Showing posts with label popular support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label popular support. Show all posts

Video - Bill McKibben of 350.org Speaks at Forward on Climate Rally



Here is the entire speech by Bill McKibben at the Forward on Climate rally on February 17, 2013. 50,000 concerned citizens watch at the largest rally on climate to date in Washington DC.

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Video - What the Forward on Climate Rally Looked Like



An estimated 50,000 people gathered in Washington, D.C. on Sunday, February 17th for the Forward on Climate Rally at the National Mall. The rally preceded a march to the White House to urge President Barack Obama to take action against climate change and reject the Keystone XL pipeline.

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Video - Thanks to All Who Supported the Historic Forward on Climate Rally



Thank you to the nearly 50,000 who demonstrated on Presidents Day Weekend at the Washington Monument, the thousands at 20+ solidarity rallies across the country, and the more than one million online activists who stood up and spoke out to tell President Obama that right now its time to move Forward on Climate.

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Forward on Climate Rally and Growing Support for Action

On Sunday February 17th, 160 organizations and tens of thousands of people came together for the biggest climate rally in American history. After assembling at the National Mall in Washington, D.C., participants marched to the White House and formed a human pipeline. In addition to the action in Washington, events took place across the US.

A decision on the Keystone XL tarsands pipeline will be one of the first tests for the new secretary of state John Kerry who called climate change a “life-threatening issue” of national security.

The tar sands in Alberta are causing irrevocable damage to the environment, destroying land and poisoning the water. The Keystone XL will increase extraction from the tar sands by 700,000 barrels a day and send it down to the Gulf of Mexico for processing and export. In addition to the fact that the pipeline jeopardizes the lands that it traverses and the aquifers that lie beneath it, 350.org's Bill McKibben has repeatedly called the Keystone XL the fuse to the largest ‘carbon bomb’ we’ll ever know.

The rally was appropriately titled “Forward on Climate.” It called for the rejection of the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline and reducing carbon pollution from America's dirty power plants. One of the most contentious issues concerns fracking for natural gas, which has been hailed as a bold step towards American energy independence. However, fracking is an environmentally hazardous process and natural gas is not clean energy.

Extreme weather including storms, droughts and wildfires are helping to build a growing base of support for action on climate change.

The rally supports the President's stated intent to engage meaningful action in his second term. In both his inaugural addresses and his State of the Union speech, the President made it clear that he intends to act on climate change.

It is becoming increasingly clear that we must move away from fossil fuels and ramp up renewable energy. No single issue will have more impact on future generations than America's response to the climate crisis. Contrary to Republican dogma, this issue trumps all other economic concerns.

A number of prominent speakers urged the President to take immediate action. Those at the rally heard from speakers like Bill McKibben, Michael Brune, Van Jones, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, Maria Cardona, the Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Chief Jackie Thomas of the Saik'uz First Nation, and Crystal Lameman of the Beaver Lake Cree First Nations.

One of the many groups in attendance was the League of Women Voters have taken a number of steps in past months to address the issue of climate change. One of those initiatives involves a letter campaign that resulted in almost 3,000 letters form grassroots organizations to the White House in support of action to combat climate change.

In conjunction with traditional social media, some new approaches are helping to move the climate agenda forward. To amplify the message of networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, 350.org has developed a new online initiative called Thunderclap that is helping to get the word out and get people involved. Another initiative involved the display of photos and messages of support on a giant screen at the rally outside the White House, showing photos and messages.

In response to a crisis that has already taken lives, affected millions and cost billions of dollars, citizens came together in unprecedented numbers to call for action. People are embracing the veracity of climate science and demanding that we act to protect our environment. It is not only scientists that are calling for urgent action, leading public health experts, military officials, heads of state and renowned religious leaders have come together to call for domestic action and international leadership on climate change.

The Forward on Climate Rally clearly demonstrated that there is popular support for action on climate change. Up to now the US has failed future generations, but is not too late and now is the time to act. The Obama administration cannot ignore the call. It’s time for the US to take the lead on climate change because a growing number of people are coming to the realization that the costs of inaction are simply unacceptable.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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American Voters Want More Renewable Energy

As reviewed in a Huffington Post article, Americans want more renewable energy whether they support Obama, Romney or are undecided. On the issue of global warming, the 7 percent of voters who are undecided tend to be more like Obama supporters than Romney supporters. Undecided voters tend to believe in anthropogenic climate change and support renewable energy.

Sixty-one percent of the undecided voters said they see global warming as an "important issue" they'll consider when making their choice. Seventy-five percent of Obama supporters said the same, while only 32 percent of likely Romney supporters see global warming as an important issue.
A total of 80 percent of undecided voters believe the Earth is warming, compared with 86 percent of Obama voters. Only 45 percent of Romney voters accept that global warming is happening.

Similarly, 65 percent of both undecideds and likely Obama voters say that global warming is driven by human activities, while only 27 percent of Romney voters agree. And 64 percent of undecideds and 61 percent of Obama voters think the president should do more to combat climate change. Only 35 percent of likely Romney voters think the president should do more about global warming, and 47 percent say he should do less.

Unsurprisingly, only 38 percent of Romney voters say the US should decrease fossil fuel use in the future while 55 percent of undecided voters and 65 percent of likely Obama supporters support that view.

Despite these disagreements on climate change and fossil fuels, the survey finds that Americans are in broad agreement on the subject of renewable energy. Even though Romney supporters tend to dispute anthropogenic climate change, 73 percent of them say the US should use more renewable energy sources. This is in the same ballpark as the 85 percent of Obama supporters, 83 percent of undecideds who support more renewable energy.

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