Saturday, February 11, 2012

Capitalism's Titanic Iceburg: We've Seen This Movie Before

            (A version of this appears in the weekend version of Counterpunch online at:          
                  http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/02/10/capitalisms-fracking-iceberg/ )
  I’ve always hated Superbowl Sunday: 
*the eating as anesthesia for the painful post- holiday spending spree; 
*the guilt-free mindless enjoyment of a gladiator match;
  *the circus-like way it distracts a dying empire’s masses from taking real action concerning the very real screwing they endure (apologies George Carlin). 
It reminds me of the big foundation-funded movements against (insert your pick of: war, fracking, anti-choice assaninity).  Lots of sound.  Lots of fury.  Lots of egos attacking everyone else’s efforts.  Lots of losses.  
So, it seemed fitting that Titanic was the entertainment offering for house-bound people trying to avoid the past weekend’s ritualized numbing.  Particularly since frack-threatened areas are busily rearranging the deck chairs while sending out push messages to contact this bribed legislator, that compromised official.   
Snobs go home.  James Cameron’s screenplay appealed to tweens and then some because it speaks the language of teetering capitalism’s truth:
“...RUTH: Will the lifeboats be seated according to class? I hope they're not too
crowded--
ROSE: Oh, Mother shut up!
                      (Ruth freezes, mouth open)
ROSE: Don't you understand?  The water is freezing and there aren't enough
boats... not enough by half. Half the people on this ship are going to die.
CAL: Not the better half.
              PUSH IN ON ROSE'S FACE as it hits her like a thunderbolt....”

