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Workers World Party: Activists say, ‘No fracking way!’

December 25th, 2009 · 7 Comments

According to Politics1.com, The WWP was formed in 1959 by a pro-Chinese communist faction that split from the Socialist Workers Party. Although the WWP theoretically supports worker revolutions, the WWP supported the Soviet actions that crushed worker uprisings in Hungary in the 1950s, Czechoslovakia in the 1960s and Poland in the early 1980s. The WWP was largely an issue-oriented revolutionary party until they fielded their first candidate for president in 1980. WWP Presidential nominee Monica Moorehead was on the ballot in 12 states in 1996 (29,100 votes – 0.03%) — and was again the WWP’s Presidential nominee in 2000 (ballot status in 4 states – 4,795 votes – 10th place – 0.004%). The militant WWP believes that “capitalist democracy produces nothing but hot air” and that “the power of the workers and the oppressed is in the streets, not in Washington.” FBI Director Louis Freeh attacked the WWP in his May 2001 remarks before a US Senate committee: “Anarchists and extremist socialist groups — many of which, such as the Workers World Party — have an international presence and, at times, also represent a potential threat in the United States” of rioting and street violence. The well-designed site features regularly updated news stories from a pro-Cuba/pro-China communist perspective, so expect lots of dogmatic stories denouncing the US government, sexism, racism, the police and capitalists. The revolutionary wing of the WWP broke away in 2006 to form the Party of Socialism & Liberation. While the WWP formerly sponsored or directed numerous popular front groups — including International ANSWER and the International Action Center — those groups all broke away and are now aligned instead with the rival PSL. [P: In the comments, Gene Berkman points out this is actually incorrect, and the International Action Center is still affiliated with the Workers World Party.] As for the 2008 Presidential race, the WWP declined to field a Presidential slate and instead endorsed Green Party nominee Cynthia McKinney. The WWP described McKinney’s campaign as “Black-led, anti-imperialist, working-class-centered and has a multinational radical base with the potential of unlimited growth.”

The following article is posted at workers.org by Betsey Piette



Members of Ithaca’s Green Guerrilla collective.

Across New York state and Pennsylvania dozens of environmental activist groups are working to ban or limit the practice of hydraulic fracturing, or “fracking.”

Fracking involves injecting millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals at high pressure down and across horizontally drilled wells as far as 10,000 feet below the surface. The pressure causes the release of natural gas. Millions of gallons of chemical-laden wastewater are created in the process.

Since 2008, more than 4,000 gas wells that use fracking have been drilled in Pennsylvania. There are more than 13,680 in New York state. The industry has grown by paying impoverished, rural northern Appalachian landowners for access to their land.

Many of the 260 chemicals suspected to be in the mix are known carcinogens and endocrine disrupters. Chemicals have been shown to spread 30 miles underground.

In Dimrock, Pa., 30 people filed a lawsuit against Cabot Oil & Gas in November after water wells exploded and the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection cited the company for several spills of fuel and drilling fluids. The spills are suspected to have caused a major fish kill.

In October the New York Department of Environmental Conservation’s first public review of natural gas drilling drew more than 300 people in rural Sullivan County. Speakers at a raucous hearing in New York City on Nov. 10 called for a statewide ban of drilling in the city’s upstate watershed, which supplies drinking water to 9 million city residents.

Green Guerrillas’ Youth Media Tech Collective consists of youth of color ages 15 through 19, who plan to create an online movie to expose the issues of natural gas exploitation. They participated in the DEC’s last public hearing in Corning, N.Y., as well as a local government hearing in Ithaca. Workers World spoke with members of the collective about their activities.

WW: Who are the Green Guerrillas?

GG:Our collective is an intergenerational crew of media makers which values young people’s creative insights and capacities to transform their reality as leaders and participants for change. As low-income youth of color, Green Guerrillas redefine sustainability in terms that make sense to us.

We make our own media, from posters to movies; do outreach at community events; and analyze important social, political, economic and environmental issues that affect our lives. We connect the dots between the same ideological approaches that criminalize immigrant communities and pollute the air, water and soil.

WW: How did you become aware of fracking?

GG: Adult members of Green Guerrillas first encountered the landsmen who have been scouring the Southern Tier region of New York state, offering landowners money in exchange for the mineral rights to the gas beneath their land. As we spent the summer of 2009 exploring our natural environment, in anticipation of making our fourth film, we couldn’t ignore this issue.

At the end of September, the New York state government announced that its Department of Environmental Conservation had completed a draft study to regulate unconventional gas drilling and would begin issuing drilling permits once the draft was finalized after a 60-day public comment period. We joined with other concerned activists nationwide to raise awareness of the problems associated with hydrofracking.

WW:What kind of problems have people confronted and how extensive are they?

GG:Problems include contaminated well water; methane contamination, causing water to become flammable; and drilling rigs erected within 200 feet of peoples’ homes. Property values have plummeted, with people unable to stay on their land yet unable to sell because it was too toxic.

Health problems, including skin rashes and neurological disorders, and unmanageable medical bills associated with treatment for illnesses likely to have been caused by exposure to hydrofracking chemicals are also problems. Because of the 2005 energy bill, chemicals in hydrofracking fluids need not be disclosed.

