Environmental Activism Paper

1152 Words3 Pages

Environmental activism is a highly polarized movement in the United States, and in fact, around the world. To gain any small amount of success, an organization advocating for environmental justice must be willing to appeal to both those who will agree with and support them and those who will oppose them and question their actions. 350.org is no exception and no stranger being questioned on their choices and actions. 350.org formed originally to protest building the Keystone XL pipeline in 2008 but over the years evolved to encompass a much wider set of campaigns and goals all working to educate and protest climate change and harmful environmental practices. In Oil and Honey, Bill McKibben writes about the initial shift in 350.org’s focus from protesting the Keystone XL pipeline to educating about protest through divestment of fossil fuels. The shift from focusing on protesting the pipeline to protesting through divestment reflects the argument presented by …show more content…

Protesting through divestment provides the opportunity not only to actively protest the fossil fuel industry, it provides the opportunity to educate about the harms of fossil fuels, the benefits of clean energy, and the harmful practices that are leading to the degradation of the planet and causing climate change. The movement brings together many groups of people and empowers them to question the institutions they are a part of. The divestment movement is also more effective due to how quickly it spread. McKibben writes on page 230, “In the ten days we’d been on the road, about one hundred campuses had joined in, with more almost by the minute.” Divestment is a movement that everyone can feel comfortable joining, whereas some of their other actions, such as the deliberate arrests or the ice sculpture they had planned, are more aggressive and might be less accessible to those who feel

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