I’ve seen this movie before.  
New Orleans.  
1984. 
For the ABC affiliate, I produced a mini-documentary series on oil-company engendered coastal erosion.  That year the New Orleans Sierra Club rewarded me with a tin cup award (shared with Ron Ridenour of the Indy weekly Gambit) for telling a story that the other corporate media had been too timid to tell.  I actually received a phone call from Garland Robinette telling me how brave I was.  That was like getting a call from New Orleans television royalty.  So, of course I spat at him, “You grew up here.  Why didn’t you do this?”  He stayed on the phone.   I like Garland.
Aside from garnering the negative attention of the oil thugs, and playing at the Worlds Fair on a kiosk at the Fish and Wildlife service area, nobody paid much attention.  Certainly not the policy makers.  Big Easy people who counted were busily planning all the arsons that would bring ATF crews down multiple times and fuel a new real estate boom around the former fair site.  While news crews focused on the crying, swearing old fire chief as each old warehouse burned, plans were afoot to recreate a new version of the warehouse district.  
Who knew the New Orleans media would stay as lazy and fearful as ever?  The dirty energy magnates did.  The nation’s newsrooms, funded as they were by advertising revenues instead of performance, winnowed out virtually any vestige of journalism.  So the cannibals looked northward after destroying the 50 + miles of marshland that could have absorbed 50 feet of flood surge.  All those ruined refineries.  All those jobs lost.  Guess they’ll have to rebuild Southeast Texas/Southwest Louisiana someplace north.  Hmmm.  No wonder they’re planting visions of plastics factories in farmland relatively unscathed by the last time industry romped this continent unbridled by unions and regulations.  No wonder they finance their malfeasance with an  ‘energy plan’ too good to be true.  
I’ve seen this movie before. 
Already, tony environmentalists in Ithaca are saying that if they can’t defeat fracking, it will mean that everyone has to pay an extra bill--for ‘safe’ water.   Water bills are a very political matter.  As Tulane University Political Science Professor Oliver Houk once explained, “If you live Uptown (wealthy area) you get Kentwood (bottled water).  If you live Downtown (poor area) you get cancer.”  Already it is looking as if Cooperstown (the same village that sold their lake water for use in fracking Pennsylvania a few years back) is not above cutting deals to protect its well-heeled residents.  
Why establish a land trust and then let anti-moratorium contributors disrupt meetings about such things?   Read how the man who snatched my video camera from me (thus preventing me from completing my post-meeting cutaways and interviews)blames me for ‘provoking’ his admitted crime.  Scroll down from the video on Shale Shock Media--and read his comments.  After admitting that he snatched a video camera out of a journalist's hands, he then brags about how his ridiculous wealth makes it all okay.  And watch a better version of that video that counts how the anti-moratorium thugs tried to bully their way in that meeting.  Most of those people don’t even live in my town.  But that didn’t keep the guy from filing what I consider retaliatory charges of harassment against me.  Let’s hope I won’t be singing any Anne Feeney songs anytime soon (love ya Anne!). 
Cooperstown (or Ithaca?) as New Orleans to the rest of the Southern Tier’s Chalmette, dawlin’?
It’s enough to make a less well-heeled Otsego County resident say, hmmm, well if they frack here, I say FRACK COOPERSTOWN FIRST!  (It’s not like the residents defended Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins’ rights anyway.)  
I’m joking.  Because people driven insane like to laugh.  And because there is a quiet mutiny underway among the grassroots environmentalists.  I saw hints of it during two activist excursions I videotaped this winter in Albany, and a White House protest I covered this Fall that culminated in the Tar Sands pipeline ‘victory’ when Obama delayed approval.
  Key members of the anti-fracking grassroots are not feeling listened to, respected, cherished for anything but numbers needed for the cover shots of top-down orchestrated actions.  
*The Albany OCCUPY people who felt they were disrespected by the more well-heeled arrivals on the busses as they stood in the ‘free speech zone’ for the prom queens to parade past the tame chants about fracking en route to Governor Andrew Cuomo’s State of the State (wide auction).   
*The failure to include other agricultural products (besides Ithaca area bread from area grains) in the attempted delivery of goods threatened by fracking to a foodbank of Emperor Exxon Frack Cuomo’s choosing.  
*The hard-fought place on the ‘lobbying day’ dias for fasting activist Patrick McElligott.  
*The failure to invite to the same dias "Frack Man" Abram Loeb, who was very instrumental in fighting the first ploy to turn central NY into a wasteland via the ‘Don’t WASTE NY’ campaign 3 decades ago.
*350.org’s Bill McKibbens’ entreaty to Sierra Club types not to give the stink eye to OCCUPY DC (McPherson Square only--Freedom Plaza was noticably absent).  
*The strange looks from people wondering why I’m fundraising to start a CSA to promote the problems with fracking with each delivery I make to fracked or frack-threatened areas.  How dare I ‘compete’ for funding when there are plenty of disgruntled former NYPIRG workers hanging out the collection cups for their own anti-fracking groups?
I’ve seen this movie before.
After being fragged out of NOLA’s ABC affiliate for reorganizing the AFTRA chapter, I became PR Director at New Orleans City Park.  “Who’s your mama?” is not a friendly inquiry, I learned.  It’s a push back into your caste.   I could do the organizing for the fundraising, but it would be an oil executive’s wife who took the credit for saving the antique wooden carousel there.  I don’t mind obscurity so long as my goals are met.  But grassroots activists aren’t having their goals met.  And they’re watching the big enviros blow the chance they’ve sought for decades to make the conversion Cuba did off dirty energy.  
Cuba’s seen this movie, too.  
Only they learned its lesson.   Because, unlike former U.S. elected leaders,  Fidel Castro doesn’t kowtow to the dictums of the Powell memoranda that shackled free thought in U.S. higher learning.  
That is why Fidel (can I call him Fidel?)  bravely summarize the work of leading scholars at Duke and Cornell Universities honestly, directly, on January 4th in Granma:  
           "...These results bring into question the energy industry's reasoning that shale gas could replace coal in electricity generation 
                 and lower greenhouse gas emissions, to help mitigate climate change.  
               It is too premature and too risky a venture.
                 In April 2010 the U.S. Department of State set up the Global Shale Gas Initiative (GSGI) to help countries identify and 
                 develop their unconventional gas resources safely and economically, with a view to furthering U.S. economic and commercial 
                 interests, including those of U.S. multinational corporations.  I have inevitably been extensive; I didn’t have any other option. I 
                 am composing these lines for the Cubadebate website and Telesur, one of the most serious and honest broadcasters in our 
                 suffering world....”
Fidel’s pronouncement on hydrofracking was part of  a brilliant article entitled “Marching Toward the Abyss.”  He wrote it New Year’s Eve.  I can imagine that each New Year’s eve for him is an amazing moment.  This time, he realized this was the 50th anniversary year of the October Missile Crisis of 1962.   In two long sentences, he evoked the dignity of the revolutionary people of not just Cuba, but the grassroots people in various movements including OCCUPY.  Castro placing his article in contemporary context by honoring the grassroots players in a manner U.S. leaders of all sort should emulate: 
                               “My words would have no sense if their objective was to impute some of the blame on the American people, or those of     
                   any other country allied to the United States in this unprecedented adventure; they, like other peoples of the world, would be the            inevitable victims of the tragedy. Recent events in Europe and at other points demonstrate the mass indignation of those for  
                   whom unemployment, scarcity, income reduction, debts, discrimination, lies and politicking are leading to protests and brutal
                   repression by the guardians of the established order....”

