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I thought this was a marvelous idea to share... If it speaks to

you, please pass it along...

Be Well,

Misty

http://www..com

 

BLACKOUT FOR PEACE

 

http://www.sunengineer.com/blackoutforpeace.htm

 

(Temporary web page for publishing a working draft of this new anti-

war action concept)

 

Open Letter to All Those Opposed to the Iraq War:

 

In the wake of our immense disappointment with the election and the

war in Iraq, an intriguing idea surfaced: Blackout for Peace. What

if a group or a coalition of groups with a huge email list like

United for Peace and Justice or MoveOn.org organized a voluntary

electrical blackout? For example, maybe we pick a night when most

people are at home and tell everyone to power down and stand in

solidarity with those forced into darkness by the U.S. war machine.

We live the rest of the evening by candlelight to show our

compassion for the victims of war and terrorism.

 

 

 

In 2003, 71% of all electricity consumed in the US came from burning

fossil fuels. A significant portion of this fossil-fueled

electricity comes from directly burning petroleum products (like

fuel oil, etc). And 5% of our petroleum imports came directly from

Iraq in the year 2003. While we certainly do get our electricity

from a variety of sources, most of it comes from dwindling fossil

reserves and a measurable percentage comes at gun point directly

from Iraq.

 

 

 

How We Imagine the Blackout Working

MoveOn, United for Peace and Justice, and/or many other groups

circulate emails calling for a Blackout for Peace on a given day—

maybe a Monday 7-10pm when most people are home (coordination

between time zones probably not necessary). Or maybe it's looser,

like dinner time until you go to bed.

 

 

 

Then on the day, everyone participating turns off as much electrical

stuff in their house as they can bear except their computer and

connection to the internet (if they have one), fires up some

candles, and goes on with their business as best as possible (just

like you would during a real blackout). Hardcore people can even

turn off electric heating, etc, but those who really need heat,

maybe they leave theirs on. If people are concerned with the candle

thing for fire safety, then we could promote flashlights or solar

powered lanterns—the point is just to not use electricity.

 

 

 

Then immediately upon initiating their blackout, the participants

log on to blackoutforpeace.org (or MoveOn or whatever) and go to the

participation page where they click a button indicating " voluntary

blackout starting now " (and if you wanted to really get into it, you

could also have them enter their previous month's electricity bill

amount so you could calculate the total amount of energy saved by

the blackout). The screen would show the entire US (or hopefully the

whole world) and each voluntary blackout makes a black dot. As more

people blackout of course more black dots appear to let you see how

connected you are to the others participating. Then of course when

you're done, you click the " power up " button.

 

 

 

The screen would also keep a running total of the number of

participants, the amount of energy being saved, how much money we

are not sending to support the destructive energy economy, and the

percentage of the goal reached (see goals below). There could also

be live streaming audio from some central organizing office giving

updates, etc.

 

 

 

Goals

Based on the conservative assumption that each participating US

household will save 4 kWh of energy[1], our goals could be something

like this:

 

 

 

1. 4 million participants for one blackout only = total amount

of electricity provided in the US per day by directly burning

petroleum from Iraq[2]

 

2. 16 million participants for one blackout only = total amount

of electricity provided in the US per day by directly burning

petroleum from the Persian Gulf[3]

 

3. 81 million participants for one blackout only = total amount

of electricity provided in the US per day by directly burning

petroleum from all sources

 

4. 525 million participants for one blackout only = total

amount of electricity provided in the US per day by directly burning

petroleum and natural gas = 19% of ALL electricity required by the

US per day = major pain for the oil & gas industry.

 

 

 

The Action Resonates on Many Levels

Based on our conversations with friends and fellow Guerneville

MoveOn members, we've come up with the following list of why this

action could be very successful:

 

 

 

1) Stand in Solidarity: We voluntarily put ourselves in the dark to

stand in solidarity with those forced into darkness by the U.S. war

machine and light a candle for the victims of war and terrorism.

