Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Green Economy Organizing (Posted by Keith) by Keith

This essay, featuring Van Jones and "Green Jobs for the Ghetto" was published in this week's New Yorker Magazine. Although he is very caught up in advocacy politics there are some interesting ideas here about vision and organizing.

Greening the Ghetto
by Elizabeth Kolbert
A few months ago, Van Jones, the founder and president of a group called Green for All, went to visit New Bedford, Massachusetts. His first stop of the day was the public library, where someone had assembled an audience of about thirty high-school dropouts. They leaned back in their chairs, hands in the pockets of their oversized sweatshirts. A few appeared to be stoned.

Jones, who is forty, is tall and imposing, with a shaved head and a patchy goatee. He wears rimless glasses and favors dark clothing. On this particular day, he was wearing a black turtleneck, black jeans, black boots, and a charcoal jacket. He was introduced by a community organizer and aspiring rapper, who described him as “a leader with answers,” a “genius from the hood, similar to our own,” and a youthful version of Barack Obama. When it was his turn to speak, Jones rejected the lectern that had been set up for him, saying that it reminded him too much of college.

“I love Barack Obama,” he said. “I’d pay money just to shine the brother’s shoes. But I’ll tell you this. Do you hear me? One man is not going to save us. I don’t care who that man is. He’s not going to save us. And, in fact, if you want to be real about this—can y’all take it? I’m going to be real with y’all. Not only is Barack Obama not going to be able to save you—you are going to have to save Barack Obama.”
Read the rest here.

2 comments:

  1. That's a spot-on quote there at the end of your post, Keith. The real onus is on us to push the country in a progressive direction. I like Obama too, but I don't expect him to unilaterally shower goodness as we define it onto the world. All power to the people in '09!

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  2. What's exciting about handing out menial jobs to the urban working class, especially where it involves fixing up businesses and buildings they'll never own?

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