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To coal-state Senators and Representatives: Please consider the very real possibility that there is a fundamental conflict between the continuance of some of your constituents' way of life, and the survival of civilization as we know it. I understand that it's very difficult to accept; it probably makes you feel about how I would if I discovered that my employer was making weapons of mass destruction. Nevertheless, this reality must be faced: “clean coal” technology will not be commercially viable for decades at least, and according to the latest science, that's longer than we can afford to wait.

American industries have become obsolete and collapsed many times before, and the American economy has continued to prosper. The U.S. government has phased out leaded gasoline and ozone-destroying CFCs, and the economic impact was nowhere near as dire as industry predicted. We can phase out coal, and the risk of failing to do so far outweighs the risk of taking action now to solve the climate crisis and grow a new clean energy economy.

I'm not entirely sure I should send this out, because according to my Democracy For America Grassroots Campaign Training Guide, "LTEs are the most personal and local part of the paper. . . . [In an LTE,] Statements like 'two-thirds of the state's waterways' are less powerful than 'the creek in my back yard.'"  (LTE is the wonky acronym for Letter To the Editor.)

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I haven't submitted this anywhere yet.  Haven't even had time to edit it, and it's probably too long as is, but it's my bedtime, so I figured I'd post it and see if anyone has suggestions:

This is it, people--the endgame on climate.  What happens this year will decide, not the fate of life on Earth or probably even humanity, but certainly the survival of civilization as we know it.  The world's biggest polluters are not nearly afraid enough to change their whole business models--after all, their leaders and major shareholders will be among those least impacted by climate catastrophe, while islands and coastal cities drown and poor farmers watch their lands turn to desert.  Governments must act, and we only have one chance to ensure that they do: the negotiations in Copenhagen this December to hammer out a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol.

American leadership will be crucial here.  We failed to sign onto Kyoto, and as a result it has accomplished very little--most of the pollution reductions it "caused" were already in progress as eastern European nations shut down or modernized dirty Soviet-era industries.  This time, we can't afford such a fiasco.  According to the latest science, we only have a few years left to get moving if we want to prevent irreversible warming substantial enough to kill nations and economies.  If these negotiations fail to produce a truly effective international commitment to action, there will be no third chance.

And if Congress can't even pass strong domestic climate legislation, they're scarcely likely to be willing to ratify such a strong treaty.  That's why we have to strengthen and pass the American Clean Energy and Security Act.  It may be our last best hope for our children's future.

March 2015

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