by YAHOO! SEARCH
Group can play key role in fight against global warming
Updated: August 21, 2010, 4:24 AM
WASHINGTON— It’s hardly amazing that ACORN, the embattled community organizer that has done so much good in the nation’s inner cities, is considered a latter-day embodiment of the anti-Christ by the nation’s right-wing fringe. First came the baseless allegations of voter fraud that popped-up in the late stages of last year’s presidential election. Then two conservative activists posing as a pimp and prostitute did a gotcha video at several ACORN chapters seeking—and surprisingly, getting—advice on how to set up neighborhood bordellos. The gullible ACORN workers who dispensed the advice, it should be noted, were fired promptly by the group’s national office.
Now, the right wing is going ballistic because the cap-and- trade legislation currently on hold in Congress contains money for ACORN and other community organizations to combat global warming by helping the urban poor to become more energy efficient.
Why all the fuss? A consensus of world-class international scientists has repeatedly stated that we are approaching the doomsday hour in confronting a climate-change crisis that— if allowed to continue unabated— could well wipe out civilization as we know it.
Yet community organizations have played a storied role in modern American crises. They did yeoman work in helping huge numbers of the downtrodden survive — and often thrive — during the decade-long Great Depression. They encouraged the notion of shared sacrifice on the home front during the darkest days of World War II when everything from gasoline to sugar and coffee were strictly rationed.
In the ’60s, their cultivating of the grass roots pushed the long-held dream of civil rights into law and helped spur the movement that ultimately led the United States to withdraw from the quagmire of Vietnam.
Now — as we finally come to terms with the pending crisis that former Vice President Al Gore calls “a more serious threat to Americans than World War II” — community organizations can be our front-line troops in what must be an all-out war against catastrophic climate change.
Who better than ACORN’s 500,000 national members to act as energy auditors and educators in our battered big cities? They already are on the ground helping deprived city residents to weatherize their homes and obtain discounted home heating oil.
Who better than ACORN and similar groups to expand such efforts to help re-educate energy wastrels in our affluent suburbs, where gas-guzzling SUVs and luxury cars still abound nearly four decades after the Arab oil embargo of 1973-74? That’s why both the Waxman-Markey American Clean Energy and Security Act that passed the House last June and the Boxer-Kerry bill now stalled in the Senate provide generous amounts of taxpayer dollars for community development groups such as ACORN.
Waxman-Markey allocates up to $300 million for community organizations that help small businesses, homeowners and renters in blighted neighborhoods comply with developing mandates for conserving existing materials and improving energy efficiency. The Kerry-Boxer bill has up to $200 million to “promote green development in distressed communities.”
Saving the planet ought to be the No. 1 goal of every American since it will save their lives and those of their descendants. Sadly, it isn’t. Polls show a majority of Americans have become deniers about the threat of global warming and that a larger number rank it far down the list of problems that need an immediate and concerted societal effort to solve.
Community organizers like ACORN can reverse these gloomy numbers by applying their highly effective brand of persuasion firsthand to skeptical Americans. ACORN can be — and should be—a vital force in America’s belated decision to join the rest of the world in thwarting global warming.
If anything, the current climate-change legislation does not go far enough. President Obama should borrow a page from President Franklin D. Roosevelt and establish ACORN as a federal program similar to the Civilian Conservation Corps that helped rebuild a Depression-wracked America from 1933 to 1942. Now that would drive the yahoo complainers into a frenzy!
Wayne Madsen is a contributing writer to the progressive Online Journal.
advertisement
Entertainment Calendar
Best bets:
- Fri 2/10: Brian Regan
- Fri 2/10: Don Felder -- An Evening at the Hotel California
- Sat 2/11: Rita Coolidge
- Sat 2/11: Sha Na Na
- Sat 2/11: Chris Webby
- Sat 2/11: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra: Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto
- Sat 2/11: Don Felder -- An Evening at the Hotel California
- Sun 2/12: Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra: Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto
- Sun 2/12: Bill Medley
- Mon 2/13: The Low Anthem
- Tue 2/14: DL Hughley and Friends
- more events »
The Feed / What’s Happening Now
Washington makes right moves in 'Safe House'
What to do with an empty hospital?
Hall vote deepest cut for Reed
Catholic institutions here cover birth control
Sabres offense on a mini hot streak
'Biggest Loser' creates a big win
Judge rules against unions in latest wage freeze fight
Police raids target massive drug ring
Stay Informed
Newsroom Tips
Have a news tip you think The Buffalo News should investigate?
Call The News tip line at 849-4475 or email us at investigations@buffnews.com.
All calls and emails will be kept confidential.
Buffalo Marketplace
Marketplace videos
Watch the latest offers, products and services from our advertisers.
Browse our print ads
It's the ultimate advantage for Buffalo consumers. Never miss another ad again!
Buffalo Savers: coupons
Buffalo coupons at your fingertips.
Just click and print. It's Easy!

