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Bill McKibben

Bill McKibben

Posted: September 16, 2010 03:05 PM

Cross-posted with tomdispatch.com.

I got to see the now-famous enthusiasm gap up close and personal last week, and it wasn’t a pretty sight.

The backstory: I help run a global warming campaign called 350.org.  In mid-summer, we decided to organize an effort to ask world leaders to put solar panels on the roofs of their residences. It was to be part of the lead-up to a gigantic Global Work Party on Oct. 10 (10-10-10), and a way to give prime ministers and politburos something easy to do in the hope of getting the fight against global warming slowly back on track. One of those crucial leaders is, of course, Barack Obama, who stood by with his arms folded this summer while the Senate punted on climate-change legislation.  We thought this might be a good way for him to signal that he was still committed to change, even though he hadn’t managed to pass new laws.

And so we tracked down the solar panels that once had graced the White House roof, way back in the 1970s under Jimmy Carter. After Ronald Reagan took them down, they’d spent the last few decades on the cafeteria roof at Unity College in rural Maine.  That college’s president, Mitch Thomashow, immediately offered us a panel to take back to the White House. Better still, he encouraged three of his students to accompany the panel, not to mention allowing the college’s sustainability coordinators to help manage the trip.

And so, on the day after Labor Day, we set off in a biodiesel college van. Solar road trip!  Guitars, iPods, excellent snack food, and for company, the rock star of solar panels, all 6 x 3-feet and 140 pounds of her. We pulled into Boston that first night for a rally at Old South Church, where a raucous crowd lined up for the chance to sign the front of the panel, which quickly turned into a giant glass petition. The same thing the next night in New York, and then D.C., with an evening at one of the city’s oldest churches headlined by the Reverend Lennox Yearwood, head of the Hip-Hop Caucus.

It couldn’t have been more fun. Wherever we could, we’d fire up the panel, pour a gallon of water in the top, point it toward the sun, and eight or nine minutes later you’d have steaming hot water coming out the bottom. Thirty-one years old and it worked like a charm -- a vexing reminder that we’ve known how to do this stuff for decades. We just haven’t done it.

That’s what we kept telling reporters as they turned out along the route: If the Obamas will put solar panels back on the White House roof, or on the lawn, or anywhere else where people can see them, it will help get the message across -- the same way that seed sales climbed 30% across the country in the year after Michelle planted her garden.

There was just one nagging concern as we headed south.  We still hadn’t heard anything conclusive from the White House. We’d asked them -- for two months -- if they’d accept the old panel as a historical relic returned home, and if they’d commit to installing new ones soon.  We’d even found a company, Sungevity, that was eager to provide them free.  Indeed, as word of our trip spread, other solar companies kept making the same offer.  Still, the White House never really responded, not until Thursday evening around six p.m. when they suddenly agreed to a meeting at nine the next morning.

As you might imagine, we were waiting at the “Southwest Appointment Gate” at 8:45, and eventually someone from the Office of Public Engagement emerged to escort us inside the Executive Office Building. He seated us in what he called “the War Room,” an ornate and massive chamber with a polished table in the middle.

Every window blind was closed.  It was a mahogany cave in which we could just make out two environmental bureaucrats sitting at the far end of the table. I won’t mention their names, on the theory that what followed wasn’t really their idea, but orders they were following from someone else. Because what followed was… uncool.

First, they spent a lot of time bragging about all the things the federal government had accomplished environmentally, with special emphasis on the great work they were doing on other federal buildings.  One of them returned on several occasions to the topic of a government building in downtown Portland, Oregon, that would soon be fitted with a “green curtain,” by which I think she meant the “extensive vertical garden” on the 18-story Edith Green-Wendell Wyatt Federal Building with its massive “vegetated fins,” the single largest use of stimulus money in the entire state.

And actually, it’s kind of great. Still, I doubt many people are going to build their own vegetated fins, and anyway I was beginning to despair that nothing could stop the flow of self-praise until one of the three seniors from Unity raised her hand and politely interrupted.

Now, let me say that I already knew Jean Altomare, Amanda Nelson, and Jamie Nemecek were special, but my guess is the bureaucrats hadn’t figured that out. Unity is out in the woods, and these kids were majoring in things like wildlife conservation. They’d never had an encounter like this.  It stood to reason that they’d be cowed. But they weren’t.

