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Rose Marie Berger

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The Plot Thickens: Far-Right Group Joins Chorus for Keystone XL

Posted: 02/ 9/2012 1:44 pm

Last week Sen. John Hoeven (R-ND) introduced a bill (S. 2041) that would give Congress the authority to approve the controversial transcontinental Keystone XL pipeline, without the President's approval. Forty-four Republicans and three Democrats signed on as co-sponsors.

According to MapLight, which analyzes industry campaign contributions to members of Congress, one of the top 12 funders supporting Hoeven's bill is the John Birch Society, a conspiracy-minded network that led Red-baiting campaigns in the 1950s, organized against the civil rights movement in the 1960s, and recently has raised its ugly head to crush collective bargaining in Wisconsin and elsewhere.

The John Birch Society is what you might call "the businessman's Klan" -- more polite, less violent -- and has long been linked to oil companies and far-right political agendas.

Why is the JBS interested in this climate-killing pipeline?

Because the fight happening in Congress over the Keystone XL has taken a turn. It is no long about the tipping point of climate change or jobs, energy security or the Ogallala Aquifer. It's about crushing the power of the executive office -- especially when that power is in the hands of a black man.

Since the triumph of democratic social forces after the height of the civil rights movement, JBS has been casting about for new enemies. President Obama is an easy target -- but so are environmentalists.

According to the Southern Poverty Law Center's Hatewatch publication, JBS has done as much or more than any other group on the radical right to foster panic over a set of international principles aimed at addressing resource depletion -- especially oil.

JBS "has held more than a dozen conferences across of the nation in the last six months to sound the alarm," wrote Ryan Lenz this week. JBS is once again fighting "the new world order" only this time it's in the form of UN environmental resolutions and a newly invigorated grassroots environmental movement in the U.S. that is flexing its populist muscles.

The "sunshine" group MapLight additionally reports that all but five of the senators who support the pipeline have the oil and gas industry among their top contributors. In fact, 19 of the top 20 recipients of campaign contributions connected to the oil and gas industry co-sponsored the bill.

It is no surprise the John Birch Society is showing its face on this issue. It has long given moral and pseudo-religious cover for White Anglo Saxon Protestant corporate control of the political process -- whether local or national.

For those of us in the long-term struggle to advance a democratic America where all human dignity is protected and where we don't foul our own nest (or allows others to do so), we expect push-back. We aren't afraid of it. We don't despair over it.

As civil rights historian Vincent Harding puts it, "That's the nature of struggle. One side pushes and the other side pushes back."

Millions have rallied alongside President Obama's decision to deny TransCanada the Keystone XL permit. We understand the stakes. If the Alberta Tar Sands are opened and the pipeline goes through then, according to leading climate scientists, processing that unconventional tar sand sludge will push climate change into an irreversible spiral.

The John Birch Society has lots of money. But it is made up of human beings who want to enjoy the fruits of the earth for a long time to come. I invite them to join the winning side in the movement to care for creation with justice, humility, and equity as we move into our common future.

I also remind them: We know their history -- and ours -- and we're not afraid to speak it abroad in the land.

 
 
 

Follow Rose Marie Berger on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RMBerger

 
 
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12:57 PM on 02/10/2012
"According to MapLight, which analyzes industry campaign contributions to members of Congress, one of the top 12 funders supporting Hoeven's bill is the John Birch Society." How about getting the facts straight before you report them. Click the link to MapLight and you have to click the link "12 Organizations Support and 6 Oppose; See Which Ones" to see Organizations that took a position pro or con. Taking a position is not the same thing as funding.
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K August
Research Alec Exposed
04:34 AM on 02/10/2012
This makes sense......the Koch's own the existing Keystone1 pipeline and their daddy was one of the original founders of John Birch.
They also have financial ties to the Alberta tar sands...... FlintHills I think is the name of their company.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MrBIgp
If I'm wrong, please show me
01:18 AM on 02/10/2012
Are they still around?
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K August
Research Alec Exposed
04:31 AM on 02/10/2012
Yep they are but they're not in the limelight as much........they just talk with their money these days.
09:48 PM on 02/09/2012
This is blatantly an attack on The John Birch Society. I for one will tell you that this article is full of twisted informatio­n to suit HUFFPO's Agenda only. For the truth, go to WWW.JBS.OR­G... The John Birch Society makes it their goal to provide the truth. If you want twisted truth go to HUFFPO, it fits their agenda.
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
10:40 PM on 02/09/2012
Help us understand the virtues of JBS. Some of us don't follow them and only hear that they hate black people and want to destroy them. Please enlighten us.
09:37 AM on 02/10/2012
I tried to do just that, but HuffPost did not post my comments rebutting the article. I have it posted on my Facebook account. Boiled down, the JBS seeks less government, more responsibility and--with God's help--a better world. We focus on getting the government back to its proper limitations so the individual can prosper. We do not focus on the collective. We have plenty of minority members who understand that neither political party has helped American families prosper, rather individual liberties have been taken away. They also understand that prosperity is up to them as an individual. Government's role is not to take away from one to give to another, rather it's to safeguard the liberties of all. Check out JBS.org to learn more.