Imagine if the big enviros would stop hemming and hawing about OCCUPY-like actions--stop qualifying their RIGHT to be part of any action?  It might happen.  Outside an election year.  If you ever get a chance to join the Cuba Caravan of Pastors for Peace, you’ll hear some variation of this phrase:  U.S. citizens will need to change the way they think before we can ever see human needs truly met.  
What a script that would be!
It hasn’t yet been written.  
But can’t you see it already?
If we’re really going to become a democratic country, we need to change the way we think.   The well-funded national environmental movement must change the way it thinks about such events.  Those planning functions and inviting us to gather round, listen, carry bread, signs, and help lead chants have to start expanding the discussion.  Don’t get me wrong, there were great strides made by all parts of the anti-fracking movement.  But, in the words of the late Dr. Mickie Edwardson, a U.F.  a graduate media professor relaying the results of her first test: “I love you all.  You need to do better.’ 
And the big enviros could do no better right now than to listen to seasoned, battle-scarred activists like Patrick McElligott and his friend Abram Loeb.  Patrick has some history with fighting big money interests who want to despoil New York ecology and culture.  Some fights he won.  Some he lost.  Both have developed a comedic sense for the absurd that is sorely missing from the earnestly organized pleading with politicians.   Patrick McElligott is used to having his cause ignored by the likes of the Cuomos--but not Robert F. Kennedy, Jr..                               
            In the 1980s, Governor Mario Cuomo’s administration might have sent NY State Police to block a local gravel company from stealing despoiling  an Indian mound in his home town of Sidney.  Agents associated with Clark Stone Products, a key player in the local Marcellus fracking play now, did this in the middle of a court trial over the legality of shredding ancient remains for spreading to cap a superfund site.  Obscene, right?  It gets worse.  The superfund site was created by Amphenol (nee Bendix--corporations are people, after all) , a weapons manufacturer.                                                                                                                                                        
          Back then, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. was instrumental in getting a deleted page of a key report to McElligott.   Now, Kennedy seems to have signed off on letting the less capitalized areas of New York state be ‘test-fracked’.  It’s as if we haven’t learned what happened in the fracked areas Josh Fox’s GASLAND exposed--or read any newspaper attempting to cover the sell-out and devastation since in Bradford County, PA and elsewhere. 
           Let’s hope we won’t have to wait for a new movie before our Cuba-esque awakening. 

