See You in Jail: It’s Not Symbolism When You Live in D.C.

Posted by Mike Tidwell on 26 Feb 2009 | Tagged as: Coal, Washington, DC

Why I’m joining 2,000 people for a global warming mass arrest on Monday

On Monday I’m going to get arrested just two blocks from the U.S. capitol building. I’ll peacefully block the entrance to an energy plant that burns raw coal to partially power Congress. My motivation is global warming. My colleagues in civil disobedience will include the poet Wendell Berry, Country western singer Kathy Mattea, and Yale University dean Gus Speth.

Up to two thousand other people from across the country will risk arrest, too. We’ll all be demanding strong federal action to phase out coal combustion and other fossil fuels nationwide that threaten our vulnerable climate.

This mass arrest might seem symbolic and radical to many Americans. Symbolic because it’s purposefully organized amid the iconic images of Washington, D.C. And radical because, well, isn’t getting locked up kind of out there? And isn’t global warming kind of vague and distant?

But I live five subway stops from the U.S. Capitol. My home is right here. There’s nothing symbolic – for me — about trying to keep the tidal Potomac River out of my living room and off the national Mall where my son takes school trips. There’s nothing symbolic about fighting for homeowner’s insurance in a region where Allstate and other insurers have already begun to pull out due to bigger Atlantic hurricanes. And what’s vague about the local plant species like deadnettles and Bluebells that now bloom 4-6 weeks earlier in D.C.-area gardens thanks to dramatic warming.

For citizens like me who live amid the symbolic trappings of D.C., we stand as proof that climate change is everywhere, right now, and no one is immune, not even the citizens and leaders of the world’s most powerful city. (No wonder nearly 1 in ten protestors on March 2nd will be members of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network).

And radical? Actually civil disobedience is no more radical than our belief that extreme energy changes are possible now – not just in far-off China or liberal Oregon, but in the city of Washington, D.C. itself. Like a growing number of Metro D.C. residents, my home in Takoma Park is completely solarized. I heat my home with locally grown, organically fertilized corn that saves me money. And beginning this summer in much of Maryland, energy from wind farms will be cheaper than coal-fired electricity from Pepco, the state’s mega-utility. Meanwhile, as a region, the D.C. area uses twice as much electricity per capita as Californians or residents of New York State. Clearly, there is low-hanging “efficiency fruit” everywhere you look in the nation’s capital. Washington could cut its power use in half and still have every comfort and abundance: bright lights for the Kennedy Center, heating and cooling for the museums, fast computers for every hall of Congress. No tradeoffs.

We just need national legislation to move things along as fast as the climate is changing, which is to say right now! Congress must pass – in 2009 – a cap on carbon pollution that matches the goals of Japan and the European nations under the current international climate talks. Then Obama must go to Copenhagen, Denmark in December to negotiate a strong successor to the Kyoto protocol.

Otherwise, Washington, D.C. is screwed. Not just in a political and diplomatic sense. But screwed as an actual place. On its last day in office, the Bush Administration released a study showing the U.S. Atlantic coast would soon see sea-level rise much worse than previously estimated. Another study in the journal Science this month showed that ice reduction in Antarctica is actually leading to planetary gravitational changes that will further cause the Atlantic to bulge and swell, leading to still more rise. Who knew? University of Maryland professor Court Stephenson already believes a billion-dollar flood gate on the Potomac River just south of D.C. is the only thing that can save Washington from future mega-storms. No wonder in nearby New York city, mayor Michael Bloomburg is already planning to move to higher ground the pumps that keep the New York subway dry.

But adaptation measures will never protect us without a simultaneous turn to clean energy. Which is why I’m getting arrested March 2nd with thousands of others two blocks from the Capitol. President Obama and Congress have already done a lot for the climate in the last six weeks alone, and I hear the voice of those who say, “Why push so hard now?”

But I’m reminded of the labor leaders who visited Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s. After hours of talks they persuaded the President to support a pro-union proposition. But FDR then surprised them. “Okay you’ve convinced me,” he said. “Now go out and pressure me.” That’s kind of the weird way politics works. Obama and Congress need this pressure to help them keep doing what, for the most part, they already want to do.

All politics is local, as they say, so in the end I’m just looking after my street corner. My corner just happens to be in the D.C. area. I have a son here, and the scientists have spoken: there’s nowhere to hide from global warming. Nowhere. So I want an end to coal combustion in my region. I want to live surrounded by wind mills, not flood levees. For this, I’ll even get arrested, knowing all along that the reverse is true too: If the actual citizens of Washington, D.C. are safe from global warming, then everyone else in the world is safe too.

(Mike Tidwell is director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network)

Share and Enjoy:
  • E-mail this story to a friend!
  • Print this article!
  • Google
  • Facebook
  • TwitThis
  • MySpace
  • Technorati
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb

Like what you've read? Check out these related posts:

6 Responses to “See You in Jail: It’s Not Symbolism When You Live in D.C.”

  1. on 27 Feb 2009 at 4:24 am 1.casey eckels said …

    i am an environementalist working in south florida. i founded a local creative reuse center to promote sustainability thru reduce, reuse and recyle, i am coming to DC and with 5 friends to participate in the Demonstration because my children all live here, and 3 grandchildren here. I never want any of them to look into my eyes and say "Nanom, why didn't you yell until they stopped doing it? Don't you love us?"

  2. on 27 Feb 2009 at 3:37 am 2.MichaelManners said …

    Well said, Mike. I just read your letter out loud to my 91 year old father, who lived through the great "depression" here in West Virginia. His comment, coming from one who has never been arrested. who fought for this country in WW II , voted for Bush in 2004, and now in 2008 voted for Obama—–>; "Very well written, ok, now I understand better." We share a vehicle and tomorrow with his blessing, I will be traveling to DC, to join with you and others on Monday at the coal-fired power plant. Standing with other parents and future parents, standing with people who are willing to be arrested in order to help our children and our children's children, receive the best possible home, our world, in all seasons.

  3. on 28 Feb 2009 at 9:19 am 3.Roger S. said …

    Well said, Mike.

    It's high time for this type of direct action. We've tried just about everything else. See you there!

  4. on 28 Feb 2009 at 11:04 am 4.Acai said …

    I am an environementalist working in south florida. i founded a local creative reuse center to promote sustainability thru reduce, reuse and recyle, i am coming to DC and with 5 friends to participate in the Demonstration because my children all live here, and 3 grandchildren here. I never want any of them to look into my eyes and say "Nanom, why didn't you yell until they stopped doing it? Don't you love us?"

  5. on 28 Feb 2009 at 11:27 am 5.ES SENIOR SEMINAR » On social movements, powershift and p. 29 of Ignition said …

    [...] and a fine piece from Mike Tidwell – http://www.chesapeakeclimate.org/blog/?p=886 [...]

  6. on 19 May 2009 at 6:50 pm 6.Acai Berry Research said …

    Nice Post it’s very important to learn from each other how to take care of our planet this is where we live, so I think education is very important for next generations to come.

Trackback This Post | Subscribe to the comments through RSS Feed

Leave a Reply