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March 7, 2011
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From Madison, Wisconsin to Washington D.C, we’ve seen how dirty corporation-funded lobby groups have been trying every trick in the book to undermine people-powered progress and climate solutions. Last month, thousands of uncovered emails revealed a plot to spy on and sabotage critics of the US Chamber of Commerce; at the helm of this campaign were three law firms closely linked to the US Chamber of Commerce.
This week several members of Congress called for an investigation into this smear campaign, which could be held up for counts of domestic spying, fraud, forgery, extortion, cyber stalking, defamation, harassment, violations of cyber law, forgery, blackmail, libel, and slander.
Not only were these acts wildly inappropriate and an invasion of privacy, they were also quite bizarre; the law firm trolled for photos of the families of Chamber critics, researching minute and irrelevant details (ex. “attends Jewish church”, “enjoys photographing children.”)
While this most recent tactic is certainly as appalling, backhanded, and undemocratic as they come, it is not an isolated incident in the US Chamber’s considerable history of deceit and foul play.
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March 4, 2011
Today, the US Chamber demonstrated yet again how it represents the interests of wealthy oil companies instead of the priorities of the American public.
In the wake of the devastating financial crisis, Congress is undertaking an effort to create a new set of rules under the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to better protect consumers and avoid future economic disasters.
One of the proposed rule changes would require extraction issuers, like oil and coal companies, to disclose “certain payments made for projects relating to the commercial development of oil, natural gas or minerals, including payments to various governments in connection with such projects.”
From the Ecuadorian Amazon to the oil fields of Nigeria, “extraction issuers” have been involved in all sorts of shady dealings, including human rights abuses, environmental disasters, and government corruption. Additional transparency would help the public understand the true cost of our ongoing addiction to oil and reign in the corporate abuses of wealthy fossil fuel companies.
So why is the US Chamber, which claims to represent the “interests of more than 3 million businesses” (they added that “interests of” after Mother Jones exposed them as falsely claiming to actually represent those businesses), deploying their lobbyists to fight the new rules?
As the saying goes, “Follow the money.” The Chamber of Commerce doesn’t have to say where it gets its money, but last year a group called U.S. ChamberWatch used one of the last disclosure laws still in existence to uncover a single pertinent fact. They went to the headquarters of the chamber and asked to see its IRS 990 form. It showed that 55 percent of its funding came from just 16 companies, each of which gave more than a million dollars. It doesn’t have to say which companies, but the Chamber’s consistent, virulent opposition to rules like the ones for extraction industries make it pretty clear.
Karen Harbert, head of the Chamber’s energy front group, the Orwellian sounding Institute for 21st Century Energy, issued the following statement today: “Given the hostile environment for exploration here at home, which has driven companies out of the U.S. and into overseas markets, one must begin to wonder exactly where American companies are supposed to turn to obtain the oil and gas that we currently rely on for more than 95% of our transportation fuel.”
The answer, of course, is that we can’t continue to rely on oil and gas to power our economy. Every President since Richard Nixon has declared the need to end our addiction to oil, but thanks to the dirty lobbying of wealthy corporate front groups like the Chamber of Commerce we’re still addicted. And until we show that groups like the Chamber are the true threat to our energy security, we’re going to remain victim to the price hikes (and carbon emissions) that come with that addiction.
Thankfully, America is ready for change. In the last week, over 1,000 businesses have stood up and said “The US Chamber Doesn’t Speak for Me.” Let’s go out and get the next 1,000 to help build this growing wave!
March 1, 2011
350.org founder Bill McKibben has a piece in the Washington Post this morning about his life as a “communist.” Take a look below.
Say this for Glenn Beck, he works fast. Less than 48 hours after we launched our campaign to let businesses say that the US Chamber of Commerce didn’t represent them, Beck hit back. A true friend of Chamber (here’s a picture of him, broadcasting from their roof; certainly worth the $10,000 he donated from his $32 million earnings), he put little old 350.org up on his board Friday night next to a hammer and sickle. We were part of a communistic conspiracy that also included the Apollo Alliance, not to mention the Service Employees International Union.