One after another, respectfully but firmly, they asked a series of tough questions and refused to be filibustered by yet another stream of administration-enhancing data. Here’s what they wanted to know: If the administration was serious about spreading the word on renewable energy, why wouldn’t it do the obvious thing and put solar panels on the White House?  When the administrators proudly proffered a clipping from some interior page of the Washington Post about their “greening the government initiative,” Amanda calmly pointed out that none of her neighbors read the Post and that, by contrast, the solar panels had made it onto David Letterman.

To their queries, the bureaucrats refused to provide any answer.  At all.  One kept smiling in an odd way and saying, “If reporters call and ask us, we will provide our rationale,” but whatever it was, they wouldn’t provide it to us.

It was all a little odd, to say the least. They refused to accept the Carter panel as a historic relic, or even to pose for a picture with the students and the petition they’d brought with them. Asked to do something easy and symbolic to rekindle a little of the joy that had turned out so many of us as volunteers for Obama in 2008, they point blank said no. In a less than overwhelming gesture, they did, however, pass out Xeroxed copies of a 2009 memorandum from Vice President Biden about federal energy policy.

I can tell you exactly what it felt like, because those three students were brave and walked out graciously, heads high and kept their tears back until we got to the sidewalk. And then they didn’t keep them back, because it’s a tough thing to learn for the first time how politics can work.

If you want to know about the much-discussed enthusiasm gap between Democratic and Republican bases, in other words, this was it in action. As Jean Altomare told the New York Times, “We went in without any doubt about the importance of this. They handed us a pamphlet.” And Amanda Nelson added, “I didn’t expect I’d get to shake President Obama’s hand, but it was really shocking to me to find out that they really didn’t seem to care.”

Did I say I was impressed with these young women? I was more than impressed. Nobody I went to Harvard with would have handled it as powerfully as they did (maybe because they weren’t looking for a job in the White House someday). A few hot tears were the right response, followed by getting on with the work.

Our next question, out there on the sidewalk, was how to handle the situation -- which, indeed, we had to do right away, because in today’s blog-speed world, you’re supposed to Put Out a Statement to reporters, not to mention Tweet. So how to play it?

The normal way is to claim some kind of victory: we could have said we had an excellent exchange of views and that the administration had taken seriously our plea. But that would have been lying, and at 350.org, we long ago decided not to do that. The whole premise of our operation, beginning with the number at its core, is that we had better always tell the truth about our actual predicament.

Alternatively, we could have rounded on the administration, and taken our best shot. In fact, it would have been easy enough right then and there for me to chain myself to the White House fence with the panel next to me. It would have gotten some serious press (though not as much as if I’d burned a Quran). And in fact, some of our supporters were counseling that I head for the fence immediately.

We got an email, for instance, from a veteran campaigner I deeply respect who said:

Show Obama you can't be taken for granted, and I predict you will be amazed at the good things that come your way. This is a watershed moment: if they think they can get away with this with you, they'll judge they can get away with more in the future. If you show them they can't get away with it (at the very least without embarrassment), they will come your way more in the future. It's power politics, pure and simple. This is how the game is played. Get their respect!

And I think he was probably right.  As he pointed out, Obama was even then on the phone with the mustachioed Florida geezer, the stack of Qurans, and the following of 50 or less. But I couldn’t do it, not then and there. Because… well, because on some level I’m a political wuss.

I couldn’t stand to make that enthusiasm gap any wider, not seven weeks before an election. True, it’s the moment when you have some leverage, but no less true: The other side was running candidate after candidate who literally couldn’t wait to boast about how they didn’t believe in climate change. (Check out R.L. Miller’s highly useful list of "climate zombies.") That’s why we’re deeply engaged in fights this fall like the battle to defeat California’s Prop. 23 and save the state’s landmark climate law. As a group we can’t endorse candidates, but I came home and spent part of the weekend mailing small checks to Senate candidates I admire, men like Paul Hodes from New Hampshire, who have fought hard for serious climate legislation.

And a confession. We’d walked past Obama’s official portrait on the way out and, despite the meeting we’d just had, I couldn’t help but smile at the thought that he was president.  I could remember my own enthusiasm from two years ago that had me knocking on doors across New Hampshire. I admired his character and his smarts, and if I admire them a little less now, the residue’s still there.

And so I couldn’t help thinking -- part of me at least -- like this: the White House political team has decided that if they put solar panels up on the roof, Fox News will use that as one more line of attack; that they somehow believe the association with Jimmy Carter is the electoral equivalent of cooties; and that, in the junior high school lunchroom that now comprises our political life, they didn’t want to catch any.