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

It Shouldn't Be This Hard: Chasing Senator Libous



FASTING AGAINST FRACKING
(And Phone Mail)
By Lisa Barr
 It shouldn't be this hard.
 Patrick McElligott phoned and wrote his Senator, Tom Libous, an ardent hydrofracking proponent. He wanted a meeting.  He wasn’t going to try to get Libous to change his mind. He just wanted to sit down ‘like gentlemen’, and he was persistent. He was told ‘no meeting’ on the phone and in writing.  And found this inappropriate. 
 So, McElligott decided to use the time-honored tradition associated chiefly with Indian and Irish activists (think Ghandi, think Bobby Sands) who wished to embarrass public officials into proper behavior.  He would fast until a meeting was scheduled.  He had the backing of about 30 friends who drove many miles to meet with him  outside Libous’ office, in the cold, on Martin Luther King, Jr. day.
 And yet, the local newspaper began its coverage of McElligott's start of the fast with the skeptical verb "Claiming"--here's the 'lede' used: "Claiming to be following in the footsteps of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi, anti-fracking activist PatrickMcelligott launched a hunger strike Monday in an effort to pressure a pro-drilling state lawmaker to speak to him about his concerns."
 I left a comment on the Daily Star online 'peanut gallery section, defending McElligott's stalwart public service re:
 *activism of years past when town officials allowed an ANCIENT Native People's burial mound to be reduced to gravel for 'capping' a local superfund site created by a polluting arms factory.
 *activism defending Muslims from a threatened disinterment from a local cemetery;
 *scholarship and advocacy as to proper practice for archaeological digs/reburials of antiquities including bodies;
 *innovative social work getting troubled kids out on mountain tops and stream beds for archaeological digs--an environment McElligott said was a better place to get a troubled kid to open up.
          You get the picture.  Here's what I said (with links):
           “Patrick McElligott has been quoted by the Daily Star many times over the years.  I believe an examination of the Star’s morgue would show a lot of interesting articles.  Maybe not.  It’s clear to me that we are in the presence of greatness.  And that greatness is being ignored--even trivialized.  After his accident, his children wrote a book about his life.  I recommend buying it and reading it.  It’s clear to me that Mr. McElligott knows his stuff about archeological site preservation and surveying.  And he knows how to peacefully stand up to an industry that engages in bullying, that gets public servants to ignore their obligation to the commons.
...”
         I particularly liked William Pitt's Truthout piece. I also liked Patrick's own writing for Democratic Underground (much of which I read in a book by his children).  ‘Mac’ as Pitt refers to him, is an unassuming, yet no doubt very talented and innovative social worker--on disability now due to job related injuries.  
         You can read the locals (are they locals?  Are they gas company PR types writing that stuff?) disparaging him for being disabled and retired.  McElligott says his role of ‘wallet’ and ‘chauffeur’ must not be harmed by this fast.  He's the proud father of teenaged athletes.  He coaches JV Girls Basketball.   He is not about to jeopardize his health.  'Mac' consulted with a physician first.  He's having a cup of juice each day.  Along with his water.
  But, it's day three.  And still no word from Senator Libous' office.
         It shouldn't be this hard.
        Here's what it sounded like to those of us trying to reach Senator Libous on Patrick's behalf on January 18.  I put this  together with my MacBook Pro and my iPhone and Garage Band.  Be the media.  Michael Moore is right:  Apple is, basically, “a force for good.”
        I posted this audio criticism of my government on my Facebook page.  A New York FB friend suggested I contact the NY State Senate Majority leader to complain about Libous' behavior. http://soundcloud.com/anirondaisycsa-aol-com/libousdodgesconstituentsrepatr  I'm glad we still have a relatively unfettered internet, despite the threat of SOPA.  
        I am well aware that the NDAA and a new proposed bill could mean trouble for me in the future for doing exactly what I am doing here--holding my government officials accountable.   
Here's what I said in an email entitled: “Libous Office: Voice Mail Abuse/Failure to Respond to Constituents” that I sent to Dean Skelos:
"Please listen to this.  I think it is a huge embarrassment to any 
public servant that there is no one to answer the phone, and 
that his office voice mail refers us to a fundraising office.
Thank you.
Dr. Lisa J. Barr"
         Most of my sources (artists, farmers, lawyers, union reps, truckers, business owners, students) for my documentary, "MUTUAL AID: A Fracked Society" are angry that so much of their time is being consumed fighting what should be a no-brainer:  Hydrofracking must be stopped.  Sometimes we get on one another's nerves.  It's nothing personal.  We're a bunch of Davids fighting a well-funded Goliath.
         The other day a fellow videographer said to me, in front of sources,  "Your energy is heavy.  You should watch that."  I called him a "whacko."  I joked later that I regretted that because I felt I should have called him a chauvanist pig.  
        After 2 and a half years of videotaping abuse in Bradford County and up and down the Susquehanna River with an eye toward the fractured social fabric, I am angry, too.  I have other things I'd rather research and write about.  But, none of our representatives and senators seem able to fight this.  Even if they are willing to do so.