There has been no accountability for gas leaks or chemical spills and no plan for waste water treatment. There is a continued denial by gas companies that their operations are negatively impacting the areas.

WW: What was your experience at the public hearings?

GG: We traveled to Corning for the last DEC public hearing in our veggie-diesel bus. When we arrived, 98 speakers were ahead of us. There were around 500 people in attendance. We joined in a protest outside the building.

Green Guerrillas were first in line for the hearing in Ithaca the following day, where nearly 1,000 people gathered after a community rally. We offered a short skit to document the accounts of those who have been negatively impacted by fracking. All of the comments were recorded and forwarded to the DEC.

WW: Where do efforts stand now?

GG:Initially the DEC offered four public hearings, with a public comment period that was to end on Nov. 30. After a large public push for a six-month comment period, the DEC later extended it to Dec. 31.

There are multiple calls for Gov. Patterson to ban drilling statewide. Ithaca-based Toxics Targeting has issued a letter requesting that Patterson withdraw approval of any additional permits based on 270 documented oil and gas spills in New York that have yet to be cleaned up. More than 6,500 organizations and concerned people have signed the letter. (www.toxicstargeting.com)

WW: What’s next?

GG:We have been working with our local action network through our online presence: www.changents.com/green-guerrillas and www.guerrillagriots.wordpress.com. We created a new poster board on what the Marcellus Shale is, how hydraulic fracturing works and what people have experienced, plus why natural gas exploitation is not a transition from coal to a renewable future.

We recently became finalists in Free Range Studio’s Youtopia contest to get technical assistance with creating an online movie to expose the hydrofracking that affects 31 states. We plan to continue to raise awareness at a prisoner justice conference in Albany in March, and at the U.S. Social Forum in Detroit in June.

Articles copyright 1995-2009 Workers World. Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.

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Filed Under: Socialist/left parties

7 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Gene Berkman // Dec 26, 2009 at 5:52 pm

    In your introduction, you make reference to the WWP starting front groups – International ANSWER and the International Action Center – and you claim both groups are now aligned with PSL.

    In fact, International Action Center, founded by Ramsey Clark, is still aligned with the Workers World Party. Ramsey Clark was U.S. Attorney General in the administration of President Lyndon Johnson.

  • 2 paulie // Dec 26, 2009 at 5:59 pm

    Politics1.com made the claim (on the political parties page). I personally don’t know much of anything about it. Do you have more info/sources on that?

  • 3 Russ Miller // Dec 26, 2009 at 6:53 pm

    The GG needs to wakeup and figure out how the world works. Abundant cheap energy has created the greatest economy on earth and a society that allows them to exist. Wind and Solar are great but in our life time they will never produce enough energy to meet America’s needs. No one wants unregulated drilling however we can not afford to prevent the utilization of this domenstic asset. unless you want to keep our troops overseas engaged in oil wars! Maybe you want to starve in the dark with your friends who have no concept of how the world really works. Its easy to live in a fantasy world when Mom and Dad pay your bills. The rest of us see more domestically produced natural gas as an economic boom to the entire community so wake up and smell the gas! drilling will happen!

  • 4 Gene Berkman // Dec 26, 2009 at 7:02 pm

    Paulie,

    On the website of the Workers World Party -www.workersworld.net – there is a link to the site of the International Action Center.

    On the website of International Action Center – http://www.iacenter.org – there are reprinted articles by WWP leaders, like Deirdre Griswold, as well as links to Leftbooks.com which is the bookservice of WWP.

  • 5 Mik Robertson // Dec 26, 2009 at 7:39 pm

    Although it is not clear in the article, the “unconventional drilling” that they are talking about is the horizontal drilling and hydrofracturing techniques used to tap the deep Marcellus Shale gas that lies across much of western and northern Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio, and southern New York State.

    I was involved with a presentation on the subject with our county League of Women Voters last month. It was a very well attended event, and there is a lot of concern over the issue, although drilling of Marcellus wells has only just gotten underway in our area.

    There is really not all that much difference between the Marcellus wells and the shallower conventional gas wells, it is just that the Marcellus operations are orders of magnitude larger than the shallower wells. There are still problems with fracking fluids and gas getting into water wells etc. with all gas extraction operations.

    Policies promoting cheap energy have hidden much of the environmental and other costs associated with natural resource extraction, so consumers cannot make sound energy choices. This is an issue that must be addressed if a free market is going to work.

    I am confused about the intergenerational organization that is comprised of low-income youth of color. Are there guidelines as to who can join?

  • 6 paulie // Dec 27, 2009 at 8:35 pm

    fixed, thx

  • 7 MrJosephSchmoe // Dec 27, 2009 at 9:36 pm

    After all the industries that are found offensive in some way to somebody are forced to stop production, who will we all be working for. What options will be left. Is it being suggested that we should all be building or selling solar panels and windmills? Honestly, if the socialists and marxists had their way tomorrow, what would be the driving industry? Should we all work for the govt? If there is no private industry who will the govt. tax for income? Is there an ultimate goal or is this just the ranting of a bunch of frustrated children.

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