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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsStanford will divest from fossil fuels. Yale will not.
From "Democracy Now!" --
AMY GOODMAN: Speaking of the student movement that has launched all of this, I wanted to turn to one of the people I spoke to yesterday in the Peoples Climate March. I interviewed Yale student Lex Barlowe of the Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network.
LEX BARLOWE: The Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network is an organization thats been in the works for a couple of years, since the beginningsince the first, very first, convergence at Swarthmore in 2011. So, yeah, so the Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network is trying to coordinate all the over 400 divestment campaigns that we have against fossil fuels on our campuses across the country. Were really excited to be here at the march today. Fossil fuel divestment has created a huge movement. Its gone in three years from like 10 schools to over 400. And were really working on getting our students in line with this climate justice messaging. We really believe that students have created a movement out of finding this way to leverage their power as students and how they can specifically be in solidarity with front-line communities at their universities, instead of just always going to these communities and going to see what they can do, how can they take action right now on their campuses.
AMY GOODMAN: Thats Yale student Lex Barlowe of the Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network. Yale has announced they will not divest, unlike Stanford, that made a major decision recently. Scott Wallace?
SCOTT WALLACE: Right, Stanford is one of the growing number of universities that has decided, under pressure from the students and the Board of Trustees and people, graduates, who have demanded it, to get out of fossil fuelsthats defined as getting out of the 200 top dirtiest pollutersand to invest in good, clean energy solutions.
http://www.democracynow.org/2014/9/22/heirs_of_billionaire_oil_tycoon_john
LEX BARLOWE: The Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network is an organization thats been in the works for a couple of years, since the beginningsince the first, very first, convergence at Swarthmore in 2011. So, yeah, so the Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network is trying to coordinate all the over 400 divestment campaigns that we have against fossil fuels on our campuses across the country. Were really excited to be here at the march today. Fossil fuel divestment has created a huge movement. Its gone in three years from like 10 schools to over 400. And were really working on getting our students in line with this climate justice messaging. We really believe that students have created a movement out of finding this way to leverage their power as students and how they can specifically be in solidarity with front-line communities at their universities, instead of just always going to these communities and going to see what they can do, how can they take action right now on their campuses.
AMY GOODMAN: Thats Yale student Lex Barlowe of the Fossil Fuel Divestment Student Network. Yale has announced they will not divest, unlike Stanford, that made a major decision recently. Scott Wallace?
SCOTT WALLACE: Right, Stanford is one of the growing number of universities that has decided, under pressure from the students and the Board of Trustees and people, graduates, who have demanded it, to get out of fossil fuelsthats defined as getting out of the 200 top dirtiest pollutersand to invest in good, clean energy solutions.
http://www.democracynow.org/2014/9/22/heirs_of_billionaire_oil_tycoon_john
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Stanford will divest from fossil fuels. Yale will not. (Original Post)
KansDem
Sep 2014
OP
JEB
(4,748 posts)1. Better get rid of Supertanker Condoleezza Rice.
KansDem
(28,498 posts)2. I'd almost forgotten about that...
It's now called the "Altair Voyager."
From May 5, 2001 --
The Chronicle reported a month ago that the White House had faced questions over the appropriateness of the tanker's name -- particularly as California struggled with the effects of an energy crisis.
The giant vessel was part of the international fleet of the San Francisco- based multinational oil firm, christened several years ago in honor of Rice, a longtime Chevron board member. Rice, a former Stanford University provost, served on Chevron's board from 1991 until Jan. 15, when she resigned after Bush named her his top national security aide.
But critics said the ship served as a giant floating symbol of the Bush administration's cozy ties to the oil industry.
"It does underscore that there's never been an administration in power in this country that has been so close to a single industry -- in this instance, the oil-and-gas industry," Chuck Lewis of the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity said last month when the watchdog organization first raised the issue.
The tanker's name also raised more serious questions of possible conflict of interest for Rice because Chevron does business on six continents and 25 countries and has been sued for alleged human rights abuses in Nigeria.
Last month, White House spokesman Scott McClellan insisted that the issue of the tanker had "already been addressed" by Rice, and he added, "she will uphold the highest ethical standards in office."
http://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/Chevron-redubs-ship-named-for-Bush-aide-2922481.php
The giant vessel was part of the international fleet of the San Francisco- based multinational oil firm, christened several years ago in honor of Rice, a longtime Chevron board member. Rice, a former Stanford University provost, served on Chevron's board from 1991 until Jan. 15, when she resigned after Bush named her his top national security aide.
But critics said the ship served as a giant floating symbol of the Bush administration's cozy ties to the oil industry.
"It does underscore that there's never been an administration in power in this country that has been so close to a single industry -- in this instance, the oil-and-gas industry," Chuck Lewis of the Washington-based Center for Public Integrity said last month when the watchdog organization first raised the issue.
The tanker's name also raised more serious questions of possible conflict of interest for Rice because Chevron does business on six continents and 25 countries and has been sued for alleged human rights abuses in Nigeria.
Last month, White House spokesman Scott McClellan insisted that the issue of the tanker had "already been addressed" by Rice, and he added, "she will uphold the highest ethical standards in office."
http://www.sfgate.com/politics/article/Chevron-redubs-ship-named-for-Bush-aide-2922481.php
They're all connected in some way...
JEB
(4,748 posts)3. The very oily Condi is part of Stanford.