         It shouldn't be this hard.  
         And so the anti-frack movement looks at one another with suspicion--which is entirely what the dirty energy corporations want.  Remember the admission that those criticizing frack operations in Bradford County had been treated as insurgents by an industry employing ‘military psyops’ domestically.  Propaganda, torture, war are all on the same coercion spectrum, right?  Of course it would come home.  (https://coloradoindependent.com/105456/oil-and-gas-industry-using-military-psyops-tactics-to-break-insurgency-against-fracking)  .      
            And so, facing criticisms for being too  ‘radical’ myself because of who I interview and the force of my arguments against fracking at public hearings, I signed “Occupy Well Street’s pledge (http://www.owsstopfracking.org/2011/12/priority-anti-fracking-pledge-of.html) today.  It includes this key paragraph--something which would make the deeply green resistant Derrick Jensen smile, I believe:  
“IV...I will refrain from public condemnations of others' employment of effective tactics and strategies. Any effective movement must include a broad spectrum of activities, and the movement against fracking should include all who wish to resist this destructive industrial process....”
  I signed this just as other sources are organizing training in civil disobedience (CD) for the weekend in Binghamton.  I don’t think it’s coincidental that the city council just banned overnight tents in public parks, thus making it more difficult to recreate OCCUPY Binghamton--one of the longer-running OCCUPY encampments.  OCCUPY Binghamton was never OCCUPY Wall Street, but it did have anti-fracking signs posted.  It did, like the other OCCUPY sites I visited this Fall, have drums from time to time that evoked the First Peoples--the people who had a much better relationship to the land.  
Patrick McElligott is trying to save that land from fracking.
It shouldn’t be this hard.
It would be a lot easier if New York City anti-frackers would come visit us Southern Tier anti-frackers.  (The place isn’t as backward as it was when Pete Seeger was nearly killed by an angry mob. C’mon down!)  If Gotham has been hypnotized by Governor Cuomo’s SGEIS sleight of hand--then Gotham needs to wake up.  Over a ridge from Patrick McElligott’s hometown of Sidney lies Delaware County and the NYC reservoirs. And, contrary to what the SGEIS implies--these are NOT safe due to the partial ban on fracking in Delaware County. 
This fall, at the Tribeca Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) hearings, people testified about evidence available online concerning many thousands of old abandoned ‘ghost’ wells the DEC knows are out there.  Approximately 70,000, by some estimates.  DEC caps the ones they learn about from telltale leakage.  Fifty percent of these caps need repair in five years.  All these wells--ghost or discovered--go down vertically to the same level as the new ones proposed.  Once the horizontal ‘frack’ is chemically induced--they will likely ‘speak’ to one another.   Gasses, the secret-metal-dissolving-frack-sauce (courtesy of Dick Cheney’s 2001 energy meeting), and radioactivity could spew all over.
And who would know?  
But already the industry’s representatives or sycophants are prowling around New York state’s small town board meetings disputing this point.   At my own town board meeting last week, a landowner said “Lisa Barr’s wrong--its (just) hundreds” of abandoned wells not yet discovered.  The local paper covered the meeting as a ‘he said/she said’ debate without going into details.            
          Then there is the problem with anti-frack attorneys and witnesses being threatened at town board meetings here in the hinterland.  It’s sometimes hard to take this seriously, or maybe we’re just punch drunk.  Josh Fox jokes that when he visits near his hometown in PA, it’s not uncommon for him to be addresed thusly: “(Are you) Josh Fox?  (Well, then) FUCK YOU!”  And still he laughs.
But, back to solutions.  If New York City residents could hold their own Occupy Well Street style civil disobedience (or CD) training and plan on joining those doing these actions--even if nothing is ever really done--it could be persuasive.  (I don’t say ‘non-violent’ civil disobedience training because it’s redundant, okay?).  It wouldn’t hurt if all those retirement funds like T. Rowe Price, Vanguard, etc.. would stop investing in the shell-game that funds the frackers, as documented in “Drilling for Money: A look at the investors behind the Marcellus Shale gas boom” available at this link: (http://shadbushcollective.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Drilling-for-Money-1.pdf).
         Imagine hordes of people huddling in OCCUPY like meetings.  Even a potluck can be an OCCUPY, folks--tents are optional.  People possibly ready to do CD beneath the presently clean air on behalf of the presently (relatively) clean water would send a message.  It could tell Governor “Exxon Frack” Cuomo that Gotham will not let him become President “Exxon Frack” Cuomo in 2016.  
Lots of Gotham residents trained in OCCUPY Well Street-style CD  would also feed those of us trying to battle the PR disinformation and distrust the frackers are spewing daily here in the Southern Tier.
They might also persuade Senator Libous to meet with Patrick McElligott.  They might persuade Governor Cuomo to return those dirty Exxon campaign dollars.  
It could happen.  A gal’s gotta dream--and apologize for calling someone a ‘whacko’--and a man needs to eat.
Say a prayer for Patrick McElligott.  
Say a prayer for us all.
It shouldn’t be this hard.





