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ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES: Week #4 Videos

Welcome to ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES — a 10 week video tour of the 2011 “Ride for Renewables: No Tar Sands Oil On American Soil!” Join Renewable Rider Tom Weis as he pedals his rocket trike 2,150 miles through America’s heartland in support of landowners fighting TransCanada’s toxic Keystone XL tar sands pipeline scheme. To view this week’s video playlist, click on this link: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLE25F797C02D3DFEC&feature=edit_ok

ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES: Week #3 Videos

Welcome to ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES — a 10 week video tour of the 2011 “Ride for Renewables: No Tar Sands Oil On American Soil!” Join Renewable Rider Tom Weis as he pedals his rocket trike 2,150 miles through America’s heartland in support of landowners fighting TransCanada’s toxic Keystone XL tar sands pipeline scheme. To view this week’s video playlist, click on this link: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7F6CE00AABD8C5CB&feature=mh_lolz

ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES: Week #2 Videos

Welcome to ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES — a 10 week video tour of the 2011 “Ride for Renewables: No Tar Sands Oil On American Soil!” Join Renewable Rider Tom Weis as he pedals his rocket trike 2,150 miles through America’s heartland in support of landowners fighting TransCanada’s toxic Keystone XL tar sands pipeline scheme. To view this week’s video playlist, click on this link: http://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFEDE1D6D805C28AD&feature=mh_lolz

ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES: Week #1 Videos

Welcome to ROCKET TRIKE DIARIES — a 10 week video tour of the 2011 “Ride for Renewables: No Tar Sands Oil On American Soil!” Join Renewable Rider Tom Weis as he pedals his rocket trike 2,150 miles through America’s heartland in support of landowners fighting TransCanada’s toxic Keystone XL tar sands pipeline scheme. To view this week’s video playlist, click on this link: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2258134093089DBD&feature=mh_lolz.

“Keystone Lessons Learned for the Fight to Come” (EcoWatch)

March 29, 2012

http://ecowatch.org/2012/keystone-lessons-learned-for-the-fight-to-come/ (EcoWatch)

 

 

March 29, 2012

Ride Ends in Shadow of Toxic Refineries

Day 70: This morning, pedaled the final two miles from downtown Port Arthur to the Carver Terrace public housing project, where I was warmly greeted by 2011 Goldman Prize winner Hilton Kelley and members of his community. Media turnout was a grand slam. All four major television networks (ABC, NCB, CBS & FOX) were there, as well as the local papers, and all ran stories. Really appreciate Bruce Walker & Bruce Drury making the trip down to be part of it. Want to give a special shout to Tyson Sowell, Program Director of Texas Campaign for the Environment, for videotaping the press conference. You can watch it in its entirety here: http://tinyurl.com/btt65wo.

I chose to end the ride at a playground in the largely African American West Side neighborhood of Port Arthur for a reason. This is where TransCanada wants to refine much of their toxic tar sands slurry before shipping their product overseas. The American people need to know children live and play in the shadow of petrochemical facilities spewing streams of toxic emissions from their smokestacks. The EPA notes Port Arthur as having some of the highest levels of toxic air releases in the country (the companies operating the plants have been cited with hundreds of state air pollution violations). The West Side’s asthma and cancer rates are among the highest in Texas, with income levels among the lowest. The citizens of Port Arthur have suffered enough. They don’t need insult added to injury in the form of toxic tar sands emissions raining down on their community.

The end of ride press release was entitled, “2,150 Miles Later, Keystone XL ‘Tour of Resistance’ Ends With Demand for President Obama to Reject Keystone XL Without Delay.” Here are some key quotes from the release:

Ride endorser Paul Hawken, author of The Ecology of Commerce and Blessed Unrest, joined the call for Obama to immediately reject TransCanada’s permit, or be challenged on the campaign trail until he does:If America does not draw the carbon line in the Athabasca tar sands, then the question is: who are we, and why are we here? Of all the environmental follies that have occurred in time, surely this is the greatest.

Texas landowner and founder of Stop Tarsands Oil Pipelines, David Daniel:My message to every politician, from President Obama on down, is if you plan to put my family’s life and water at risk by supporting this pipeline, you need to be the first one to step foot on my property to try to take it.

Nebraska fourth generation rancher, Teri Taylor, appealed to Obama:Keystone XL is not right for America. It puts America in danger. Deny this permit for your daughters and my grandchildren.

2011 Goldman Prize winner and Port Arthur resident Hilton Kelley:The people of West Port Arthur have suffered enough. We cannot tolerate the additional toxic emissions Keystone XL would rain down on our community. Poor people also have a right to clean air and water.