If that’s their thinking, I doubt they’re on the mark.  As far as I can tell, the right has a far better understanding of the power of symbols.  Witness the furor they’ve kicked up over “the mosque at Ground Zero.” My feeling is: We should use the symbols we’ve got, and few are better than a solar panel. Still, with the current craziness in mind, I was willing to give them a pass.  So we just put out a press release saying that we’d failed in our mission and walked away.

At least for now, but not forever, and really not for much longer.

On Oct. 10, we’re having our great global work party, and ever since Obama stiffed us, registrations for its events have been soaring. Last week, with the heads of Greenpeace and Rainforest Action Network, I issued a call for ideas about how to mount a campaign of civil disobedience around climate. Not a series of stunts, but a real campaign. At coal plants and drilling sites -- and at the places where our politicians do their work.

Actually, I’ll be surprised if the White House doesn’t put up solar panels within a year. But even if they do, that would just be the barest of beginnings. We’ve run out of spare decades to deal with climate change -- the summer’s events in the Arctic, in Russia, in Pakistan proved that with great clarity. I may be a wuss, but I’m also scientifically literate. We know what we need to do, and we will do it. Enthusiastically.

Bill McKibben is the founder of 350.org and author most recently of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet. He is a scholar in residence at Middlebury College.

Copyright 2010 Bill McKibben

 

Follow Bill McKibben on Twitter: www.twitter.com/billmckibben

 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Catherine Fitzpatrick
12:19 PM on 09/21/2010
There are two things wrong with this campaign.

1) the giddy belief that Obama will do some grand gesture just because you think it's cool -- he really doesn't have a reason *not* to put in the solar panel, given its PR value, but he simply may not bother

2) the unreasonable obsessiveness of the hysterical NGO. OK, so you failed on plan A. Where's plan B and C? what *other* things can the administration do that would help the environment, even if they won't play along with your grand-standing publicity gimmick that is mainly designed to put peas in your own vanity pot? What's this about, anyway, making silly solar pane gestures (we don't need the White House to be boiling water for us!) or really making policy? Politics is the art of compromise; civic action is the art of never compromising -- yet making some small steps toward your goal so that you don't become isolated. Read all those boring government brochures, and come up with a plan; don't be whiners and posturers.
09:38 AM on 09/20/2010
I don't think the Obama White House is just concerned about FOX news distorting what they do and painting everything in a negative light. I think it has been painfully obvious that the entire corporate media is hauling water for establishment Republicans. Heck, even so called liberals are doing what they can to increase the "enthusiasm gap".
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01:28 AM on 09/20/2010
What can you expect from a president whose D o J is going after environmental hero Tim deChristopher for TEN YEARS in federal prison for having stopped the illegal Bush public land sale late in 08?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
11:54 PM on 09/19/2010
I am proud of the efforts of the people at 350.org and their associates for their work on environmental issues. I am not proud of the response from the Administration. This story reminds me of the group that delivered an electric motorcycle as a gift to Obama and were rudely dismissed in a similar fashion. Both these occasions could have been used as an inspirational story of American ingenuity and action in the face of adversity, but the oportunities were squandered, and even more, they were made into a negative publicity event. I understand that the President may not want to display favoritism in taking gifts from private companies, but is that any different then accepting campaign contributions? The Administration should at least acknowledge the intentions of the gifts publically, if only on a U-tube quick video. A few minutes or a personal statement would give much inspiration with little effort.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:01 PM on 09/19/2010
I am disgusted by Obama. Do I not vote or do I vote for Republicans that will destroy everything in sight and steal what they couldn't break? Its quite a choice we have. 2013 offers us a new world, lets make the best of it.
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11:28 PM on 09/19/2010
Why are you "disgusted"? Even the author of this article admits that he believes the President will place solar panels on the White House. Does he have to fight the battles that you want him to fight on your timetable? Grow up.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:35 PM on 09/19/2010
You and the author are far too overly optimistic. Give me a call in 2 yrs when they still aren't there and you can tell me to grow up then.
06:53 PM on 09/19/2010
Free solar panels?
Seriously?
Who turns down free solar panels? I'll take a few.
That's not fiscally smart thinking if you ask me.
Hello they are free! Put them somewhere...
04:54 PM on 09/19/2010
It's a poignant story, but come on, the politics really are problematic here. The problem is not the solar panels, it's the association with Carter, who, despite being a very good President, is precisely the sort of atmospherics the White House does not need right now. The last thing Obama needs just before an election is people making comparisons between him and Carter. Unfair, junior high school, call it whatever you like, but it is a real political danger. Obama does need to come out and make a difference, but repeating gestures that Carter made isn't the way to do it.

