Pray With Your Feet
By Chris Hedges
November 16, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Truthdig"
- MONTROSE, N.Y.—It was 6:30 in the morning and
George Packard, dressed in a dark suit, a purple clerical bib
and a clerical collar, was at church. Or, rather, at what has become
church for the retired Episcopal bishop, activist and highly
decorated Vietnam War veteran.
Packard stood with 20 other protesters on a chilly
morning Nov. 9 to block two roads leading to the staging area for
Texas-based Spectra Energy’s
Algonquin Incremental
Market (AIM) pipeline project. After an hour, he and eight other
protesters were arrested by New York state police.
Carrying out sustained acts of civil disobedience
is the only option left to defy the corporate state, says Packard,
who over the years has been arrested at an Occupy Wall Street
protest and other demonstrations. It will be a long, difficult and
costly struggle. But there are moral and religious laws—laws that
call on us to protect our neighbor, fight for justice and maintain
systems of life—that must supersede the laws of the state. Fealty to
these higher laws means we will make powerful enemies. It means we
will endure discomfort, character assassination, state surveillance
and repression. It means we will go to jail. But it is in the midst
of this defiance that we will find purpose and, Packard argues,
faith.
“This is the renewed presence of the church,
people of spirit wandering around in the darkness trying to find
each other,” Packard said to me before he was taken into custody by
police during the Montrose protest. He stood holding one corner of a
large banner reading, “We Say No to Spectra’s Algonquin Pipeline
Expansion.” “When you find a cause that has spine, importance and
potency you find the truth of the Scripture. You find it inside your
gut. There is an ache in the culture.” Gesturing toward his fellow
demonstrators, he added: “These are a few of the people who are
speaking to it. This is what the church used to be. It used to be
standing in conscience.”
The high-pressure, 42-inch-diameter pipeline,
slated to run within 100 feet of critical structures of the Indian
Point nuclear power plant and 400 feet of an elementary school,
under major power lines, across a fault line, and below the Hudson
River, would expose residents along the route to toxic emissions
from compressor stations, along with the threat of ruptures,
leakages and explosions. If an explosion caused a meltdown at Indian
Point it would jeopardize the more than 21 million people living in
and around New York City and the Hudson Valley. Pipelines are prone
to
leaks, breaks and explosions and are poorly monitored. On
average in 2014, there was an accident involving a gas transmission
pipeline every three days.
The gas in the AIM pipeline, bound for foreign
export, will not be available to local communities along the route
or provide many jobs to local residents (workers in pickup trucks
blocked by the protesters at Montrose often had Texas or Oklahoma
license plates). Residents, as is common along pipeline routes, have
found themselves powerless to prevent the state from seizing their
property under eminent domain and turning it over to the industry.
The protesters were from a local organization
called Resist AIM. They had spent more than two years attending
hearings and meetings with elected representatives and county and
state officials, as well as reaching out to regulatory agencies such
as the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission (NRC). But these officials and agencies, cowed
or controlled by corporate power, ignored their pleas. The oil and
gas industry controls FERC, the federal agency in charge of issuing
pipeline permits, by placing members from the industry on the board.
FERC has denied only one pipeline request in the last decade. The
agency is a corporate front posing as a regulatory agency; most of
its budget comes from permitting fees paid by the oil and gas
industry. It rubber-stamps requests so the fossil fuel industry can
transport fracked gas or shale oil in a series of pipelines from
Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and other areas in the
Marcellus Shale region to export terminals on the East Coast.
The New York AIM pipeline, which replaces a smaller pipeline, is
part of this vast infrastructure project.
“Front-line communities start out by being
obedient and attempting to influence legislation and regulation,”
said activist
Susan Rubin, who is part of Resist AIM. “They put a lot of time
and energy into their two-minute talk with FERC thinking that will
make a difference. We wasted about a year and a half going to these
regulatory meetings and writing letters. We did not understand that
FERC is a rogue agency run by gas and oil insiders.”
“It is a hard conversation to have with people,
even explaining how broken FERC is, that being nice to our
congresswoman is not going to fix it,” she said. “We have to turn up
the heat. We have to get loud. But we live in a culture of
obedience. When I was arrested in front of the White House in 2011
it caused a shift in me. I realized signing a petition would not
work. I realized I needed to be in this for the long run. There
would be no short victories. I do little happy dances for a few
hours and then I get back to work because I have kids. This is what
I have to do.”
