I can't verify Hari's claims  (http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100322/hari
) but what he reports fits the general impression many of us have been 
getting for few years now. 

When corporate creep started, many warned of its corrupting influence, but 
few thought it could penetrate environmentalism's soul.  We twisted 
ourselves to see the wisdom of partnering with polluters--under the 
impression that change from within is possible, that one can shift 
practices by being friend rather than foe.  With Hari's piece, we learn 
that change from within IS possible: the corporates have taken the "long 
walk through the institutions," and have left some of our most venerable 
environmental groups shells for the moneyed green world. 

Hari's article is painful to read.  As Hari points out, those of us who 
care about the earth's ecosystem services and its most vulnerable must now 
add to our list of things to save environmentalism itself.  It is a sad 
day when the very movement we've built to breathe ecological reality into 
our politics is in need of resuscitation. 

But, this is our call.  Let's publicize Hari's critique, and demand 
accountability.  Let's send hardcopies of his article in all of those 
post-paid envelopes we receive asking for our donations.  Let's continue 
to pay our rent on the planet by giving only to those groups who refuse 
polluters' money, and let's support political efforts that speak on behalf 
of ecological and social justice realities. 

Environmentalism is one of the most profound and generous human 
expressions.  There is no question that witnessing the ecological 
dismemberment of the earth is and will continue to be a sorrowful 
experience.  Imagine witnessing this without a movement committed to 
bringing a dose of genuine humanity to our descent, and the road forward 
becomes downright agonizing. 

Let's swerve.  There is a battle for environmentalism's soul being played 
out as two paths diverge in a darkening and warming wood.  Turn left. 

Further thoughts? 

(A bit of self promotion: I just published, Living through the End of 
Nature: The Future of American Environmentalism)


Paul 

Paul Wapner
Associate Professor
Director, Global Environmental Politics Program
School of International Service
American University
4400 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington DC 20016
(202) 885-1647



Pam Chasek <[email protected]> 
Sent by: [email protected]
03/20/2010 10:41 AM
Please respond to
[email protected]


To
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>
cc

Subject
RE: [gep-ed] Johann Hari in The Nation






I think part of the problem is that many of us have been on spring break 
this week. 
 
I asked for and received a reaction from a ?high-level? representative of 
one of the environmental groups mentioned in the article. Here?s what he 
said:
 
?They never talked to us before this was published. They sent me an email 
saying I could write a 300 word response that they would post in their 
web. I talked to Katrina their publisher to no avail. Leah Hair, Bill 
Ruckleshaus, and several others also wrote. They are practicing junk 
journalism on the left.? 
 
Have the environmental groups been co-opted? Perhaps. I guess this goes 
back to the age-old debate: when do you compromise your sense of idealism 
for the reality of what small gains are possible in the society in which 
we live. Many admirable souls will not give up the fight. Others 
reluctantly recognize that they cannot give up their cars, their 
computers, their consumptive lifestyles, travel and food choices to reduce 
CO2 emissions enough to make a difference.  And the environmental groups? 
Are they trying to fight the battle or have they given up and are happy 
with minor victories? I clearly agree that they have not been that 
effective in their work at the national level or international level for 
that matter. But how much can we really expect? I don?t know.
 
Pamela S. Chasek, Ph.D.
Executive Editor, Earth Negotiations Bulletin
IISD Reporting Services
 
300 East 56th Street #11A New York, NY 10022 USA
Tel: +1 212-888-2737- Fax: +1 646 219 0955
E-mail: [email protected]
International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) 
www.iisd.org
IISD Reporting Services - Earth Negotiations Bulletin
www.iisd.ca
Subscribe for free to our publications
http://www.iisd.ca/email/subscribe.htm 
 
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2010 4:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [gep-ed] Johann Hari in The Nation
 
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100322/hari 
 
Did I miss something ? I don?t think I did, I?m just checking ? or has the 
publication of Johann Hari?s essay, ?The Wrong Kind of Green: How 
Conservation Groups Are Bargaining Away Our Future,? in the March 22, 
2010, issue of The Nation passed entirely without comment, here?  Is 
there, perhaps, a sense that it is so polemical as to be not worth the 
bother?
 
Just curious.
 
Geoffrey.
------------------------------------
Geoffrey Wandesforde-Smith
Emeritus Professor of Political Science
University of California, Davis
 
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