The following is copied from Amy Goodman's Democracy Now! Blog (h/t: Dan):
“Unjust
laws exist.” So wrote Henry David Thoreau in his 1849 essay, “On the
Duty of Civil Disobedience.” The naturalist and pacifist asked, “Shall
we be content to obey them, or shall we endeavor to amend them, and obey
them until we have succeeded, or shall we transgress them at once?” His
answer was simple: “I say, break the law.”
One hundred and sixty-four years later, on May 15, 2013, Ken Ward Jr.
and Jay O’Hara did just that. They navigated a small lobster boat,
named “The Henry David T.,” to a point off the Massachusetts coast near
the enormous Brayton Point Power Station, a coal-fired power plant built
in 1963 that is the largest source of carbon emissions in the region.
They dropped anchor and blocked access to the pier, preventing a cargo
ship from unloading 40,000 tons of coal. They suspended banners from
their boat reading “#CoalIsStupid” and “350,” a reference to the
international climate action group 350.org. Three hundred fifty parts
per million (ppm) is the concentration of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere that scientists feel is the maximum level that will allow the
planet to avoid catastrophic human-induced climate change.
Ward and
O’Hara succeeded in blocking the coal shipment. From the boat, they
reported themselves to the local police and were later arrested by the
U.S. Coast Guard.
O’Hara, a Quaker and a sailmaker on Cape Cod, explained, “We were
charged with ... disturbing the peace, conspiracy to disturb the peace,
negligent operation of a motor vessel and a failure to act to avoid a
collision of a boat.” They faced years in prison.
They decided to mount a
“necessity defense,” admitting that they broke the law, but claiming
that they did so only to prevent a much greater harm, i.e., the burning
of coal that increases global warming. Last Monday, Sept. 8, they
finally went to court. Bristol County District Attorney Sam Sutter
offered them a deal. He dropped all criminal charges against them in
exchange for a guilty plea to a civil offense and a fine. D.A. Sutter
then went a step further — a few steps, actually, to the plaza in front
of the courthouse, where he shocked the two defendants and close to 100
of their supporters with a short speech:
“The decision [we] reached today ... certainly took into
consideration the cost to the taxpayers in Somerset, but was made with
our concern for their children, the children of Bristol County and
beyond, in mind. Climate change is one of the gravest crises our planet
has ever faced. In my humble opinion, the political leadership on this
issue has been gravely lacking ... we were able to reach an agreement
that symbolizes our commitment at the Bristol County District Attorney’s
Office to take a leadership role on this issue.”
Sutter’s incredible demonstration of political leadership is timely,
indeed. This week, the World Meteorological Organization released its
latest Greenhouse Gas Bulletin, packed with dire statistics about the
accelerating threat of climate change. “The amount of greenhouse gases
in the atmosphere reached a new record high in 2013,” the WMO reported, with current concentration of carbon dioxide at 396 ppm. The WMO
also warned, ominously, “The current rate of ocean acidification
appears unprecedented at least over the last 300 million years.”
Defendant Ken Ward, a former deputy director of Greenpeace USA,
noting the urgency he feels for the climate, told me, “We should ... be
taking emergency actions everywhere we can. And the very first
emergency action is to stop burning coal.”
Henry David Thoreau is best known for his book “Walden,” in which he
describes the year he spent living in a cabin he built on Walden Pond,
near Concord, Mass. Thoreau opposed the 1847 U.S. invasion of Mexico. He
was a staunch opponent of slavery. To protest these violent policies,
he decided he would not pay taxes. When he was jailed for his protest,
he was visited by his friend, the poet Ralph Waldo Emerson. It is said
that when Emerson asked, “Henry, what are you doing in there,” Thoreau
replied, “Waldo, what are you doing out there?” Thoreau’s essay on civil
disobedience was one of the first modern articulations of the
resistance tactic of nonviolent noncooperation. His words and actions
have inspired millions, among them Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr.
The People’s Climate March will happen in New York City on Sunday,
Sept. 21. Organizers expect it to be the largest march for the climate
in history. The march’s slogan: “To Change Everything, We Need
Everyone.” Sam Sutter says he’ll be there, as will the two activists he
prosecuted. I asked the district attorney and the defendants if they
would be marching together. They all smiled. Prosecutor Sutter said,
“It’s certainly possible.” Jay O’Hara concurred, “Sounds like a plan.”
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