slcw, to random
@slcw@newsie.social avatar

#Trump is selling our future to the #oilIndustry for his own enrichment. It's being done under the guise of political donations, but there's no chance a significant portion of this "donation" won't end up in his personal bank account. And what does he care? He'll be long gone by the time the details are uncovered, and authorities have any opportunity to hold him accountable. He'll be gone, and our children and grandchildren will be left with the consequences.

#TrumpLies

https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-offers-oil-execs-110bn-in-savings-exchange-support-2024

globalmuseum, to Scotland
@globalmuseum@mastodon.online avatar

National Museums Scotland Assistant Curator of Modern & Contemporary History, Dr Georgia Vullinghs explores the connection between the North Sea oil industry and a 12th century Saint.

https://blog.nms.ac.uk/2024/02/09/north-sea-oil-and-a-medieval-saint-whats-the-connection/

nelsonstreetlad, to Canada
@nelsonstreetlad@mstdn.ca avatar

Let's not have any delusions about the biggest cause of current in . Blame it on Trudeau? Get real.

https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/gas-prices-canada-wide-average-sees-biggest-jump-so-far-in-2024-125909058.html

freezenet, to news
@freezenet@noc.social avatar

Sorry Right Wingers, You Aren’t Going to Jail for Being “Pro-Oil” Under Bill C-372

Right wing troll farms are arguing that Bill C-372 would have people jailed for being "pro-oil". No surprise that's not the case.

There are numerous threats to freedom of expression in Canada right now. Whether it is

https://www.freezenet.ca/sorry-right-wingers-you-arent-going-to-jail-for-being-pro-oil-under-bill-c-372/

TheMetalDog, to climate
@TheMetalDog@mastodon.social avatar
CelloMomOnCars, to climate
@CelloMomOnCars@mastodon.social avatar

"Newly minted House Speaker (R-La.), who won the gavel Wednesday after three prior Republican nominees failed to reach a majority, is a longtime ally of the and will be perhaps the most vocal skeptic of the scientific consensus on ever to hold the speakership."

https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/4275210-mike-johnson-speaker-gop-pro-oil-climate-skeptical-record/

DoomsdaysCW, to climate
@DoomsdaysCW@kolektiva.social avatar

The people of just made history. The world can follow

Voters won a huge battle with the – proving that we can’t save the planet without robust democracy

by , August 31, 2023

"Days ago, voters in Ecuador approved a total ban on oil drilling in protected land in the , a 2.5m-acre tract in the national park that might be the world’s most important hotspot. The area is a Unesco-designated biosphere reserve and home to two non-contacted groups. This could be a major step forward for the entire global climate justice movement in ways that are not yet apparent.

"This vote is important not only for Ecuador and for the Indigenous peoples in the Yasuní, who now have hope of living in peace in perpetuity. It is also a potential model for how we can use the democratic process around the world to help slow or even stop the expansion of fossil fuels to the benefit of billions of people.

"The Yasuní referendum proves that real democracy that respects the popular will can be a powerful tool for transitioning to a sustainable future. Ecuador’s state oil company, , had been producing nearly 60,000 barrels a day in the Yasuní. It now must figure out how to dismantle its entire operation and go home. When in history has a popular vote ever forced an oil company to cease active drilling? Never.

"The Yasuní vote was not the result of a business decision made in a boardroom or government office. It was the product of two decades of organizing by citizens and like you and me. I know because I have been to Ecuador more than 250 times to work on a historic pollution case against on behalf of the Indigenous people there. Many of the same Indigenous leaders and activists who helped fight Chevron organized the Yasuní vote.

"At the same time, the vote underscores how important it is to protect our increasingly fragile democracy. Without a robust democracy that allows citizens to place issues of critical importance on the ballot without the intermediation of elites, the Yasuní referendum never would have happened.

"The flipside is that powerful companies understand the threat a real citizen-based democracy poses to their power. They fear a society where citizens can put referendums on the ballot without the approval of business leaders. Those of us in the climate movement often can’t even stop to focus on the connection between democracy and climate justice because we’re so focused on dealing with the immediate crises taking place before our eyes, such as the Maui fire.