Sunday, January 8, 2012

HELP THE 'DON'T FRACK MORE FARMS' PR CAMPAIGN

A shorter version of this fund drive is explained here (WHAT's This?; WHY Do This?; WHERE Will the Money Go?; WHO is An Iron Daisy CSA?;  and HOW To Help):
https://www.wepay.com/donations/184792

WHAT'S THIS?
         Each of the TEN deliveries this summer to 501c3 food banks or their equivalent, is a chance to say 'Fracking KILLS' and must be stopped.
         It's a chance to tell those in power their legacy will be the ruined agriculture and water of Upstate New York.
          It's a chance to remind people that those in power already cannot and will not control floodwaters properly or repair the aftermath properly.
         The subscriptions I'll deliver with your help, are worth $1500.   If you can help support any of these subscriptions at any level it would be greatly appreciated.
          New York towns served will include:  Afton, Bainbridge, Binghamton (AND Food Not Bombs-Binghamton), Butternuts, Cooperstown, Franklin, Guilford, Ithaca, Maryland, Middlefield, Morris, New Berlin, Norwich, Oneonta, Otego, Schenevus, and Sidney.
          There will also be runs into PA towns--one that GASLAND featured:
         1.  Dimock, PA's Carter Road folks will get 10 share deliveries this summer.  They were denied a MUTUAL AID signature by their pro-gas town board that would have allowed FREE water deliveries from the town of Binghamton.
         2.  Towanda, PA will get 10 share deliveries this summer.  The County seat of Bradford County (ground zero for gas fracking in the Northeast).  This will help reming people that TOWANDA LOST ITS FARMERS MARKET because farmers and customers could no longer hear one another for the frack truck traffic.
          The fundraiser will also make a point about the need to consider new strategies to get the attention of the powers that be.  There will be deliveries to the two longest standing Occupies in the Northeast:
          1.  OCCUPY BUFFALO New York is STILL there, and STILL attending town meetings and working with its mayor to pressure Governor Andrew Cuomo to give a bigger share of state funds to that town.
          2.  OCCUPY WASHINGTON D.C., which has a large out of town community of which I am a part.   This Occupy has a kitchen that recently received a 98% grade from the D.C. health officials and they serve and assist homeless in a manner that should be emulated nationwide.

WHY DO THIS?
         We need to reach the LOCAL media that MOST of the people in fracked or frack-threatened areas READ.  Most people don't read the 'left' journals on line.  They read the local paper.  If the issue is made tangible enough, the local papers can pick this up as a non-threatening feature.  There is massive intimidation by the gas companies on local media.
   
WHERE WILL THE MONEY GO?
         This will help reimburse me for seeds, labor redoing the farm beds this past year, seminars needed to get certified as OFFICIALLY organic (I could already pass as no chemical, no gmo), my time, gasoline, electric bills, mortgage, etc..
        An Iron Daisy CSA houses my production company, ClusterFracked Productions.  I normally cover the national movement for human rights and justice but fracking has overpowered nearly everything for me this past year.  I say nearly everything, because I see great promise and example from the OCCUPY movement.

WHO IS THIS An Iron Daisy CSA?
         My name is Lisa Barr.  I began farming at age 11 in Michigan, picking strawberries in 1968 with Mexican migrant labor.  I learned a little Spanish and a little worker rights (we struck so that the Mexican workers could use something other than a ditch for restroom breaks--it worked!).   I began a career in journalism in 1977, and some of the work I'm now doing with consumer software using an iPhone is included below.  A CSA shares the farm season bounty among subscribers. It's a way to help local farms.  Usually, those of us doing a CSA also have other jobs. Mine right now is documentary work and print coverage of the human rights/ justice movements.
           Later this year, I hope to get my documentary MUTUAL AID: A Fracked Society viewed privately for comments and later distribution.
            If you'd like to see/hear some of my work:
             AUDIO (a NY Fracking Activism update from January 3, 2012)  http://soundcloud.com/anirondaisycsa-aol-com/2womentalkingonacouch
             PRINT ( I am also a mass communication academic, and this journalism is the product of my  
             critical media scholarship as well as my movement journalism).
http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/07/19/to-cuba-with-baggage-and-love/
            VIDEO (I released this piece on Bradley Manning to youtube before learning that many awards contests do not allow you to have done so.  But I am quite proud of this piece from March 2011).
             http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ef1JRwpI-ZI