In some sense, I guess, this pleased us. Right back to J. Edgar Hoover and his attacks on Martin Luther King, ‘communist’ has always been the epithet of choice for any organizers who’ve shown signs of being effective. (The Tea Party is obviously chagrined that actual working people in Wisconsin are upstaging them). In some other way, it’s just sad: confronted with the hard choices posed by physics and chemistry, Beck (like too many others) tries to figure out some spectral ghost to blame. But it didn’t seem worth getting mad–better, perhaps, to point out that there’s something…funny about Beck.
Hence this little essay, in this morning’s WaPo:
My life as a communist
By Bill McKibben
My life as a communist actually began without me knowing it, on Friday evening, when Glenn Beck spent his program explaining about a “communistic” conspiracy that included 10 groups in America. One was 350.org, a global campaign to fight climate change that I helped found three years ago. He even put our logo up on his whiteboard – and next to it a hammer and sickle.
Since I don’t actually watch Mr. Beck, I didn’t know about it until e-mails began to arrive, informing me that indeed I was a communist. My first reaction was: I’m not a communist. I’m a Methodist.
But then I reconsidered. What exactly was I doing when those e-mails arrived? I was downloading an iPad app, At Bat 11, which lets me (for only $14.99) hear the broadcast of any baseball game anywhere in the country. Since I live in New England, I use it to track our beloved Boston squad, whose moniker I had never before deeply contemplated. Now—well, enough said.
And the next morning, on my first full day as a communist? I spent most of it outdoors, at the annual New England festival for young cross-country ski racers. More than 500 kids from across the region were competing, and I was standing on the toughest hill cheering. And here’s the thing – at least with the first- and second-graders, I was cheering for everyone equally. Not only that, but did you know where this particular type of skiing was invented? Norway.
Some people laugh at Mr. Beck – earlier in the same week, for instance, he’d ventured the opinion that “Reformed Judaism” was pretty much the same as Islamic extremism. Not 100 percent correct, but the next day he apologized, and explained the research technique that that had led to the slight miss: “I had, was having a conversation with a few friends the night before—one of them, I trust on things like this, and I’m not even sure if I misunderstood him, or misheard him, or what.” In my case, though, the evidence seemed fairly damning.
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February 15, 2011
Welcome to the “US Chamber Doesn’t Speak For Me,” a new campaign by 350.org to show that when it comes to climate and energy, the US Chamber of Commerce represents the interests of big polluters, not everyday American business.
350.org Founder, Bill McKibben, launched the campaign this Tuesday with an article titled “Money Pollution” that’s now been published in TomDispatch, CBS News, Huffington Post, Daily Kos, Alternet, TruthDig, Guernica, and elsewhere. You can read the entire post below. Many thanks to the good people at TomDispatch for spreading the word!
Money Pollution
by Bill McKibben
Aerial view of Washington D.C.
In Beijing, they celebrate when they have a “blue sky day,” when, that is, the haze clears long enough so that you can actually see the sun. Many days, you can’t even make out the next block.
Washington, by contrast, looks pretty clean: white marble monuments, broad, tree-lined avenues, the beautiful, green spread of the Mall. But its inhabitants—at least those who vote in Congress—can’t see any more clearly than the smoke-shrouded residents of Beijing.
Their view, however, is obscured by a different kind of smog. Call it money pollution. The torrents of cash now pouring unchecked into our political system cloud judgment and obscure science. Money pollution matters as much as or more than the other kind of dirt. That money is the single biggest reason that, as the planet swelters through the warmest years in the history of civilization, we have yet to take any real action as a nation on global warming.
And if you had to pick a single “power plant” whose stack was spewing out the most smoke? No question about it, that would be the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, whose headquarters are conveniently located directly across the street from the White House. On its webpage, the chamber brags that it’s the biggest lobby in Washington, “consistently leading the pack in lobbying expenditures.” Read the rest of this entry »