Sunday, November 3, 2019

Legacy of Judi Bari

Half-measures and political equivocation were never the hallmark of Judi Bari.

We all know that.

I never really knew Judi myself, though I was introduced a couple of times, the first time late in Redwood Summer. Clearly she was not the only person who had influence on me, but definitely Judi Bari had an impact on the development of my personal and political philosophies.

Because of that influence, it seems timely to share some thoughts, as the North Coast of California, the bioregion that Judi Bari called home, is facing profound challenges. These challenges are threatening not only the natural landscapes we treasure. The rhetorical and messaging substance of these challenges also put at risk our understanding of the politics and power structures in which we live. Which then endangers our ability to influence outcomes, leaving us at the mercy of what is increasingly a predatory economic system.

Judi would be astounded at the degree to which extractive industry and the states largest landowners have successfully co-opted the symbolism, the language and even, in too many cases, the people of what was known as the environmental movement.

As many look back in history, fondly recognizing the significance of the political innovation inherent in Judi Bari’s legacy, slapping each other on the back with radical sentimentality, the larger question looking forward, as local and global environmental and political stresses amplify and intensify, is:

Will more North Coast activists step up their game? 

Props and gratitude to the crews that are taking the social and political risks that are characteristic of action that promotes real change. We are speaking of the individuals who are taking chances and getting in the way of business as usual. This includes finding the political pressure points that make the powerful uncomfortable. These are the local activists that need our support. We don’t need to share fotos of the climate glitterati that are public relations tools of green economy social engineering, clamoring for some ambiguous action that is vague on specifics. We know who it is that is fighting to expose greenwashing, to protect pubic health, to keep trees standing, and to keep fossil fuels in the ground, among many still relevant actions. We have limited resources, we must support those who are truly on the frontlines. And especially those who are not taking money from the corporations that are causing the damage.

Certainly in 2019 no one and no organization on the North Coast should be leveraging the legacy of Judi Bari for fundraising while at the same time failing to clearly and stridently identify the threats to natural and human communities embedded in the multiple False Solutions of green capitalism being thrust upon the Redwood Region.


Though it is truly impossible to know what Judi would say today, it is a worthy exercise to ponder just what she would say, and how she would say it, when bringing up her history and influence on our movement. Anyone who invokes the name of Judi Bari in 2019 needs to look in the mirror and ask themselves: what position would Judi take on the most pressing issues on today’s North Coast, such as carbon trading and utility scale energy development? What would Judi Bari say about one of the owners of Humboldt Redwood Company being a board director of the corporate green organization Conservation International while pushing forward the logging of Rainbow Ridge? What about a Democratic Party that takes campaign money from Big Oil and Big Timber and Big Ag?

Would she say something that would challenge economic assumptions and existing power and class structures? Would Judi Bari be afraid of offending status-quo social sensibilities about what it might take to begin healing our relationship to the land, about reasserting our relationship to our government and about standing up to the corporations that we shouldn’t allow to control our lives and communities?

Again, it is impossible to know for sure what she would say. This is clearly a hypothetical exercise. But it is relevant, in that we must be true to the spirit of those people who inspired us, and be true to what is the essence of that inspiration.
Fundamentally, to respect and honor the legacy of Judi Bari we must ask ourselves how we ourselves are handling these questions before we invoke her name.

Viva Judi Bari!
Viva wild Earth!
Environmental justice is social justice!

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Bosque Protector Pañacocha



I recently was blessed con la suerte de poder realizar una visita íntima a un lugar precioso con alta relevancia en nuestra comunidad extendida de amantes de la naturaleza. Believe it or not I finally made it to Pañacocha, en el oriente ecuatoriano, down into the Amazon Ecuatoriano we went. I was nobody and then I finally made it to Pañacocha, and now I am somebody. Ahora entiendo bien lo que ya entendí bien:

El Bosque Protector Pañacocha es una joya de la naturaleza!







The Río Napo is a world all it's own, very possibly the largest river that I have ever really been on.







The Amazon is under assault from the global petro-chemical industry, all I need to say in this space is that they are laying pipe as fast as they can. This foto is a half-useless image of an effort to snap a shot of the seemingly endless number of trucks heading out into the Amazon carrying every imaginable diameter of this most likely Chinese fabricated pipe material.


As an example of how established protected areas in the Amazon are violated by industry while the true indigenous stewards of the rainforest are marginalized from decision making processes regarding these very same protected areas, totally undermining the legitimacy and effectiveness of traditional Western nature protection practices, el Bosque Protector Pañacocha is increasingly isolated, an island of intact forest on the petrolero penetrated landscape, threatened by road building and held hostage by the fossil fuel industry. Still it remains a truly wild and natural expanse of the Amazon rainforest, hogar de los pueblos originarios, lungs of the planet and conservation imperative of humanity. While up Pañayaku exploring we could occasionally hear the hummmm of motors on the distant Napo, and even saw the apocalyptic pulsating flame light of pipeline and oil industry gas flaring in the distance against the clouds and fogs of the jungle night sky. It is all too clear that the extractivist pressure is unrelenting in the Amazon. This is simply not sustainable, it is suicide to exploit these remaining forests, and the clarion call that we must dramatically change the course of this industrial exploitation has never been louder. It is also clear that the efforts to protect Pañacocha will remain standing. I am so appreciative of having made the journey! Thanks and appreciations to those who have invested so much sweat and tears into the long term protection of the human and natural communities of Pañacocha, el Bosque Protector es tarea de tod@s! La vida es una fucking hermosura, DE LEY, no lo vamos a malgastar. Viva Pañacocha, viva Pañayaku, viva la Amazonas!