Oglala Lakota matriarch and 2011 Indigenous Woman of the Year award winner Debra White Plume:President Obama faces a truly historical moment.The world will soon see if he caves in to the tyranny of big oil, or if he is a sensible human being with a heart on fire for life, for the future generations. I hope he denies the permit right away, as game over for big oil, and the first stroke of painting a beautiful path for our generations to walk on.

Let’s be real: President Obama has shown zero leadership to date on Keystone XL. TransCanada’s toxic tar sands project is not only un-American, it is a direct threat to the American people. Anyone paying even the slightest bit of attention can see this. Yet our president can’t seem to bring himself to reject this project on “national interest” grounds. Obama needs to be challenged on the campaign trail until he does. Alternatively, he needs to lay out a green energy plan for America that will revive our ailing economy and put millions of unemployed Americans back to work. On Keystone XL, there is no middle ground. Barack Obama is either with us or he’s with a foreign corporation.

After the press conference, Hilton escorted Bruce Walker and I to his restaurant, Kelley’s Kitchen, where his wife, Marie, treated us to some wonderful soul food. If you’re ever in the area, do yourself a favor and stop in for an unforgettable meal. A glutton for punishment, I then set out to pedal across the Martin Luther King Bridge for a better view of the port and the refineries surrounding the community. Felt the burn in my legs on the long, slow uphill climb. Climbing the back side, felt the burn not only in my legs, but also in my lungs, which was a first. Only later did it dawn on me this was due to the sulphur and other airborne chemicals I was breathing in. The difference is I get to leave. The people living here don’t.

Spent the rest of the afternoon doing a driving tour of the community with Hilton, learning more about the challenges facing his hometown. I am in awe of this person who gave up a successful Hollywood acting career to move home and fight for his people. Literally acting on a dream, he returned to Port Arthur and founded the Community In-Power & Development Association, for which he was honored this year with the Goldman Prize. The Goldman Environmental Foundation chose very wisely in honoring this man who gives so generously of his time, spirit and soul to protect our future: the children.

I want to take this final opportunity to thank David Blittersdorf, CEO of AllEarth Renewables; Stefanie Spear, Executive Director of EcoWatch; Casey Sheahan, CEO of Patagonia; and all my other wonderful sponsors for their extremely generous support and unquestioning faith in me. I couldn’t have done this without them.

2,150 miles later, the “Ride for Renewables: No Tar Sands Oil On American Soil!” has ended, but the fight to defeat Keystone XL and ecodical tar sands mining has only just begun. It is time now to contemplate next steps, SO STAY TUNED…

Fighting for West Port Arthur’s Children

Day 69: Pedaled the final real leg of the journey today, a flat and fairly quick 21 miles from Beaumont to Port Arthur. A few miles outside of Beaumont, a large hawk appeared seemingly out of nowhere and alighted on a utility wire not 20 feet away, wings spread wide and looking right down at me. Reminded me of the hawk in Boulder that suddenly appeared and helped inspire my ride last year. Very auspicious sign. A light rain was falling as I pedaled, which seemed to intensify the sulfur smell of the surrounding oil refineries. Made it to downtown West Port Arthur, with only a mile or two now left to go.

Today was dedicated to a group of West Port Arthur children who Goldman Prize winner Hilton Kelley had lined up to see the trike and learn about the Keystone XL pipeline. We met in a community room at the Prince Hall government housing project — overshadowed by the nation’s largest cluster of oil refineries and chemical plants — where people have been suffering in silence for far too long. Where we met was right next door to the Carver Terrace housing project, where Hilton was born in a back bay room. We had about 20 local kids there, a group small enough that each one got to take a short ride in the trike. VERY fun. One of the big “kids” even took the trike for a spin. Look for a wonderful YouTube video of Hilton Kelley showing how its done.

Afterwards, we went inside and did some Q&A with the children. Not surprisingly, most of the questions were about the rocket trike, but I think some of what Hilton and I said about why we don’t want tar sands coming to their community also sunk in. One of the older kids, Jeremiah Williams, said he wanted to talk to me, so I pulled up a chair. With a look of disbelief on his face, he quietly asked me why I did it (that is, rode from Canada to West Port Arthur). He listened with rapt attention as I told him, then handed me a wrist bracelet that read “LAUGH.” I’m wearing it now. Balances out well the jail wrist bracelet I’ve been wearing since I was arrested outside the White House this summer, along with 1,252 others, protesting against Keystone XL.

Then Hilton and his wife, Marie, generously treated me to a wonderful Cajun-style dinner at one of their favorite restaurants, where we learned that we shared a mutual friend in common, one of my ride sponsors, Graham Hill, from Boulder. So of course we had to give him a call. The older I get, the smaller the world seems to get, and I really like that.

Am writing this around 1:00am — one last late night preparing for tomorrow’s end of ride media event. I want to thank Bruce Walker and my amazing friend, Paul Alexander, for their herculean efforts to alert the media. Here’s one more newspaper story on the ride that ran in Oklahoma: http://tinyurl.com/7my8nlu.

