements that have utilized civil disobedience, DeChristopher explained why such strategies are more powerful and effective than writing letters or petitions. “Civil disobedience uses the power of one’s own vulnerability to arouse the conscience of others and break through the apathy” that blocks change, he said.

Being vulnerable to a prison sentence – or being beaten with the billy clubs and fire hoses that hit Civil Rights protestors in the ‘60’s – arouses empathy when people see what’s happening. This is how we can manifest our power and break the hold of oil companies over our country, he said.

When asked about the value of other tactics to curtail climate change, DeChristopher said we still need to try them all. “Cesar Chavez said when we’re well organized, it doesn’t mean we’re all doing the same things. It means that we’re all pushing in different places against the wall of power. When we find a weak spot, we all come together and push there.”

“The challenge of the climate movement now, however, is to shift from talking about reducing emissions to facing the question of how to retain our humanity in light of the tremendous changes we are facing,” he said. “Anger is an appropriate response. Anger is a sign that something is in wrong in one of our relationships — a sign that we care about something — and that we care enough to make the relationship right. We need to strengthen our connections and make the relationship right with Earth — and with each other.”

Noting that America’s consumer culture is a comfortable place for many, he compared it to people who deny the fact of death. “It’s easy to pretend we’re not going to die, but any system that acts differently is false.” Our dependence on fossil fuels is killing Earth’s ecosystems, and our civilization – even the survival of the human species – is at stake. This is why he advocates that protesters use non-violent disobedience and use the “necessity defense” to argue they are not guilty. Such a legal defense is like saying it’s not a crime for someone to break into a burning house to rescue a child, because the “breaking and entering” is necessary for a higher good. Stopping a pipeline or blockading an oil train is necessary for the higher good of protecting Earth’s climate.

When an audience member said, “You’ve been a martyr, without having to die,” DeChristopher demurred. “I didn’t ‘lose’ those two years in I spent in jail,” he said. “I spent them differently. I met different people there that I might not otherwise have learned from. And I wouldn’t be here tonight, talking with you, if I hadn’t done that time in jail.”

Asked how he envisions a future without fossil fuels, DeChristopher said, “I envision a more connected age. The fossil fuel era has given us the illusion that we don’t need one another.” Without having false optimism or believing in a “techno-fix,” he said, “we can still stand together in the face of this crisis and support each other in finding ways to get through it. “

[For more information about Tim DeChristopher, visit his website: www.timdechristopher.org ]

— By Debbie Mytels, Transition Palo Alto Steering Committee