HOW TO HELP?
 1.  Send a donation to An Iron Daisy CSA, P.O. Box 1539, Oneonta, NY 13820.
It would be helpful, statistically, if you could indicate which town or organizations you wanted to particularly support:
NY: Afton, Bainbridge, Binghamton, Cooperstown, Franklin, Guilford, Ithaca, Maryland, Middlefield, Morris, New Berlin, Norwich, Oneonta, Otego, Schenevus, and Sidney.
PA:  Dimock (Carter Road) and Towanda
FOOD NOT BOMBS Binghamton (also indicate whether you would want information on starting Food Not Bombs Chapters in YOUR town)
OCCUPIES in Buffalo, NY and Washington D.C./Freedom Plaza or its new houses.
And/or     
2.  Perhaps you are a friend with a website that reaches many people.  If you could post a link to this I would greatly appreciate it.

     
           


Saturday, January 7, 2012

HELP ANIRONDAISYCSA SAY NO FRACKING WAY SPRING THRU FALL 2012





Donate with WePay

Monday, January 2, 2012

Early January Frack Fighting Update New York State

http://soundcloud.com/anirondaisycsa-aol-com/2womentalkingonacouch

What an interesting group of people are trying to protect the air, land, water and culture of New York state.  I have met so many interesting and dedicated fractivistas the past two and a half years.  I hope once we beat back the dirty energy companies we turn our sites to other states and other countries these corporate criminals are bludgeoning.  I am only a decade into the digital revolution for radio and television.  My law degree allowed me to escape teaching production courses for a time.  I named the garage band project 2womentalkingonacouch and that's what the podcast appears to be name now!  Anyway.  Happy New Year!   The three women interviewed here are brilliant:  Linda Lavine(Dryden Town Supervisor); Irene Weisser (Caroline Town Supervisor) and Helen Slotje, Managing Attorney for Community Environmental Defense Council (Ithaca).
Feel free to post to any list serve of fractivists.
No Fracking Way will we have a bad 2012!
 anirondaisycsa@aol.com

Saturday, December 3, 2011

(STILL MORE) MUTINY IN CUOMO'S EMPIRE STATE: Hundreds at DEC say NO FRACKING WAY!