TransCanada’s “12 Disgraces of Christmas”

Day 68: Ron and I were up most of the night (got 3 hours of sleep, tops) preparing for our street theatre media event at TransCanada’s Houston headquarters. So tired by now, I practically sleepwalked through it, but it came off well. Twelve pipeline fighters lined up in front of TransCanada’s Houston headquarters and, one by one, opened gift boxes containing twelve of the most egregious lies and abuses TransCanada is giving the world through their proposed Keystone XL pipeline and tar sands exploitation. Here are the 12 Disgraces (in no particular order): 1) Toxic Tar (not oil), 2) Ecocide, 3) Human Rights Abuses, 4) Eminent Domain Abuses, 5) Lies about Jobs, 6) Lies about Energy Independence, 7) Pipeline Leaks, 8) Polluted Water, 9) Environmental Injustice, 10) Climate Chaos, 11) Higher Fuel Prices, and 12) Undermining the Green Industrial Revolution.

During the event, on the sidewalk outside the office building where TransCanada takes up several floors, several well dressed executives walked past with their security detail to their black, tinted window SUVs with dismissive smirks on their faces. For me, it immediately brought to mind the arrogance of Ken Lay and the Enron meltdown.

We later attempted to return the “gifts” to TransCanada, with decidedly mixed results. Security stopped the larger group, but Ron Seifert, Bryan Parra and Hope Sanford got into an elevator, where they began chatting with a friendly TransCanada employee.  When they got to the office door, which was supposed to be locked, it opened, prompting the employee to say, “That’s not supposed to happen.” He then took them to his office cubicle, where they opened the “gifts.” Right about then, two big burly security guards confronted them, told them they needed to leave, and showed them the door. Despite repeated attempts to identify someone to come down and accept the other nine gifts, we were told we would have to mail them, so that’s just what Hope is going to do.

Afterwards, met up with Scott Parkin, Phillip Walker (thanks for lunch) & Bryan Parra (thanks for the coffee) at a bustling local coffee shop, before Ron headed off to the airport (thanks, Neil Carmen, for so generously picking up his flight) to join his family for the holidays. I can’t thank Ron Seifert enough for helping me take the “Tour of Resistance” to a whole new level. Ron literally “quit his job and became voluntarily homeless” to fight this ecodical pipeline project. In addition to selflessly supporting me for most of the ride, we rode together through most of Oklahoma and Texas, managing to double the size of the Ride for Renewables. It was a journey I know neither of us will ever forget.

Ended the day by doing this 9-minute interview with Marlo Blue at KPFT FM Radio in Houston before shuttling back to Beaumont for tomorrow’s final push into Port Arthur:  http://tinyurl.com/7tgl4fc.

Houston, We Have A Problem

Day 67: Shuttled the rocket trike from Port Arthur to Houston this morning (thanks, Ricky Melancon, for trusting me with your new rig!) to visit the Johnson Space Center. There’s nothing like seeing real rockets up close to inspire the imagination. Rolled the trike into Rocket Park for some photos with Saturn V and other real rockets. Then took the Space Center tour. The most exciting part was sitting in the visitors gallery of NASA’s Mission Control Center, where the people responsible for sending up and bringing our astronauts safely home do their work. It’s a serious place with a serious mission, where failure is not considered an option. We clearly need a CLIMATE Mission Control Center to help bring America, and the planet, back from the brink of global meltdown. But this requires bold and inspired presidential and congressional leadership, neither of which is anywhere to be found in 2011. Time for Occupy Congress and Occupy White House?

Later dropped in on an Occupy Houston direct action training put on by my friend, Scott Parkin, before heading over to the Occupy Houston General Assembly in Tranquility Park, where we were not only both generously invited to speak, but very warmly received. Ron inspired everyone with his talk about how the Keystone XL fight and the Occupy movement are inseparable. From there, it was on to the home of Madeleine & Jim Crozat-Williams, who very kindly offered to put us up for the night.

Here’s one more Texas newspaper article on the ride. The reporter got a few significant facts wrong, but also got a lot right: http://tinyurl.com/78lmcld.

Obama’s Trust Deficit

Day 66: Much end of ride event planning left to do, so today’s post will be short. But wanted to share this important article with you (http://tinyurl.com/bsg9uvb)
reporting on how Obama administration and State Department officials say the two-month extension of the payroll tax cut, which includes a provision requiring the president to make a decision on Keystone XL within 60 days, will likely keep the project from moving forward because it would cut short the necessary environmental review. Do you believe them? I don’t.

Keep in mind this is the same President Obama who said he would veto any legislation that included conditions on Keystone XL, then caved in and said he would sign the bill. Obama has shown he can’t be trusted to do the right thing when it comes to protecting America from Keystone XL. The American people are going to have to make him do it.