 

 

 

2) Reduce Fossil Fuel Electricity Demand: If enough participate, we

will actually cause a dip in energy demand which helps to punish the

oil & gas industry for their pursuit of bloody oil and their

reckless contribution to the warming of our planet (see below for

how easy it will be to achieve enough numbers to be successful). In

2003, 71% of all electricity consumed in the US came from fossil

fuels[4]—that is, 71% of the electricity consumed by us, the

American people, came from burning fossil fuels.

 

 

 

3) Vote with Our Dollars: We are the consumers that are consuming

these fossil fuels. We are sending a loud and clear message to the

US government that we want them so bad that we are willing to watch

people die so that the US can dominate the economy of the Middle

East in order retain control over the last great reserve of oil. And

we also have the power to power down and vote with our dollars for

peace.

 

 

 

4) Easier than Driving Boycotts: While some have tried to

organize " no drive " days or similar boycotts, they haven't been very

successful because we Americans are way too addicted to gasoline. On

the contrary, an electricity boycott during non-working hours is

something that can easily be done by whole families in the safety,

comfort, and privacy of their homes. Even partial participation is

effective.

 

 

 

5) Very Mellow, Low Key: This is the ultimate couch potato protest

because you don't have to go anywhere! And you can participate

without anyone else knowing, unlike street protests. Plus how bad

can it be to have to have a romantic candle light dinner?

 

 

 

6) We Save, They Lose: A user initiated blackout enables us to save

money and help reduce pollution, greenhouse gases, and the demand

for a product which has caused the deaths of over 100,000 innocent

people just in the last year alone. And while we save, the oil & gas

industry loses money! If we really do it well, we may even effect

revenues enough to wake some people up! (See below for the number of

people required to cause a total cancellation of all electricity

provided by petroleum).

 

 

 

7) Build Communication & the Movement: Without lights and TV,

friends and families will have the opportunity for conversation,

games, and candlelit dinners. Being a part of a large and possibly

continuing demonstration will help foster a sense of community and

power.

 

 

 

8) Repeatable and Potentially Global in Scale: If the blackout is

successful, we could continue to do them. For example, maybe we

start some rhythm to it like first Monday of the month, or every

Monday, or better yet, we do it Ghandi-style and say we're not

turning our lights back on until you stop the war! If it goes well,

there's no reason why others around the world wouldn't want to

coordinate a massive worldwide blackout with us.

 

 

 

9) Media Attention: If we have any success at all, it will certainly

garner media attention (due to the unexpected nature of the action)

which will help to send a message to the rest of the world that

there are still a lot of us in the US that do not agree with Bush

Administration policies.

 

 

 

10) Fasting Brings Awareness: Like a fast, this act of inflicting a

small amount of suffering on ourselves may help to make us all

reflect on the energy we use every day, where it comes from, and the

suffering caused by our pleasure-filled and convenient lifestyles.

 

 

 

11) Economic Sanctions Work: While marching in the streets can

certainly be effective, the possibility of actually impacting the

opposition's wallet may be even more effective. Let's not forget

that Gandhi combined effective street actions with clever economic

boycotts to rid India of imperial rule. If we want to rid ourselves

of the new imperialists—aka multinational corporations—then we have

to use the only weapon that is guaranteed to work: stop giving them

our money.

 

 

 

Ethics & Values

At the most fundamental level the progressive movement is an ethical

movement, very similar in many ways to the abolitionist movement to

end slavery in the 1800's. And while the abolitionists did finally

succeed in convincing most Americans that enslaving another human

being is a violation of ethical principals, so too will our movement

eventually succeed in convincing most Americans that any action

which permanently diminishes or eliminates any part of the complex

and interconnected web of life on earth is indeed a violation of

ethical principals.

