Green Party of Santa Clara County

Category Archives: Economy

YOUTH VS. THE “LEFT”

Category : blog , Divestment , Economy , Energy , Politics

Youth Vs. the “Left”

by – Jake Tonkel & Christen Corcoran

Originally published in TheBridgeConvo.org

When it comes to the topic of climate change, nearly everyone on the millennial left (and a lot of the right) seems to be on the same page. Scientific evidence has demonstrated, our teachers have educated, nature itself is giving us the warning signs, and Al Gore has spread the word: climate change is real, it’s happening and it is the greatest challenge the human race has ever seen—infinitely more complex than WWI and WWII combined. This is the starting point that we must have in climate discourse. So why do we not see this reflected in politics? Why isn’t the liberal left doing more to reflect what our generation is demanding?

Climate change has already had devastating consequences, especially for the already-marginalized communities of our country and our world. Big oil, big business, the transnational elite and others have a vested interest in preventing policies directed towards combating climate change: they would lose money or like whitefish, stand to gain during the recovery effort. Furthermore, they will either be dead or as rich as King Midas by the time ultimate disaster strikes. We stand up time and time again (KeystoneDAPL, etc), but the DNC couldn’t even rule out fracking in its official 2016 platform. In fact, according to ClimateHawksVote, an organization that ranks representatives on their action on climate issues, Dems scored an average of just 23.25pts out of 100! With 6 of 44 scoring in the negatives!

That is a really, really tough pill for us to swallow as millennials. With Congress at an average age of 57, we don’t have much, if any representation. It’s ironic really, being told your whole life that with age comes wisdom only to have those that touted the saying literally destroy our world. Politicians empirically care more about the money in their pocket than working towards a solution.

As the world tries to collaborate, our government makes sure the deals are non-binding, cheering “compromise” between business and consumer, developed and developing.

It is devastating that the US is no longer party to the Paris Agreement, but in reality—we were the reason it was weak to begin with. The US follows the money, not policies that will protect humanity. This is a gross corruption of our fundamental values—by the people, for the people—which puts the market above society, and greed above human lives.

This is a somber “Left” because this is not a problem of “getting the word out”; the word is already out. Politicians know the consequences of inaction. Yet they are not following through. Terrorist attack, Congress passes legislation, gun violence, the Blue team gets all frustrated at thoughts and prayers, 3 or 4 natural disasters hit the U.S., exacerbated by a warming planet, and only the Pope seems to give it the time of day.


National Priorities

Category : blog , Economy , Politics

“Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and not clothed.” – Eisenhower, Chance for Peace, 1953. Our last US president to have been a career military general.

When it comes to National Priorities, we hear lots of talk, but where are we walking? The way to judge a politician is not their speeches or their website, as Joe Biden said, “don’t tell me what you value, show me your budget and I will tell you what you value.”

Green Money

Category : blog , Divestment , Economy , Politics

Money is strange. It’s a portable, transferrable storage symbol for our energy, effort and expertize. It can indicate our rank, our cleverness at “playing the game,” or become a shackle to a life we no longer enjoy. Lack of it can impose profound misery and its distribution can create injustice, corruption and war; or peace and plenty. Every philosophy comments on money; warning us against it, or lauding its correct application. Outside the context of a socially created market it has no intrinsic worth. Within that context it can be everything.

Our money is also our politics, and is as much a tool of intelligent stewardship as our vote. It acts beyond our independent spending. The banks we trust to secure our futures use our savings and our debt payments to fund both good and evil. We are responsible to know, and choose, the paths our money travels, and the influence it buys.

With the Citizens United decision reinforcing corporate personhood, the Supreme Court also made money free speech, effectively making money the only speech. While the heart of avarice now holds the loudest megaphone in the republic, it can’t yet forcibly silence us. We can be a chorus and collectively take back the wheel from greed and corruption. We have to clean and green our money.

It’s going to be inconvenient, time consuming and may require sacrifices. If these things deter us, we become “good people doing nothing,” giving evil a clear path. Compared to the costs dirty money will force on our children, the sacrifice is insignificant.

  1. Move your money to a credit union. Checking, savings, credit cards, loans, even mortgages; move them all over to a credit union. CU’s are non-profits that lend locally and support the small businesses and local companies that are the true engine of the American ideal.
  2. Take a good look at your 401K and other retirement savings strategies. Are you funding banks and other corporations that continue to destroy the natural world? Is your money underwriting fracking, dirty energy, deforestation, irresponsible real estate development? Redistribute your investments to reflect your politics.
  3. Buy from local chains and stores instead of multi-national corporations. Quit the online shopping habit and look for independent grocery stores , bookstores, coffee shops, material suppliers. Yes, independents may be more expensive, but if the large scale corporations were actually charging you what it’s going to cost to repair the damage they are doing to the world, their prices would be astronomical. Do you want your grandchildren to inherit an unlivable world, or the story of our victory over greed and waste? Open a map application and type in a search for whatever you need to buy. Not only will you find the independents in your area but you’ll use less energy getting there.
  4. When you make donations, investigate. Did you know that Savers thrift shops in San Jose are for-profit? They only “share” their profits with charities. Why provide them with free inventory when other donations go to actual non-profits?
  5. Support the maker community in your neighborhood. Look for independent craftspeople and artisans to support when you buy gifts, seek entertainment, or need durable goods.
  6. Talk to your relations, friends and neighbors about bringing their money back home, regardless of political stripe. Supporting businesses in your home town and keeping money local is not a partisan issue. Conservative or progressive, the benefits are a no-brainer.

Keep thinking, asking, loving, doing, giving, trying. The world is better for your efforts.