Black Activists Condemn Elitist "Earth Day"
Elitist environmental activists observing "Earth Day" on April 22 are promoting a regulatory agenda hostile to minority ambitions for economic and social advancement. Members of the African-American leadership network Project 21 prefer an alternative environmental justice agenda that ensures human welfare is not sacrificed to meet regulatory goals.
"Most people in our country favor things such as clean air that are raised on Earth Day. However, I believe that Earth Day has changed into an opportunity for socialists and others with interests in slowing down our economy to suppress the resource development, exploration and production that our country needs to maintain our quality of life," said Project 21's Ak'Bar Shabazz.
Policies advocated by the environmentalist establishment show little regard for the economic priorities of the average American, and can be even harder on poor and minority citizens. For example:
* Provisions to combat the unproven theory of global warming, as dictated by the United Nation's Kyoto Protocol, would force almost 1.4 million black and Hispanic Americans out of work and raise the price of food, energy, gasoline and other necessary goods.
* "Smart growth" land use plans restricting new home construction essentially creates a new form of segregation by preventing upwardly-mobile black prospective homebuyers from being able to find preferred affordable housing.
* Elitist environmental groups prefer to focus on issues like abortion and campaign finance reform rather than legislation that will clean up and give an economic jump-start to inner-city communities. These groups also lack diversity in their hiring.
"The notion of sacrificing economic empowerment for the sake of assuaging the feelings of a handful of environmentalists is offensive," said Project 21 member Michael King. "These activists seem to think their notions of solving pseudo-scientific concepts like 'global warming' will save humanity, but at what cost? These increased costs create a new underclass unable to afford to buy homes, vehicles and household goods."
More information on environmental justice can be obtained at http://www.nationalcenter.org/CEJ.html.
Project 21 has been a leading voice of the African-American community since 1992. For more information, contact David Almasi at (202) 371-1400 x106 or Project21@nationalcenter.org, or visit Project 21's website at http://www.project21.org/P21Index.html.
http://www.nationalcenter.org/P21PREarthDay404.html
[ Letting everyone in = the end of 'Blood and Soil,' and a race to destroy our earth so that everyone can be equal. This shows you why the left, and internationalism, are destructive to every issue they touch including - of course - white racial and cultural interests. ]
Nice to see some open hostility of this sort. May go a ways towards waking up some green whites.
I remember Pierce saying something in one of his weekly addresses to the effect of "what's a nigger care about a tree?!". That cracked me up. It's a good pressure point on the leftist body politic. I let a girl drag me to some sierra club meetings when i was in high school, and this group was as white as could be. There might have been a jew or two in there but it's about the last place you'd ever see a nigger. I wouldn't be surprised if some chapters' members manage to coerce(or reward with freebies, I did see a nigger at their picnic) a token into attending a few meetings but I've never seen a really "green" black yet and I doubt if all the chicken flavored tofu in the world would make a nigger care.
Nice to see some open hostility of this sort. May go a ways towards waking up some green whites...
It's a good pressure point on the leftist body politic.
Don't underestimate the left's capacity for rationalization. Just as labor organizations have strenuously asserted that illegal immigration hurts mestizos as much as it hurts us (without bothering to explain why), so too will environmentalists claim, with tear-stained faces, that noble savages simply don't have the luxury of participating in environmental action campaigns. They're too busy trying to stay alive in the face of the ongoing and horrible racism which is a part of their every waking moment, etc.
I don't. "a few", like i said. One of my girlfriend's classmates lived below us in our old building and my first couple of conversations with her were pleasant enough but then she started talking about "racism" and I asked her if any blacks came to her meetings. She didn't answer me and suggested That I come to her show and bring one(!?) I probably need to hone my style lol. The next time I saw her she didn't even say "Hi" but told me I had 10 lbs of undigested meat in my bowels. I made a crack about "crackpots",(earlier that day she was dropping flower pots off her balcony into the courtyard and going down to collect the pieces, for some art project no doubt) and that was the end of the romance heheh. She's a "vegan". Not unattractive but she looks really frail and she'd usally turn a conversation into a confrontation. The girl has a white boyfriend or else I never would have bothered. Maybe some hope for her but I didn't get very far.