10/30/12

Paul Corbit Brown Challenges European Bankers on Coal: "Stop financing nightmares...begin financing dreams"


From Paul Corbit Brown's (bio) series of eighteen photographs, "Troubled Water" from his larger project, Toxic Water, Poisoned People: When Mountains Fall To Pay For Coal:  from left to right:

Photo 2 of 18: Acid mine drainage, July 27, 2008
Photo 3 of 16: Maria Lambert at  home in Prenter WV shows jars of water that came from her kitchen sink. Behind her are the jugs of water she filled and carried everyday from elsewhere so she would have water for her family to cook with and to drink.
Photo 6 of 18 (chosen by Blue Earth for its photograph of the day on September 17, 2012): Owen Stout with water from his family’s well in Cabin Creek, WV.

At 4:30 p.m., coming back from a late lunch, I noticed that my friend Paul Corbit had sent out--at 3:11 p.m. from Frankfurt, Germany via his cell phone--a status update on Facebook that he was "with" me and nine others speaking to a meeting of bankers from Germany, Austria and Switzerland, sharing why they should "no longer finance coal in general, and Mountaintop Removal in particular."

Through the magic of the internet, I started a conversation with him at  4:35 p.m.and by 5:12 he'd given his permission to share these notes from his talk and approved the use of the above copyrighted images.


*

Ladies and gentleman, I would first like to thank you for having me here. I am honored to have the opportunity to speak to you about this incredibly important situation. Indeed, it is so important that I have spent a week of my life to travel thousands of miles, knowing I will have only 15 minutes to speak to you. I hope I am up to the task. I regret that I cannot address you directly, in your mother tongue, for we do not share that. But I do hope to reach you as a fellow human being.

I will not speak of the images behind me directly, but rather, I will let them play silently in the background as a witness to the irreversible devastation of my home in Appalachia, the second most bio-diverse ecosystem in the world, and the poverty, sickness, suffering and death of many people at the hands of the coal industry.

Martin Luther King said, " We must all learn to live together as brothers and sisters or we will all perish together as fools. We are tied together in the single garment of destiny, caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. And whatever affects one directly affects all indirectly."

First I would like to propose a toast

First, I would like to propose a toast. I ask each of you to raise your glass with me and drink to our shared destiny. I know it isn't normal to toast with water, but in this case, I think it is highly appropriate because water is one of the few things that all humans, in fact all life on this planet, share. Our planet is 2/3 water and our bodies are more than 3/4 water. And so it is true that whatever any one of us does to the water on this planet, we do to everyone and to all life on earth.

The bottle of water I am holding is water that came from a well in a community near where I live. You would be rightfully disturbed if I told you that you had just shared some of this water, unaware, just like the people in so many communities where coal is mined.

Don't worry, even if I had shared this water with you, it's doubtful only one sip of it would harm you very much. But unfortunately, my people have had more than one drink. It is their daily reality. It is the water they use to drink, to cook with, and to bathe themselves and their children.

I will pass this water around so you can see it up close and you can know what it feels like to hold death in your hands. You are even free to smell it, if you dare. I put it in a water bottle from here because it is symbolic of the very real fact that financing this industry anywhere, makes a problem for you here, because it makes your bank complicit in the system that creates this poison water.

The effluents of mining, preparing and burning coal include mercury, chromium, selenium, cadmium, lead and arsenic- just to name a few. Heavy metal poisoning is forever. Once it is ingested into your body, it stays there and, like radiation, it accumulates until it kills you. And even worse, large amounts of this poisoning have begun to cause genetic mutations in aquatic wildlife near my home. These mutations will eventually work their way up the food chain to us, humans, who on our current course of environmental devastation, won't stay at the top of this chain for long.

The good news is that we really needn't worry about saving the earth.

The good news is that we really needn't worry about saving the earth. She has been through several mass extinctions already. We aren't really destroying the earth, we are simply and rapidly making it unfit for human life. This is proven by the fact that 4,000 additional Appalachians die each year in the areas where coal is mined and burned.

Death to my people doesn't come quickly from the barrel of a gun. It comes slowly from the simple act of drawing water from the kitchen faucet. There is no difference in killing me slow or killing me fast.

Coal in general, and mountaintop removal mining in particular, is far more than an environmental disaster. The production and use of coal is an egregious human rights violation of epic proportions. It is a living, waking nightmare.

Why should you not finance mountaintop removal mining?

The question in front of us today is, "Why should you not finance mountaintop removal mining?" If, after hearing me talk and seeing the photographs of the way my communities and our ecosystem are being destroyed, isn't enough, I will give you another reason. You represent the banking industry. Banks exist for one very simply reason: to make a profit.

The science has finally arrived to prove what we in Appalachia have always known: coal is killing us. We now have more than 22 peer reviewed scientific studies that show how coal is irreversibly destroying our water and our health. These studies prove that people who live in areas around MTR are far more likely to suffer from heart attacks, cancer, respiratory diseases and are even more likely to have children with birth defects.

The science is here and the lawyers will soon follow.

