There was so much news over the weekend and into Monday that it began to feel a bit like the Trump Era again. Don’t worry! It ain’t. But it sure felt like it trying to get caught up on today’s BradCast. (Or maybe it was barely making it on air in time after we learned the catalytic converter had been stolen from our Prius. Apparently, that’s now a thing!) [Audio link to full show is posted below summary.]

Among the stories covered at the top of today’s show:

Then, as Texas finally begins to thaw out from a massive winter storm that knocked out power and water to millions in the state last week (thanks to the Lone Star State’s deregulated system that left it up to private power utilities to decide if they wished to winterize their systems — they held onto their profits instead, go figure!), it is, once again, the most poor and disenfranchised minority communities who are likely to have the most difficult time recovering. As is too often the case after such disasters, communities of color are likely to pay the biggest price for it.

We’re joined today by DR. ROBERT BULLARD, Distinguished Professor at Texas Southern University, author of some 18 books, co-chair of the National Black Environmental Justice Network, and known as the “Father of Environmental Justice”. Bullard himself was a victim of last week’s power failures in Houston for several days.

“Texas prides itself on being the Lone Star State,” he tells me. “But this severe weather event and the power outages and loss of water, has shown us that we are the ALONE Star State. Our energy policy of go it alone, keep the federal government out, doesn’t make any sense. And it’s never made any sense. We need to re-join the United States [and] rejoin the grid.”

“They planned it on the cheap. These [Texas] officials had the nerve, they had the gall to say ‘Oh, it’s the windmills causing the problem.’ In Texas, we have privatized the energy system to the point where people gambled — they gambled and lost,” he says.

Bullard explains the concept of “Environmental Justice” in layman’s terms for us, as the need to overcome decades of redlining and poverty that has resulted in a disproportionate impact on minority communities when it comes to pollution, natural disasters and climate change itself. We discuss the “cascading threats that are pushed into certain communities. That’s the double whammy, the triple whammy — what the medical folks call ‘co-morbidity’, but we call it ‘You get hit with everything damn thing!'” He adds: “How these things intersect, it means that these communities are limited when the lights go out, limited in terms of their ability to bounce back. This, for communities that are struggling with a challenge, with a disaster, and the disaster that will unfold when they get these big bills, when the shutoffs come.”

On the positive side, however, on the same day that Joe Biden’s Attorney General-designate Merrick Garland cited “communities of color and other minorities [who do not have equal justice and] bear the brunt caused by pandemic, pollution and climate change,” during his Senate confirmation hearing, Bullard is optimistic. He says he is encouraged by the new Biden Administration’s promises to tackle systemic racism and the need for environmental justice.  “These issues were on the ballot in November and we won,” Bullard asserts. “We won on policies and platforms that brings justice at the center. Not a footnote, but a headline.  Environmental justice, climate justice, economic justice, racial justice, energy justice, health justice. JUSTICE is the headline”…

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2 Responses

  1. Sorry about your car. There is a plate by Catsecurity you can buy to prevent future cat theft.

    (I don’t have one myself, but have been thinking of installing one.)