Washington,
DC – The dome was encased in a rigid web of scaffolding as I rushed by.
Looking up at it on my way to the corner of Independence Avenue and New
Jersey Avenue SE, I saw a country trying to hide a fatal illness. It’s
beyond repair, I mumbled to myself, thinking about the deep underlying
rot I see everywhere I look.
Walking
in the shadow of the Capitol Building in the day’s rising heat, my ears
were still ringing. Made uneasy by the inadequate yet intensifying
public scrutiny faced by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
(FERC), the captive government agency that receives its funding from the
very industry it purports to regulate, the rule-makers there no longer
allow its outspoken critics inside the room where monthly public
meetings are held. Instead, we’re relegated to an overflow room where we
have to watch the meeting’s proceedings on a screen. That’s where I’d
just come from.
I
wasn’t discouraged to be in the overflow room, though, because I
already knew such meetings meant little anyway. Not only is public
comment not allowed, but matters are decided on by the FERC
commissioners in difficult to discern code. From the screen inside the
overflow room, I heard the secretary read what would be voted on.
“E1, E2, E3, E4, E5, E6, E7….,” she droned on, only those with special insight able to follow.
The
only sensical sound that could be heard at FERC that morning was the
sound of three screeching whistles that Ted Glick, Steve Norris, and I
sounded in protest as we walked through the lobby and out of the
building, mischief managed, but change left as yet unmade.
I
thought about the fracking pipeline, compressor station, and export
terminal permits that are rolling in like waves during a storm, all
thanks, in part, to FERC’s rubber-stamp. What will it take to stop this
onslaught, I wondered. Those at the levers of this crisis seem blind to
reality.
Arriving
at the corner of Independence and New Jersey, and joining almost two
dozen others who were gathered with signs and banners directed at
members of the House of Representatives, we learned the House was only
an hour away from voting on a bill that would help corporate power grabs
like the secretly negotiated Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) pass
through Congress. Known as Fast Track, this piece of legislation would
make it so Congress could only vote such “free-trade laws” up or down
with no amendments, no filibuster, and little time for debate.
“Vote no on fast track,” a friend shouted to a passing Representative on his way to the debate.
Watching
the Representatives walk back and forth from the Capitol Building and
the House offices, it struck me how insulated they were, surrounded by
donors and lobbyists, seeing little of the direct impacts of the
decisions they made. What about communities that stood to be hurt by
fracking? Why would their Representatives give corporate interests
primacy over their own? Perhaps it’s because they’ve been blinded.
That’s certainly the case with FERC and their blatant insulation from
the public. The big question for me is how to break through those
blinders?
Before
the Fast Track vote came, five of us, all members of Beyond Extreme
Energy (BXE), a coalition of citizens and allied community groups
fighting to stop new fracked gas permits at FERC, headed over to the
Rayburn House Office Building where we had signed up to attend the
Natural Gas Roundtable Luncheon. Congressman Tom Reed (R- NY),
Congressman Jim Costa (D- CA), Congressman Gene Greene (D- TX), and
Congressman Glen Thompson (R- PA) were slated to speak, all co-chairs of
the Congressional Natural Gas Caucus, the caucus focused on promoting
fracked gas in the House and among members of the public. We were going
to gather intelligence on what was being said on the inside, but also
to speak out and make our opposition to fracked gas infrastructure
known.
It
was inside the banquet room, sitting at a table watching the lobbyist
file in, that I received a text about Fast Track from someone following
the votes outside. “In case you haven’t heard yet, we’re doomed,” it
said. Fast Track was going to pass in the House. My heart dropped. I
thought of the dome, the construction, the rot, and the whistles.
I
glanced around the room, reading some of the name tags. A
representative from FERC. Someone from Spectra Energy, the Fortune 500
Company that builds and operates gas pipelines and storage facilities
all around the country. ANGA, American’s Natural Gas Alliance. And many
others.
No
wonder Fast Track was going to pass, I thought. This was the kind of
world our so-called Representatives lived in. Just like FERC, these
people were insulated from the outside, surrounded by the industry, and
effectively held captive to it.
Congressman
Green spoke first, and Ted Glick of BXE delivered his uninvited speech
directly afterwards. Ted’s focus was the release of the Pope’s
encyclical about the realities of human-induced climate change and the
moral imperative to act on it. The room seemed uncomfortable but
determined to brush off his words. Ted sat down and the luncheon
continued.
Congressman
Reed spoke second. He spoke of a farm family he knew in Pennsylvania.
The farmer’s daughter was opposed to fracking, Reed said. The farmer
decided to have a fracking well built on his property anyway. He did it,
Reed explained, because he would be able to use the money he earned
from fracking to pay for his daughter’s college education. It was a
tragic story that highlighted a grave ignorance to the realities of the
climate crisis, not to mention the other negative health impacts of
fracking.
When Reed told the crowd that fracking helps future generations, I felt words involuntarily escape from my lips.
“Fracking kills future generations,” I shouted, much to the room’s displeasure.
Before
I knew it, a police officer was by my side, pulling my arm to remove me
from the room. Once again, the insulation of those at the levers of
destruction was being protected. Knowing it wouldn’t do much good to
walk out quietly, I let my body go limp and shouted to the room as three
officers carried me out. At one point, I remember calling those in the
room criminals, because that’s what I believe they are.
I
was disappointed not to hear the hard-hitting questions asked of the
speakers by fellow Beyond Extreme Energy members after my removal. I
later heard their questions about drought and climate change were not
answered in a straightforward way.
As
I sat in a holding cell an hour later and thoughts of the day raced
through my mind, I was reminded that it’s going to take a whole lot more
than a few individual disruptions to stop permits at FERC, or to stop
corporate power grabs like the TPP, or to neutralize the power and
influence of the fracked gas lobby on our supposed representatives. Such
disruptions and appeals seem to do nothing when the system is set up to
be non-responsive. Nor do I think any one of these endeavors, a few
among many, can be achieved alone in isolated campaigns. Each one rests
on a rotting system that if not dismantled and replaced as a whole, will
leave us with a threatened existence.
If
FERC stops issuing permits, for example, what of the power of the
fracked gas lobby? And what good is delivering a message to Congress,
however disruptive, if Congress is set up to operate in the interests of
the industry? The same can be asked of FERC.
The
time has come to rise up and displace the harmful machine that grinds
on around us. I can’t see how that can be done if a whole lot more of
us aren’t willing to sacrifice our freedom in the process, and maybe
even our lives. Perhaps the unresponsive institutions around us make us
feel alone. Maybe if that illusion is cracked, more will be willing to
take action.
More symptoms of the disease that is capitalism and there is no vaccination against them. The message to be taken from the above is one we offer consistently - 'if not dismantled and replaced as a whole, (it) will leave us with a threatened existence.' Exactly. The evidence is all around that we have been at that stage for some considerable time and that piecemeal efforts to effect reforms have changed little for the good.
The decision is ours to make. Dismantling this system and replacing it with socialism is in our hands. Let's get on with it, together.
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