The science is here and the lawyers will soon follow. Several large cases have already been heard in the courts, with tens of millions of dollars being rewarded to those who have suffered because of coal. This is only the beginning. The courts may finally force the coal industry to pay the true cost of its profits, the human cost- which until now, had been an externalized and hidden cost.

Many in the coal industry point to the jobs that coal creates. "Look at all we've given you," they say.

Yes. I see all you've given me every day.

And I answer," Yes. I see all you've given me every day. I watch my father gasping for his next breath, just like my grandfathers did. All of them victims of Black Lung disease. I see children dying of brain cancer and my own mother suffering through two fights with cancer. I see the communities left in ravages after you make your profit and leave. I see the five counties in my state that produce the most coal are among the poorest counties in my entire country. And I see you pointing to the food you have laid upon our tables, for a time, as being merely a distraction to the fact that you have poisoned the vessel from which we drink."

We should not need to wait for government legislation in order to do the right thing

As human beings with a hearts and minds, we should not need to wait for government legislation in order to do the right thing. Financing coal is exactly and simply financing the poisoning of Appalachian people and our planet. Why do you need to wait for the government to tell you it's wrong?

Coal is a barbaric and outdated method for producing heat and energy

Coal is a barbaric and outdated method for producing heat and energy. There are ways as yet unimagined to do all that coal has done and more. Rather than mining our mountains and destroying our water, invest your best money and efforts in mining the human imagination and the untapped potential for human creativity. The energy in coal pales in comparison to the unlimited and inexhaustible fire of the human spirit.

A good investment should be one for the future, rather than one of the past.

Imagine investing in chariots and stagecoaches when the automobile was first introduced

In hindsight, can you imagine investing in chariots and stagecoaches when the automobile was first introduced?

If you can't do it for my children, do it for your own. There is only one water and one air on this planet and, ultimately, it is shared by all of us. Would you want your children to drink this water and breath this toxic air? How would you feel to know that someone in another country was actually realizing a profit from the suffering and reduced life spans in your own community? I will not sit idly by, offering my life as a mechanism of sacrifice for anyone's profits.

Stop financing coal.

Dream won't manifest unless you, the bankers, finance it

In closing, I would like to share this:

Folks often confuse what they do, with who they are. Many people regard bankers as the greedy ones who only care about money and their profit. But I propose a different view, I suggest we look at bankers as those who sit at the right hand of the Architects of the Future. The architect can dream it, but the dream won't manifest unless you, the bankers, finance it.

From this perspective, the future truly lies in your hands. What will you choose to make of it? You can choose who you are by what you do. My father, for instance, was not merely a coal miner. He was a man who chose to work hard, at any peril to himself, to provide for his family and see to our wellbeing. He and my mother always chose to give of themselves for what was best for us and our community. The world is a better place due to the kindness, devotion and generosity they shared.

Although I don't know you, I have a great belief in each of you. I know each and every one of you has the capacity to change our world for the better. As I leave you, I will offer you this choice:
At the end of your lives, as you say to your children of the world you are leaving them, "I built this world and I now leave it to you", will you look back with pride or will you look back in regret?

The quality of our future will be measured in much more important terms than simply a financial return on our investments. It will be measured more by our ability to live peacefully with one another and in harmony with the planet that gives us life.

As bankers, I challenge you to stop financing nightmares and begin financing Dreams.

Comments (10)

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This brings up an important issue about the relation of art and politics. Artists like Brown love to congratulate themselves that they are doing something “important” -- but are they really?

Since the 60s, “activists” haven’t really been active in anything: they just take pretty pictures, or write a feel-good song, or march in a silly protest. This is why liberals are so ineffectual – they simply aren't serious enough to do the real work necessary to make a lasting impact. If you really want to be catalyst for positive change in the world, you need to grow up and actually DO something instead of just observing it or singing about it or taking a photo of it.

The fight for a green energy future needs engineers, scientists, land-use planners, lawyers, and progressive lawmakers. What it doesn't need is some self-righteous liberal trying to pad his portfolio.

Let's hope the anti-mountaintop removal movement finds are more substantive and effective spokesperson than Brown.
3 replies · active 640 weeks ago
LFP You're not signing your name and it's hard to have a conversation with someone who chooses to remain anonymous while deriding others. I often wish that commentators to blogs signed their name, as do letter writers to the editors of newspapers, . I'm not sure that you will even know I replied. It's interesting, I guess, to find out how even anonymous commentators respond to what I am selecting here for publication. It sounds from your last paragraph as if you are in favor of protecting mountains from mtr.

You might want to look at his photo essay on Larry Gibson...Brown certainly helped Larry tell his story, something that Larry asked also of writers such as myself http://bethwellington.blogspot.com/2012/09/larry-...
Those who can= do. Those who can't= criticise all who do. Go back to working for the coal industry, LFP.
LFP,

I would argue that it takes all kinds - scientists, policy-makers, artists, organized voting blocs, and radicals (and many others). Scientists on their own are supposed to remain impartial so as not to impart a selection bias into their work, but scientific studies (such as the thousands of peer-reviewed articles on climate change, or the dozens released in the last few years on the health impacts of mountaintop removal) are ineffectual on their own, without someone using the data to apply pressure to politicians and corporate shareholders. Activists of all flavors give those in power the social capital to do the right thing.

