http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/aug/25/martin-luther
-king-washington-tar-sands-protest


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Martin Luther King's legacy and the power of nonviolent civil disobedience


In opposing the Keystone XL oil pipeline, demonstrators are getting a sense
of the civil rights leader's courage 

*        <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/mckibben-bill> bill

*          

*       Bill McKibben <http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/mckibben-bill>  for
TomDispatch <http://www.tomdispatch.com/> , part of the Guardian Comment
Network
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/series/guardian-comment-network>  
*       guardian.co.uk <http://www.guardian.co.uk/> , Thursday 25 August
2011 16.09 BST 
*       Article
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/aug/25/martin-luthe
r-king-washington-tar-sands-protest#history-link-box#history-link-box>
history

White House oil pipeline demonstration

US park police officers move in to arrest a group of demonstrators in front
of the White House. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

I didn't think it was possible, but my admiration for Martin Luther King,
Jr., grew even stronger these past days. As I headed to jail as part of the
first wave of what is turning into the biggest
<http://www.tarsandsaction.org/>  civil disobedience action in the
environmental movement for many years, I had the vague idea that I would
write something. Not an epic like King's
<http://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html> "Letter
from a Birmingham Jail," but at least, you know, a blog post. Or a tweet.

But frankly, I wasn't up to it. The police, surprised by how many people
turned out on the first day of two weeks of protests at the White House,
decided to teach us a lesson. As they told our legal team, they wanted to
deter anyone else from coming - and so, with our first crew, they were. kind
of harsh.

We spent three days in D.C.'s Central Cell Block, which is exactly as much
fun as it sounds like it might be. You lie on a metal rack with no mattress
or bedding and sweat in the high heat; the din is incessant; there's one
baloney sandwich with a cup of water every 12 hours.

I didn't have a pencil - they wouldn't even let me keep my wedding ring -
but, more important, I didn't have the peace of mind to write something.
It's only now, out 12 hours and with a good night's sleep under my belt,
that I'm able to think straight. And so, as I said, I'll go to this
weekend's big celebrations for the opening
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/23/us/23mlk.html>  of the Martin Luther King
Jr. National Memorial on the Washington Mall with even more respect for his
calm power.

Preacher, speaker, writer under fire, but also tactician. He really
understood the power of nonviolence, a power we've experienced in the last
few days. When the police cracked down on us, the publicity it produced
cemented two of the main purposes of our protest: First, it made Keystone
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/archive/175417/bill_mckibben_the_great_american_
carbon_bomb>  XL - the new, 1,700-mile-long pipeline we're trying to block
that will vastly increase the flow of "dirty" tar sands oil from Alberta,
Canada, to the Gulf of Mexico - into a national issue. A few months ago, it
was mainly people along the route of the prospective pipeline who were
organising against it. (And with good reason: tar sands mining has already
wrecked huge swaths of native land in Alberta, and endangers farms, wild
areas, and aquifers all along its prospective route.)

Now, however, people are now coming to understand - as we hoped our
demonstrations would highlight - that it poses a danger to the whole planet
as well. After all, it's the Earth's second largest pool of carbon, and
hence the second-largest potential source of global warming gases after the
oil fields of Saudi Arabia. We've already plumbed those Saudi deserts. Now
the question is: Will we do the same to the boreal forests of Canada
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boreal_forest_of_Canada> . As NASA
climatologist James Hansen
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/feb/17/barack-obama
-canada-climate-change>  has made all too clear, if we do so it's
"essentially game over for the climate." That message is getting through.
Witness the incredibly strong New <http://tinyurl.com/3t2fx8a>  York Times
editorial opposing the building of the pipeline that I was handed on our
release from jail.

Second, being arrested in front of the White House helped make it clearer
that President Obama should be the focus of anti-pipeline activism. For once
Congress isn't in the picture. The situation couldn't be simpler: the
president, and the president alone, has the power either to sign the permit
that would take the pipeline through the Midwest and down to Texas (with the
usual set of disastrous oil spills to come) or block it.

Barack Obama has the power to stop it and no one in Congress or elsewhere
can prevent him from doing so. That means - and again, it couldn't be
simpler - that the Keystone XL decision is the biggest environmental test
for him between now and the next election. If he decides to stand up to the
power of big oil, it will send a jolt through his political base, reminding
the presently discouraged exactly why they were so
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/nov/05/climatechange-carbonemiss
ions>  enthused in 2008.

That's why many of us were wearing our old campaign buttons when we went
into the paddy wagon. We'd like to remember - and like the White House to
remember, too - just why we knocked on all those doors.

But as Dr. King might have predicted, the message went deeper. As people
gather in Washington for this weekend's dedication of his monument, most
will be talking about him as a great orator, a great moral leader. And of
course he was that, but it's easily forgotten what a great strategist he was
as well, because he understood just how powerful a weapon nonviolence can
be.

The police, who trust the logic of force, never quite seem to get this. When
they arrested our group of 70 or so on the first day of our demonstrations,
they decided to <http://www.tarsandsaction.org/not-deterred/>  teach us a
lesson by keeping us locked up extra long - strong treatment for a group of
people peacefully standing on a sidewalk.

No surprise, it didn't work. The next day an even bigger crowd showed up -
and now there are throngs of people who have signed up to be arrested every
day until the protests end on September 3rd. Not only that, a judge threw
out the charges against our first group, and so the police have backed off.
For the moment, anyway, they're not actually sending more protesters to
jail, just booking and fining them.

And so the busload
<http://www.tarsandsaction.org/message-from-randy-the-rancher-to-bold-nebras
kans-in-washington-dc-today/>  of ranchers coming from Nebraska, and the
bio-fueled RV with the giant logo heading in from East Texas, and the flight
of grandmothers arriving from Montana, and the tribal chiefs, and union
leaders, and everyone else, will keep pouring into D.C. We'll all, I
imagine, stop and pay tribute to Dr. King before or after we get arrested;
it's his lead, after all, that we're following.

Our part in the weekend's celebration is to act as a kind of living tribute.
While people are up on the mall at the monument, we'll be in the front of
the White House, wearing handcuffs, making clear that civil disobedience is
not just history in America.

We may not be facing the same dangers Dr. King did, but we're getting some
small sense of the kind of courage he and the rest of the civil rights
movement had to display in their day - the courage to put your body where
your beliefs are. It feels good.

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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