 

 

 

Furthermore, the ethics which we are striving to articulate directly

translate into the basic American values which most Americans

to. " Polling data make clear that the vast majority of the

US electorate wants peace, fairness, a healthy environment,

opportunity, freedom, democracy, and security for all—a world

centered on people, not profits; on spiritual, not financial,

values; and on international cooperation, not domination. These are

not distinctively liberal or conservative values; they are the

universally shared values on the which the United States was

founded " (David Korten, Renewing the American Experiment).

 

 

 

Blackout as General Purpose Action Technique

Upon reading our initial email on this subject, our friend Steve

Robertson suggested use of the blackout technique as a general

purpose means. Since many agree that the war in Iraq overshadows

most other progressive concerns at the moment, then maybe the first

series of blackouts are for peace. But once we create peace in Iraq,

why stop there? Blackout to End Global Warming, Blackout for Fair

Elections, Blackout to End Corporate Takeover of Politics, Blackout

to Dismantle the WTO, NAFTA, etc., and on and on!

 

 

 

Conclusions

The Abolitionists won their battle by fighting on many fronts:

spiritually through churches; grassroots activism through letter

writing, petitions, etc; politically through creation of the Liberty

Party which evolved into the Free-Soil Party and almost won the

presidential election of 1848; and, unfortunately, militarily via

the Civil War, though very few of the movement's founders believed

in violent means (in fact, slavery was not adopted by the US

government as a war goal until well into the war). But one important

lesson emerges: the slaves were eventually freed by a main stream

Republican politician, Lincoln, only after decades of grass roots

work which clearly expressed the ethical principals of the people.

 

 

 

While we do believe that expressing our ethical principals via the

ballot is important (by either voting for Green Party candidates or

truly progressive democrats), we believe that a Blackout for Peace

would be a new and innovative mechanism for showing our mainstream

leaders, and indeed the rest of the world, that we do have ethical

principals and we're willing to do something more than just talk

about them. Furthermore, we can use the enormous amount of press

that we'll get as an opportunity to express to the American people

how our ethics are indeed aligned, not counter (as is currently

bantered in the media), with core American values.

 

 

 

Our government is killing people so that we may bask in the luxury

of a fossil fuel powered paradise. We have the power to power down

and send a message to the world.

 

 

 

Thanks for your time, and if you are interested, please let us know

your thoughts on this concept.

 

 

 

In Peace,

 

 

 

Jack West & Christina Manansala

 

Guerneville, CA

 

jack – at – sunengineer – dot – com

 

christina – at – sunengineer – dot – com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What Next?

We have currently contacted MoveOn and United for Peace and Justice

and proposed this idea, but have not heard back yet probably because

they are really busy right now and may not have seen it yet. We are

trying to send this link out to as many people as possible now to

see what people think and if they have any ideas to add to or

improve what's here.

 

 

 

We also discussed the idea with our local Guerneville MoveOn group

and got some very good feedback. Some of which we've incorporated

into the letter above.

 

 

 

Please email Jack at the above address if you have questions or

would like to discuss further. We also have video chat capability or

would be interested in trying to get some people on a conference

call to discuss further.

 

 

 

Ideally we'd like to start big by having some large progressive

groups help kick it off. But if necessary we'll start it small and

watch it grow. At this point there are only three of us trying to

spread the word and we don't have any connections with activist

groups, so if you'd like to get involved, please drop us a line.

 

 

 

If you made it this far, thanks for listening.

 

 

 

---

-----------

 

[1] This is only 12% of the average US household electricity use in

2003 which was 33 kWh/day. Data shown is calculated from 2003 US

census data and US DOE Energy Information Administration " Annual

Energy Review 2003 " and Petroleum Supply Annual 2003, Vol 1.

 

[2] In 2003 5% of all imported petroleum came from Iraq and this

calculation assumes that the same percentage applies to the

petroleum that was burned to make electricity in 2003 (since there

is no data available to validate).

 

[3] Persian Gulf region is defined as Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait,

Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and United Arab Emirates and is home to two of

the three original members in the " Axis of Evil " club.

 

[4] Energy Information Administration, US DOE Annual Review 2003

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