      I am surprised no other blogger or burgeoning documentarian has posted this yet.  I am beginning the fundraising for Cluster-Fracked via my soon to be organic CSA (more on that later).  But--isn't it curious we have not heard perhaps the most amazing piece of news to emerge from any of the DEC hearings on the one-stop polluting SGEIS permit for the Frackers?  Public Employees Federation (PEF), speaking for the 1774 members of the professional, technical and scientific staff of DEC says NO FRACKING WAY!  (They had to go to the city to do this, but they DID say this at the hearing November 29 in Manhattan!).  They also said with the cuts they can't enforce the current regs on DEC's table either.  Here's the text of what was said in the 3 minute haiku the DEC made us use:
    Stephanie Low presented the statement:
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        "I'm here to deliver a statement from an employee of the DEC, Environmental Program Specialist and Executive Board member of the DEC's union, the Public Employees Federation (PEF).  His name is Wayne Bayer and he speaks for the 1774 members of the professional, technical and scientific staff of the DEC, those on the ground who may be assumed to know the issues of fracking and the rdSGEIS best.  His statement follows:
        Three minutes is not an adequate amount of time to fully convey the concerns of Division 169 of the New York State PEF, or PEF/encon, who represent the rapidly declining professional, technical and scientific staff of DEC.
         Therefore, we will be submitting more extensive comments for the public record before the public comment period is over.
          Almost everyone agrees that public regulatory involvement and oversight is necessary to protect the public, vital natural resources, and wildlife, as well as the natural gas industry itself from unjustified allegations of mis-and/or malfeasance with gas extraction activities.  The point PEF/encon wishes to make loud and clear today is that the 25% reduction in existing staff at DEC has crippled our ability to carry out all existing regulatory and statutory responsibilities assigned to our agency.
         There is NO FRACKING WAY we can presently, honestly, and adequately add any new responsibility as labor-intensive as regulating, monitoring and inspection activities related to high volume hydraulic fracturing of natural gas.  DEC would also be hard pressed to adequately provide emergency remedial response in cleanup assistance for a major accident of any kind.  Til there are adequate staffing resources available, the moratorium should be extended."
END OF STATEMENT.
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        IN CLOSING:
        The other day, a man and his wife lamented that their daughter's husband was thrilled that their 100 acres could be signed.  They plan on traveling in Europe, Italy, etc..  I reminded them--you can travel NOW  cheaply--sign up for couchsurfing.com "Making the World a Friendlier Place One Couch at a Time."  They said the daughter is a retired teacher.  They already have enough money to travel.
        Perhaps they could get their daughter and similar lease-holders or lease-holder wanna be's, perhaps, to listen to David Rovics' advice on what to tell Halliburton, Exxon-Mobil, et al..
        David came to Oneonta and Binghamton this Fall before the anti-frack fever kicked in here [I'm always just a little bit too ahead of the curve (sigh)] and I lost my shirt on that concert.  I also spent a bit of money on this ad highlighting the need to vote and referring people to sources for learning about anti-fracking candidates this Fall.
http://hegemonicseam.blogspot.com/2011/11/clusterfrackeds-election-guide-for.html
        If you'd like to help me get Cluster Fracked, my documentary, off the ground, the best way to help is by donating to the first year of An Iron Daisy CSA by the end of this month.
       I will be delivering fresh produce bi-weekly (Mid-May through Mid-September) from my soon-to-be-certified organic farm to food banks in Oneonta, Cooperstown, Binghamton, Bradford County PA (Including Towanda and the Carter Road folks in Dimmock) and 5 other towns (say where, say when on those others) in the test run of the new improved garden beds.
           My farm was not plowed for about 40 years.  I've owned it since 2001 and never used any insectides, etc.. Certified organic seeds (no GMO!).   I need donations by the end of December 31st to go to the CSA, please.   I'm not good at raising money for myself.  I'm usually good at writing grants for others.
To donate:
An Iron Daisy CSA
P.O. Box 1539
Oneonta, NY 13820
and make the check out to An Iron Daisy CSA, please.
 It's important.  Thank you for supporting this.  Any questions--call me at 607-267-9337, and remember to say (and sing with David Rovics!)
NO FRACKING WAY!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4qledBpbig
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Wednesday, November 16, 2011

TWO WEEKS LATER--OCCUPY DEFENSE LETTER APPEARS


well--they did get the headline 'wrong'--but then my local newspaper does own the printing press.  Click on the newspaper opinion page http://thedailystar.com/opinion/x1022081317/Letters-to-the-Editor-Nov-16-2011 if you'd care to give it a little love.  I'm sure it will get some folks (probably more academic liberal types) in a lather.

Occupied by Revels, Slaves, and Courtjesters?
Recent Millard Filmore cartoons and letters about the “Occupy” movement conflict with my knowledge that 4-tour Marine Scott Olsen lies damaged by rioting paramilitary police in Oakland.   Award-winning journalist and theologian Chris Hedges calls Occupiers “the best among us.”   Having visited a few general assemblies in D.C. and NYC, I must agree with him.  They are clean, respectful, and principled. 
Sadly, the U.S. has no Canadian style law banning media liars--or we could ban Fox News and derivative ‘humor’ from Filmore.
  As a journalist since 1977, with a Masters and PhD in critical media analysis, I feel obligated to point the Star to the shining example of the late Ralph McGill, who put his pro-integration editorials on the front page--replete with photograph.   McGill and other publishers of his era, such as Hodding Carter II, knew that reactionaries have a history of calling ‘dirty’ those who ‘betray’ white middle class privilege to denounce injustice.  Consider Dr. Martin Luther King’s Letter From Birmingham Jail, which praised brave publishers like McGill thusly:  “...Unlike so many of their moderate brothers and sisters, they have recognized the urgency of the moment and sensed the need for powerful “action” antidotes....” 
I would like to think the Star would willingly stop carrying Filmore, and other ‘conservative’ liars.  
Anti-falsehood legislation would undoubtedly over-reach.
However, responsible editorial fiat could provide a sane middle ground.
So, please reconsider paying known liars.  In the words of Hedges:  “There are no excuses left....Either you obstruct... the plundering by the criminal class on Wall Street and accelerated destruction of the ecosystem that sustains the human species, or become the passive enabler of a monstrous evil....Either you are a rebel or a slave.”