"In the United States, it is not broadly known that the industry quietly funds a national lobbying campaign that has introduced draconian bills in at least 18 states. These laws threaten anyone at an oil or gas facility with huge fines and serious prison sentences; some states even impose criminal liabilities on non-profit advocacy groups that support the protesters. These are really laws of intimidation designed to stop protest before it happens. And they are also manifesting in other countries including , the and .

"As a result, many Americans who have committed acts of non-violent – central to the birth of our country and a cornerstone of our political tradition – now face decades in prison. In Atlanta, , 42 people have been charged by prosecutors with 'domestic terrorism' for trying to save the city’s last green canopy in the . Local police are trying to raze part of the forest to build a military-style police training academy, colloquially called “”, that already resulted in the first police killing of a climate activist in US history. (The police have said that the activist, Manuel Paez , was used a weapon; activists dispute that claim.)

"The Atlanta cases represent a frightening escalation of attacks on and protest in the US. None of those charged – whom authorities accused mainly of vandalism and arson – committed a direct act of violence against another person. Nobody was injured other than the activist shot and killed by police while sitting in the forest.

"That this is happening in a city considered to be one of the cradles of the American civil rights movement shows just how entwined corporate and police power have become in their efforts to erode democratic rights.

"The prosecutions in Georgia are also occurring in a broader context where the right to vote has been seriously impaired. Voter suppression is now a regular feature in many US states, with ludicrous laws being passed to throw out votes. In this short century, two presidents have taken office in the US who did not win the popular vote. Votes are constantly thrown out for the thinnest of reasons, as journalists such as Greg Palast have meticulously documented.

On top of these threats to democracy at the state level, the US and its unelected, mostly justices are weakening both our democracy and its ability to regulate the fossil fuel industry. The court has consistently approved measures like voter ID laws and felon disenfranchisement that make it more difficult for historically marginalized groups to vote. It has also, of late, decided its role is to strike down popular legislation, so who knows what they’d do to a popularly won ban on oil drilling.

"I am an and lawyer, but one reason I spend significant time focused on issues of democracy is because I simply cannot do my work if our political system does not allow the political space to advocate freely. After I helped Indigenous peoples win a major pollution case in Ecuador, I was detained for almost three years in the US after being targeted with the nation’s first-ever corporate prosecution. My own case is a reminder that the normal rules of democracy can easily be suspended when entrenched economic interests face a serious enough threat to their bottom line.

"As I write this, a heat dome in the US sits over the entire midwest and is affecting 100 million people. Fires have destroyed millions of acres of land. A tropical storm just smacked southern California for the first time, and the historic town of Lahaina in Hawaii burned to the ground with hundreds of people still unaccounted for. In the meantime, the oil industry is reporting record profits, creating enormous incentives for a small group of powerful shareholders to maintain their power by shrinking our democratic space.

What the referendum in Ecuador teaches us is that democratic processes when coupled with strong grassroots organizing can produce startlingly effective results. Taking a cue from our friends in that brave country, the next major move for the climate justice movement could be to launch a national campaign to put the simple question presented in Ecuador before the American people in every state that allows citizens to place their own questions on the ballot. The question is whether we can vote to end the destruction of our planet by the burning of fossil fuels.

"It is clear we cannot trust either of the two major US political parties – both of which mostly support fossil fuel expansion – to adequately address this crisis. We simply cannot save the planet without first protecting and strengthening our democracy."

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/aug/31/ecuador-oil-drilling-ban-climate-solution?_hsenc=p2ANqtz-_KbDCZFul0YHH-aJr2OOM78_6qWy0yjw-4jadswGnC7C2P8UVCkkUPQVfzIz3k4tfcZUfA

990000, to Futurology
@990000@mstdn.social avatar
anna_lillith, to random
@anna_lillith@mas.to avatar

SUPPORT PROTECTING FOR THESE ENDANGERED WHALES 🐋

The Gulf of Mexico is home to Rice's whales, one of the world's most endangered whale species. Fewer than 50 of these magnificent mammals remain — yet they have no federally protected critical .

Rice's whales are hovering on the brink of . Vessel collisions, spills, and chronic from and other activities all threaten their survival.

1/3

pvonhellermannn, to Houston
@pvonhellermannn@mastodon.green avatar
itnewsbot, to science
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

Fossil fuel companies must face climate change lawsuits in local courts - The next stop for net neutrality? (credit: Joe Ravi (CC-BY-SA 3.0))

... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=1934146

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