The following column was submitted to From The G-Man on September 19, 2015.
By Ted Glick
It’s
the morning of the twelfth day that I haven’t been eating. The only
things I’ve been putting into my body are lots of water, salt, potassium
and a multi-vitamin.
How
do I feel? Weak, very weak, as do most of the others—about 15 as I
write—who are also fasting and intend to do so until September 25th, the day after the people’s pope speaks to Congress. 11 of the 15 are also, like me, on the twelfth day of water-only.
We’re
physically weak mainly because of the water-only diet but also because
we’ve been conducting this hunger strike on the sidewalk in the hot sun
in front of FERC, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, from 7 am to 6 pm
every work day. We’ve been leafletting and talking to FERC employees,
including, several days ago, Norman Bay, the chairperson. We’ve been
leafletting and talking to passers-by and people who come to visit, as
have Tim DeChristoper, Medea Benjamin, “No Impact Man” Colin Beavan,
local high school students, and more.
We’ve
been using white boards to make signs that we change as the days go by.
We’ve been putting up quotes from Pope Francis and Gandhi. Every
morning part of our routine is to change the number of the days that
we’ve been fasting on the signs that say, “Day ___ of 18-Day Hunger
Strike for No New Permits for Fossil Fuel Infrastructure.”
We’ve
also been traveling around DC. We’ve gone to important local
demonstrations, several times to the site of a sister fast being
conducted by the Franciscan Action Network, and meetings.
All of these activities are taking a physical toll, adding to the impact of not eating.
Spiritually,
however, we’re a very strong group. Every day we gather together
outside of FERC in the morning and the afternoon to meet and go over
everything that has happened or is happening that day. We always begin
by going around our sacred circle with each faster reporting on how they
are doing. Sometimes individual fasters have reported problems, some
pretty serious, as far as how they are doing. So far we have been able
to help everyone in those situations to get over them and continue on,
sometimes aided by local nurses who have volunteered their services for
free.
At
the end of each meeting, we join hands for a minute or more of silent
breathing together and communal strengthening, and it always works.
Two-thirds
of the way through this ordeal, we’re seeing the end of it. We’re
starting to talk about how to come off the fast in a way that doesn’t do
damage to your digestive system. I shared yesterday my nine-day
plan—one day of transitioning back for every two days of fasting-- for
how to do so based on my past fasting experiences.
The fast will end this coming Friday, September 25th, at 12 noon
in front of FERC, the day after Pope Francis speaks before Congress. We
will end it by breaking and sharing bread together—a very small piece
for each of us—and with the many hundreds or more people we hope will
join us. We are inviting people who do so who can to bring a healthy
loaf of bread to share so that, together, we will break bread together
there on First St. NE, affirming life and community and our
determination to keep at it until we have won.
We need people to join us on the 25th
not so much to support us but to make a strong statement to FERC, and
all those who will learn of our action, about the need for FERC to heed
our demand: No New Permits for Fossil Fuel Infrastructure.
Some
of the fasters got into the monthly meeting of the FERC Commissioners a
few days ago, the meetings BXE has been attending and speaking out at
for a year. One of them stayed throughout it, and he reported on how the
Commissioners were talking about how electrical power companies need to
be making plans to switch to gas as their fuel source going forward.
Much of that would be fracked gas. This is consistent with the EPA’s
Clean Power Plan projections and the very serious economic problems
being experienced by the coal industry.
The
Commissioners did not talk about the need for power companies to get
serious about switching to wind or solar energy as their power source,
even though 1) they are price-competitive with coal and gas, 2) they are
actually clean and non-polluting, no water contamination, no poisoning
of the air and land, and 3) they don’t leak methane, a greenhouse gas 86
times more powerful than CO2 over a 20 year period.
It has become very clear that a, if not the,
central battle to prevent worldwide climate catastrophe is the battle
over whether natural gas, increasingly fracked gas, or renewables is
going to become the primary electrical power source in the next decade.
FERC Commissioners are going all-in on an expansion of fracking
infrastructure and exporting the stuff around the world.
This
decision must not go unchallenged, and it is not. There is a growing
and connecting national movement, centered along the east coast right
now, that is taking on FERC, in DC and in the scores and scores, maybe
hundreds, of local communities where people are organizing to fight new
fracking infrastructure. Many more need to join this fight, and now.
Let’s make September 25th at FERC in DC, following upon the big Climate Justice rally September 24th
on the mall as the Pope speaks to Congress, the next major
manifestation of our determination to prevent FERC from continuing to
poison local communities and our threatened climate. In the words of
Pope Francis, “There is an urgent need to develop policies so that, in
the next few years, the emission of carbon dioxide and other highly
polluting gases can be drastically reduced, substituting for fossil
fuels and developing sources of renewable energy.”
Wake up FERC!
Ted
Glick is the National Campaign Coordinator of the Chesapeake Climate
Action Network. Past writings and others information can be found at http://tedglick.com, and he can be followed on twitter at http://twitter.com/jtglick.
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