The frustration, mounting across the country, is
bringing with it a new radicalism.
“They tell you there are things you are supposed
to do,” said activist and attorney Jessica Roff, who was at the
protest. “You do them. But even when we present legal challenges the
construction continues. If you win a legal challenge it [the
project] is already built. It is too late. This forces people to
take different courses of action. The system, actually, is not
broken. It works exactly the way it is designed to work. It serves
the corporations. It is up to us to break the system. There has to
be a massive shift to renewables now.”
“They are building these infrastructure projects
across the country and yet no one is talking with local first
responders,” Roff went on. “There is no increase in training,
funding or access to resources and equipment. We just spoke with
seven state troopers. Not one of them knew this pipeline was being
built. Not one of them knew the possible repercussions of having a
42-inch, high-pressure gas pipeline going through three counties,
under the Hudson River, across two major power lines, a fault line
and winding up within a hundred feet of critical structures of
Indian Point, where 40 years of spent nuclear fuel is being
stored. There are 21 million people living within the blast zone of
Indian Point.”
“We now have massive infrastructure systems
crisscrossing the nation to transport oil and gas and we have no
standard response in how to deal with an emergency,” she said. “We
have pipelines, such as the
Constitution pipeline and the Northeast Energy Direct pipeline,
built next to each other. What happens if there is an explosion and
the fire department arrives before the gas company responds? What
happens if the gas company can’t shut off the valves? And we have to
remember that the shutdown valve for these high-pressure pipelines
is controlled from afar—Texas for the AIM pipeline. And once you do
shut it down, how much gas is left in the pipe? Are there pockets of
gas? Was the pipeline leaking before an explosion? Miles separate
shutdown valves. ... Our safety precautions deal with the known, not
the unknown. The question with pipeline accidents is not if but when
something will happen. And we are not ready.”
The refusal by the political, legislative and
judicial system, along with regulatory agencies such as FERC, to
respond to the concerns of those who live along pipeline routes
leaves us with no other option than sustained civil disobedience.
This sustained civil disobedience cannot be designed merely to send
a statement. Statements are symbolic gestures in our corporate
state. Day after day, acts of civil disobedience have to physically
shut down the pipelines, rail lines and industries that are carrying
out the assault on our communities and the planet. These actions
must involve hundreds, even thousands, of people willing to be
carted off to jail in rotation. They must successfully cripple the
fossil fuel industry by making its work impossible. There is no
other mechanism left.
An angry worker in a large, black pickup truck
with Oklahoma license plates got out of his vehicle to shout and
take pictures of the protesters with his phone. He told the
activists they were trying to take away his job “based on what you
believe.” Roff countered by telling him that this was “not about
belief, but about facts.” The anger of blocked workers—which in this
case led one man to rip a banner out of protesters’ hands and
another to try to edge his truck through the demonstrators—will only
rise with further actions. The state police, respectful and polite,
separated the two groups. Packard said this act of civil
disobedience was “a country club visit” compared with the ones that
will follow.
The driver of the truck with the Oklahoma plates,
who declined to give his name, told me: “They want to shut this down
because they think the state of New York can function without
natural gas or fossil fuels. If they shut this down what’s going to
run? Nothin’. What’s their plan? To live off of wind and solar? What
makes their cars run? An’ look, that lady is smokin’ cigarettes.
That causes cancer. Her secondhand smoke offends me. Cars leak oil
all the time. It’s not the pipelines. How many people a year get
killed by cars? Why don’t they stand in front of a Ford dealership
that’s makin’ cars that kill people?”
Packard does not expect much help from religious
institutions in this fight. He says most mainline religious
communities wallow in stale liturgies and rituals, what he calls
“theatrics,” and have become socially, politically and culturally
irrelevant. The dwindling members of these congregations rarely
leave their houses of worship—which often are little more than
social clubs for the elderly or the elites—to join the struggle in
front-line communities or in groups such as Black Lives Matter or
Occupy. He calls the outreach by most religious institutions largely
meaningless, little more than a “patina of social service.”
It is only the outlaws who will save us. And it is
only among outlaws that Packard’s religious faith makes sense. The
bishop, in his church in the streets, worships surrounded by many
who do not consider themselves religious, but whom he sees as
carrying the spirit and passion for justice and commitment to life
that embody the essence of his faith and mine. Spirituality, he
knows, is found on the barricades.
Chris Hedges previously
spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central
America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported
from more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian Science
Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New
York Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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