Bill McKibben on Burlington’s Letter on Understanding with Lockheed

(Jonathan writes, “Using the very real climate crisis as a fig leaf for getting in bed with Lockheed to deal with his leading political liability is beyond the pale.”  I agree. – promoted by Maggie Gundersen)

Noted environmental author and founder of 350.org Bill McKibben on Burlington’s Letter on Understanding with Lockheed:

“As someone who thinks a lot about local economies, one of the things we’re really good in Vermont at, better than Lockheed are these kind of solutions. […] We probably don’t have to go to find that outside help. I take seriously the idea that people can change, it’s harder to see how corporations as deeply enmeshed in one way of doing business and looking at the world as Lockheed is can change. […] Some of the stuff Lockheed or anyone else would advise us to do would happen automatically if we did the necessary political work at the national level that we need to do. If Lockheed was willing to pull out of the US Chamber of Commerce and say ‘they don’t speak for us, we don’t like the way they deal with climate energy,’ then that strikes me, then I’d be willing to give them a look at what they wanted to do here in Burlington. I don’t think that’s going to happen and until it does I would be disinclined to get too deeply in bed with them.”

McKibben’s 350.org just launched a new campaign ‘The US Chamber Doesn’t Speak For Me’ 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.” According to a recent New York Times article, (“Justices Offer Receptive Ear to Business Interests” 12/18/10) “[The Chamber of Commerce] board includes executives from some of the nation’s biggest companies, including Lockheed Martin.” The Chamber of Commerce filed a brief in a Supreme Court Case stating, “a suit by eight states against power companies over carbon dioxide emissions, ‘has potentially disastrous implications for the U.S. business community.'”

The New York Times article links to the Supreme Court brief which illuminates the lengths the Chamber of Commerce and its corporate partners including Lockheed will go to, to block carbon reductions:

“The Chamber works to discourage ill-conceived policies and measures which could damage the economic security of the United States and instead encourages long term technological innovation and long term clean technology development. The Chamber believes that nuisance suits such as this one which seeks to impose caps and reductions on carbon dioxide emissions in piecemeal fashion on an arbitrary subset of U.S. industry are an especially ill-conceived and constitutionally illegitimate response.”

For Burlington to work with a corporation which According to William Hartung’s Prophets of War performs drone bombing in Pakistan, buys scandal plagued companies interrogating prisoners in Abu Ghraib, lobbies against nuclear weapons treaties and performs warrantless wiretapping on Americans is bad enough. Discovering Lockheed via its seat on the Chamber pushes the Supreme Court to not regulate carbon emissions on a state and Federal level begs serious questions about the Kiss administration’s commitment to addressing climate change.

In Seven Days recent cover story (“Up In Arms” 2/9/11), Mayor Kiss invokes crisis and urgency saying “There’s enough urgency to this issue of climate change that we need to look for all the partners that are out there.” So it’s deeply disappointing that according to its website Mayor Kiss hasn’t convened his Mayoral Task Force on Climate Change (E2C2) full of award winning local climate change talent since November 14, 2007.

Now that City Council has overwhelmingly passed a resolution rebuking the lack of transparency and public comment which Mayor Kiss would attach Burlington’s sterling reputation to Lockheed; now that Burlingtonians have spoken out unanimously at City Council in overwhelming number, including green engineers and sustainability leaders; now that UVM Student Government has overwhelmingly passed a similar resolution critiquing this most unlikely of bedfellows; one would hope Mayor Kiss would listen. One would hope Mayor Kiss would do the moral, just and right thing and end this corporate PR job of a deal, quickly re-convene his long dormant Mayoral Task Force on Climate Change, and find more appropriate and just ways to incentivize Burlington’s already award-winning responses climate change.

When discussing the Lockheed Letter of Understanding Mayor Kiss mentions potential Burlington Telecom financing from Lockheed. Using the very real climate crisis as a fig leaf for getting in bed with Lockheed to deal with his leading political liability is beyond the pale. When I supported Mayor Kiss on the re-election trail in 2008, he invoked in debates the words of former Burlington Mayor Bernie Sanders’: “Burlington is open for business but not for sale.” If Burlingtonians keep organizing and speaking out against the Lockheed Letter of Understanding, hopefully we can help Mayor Kiss live up to those words.

3 thoughts on “Bill McKibben on Burlington’s Letter on Understanding with Lockheed

  1. pokes fun at Glen Beck for identifying 350.org as a “communist” organization, thus demonstrating once again that Beck’s synapses are held together with crazy-glue.  One has to wonder if he even knows what 350.org’s mission actually is.

    It’s not difficult to imagine a scenario in which the Chamber winds-up Beck’s paranoia machine and targets it on whomever or whatever is in the way at the moment.

  2. and judging from the jumbled syntax, i hope it’s just a transcription of me speaking, maybe at a benefit for Branch Out Burlington a couple of weeks ago? If it was, there was another point I made then that got lost in the transcription somewhere, which is that–though I don’t know him except once to shake hands–my impression is not that Mayor Kiss had some sinister motive for dealing with Lockheed. I think he very much wants to help Burlington cut carbon emissions; I know he’s not a popular figure on this blog, but my guess is his heart is very much in the right place on this.

    It would actually be an excellent test to see if Lockheed was willing to quit the US Chamber; if they are, that strikes me as serious evidence of their sincerity in the fight against global warming. So maybe some of the campaigners should ask them.  Gave a small talk at Goddard College in Plainfield last night and collected a couple of dozen businesses willing to take the “US Chamber Doesn’t Speak for Me” pledge.If I was having any more babies, I’d work with Moon Mouuntain Midwifery, and if my back hurt I’d go to Zippy Life Physical Therapy.  Many thanks to the thousands joining in in the first week around the country.  Anyone can help: chamber.350.org

    thanks, bill

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