I've heard repeatedly - that in order to be successful, folks advocating for change need to be more artistic. Look at how political so many songs from the 1960s were, and understand that they shaped the conscience of a generation. Each of us are born with natural talents, and I hold as a core belief that we need all of them to win.
I will say for other readers is that Brown has never struck me as "self-righteous," someone who "pads his portfolio" nor as a liberal in the pejorative sense. He is a community arts worker, supportive of others who fight mountaintop removal and has chosen to return home from his world travels to make a stand in this fight by documenting the results of mtr. Maybe the public is now to inured to devastation to react, but I like to think that photographers and writers and filmmakers and other artists have their place in moving public opinion. Think of how Rachel Carson helped end the use of DDT.

For those who don't know, Paul Corbit lives simply in a solar-powered home he built himself within miles of where he grew up in a coal camp in Kilsith, WV. Before him, all his male relatives were coal miners. He has been taking photographs since he was in the seventh or eighth grade. He was in donates his considerable talents to collaborate with a wide variety of local groups and individuals including activists, lawyers, and progressive lawmakers. I have many friends in WV who hold him in the highest esteem. Maybe some will reply here. for more on his background, you can read Jamie Goodman's piece from 2011, which I've included in the above post as the link "(bio)."
I admire people like Paul who have given up the American Dream to bring to the forefront of all we know as normal, the devastation of politics and all the problems that go along with it. Getting to the top of the ladder has many broken rungs and should be mended and if taking photos, singing songs and protesting is the only way to get some of the many to see what is actually happening in our country then so be it and I will gladly lend a hand.
Tricia Shapiro's avatar

Tricia Shapiro · 641 weeks ago

Paul's work has value that speaks for itself. He's also a longtime, ongoing supporter of other sorts of work toward a sustainable future for us humans on this planet. To give just one example: he's supported from the beginning efforts to launch Mountainhugger.com, an online marketplace that aims to connect small, sustainable businesses in Appalachia with customers everywhere who want to vote with their dollars for just and sustainable economic relationships.

Making a transition to a more just, sustainable, resilient, diverse, and robust economy and society requires lots of different people doing different sorts of things--entrepreneurs, engineers, farmers, customers, writers, and yes artists and bankers too.
carol judy's avatar

carol judy · 641 weeks ago

i am carol judy. i live in the clearfork valley in tennessee. paul corbet brown has claimed the american dream of living as others wish they could. he has reduced his carbon footprint by going off the grid with solar to transition to greener energy. In telling a generational story with photo's, something needed by us, we live along the ridges and in the hollows of mountains being taken apart, never to be mountains whole and living again. paul work is a way of reducing urban people ignorance, for the isolation they have of not knowing "us" as part of their world, we are invisible to others.. well there are stereotypes that some think of when presented when "appalachian/hillbilly/ridge-runner is mentioned. we in the mountains are not as isolated as they are, we know the urban needs, the corporate greed, the lived knowledge of being deemed and named "a sacrificial area" for over 60 years, watching out loved ones, our family members, becoming static's and numbers in health reports, rivers, creeks, streams and springs of good water, become unhealthy waters, or no water at all. people living. these central Appalachian mountains are traditional "root diggers" digging ginseng/black-root/golden-seal/star-root ect. We hears of understanding of central Appalachian mountains as a subtropical rain forest, with over 900 culinary and medicinal herbs growing here. people should know that these mountains have as much importance to cities and sustainability , as the amazon rain forest does. look at what the world is acknowledging by standing up for importance of not losing species of plants/animals, the acknowledgment that loosing bio-diverse habitats is not good or healthy for people to continue being able to live. yes, this world will survive with no people, it is we, as people, who can't survive without this world.. it is hard for those who have no context of our place and lives to get connected, Paul work helps make that happen. As a statement the other day, "I can explain something to you, I can't give you the understanding or experience of it ." as a root-digger and appalachian woman and root-digger, I feel that paul's work presents and gets people connected to our life experiences. we have to know each other to be able to work on solutions to issues that are multi-generational in solutions.. thank u
Paul Corbit Brown needs no one to defend his commitment, devotion, and personal sacrifices to the MTR movement. I know the impact and importance of his work, and the work of each/all of us. It continues to sadden me to see hateful personal attacks against any one of us. For anyone to make such a comment reflects solely on that person who stands secretly in the shadows throwing rocks at those who do the work. Gratitude to all who commit their lives to justice. I agree with Maria's comment and I thank you, Paul Corbit.
Average Joe's avatar

Average Joe · 586 weeks ago

Paul is a hoax. I know who he is and while he claims to live off the grid but actually just lives off other peoples grid. I get tired of hearing how he is so environmentally friendly. I guess the constant traveling back and forth across the country is on mules and horses. He claims to live with the basics....I was not aware that iPads and iPhones were basics.

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