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Lee Thorn -- Jhai - from the vets

Dear friends and board,

Something is stirring in the US that I think is quite promising. Veterans are standing up for clean energy. I find it so promising on a number of levels I want to turn this entire update over to an article my good friend, Jan Barry wrote. It is entitled:

Veterans Campaign on Environmental Issues

After Army tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, Captain Mike Breen is on a new
mission—seeking to convince fellow Americans that our addiction to fuel
from Middle Eastern oil wells is a dire threat to our soldiers in combat
and our security at home. Breen, a former infantry platoon leader,
contends that the shadowy insurgents our troops have been battling in two
military campaigns are largely financed by oil-rich Islamic groups that
profit from America’s insatiable demand for gasoline but oppose our
military actions in Islamic nations.

“When you pay at the pump… we are literally putting the bullets in the
magazines that are being fired back at our guys in Afghanistan and Iraq,”
Breen said recently during a bus tour sponsored by Operation Free, a
coalition of veterans and national security groups working to counter what
they see as a growing threat from dependence on foreign oil supplies.
Citing military experiences, Breen and his buddies are determined to add
red, white and blue to the green banner of the environmental movement.

“We don’t have to make a choice between our lifestyle and an independent
energy policy that promotes a clean energy environment and keeps us safe,”
he added, in comments reported by the Times Leader of Scranton, PA.

Breen, an ROTC graduate who is now a law student at Yale University, was
part of the Veterans for American Power bus tour that traveled to dozens
of communities in 21 states last month.

“As we spoke in Pennsylvania’s steel towns and rolled through the wooded
hills of New Hampshire, I began to realize just how ready most people were
to hear what we had to say,” Breen reflected in a blog on the Operation
Free web site. “In small towns and state capitols, Americans young and old
seemed to intuitively understand that dependence on foreign oil and
pollution that threatens our climate both pose a danger to our security
and way of life. More importantly, they seemed ready and eager to stand up
and do something about it.

“In Pittsburg, the leaders of a local union showed us a training program
that prepares workers for a renewable energy economy. In New Hampshire,
state legislators explained how weatherizing homes in the state could
create jobs. In Maine, Bowdoin College was packed with a new generation of
student leaders ready to commit to putting America’s energy future back in
American hands,” he continued.

“As the bus rolled on, I watched with humility and excitement as my fellow
veterans mastered the skills of a new kind of service. Glenn Kunkel, a
decorated Marine rifleman, spoke eloquently of wind farms as the victory
gardens of a new greatest generation. Robin Eckstein told hushed town
meetings of the perils of logistical convoys in Iraq, dodging insurgent
attacks to supply petroleum for Army generators. Andrew Campbell brought a
crowd of his fellow Mainers to their feet at our last event, with a call
to stop funding both sides of the war through foreign oil.”

Meanwhile, a second bus-load of energized vets was touring Midwestern and
Southern states. Rolling into Florida, the group’s “first stop was in the
American Legion Hall Post 6 in Deland, FL,” noted Rocky Kistner on a
campaign blog. “In a room appointed with military memorabilia and a
wall-mounted M16, the vets mingled with fellow veterans of wars dating
back to World War II. Many in the room agreed with their message: we need
to find other sources of clean energy here at home to keep American armed
service members from having to deploy and fight in wars over oil and other
energy sources. It’s the best way to avoid future conflicts fueled by the
increasing threats of climate change.”

Besides public education, a major focus of the bus tour was to build
support for a bill in Congress, the Clean Energy Jobs and American Power
Act. That bill was released by the Senate Environment and Public Works
Committee earlier this month for consideration by the full Senate.
Introduced by Senators John Kerry (D-Mass.), chairman of the Foreign
Relations Committee, and Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), chairwoman of the
Committee on Environment and Public Works, the bill aims to “cut carbon
pollution and stimulate the economy by creating millions of jobs in the
clean energy sector,” according to a Senate press release. A companion
House bill was approved in June.

"This is a security bill that puts Americans back in charge of our energy
future and makes it clear that we will combat global climate change with
American ingenuity," said Kerry, the former presidential candidate and a
Vietnam veteran long active on environmental issues. "Our health, our
security, our economy, our environment, all demand we reinvent the way
America uses energy. Our addiction to foreign oil hurts our economy, helps
our enemies and risks our security.”

Fueling this bill and the concerns of vets on the bus tour were national
security issues raised in federally funded studies and Congressional
testimony by retired senior military officers.

“Global climate change presents a serious national security threat which
could impact Americans at home, impact United States military operations
and heighten global tensions, according to a new study released by a
blue-ribbon panel of retired admirals and generals from all branches of
the armed services,” states a summary of “National Security and the Threat
of Climate Change,” a 2007 study by the Center for Naval Analyses, based
on research by nearly a dozen admirals and generals.

“Climate change is occurring at a much faster pace than the scientists
previously thought it could,” noted General Gordon Sullivan, a former Army
Chief of Staff. “Military professionals are accustomed to making decisions
during times of uncertainty… Even if you don’t have complete information,
you still need to take action. Waiting for 100 percent certainty during a
crisis can be disastrous… The US has the responsibility to lead [on global
climate change]. If we don’t make changes, then others won’t.”

Noting these concerns, support for addressing these issues has come from
some Republicans as well as Democrats.

“As a conservative S.C. senator, a Marine and former chairman of President
Ronald Reagan’s campaigns in South Carolina, I have always regarded
national defense and economic development as top priorities,” state
Senator John Courson wrote in a recent guest column in the Orangeburg (SC)
Times and Democrat. “America’s dependence on foreign oil hurts our
economy, helps our enemies and puts our security at risk. Together, we can
protect our national security, keep our brave men and women out of harm’s
way, strengthen our economy and take control of our energy future.”

Changing ingrained attitudes, and countering powerful economic interests,
remains an uphill struggle. Courson was coming to the defense of U.S.
Senator Lindsay Graham (R-SC), who is under fierce attack by power utility
groups for backing proposed legislative changes on energy use. Yet Captain
Breen remains upbeat. “The bus tour may be over, but the mission
continues,” he wrote. “I’m looking forward to reuniting with my fellow
Operation Free veterans, and working together to meet the great challenge
of our generation.”

For more information:
http://www.operationfree.net/2009/11/10/mike-breen-why-im-fighting-for-clean-energy/
http://www.vetpac.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=157&Itemid=1
http://securityandclimate.cna.org/
http://epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Majority.PressReleases&ContentRecord_id=0c00344c-802a-23ad-4f4d-edb0c9408d2e
http://www.timesanddemocrat.com/articles/2009/11/07/opinion/letters/doc4af46eebcd2a9755616331.txt




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--
Lee Thorn
chair, Jhai Foundation
I tweet @leethorn_jhai
Way cool .... see 30 sec video of
2003 JhaiPC bicycle-powered set up at
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JiZa_A0QrtQ

350 Townsend St., Ste. 309
San Francisco, CA 94107 USA
+1 415 344 0360 (office)
+1 415 420 2870 (mobile)
lee@jhai.org
www.jhai.org


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