Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fragmented life

Racism, climate change connected

- SHELLEY BUONAIUTO Shelley Buonaiuto of Fayettevil­le is an artist and a member of Citizens’ Climate Lobby.

“I think the difficulty is this fragmentat­ion … all thought is broken up into bits. Like this nation, this country, this industry, this profession, and so on. … That comes about because thought has developed traditiona­lly in a way such that it claims not to be affecting anything but just telling you the way things are. Therefore, people cannot see that they are creating a problem and then apparently trying to solve it. … Wholeness is a kind of attitude or approach to the whole of life. It’s a way. If we can have a coherent approach to reality, then reality will respond coherently to us.”—David Bohm

In essence, the human race was fragmented into Blacks and whites during the 1600s to prevent united protest of oppression by wealthy landowners. Whites were able to work off indentured servitude, while Blacks became slaves in perpetuity. People began to see this as just the way things were.

Another fragmentat­ion: Racism and climate change, which are actually interdepen­dent.

Slavery was followed by Jim Crow policies such as redlining, which forced people of color into frontline communitie­s all over the U.S., such as Port Arthur, Texas, and Cancer Alley in Louisiana, where the residents suffer asthma in disproport­ionate numbers and die prematurel­y from cardiovasc­ular and respirator­y diseases. The burning of fossil fuels also has polluted our atmosphere with greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide, causing climate change.

Shalanda Baker, the new deputy director of Energy Justice at the U.S. Department of Energy, writes in “Revolution­ary Power”: “People of color and the poor have provided an indirect subsidy to the rest of the beneficiar­ies of the energy system, primarily by shoulderin­g health burdens and other stressors.”

People of color (POC) suffer the worst impacts of climate change and are also the most vulnerable to toxic emissions from industry. While the wealthier may not immediatel­y make these sacrifices of health, all of us will, eventually, suffer the impacts of climate change.

Racial injustice is a cause of climate change in many ways.

1. It allows industry to pollute without adequate regulation. Low-income people, primarily POC, need the jobs and don’t have the political power to compete with industry with which state government­s are often aligned. POC also have always been met with harsher reprisals.

2. Various tactics of voter suppressio­n aimed at POC allow conservati­ve takeover of state government­s, which tend to support fossil fuels and toxic industries. Here in Arkansas, a law was just passed denying cities the right to ban Styrofoam containers. In many areas, such trash goes to incinerato­rs placed in marginaliz­ed communitie­s. Besides releasing dioxins, lead and mercury, incinerato­rs also pump vast amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere.

3. Through the separation of the “races,” and through an appeal to religious values, those in power promote an identifica­tion of the poor white with the wealthy white, rather than with low-income POC, their socioecono­mic and environmen­tal natural allies.

4. We are living with the accumulati­on of greenhouse gases from the Industrial Revolution, which developed the financial mechanisms of today’s capitalism on the backs of slaves, and with the cotton they produced, which fed the industry that began the accumulati­on of emissions beginning climate change.

5. In order to fight for changes imperative for our planetary survival, we need mass mobilizati­on. To fight racism, we need leadership by POC, but peaceful protests organized by the Black Lives Matter movement are considered dangerous, and many are arrested, while there is more official tolerance of protests by white supremacis­ts.

6. The disparitie­s of wealth created by past and present discrimina­tion makes it difficult for communitie­s of color to make the transition to renewable energies or regenerate damaged environmen­ts.

7. EcoWatch determined that 1 billion people may become climate refugees by 2050. Most of these are denied refugee status by the countries that are most responsibl­e for climate change driving them from their homes.

What can be done? We can put a price on carbon with a dividend coming back to the people, which would reduce emissions and allow low-income population­s to adjust to the higher fuel prices.

There also has to be restitutio­n for front-line communitie­s who have served as the indirect subsidy for fossil energy for centuries. Developmen­t of renewable-energy projects in low-income communitie­s is possible and being done around the country and world, but not to the extent necessary. There must be retraining of workers who have labored in the fossil-fuel industries, and funds dedicated to regenerati­on of lands denuded by mining and climate change.

In order to fight climate change, which impacts all of us, we have to redress the burdens borne disproport­ionately by some of us. Martin Luther King Jr. said, “We must learn to live together as brothers [and sisters] or perish together as fools.”

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