Let's face it: what we need is national energy policy to encourage renewables. Putting solar panels on the roof of the White House is political symbolism, not serious policy, and it's symbolism that is almost surely bound to be ridiculed. It's not worth the cost.
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jlive2003
Do not block the road of inquiry
07:40 PM on 09/19/2010
They ought to try to bring the historical narrative back to something like the truth. Put up the panels, praise Carter as a visionary, and condemn Reagan as a fool.

In any event, Obama has lost my vote for 2012.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:03 PM on 09/19/2010
you aren't the only one, i am too liberal, i had my teaching moment already.
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07:42 PM on 09/19/2010
Exactly. And I'm having trouble imagining that no one, along this involved chain of events, either figured this out or had it explained to them by a more worldly fellow activist.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:04 PM on 09/19/2010
worldly does not mean wrong sided.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HenryS
04:48 PM on 09/19/2010
This is easy! Chain yourself to the fence, and then the next day send a friend who can go take a tour of George Bush's old stage in Crawford, Texas. Bush actually had a house with a number of environmentally friendly features, showcase those which will be media gold as it says something nice about Republicans and also reminds everyone of the Carter years so it would be a wash. Say if even George Bush has the sense to do this, then why doesn't the Obama White House? The notion will be amusing, something nice to say about Republicans - which is catnip to a guy like Obama, and it is good symbolism.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:05 PM on 09/19/2010
Sadly the white house staff is far more interested in watching fox news.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iblogleft
Certifiable
04:33 PM on 09/19/2010
They just need people that give them wads of cash right now, and the only people left with wads of cash are corporations. They will not anger any corporations until next year, and only after this years GDP numbers come out.

They are so afraid of negative GDP they will take advice from Beck at this point.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:08 PM on 09/19/2010
When the numbers come out this year they will be afraid of numbers in 2012, and 2014, and 2016. They have no convictions -- just worries. Not a good way to keep shop.
.
04:18 PM on 09/19/2010
The author of this article states: "And so I couldn’t help thinking -- part of me at least -- like this: the White House political team has decided that if they put solar panels up on the roof, Fox News will use that as one more line of attack..."

Bingo!
05:27 PM on 09/19/2010
Nevertheless, the best defense is a good offense. Acting paralyzed out of fear of what Fox News will do, when they'll attack you no matter *what* you do, is essentially suicide.
04:05 PM on 09/19/2010
Obama should have been brave and undertaken so many liberal initiatives that Fox Nausea could not have kept up. The right is easily confused and watching them in angry frenzy is so much fun.
02:14 PM on 09/19/2010
There's no doubt that McKibben's working on some extremely important issues. Unfortunately his prose is so boring and his purview so ego-centric that reading him is a serious tribulation even for the dedicated. I can only wonder how many budding 'green' partisans he's put to sleep. A pity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
adrianrf
Another job-creating immigrant
10:59 PM on 09/19/2010
not exactly a slashingly incisive prose merchant yourself, are ya?
and with bugger-all of substantive value to boot.

nice.
02:09 PM on 09/19/2010
We could have gone green 40 years ago. The fact that we haven't speaks volumes of not only our government, but of our society.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
iblogleft
Certifiable
04:34 PM on 09/19/2010
I would say more our economic system...
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
vonbek
Forget revolution we need evolution
04:43 PM on 09/19/2010
Carter tried, told us we needed to conserve, said cars must be getting 40 mpg by 1994. Then Reagan gets elected saying we do not need to conserve energy and removes the White House solar panels and lowered the cafe standard. Republicans are not conservatives, they are corporatist that believe corporations can solve all our problems, think that used to be called fascism.
garystartswithg
el sueno de la razon produce republicans
11:39 PM on 09/19/2010
until people learned the lesson mussolini learned we aren't going to get anywhere. you can't play nice with people that don't play nice themselves.
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snowballinhell
Humans have a 100% chance of extinction
11:09 PM on 09/21/2010
Republicans who support their corporate masters don't care if our problems are solved or not. They don't care - don't recognize the seriousness of our problems and find them mere impediments to their aims. Think Joe Barton. Think Inconvenient Truth. They want power so they can wield power for the powerful corporate interests over the interests of humanity. That's us, isn't it? We need to all just get out of their magnanimous way. In league with their corporate masters, they will be fascists.
10:56 AM on 09/19/2010
Good for the President
10:31 AM on 09/19/2010
It sure does seem as if the current administration worries more about what a few branches of the MSM say about them than what the people who voted for them say.