'RS Interview: Special Edition' With Al Gore
By JAMIL SMITH
John Lewis had died two days before former Vice President Al Gore and I sat down to speak, and Lewis legacy was weighing heavily on his mind. Speaking from his home in Nashville, where he has been isolating during the pandemic, Gore said that while many have referred to Lewis as the conscience of Congress, he would take that one step further. For those who listened carefully to his words, I would call him the conscience of America. He had a conscience that was fine-tuned; you could tune your piano to it.
We spoke about environmental justice and the late congressman and civil-rights icons history of activism in Tennessee, which Gore represented in the House and Senate for more than 15 years and where he still lives. Gore was eager to speak about Lewis the environmentalist. Both he and Lewis worked together on policy during the time they were on Capitol Hill together both introducing the Environmental Justice Act of 1992, which was intended to help those people who face the greatest risk of exposure to toxic substances and pollution.
Though the bill died in committee, Gore noted that it was enacted three years later during Bill Clintons presidency while Gore was vice president as an executive order. Trump must not have found it yet, because its still in force, Gore said, nodding to the current presidents recent sweep of environmental deregulations. Though that action helped undergird the modern environmental-justice movement, Gore went on to cite the grassroots work of other leaders such as the Rev. William Barber II and (further back) Cesar Chavez, which has shown why the fights for racial justice and to protect the environment are often one and the same.
Gore has traveled with Barber to communities like Union Hill, Virginia, which recently won a major victory when the planned Atlantic Coast Pipeline was canceled saving a historically black town whose residents feared the new construction would endanger their air quality and well water. Still, as Gore noted in our conversation, there remain areas such as Louisianas Cancer Alley, where industrial plants have been proven to cause adverse health outcomes in predominantly black municipalities.
https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-news/al-gore-climate-reality-project-jamil-smith-1033135/
Video of interview at link. Not in YouTube format