Tim
DeChristopher, the climate activist jailed by the Obama administration
for disrupting a last-minute Bush administration oil auction, finds his
strength by accepting the terrible reality of climate change.
In an
interview
recorded in May 2011 before his two-year jail term began in July of that
year, DeChristopher told environmental activist and author Terry Tempest
Williams that he was willing to be Bidder 70 at the Bureau of Land
Management auction in Utah – willing to dedicate his life to fighting
global warming through nonviolent direct action – the moment he learned
that the window had already closed for humanity to avoid all of the
terrible catastrophes of climate pollution:
TIM: I think part of what empowered me to
take that leap and have that insecurity was that I already felt that
insecurity. I didn’t know what my future was going to be. My future
was already lost.
TERRY: Coming out of college?
TIM: No. Realizing how fucked we are in
our future.
TERRY: In terms of climate change.
TIM: Yeah. I met Terry Root, one of the lead
authors of the IPCC report, at the Stegner
Symposium at the University of Utah. She presented all the
IPCC data, and I went up to her afterwards
and said, “That graph that you showed, with the possible emission
scenarios in the twenty-first century? It looked like the best case
was that carbon peaked around 2030 and started coming back down.” She
said, “Yeah, that’s right.” And I said, “But didn’t the report that
you guys just put out say that if we didn’t peak by 2015 and then
start coming back down that we were pretty much all screwed, and we
wouldn’t even recognize the planet?” And she said, “Yeah, that’s
right.” And I said: “So, what am I missing? It seems like you guys are
saying there’s no way we can make it.” And she said, “You’re not
missing anything. There are things we could have done in the ’80s,
there are some things we could have done in the ’90s—but it’s
probably too late to avoid any of the worst-case scenarios that
we’re talking about.” And she literally put her hand on my shoulder
and said, “I’m sorry my generation failed yours.” That was
shattering to me.
TERRY: When was this?
TIM: This was in March of 2008. And I said,
“You just gave a speech to four hundred people and you didn’t say
anything like that. Why aren’t you telling people this?” And she
said, “Oh, I don’t want to scare people into paralysis. I feel like if
I told people the truth, people would just give up.” And I talked to
her a couple years later, and she’s still not telling people the
truth. But with me, it did the exact opposite. Once I realized that
there was no hope in any sort of normal future, there’s no hope for me
to have anything my parents or grandparents would have considered a
normal future—of a career and a retirement and all that stuff—I
realized that I have absolutely nothing to lose by fighting back.
Because it was all going to be lost anyway.
DeChristopher also discussed a 2008 speech by Naomi Klein that noted
that Barack Obama’s goals for climate change were centrist, that “even
his pie-in-the-sky campaign promises were not enough.” “And so if the
center is not good enough for our survival,” Klein argued, “and if Obama
is a centrist, and will always be a centrist, then our job is to move
the center.” So DeChristopher realized that “you have to go to the edge
and push” :
I mean, with climate change, the center is this balancing point
between the climate scientists on one side saying, “This is what needs
to be done,” and ExxonMobil on the other. And so the center is
always going to be less than what’s required for our survival.