Diane Wilson http://www.bhopal.net/diane/ 2007-03-01T01:47:59+00:00 Texas Jail Project: Raising a ruckus http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2007/03/texas_jail_proj.html Seadrift, TX, Feb 28th 2007

Dear friends & supporters,

Ten days ago, Feb 17th, was the one-year anniversary of my release from the Victoria County Jail. I served 2 and 1/2 months for a criminal trespass conviction I got for climbing a Dow Chemical tower to protest the company's continued denial of justice to the victims of the 1984 Union Carbide-Bhopal Gas Disaster in India.

Those 73 days were hell. Only made bearable by all of you who wrote, called, paid for me to call you and sent me books. I received hundreds of messages of support and I appreciated each and every one of them.

Most of you know I wrote a nine-page letter (http://www.texasjailproject.org/stories/diane_wilsons_letter) to the Victoria County Sheriff detailing the inhumane conditions in their jail, including overcrowding, lack of legal representation, withholding of information pertaining to inmate rights and the status of their cases, and worst of all, the withholding of medical treatment from ill women who were jailed for non-violent misdemeanors.

One of the ways I fought off my anger and depression was by listening to the other women's stories and writing them down. As I heard story after story of injustice compounded by mistreatment, I knew I had to do something more to call attention to all this abuse and neglect. And when I got out, that's what I did.

TEXAS JAIL PROJECT— CHANGING TEXAS JAILS ONE COUNTY AT A TIME

With the help of my friends, Houston activist Krishnaveni Gundu (Kinnu), Austin writer/historian Diana Claitor and former diplomat, ex-colonel and peace activist Ann Wright, we started a jail advocacy group and called it the Texas Jail Project (TJP). It enjoys non-profit status as a project of Calhoun County Resource Watch, which is my 18 year old 501(C )(3)(K) environmental organization.

OUR ACHIEVEMENTS SO FAR

· We made our first public appearance as a group in May 2006, at the Texas Commission for Jail Standards quarterly meeting in Austin and when we returned on November 2, 2006, we were joined by five more women. We all wore black t-shirts with white numbers on the front that represented the various neglected population of female inmates in Texas: women with HIV-AIDS who are receiving no treatment or medication, women held in lengthy pre-trial detention and women who had committed suicide.

· Sheriffs, jail managers, other advocates, and the assistant director of the Jail Commission have spoken to us after our appearances and commented on the way our descriptions grabbed attention and made people think more about the women in jail.

· Thanks to a wonderful volunteer web designer Scott Gress we’ve launched a website, www.texasjailproject.org. Besides functioning as an organizing tool, the site enables secure Pay-pal donations.

· We started a Listening Project, to gather stories from women who’ve been inside the 255 local lockups in Texas.

· Diana Claitor’s article on pre-trial detention—of the way women AND men are held for months on end without even being convicted of a crime—was featured in the October 2nd online edition of the Lone Star Iconoclast (http://www.lonestaricon.com/absolutenm/anmviewer.asp?a=591&z=68).

· We were interviewed on KOOP radio in Austin about our activities; the calendar section of the most recent MS. magazine (Winter, 2007) listed our Dallas Caravan action.

· We drove a small caravan from Austin and Houston to Dallas for the January 23rd County Commissioners meeting where Dallas supporters met us. Four of us from TJP presented the commissioners with specific examples of conditions in their jail, and I announced that we were nominating the Dallas County Jail (DCJ) for the first annual Slammer, the award for the worst jail in Texas!

U. S JUSTICE DEPARTMENT'S SHOCKING REPORT ON DALLAS COUNTY JAIL

Our caravan could not have been more timely.

As part of our Listening Project, we came across Margie Snider's story (http://www.texasjailproject.org/stories/a_mothers_story_of_the_dallas_county_jail). She was in the Dallas County Jail for four months in 2006 and tells about women inmates with severe medical conditions going untreated or ignored and despite her protests and fears, Margie herself was given medication other than what was prescribed to her by her doctor.

We decided to go in person to register outrage in front of the Dallas County Commissioners at their public meeting last month. Just after we posted Margie’s story on our website, the U.S. Justice Department issued a stunning report about its year long investigation of the Dallas County Jail, warning the County Commissioners that the federal government would have to take over the jail unless massive changes were made immediately. In addition to high rates of infectious disease and filthy living conditions, the investigators discovered 11 deaths due to incompetence and mistreatment. You can read the report which is 47 pages of horror here: http://www.texasjailproject.org/articles/must_read_feds_report_on_dallas_county_jail

Armed with this report we intensified our efforts at the Dallas meeting. On our request most of the local TV news channels were present to cover our statements to the County Commissioners.

NEXT STEPS - GETTING THE WORD OUT

A veteran prison activist at the American Friends Society has commended our Listening Project and we are collecting more of those inmate stories every day.

In the meantime, we have received phone call after phone call, and numerous e-mails from family members of DCJ inmates asking for our help, and we are connecting those people with Dallas area advocates. Also, I’ve been asked to co-write a story for a national online news source that will draw much attention to their jail.

Our immediate plans are to return to Dallas to stage a larger demonstration both inside and outside the commissioners’ court. We also plan to speak to county commissioners in Angelina County and in San Antonio since women have written us from both those counties about mistreatment and a lack of medical attention. We can’t help everyone but we are trying to live up to our slogan 'changing jails one county at a time.'

WE NEED YOUR HELP

The Texas Jail Project has so far been completely volunteer run and led. The only financial support we've received so far has been a modest contribution towards the Dallas Caravan from the Houston based Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services (tejas). When we began we had no idea how much we were needed by inmates and their families, and now we find that we are unable to move forward without your monetary support. Your donation will go towards much-needed organizing material and a part-time project manager and basic supplies. Right now, we have no way to get that without your support.

We are a project of Calhoun County Resource Watch which is a registered 501 C (3)(K) non-profit which makes your contributions tax deductible. Please consider donating through our secure donation page on our website www.texasjailproject.org. While you’re there read more about our goals and history. If you have any questions about donating or getting involved, please e-mail our executive director Diana Claitor (diana@texasjailproject.com).

Also, you can mail a check payable to Calhoun County Resource Watch and write TJP in the memo line. You can mail that to:
TJP, 1712 E. Riverside Drive, Box 190, Austin, Texas 78741.

Please help us keep fighting for those without power.

Thank you,
Diane Wilson
Calhoun County Resource Watch
Box 1001 Seadrift, TX 77983

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bhola 2007-03-01T01:47:59+00:00
US activist Diane Wilson to receive "Blue Planet Award" in Berlin http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/12/us_activist_dia.html November 21, 2006


For Immediate Release

On 2 December 2006 "ethecon - The foundation for Ethics & Economics" will award the international "Blue Planet Award" to Diane Wilson, the American environmental activist. The awards ceremony starts at 2 pm and takes place at the "Ufa-Fabrik", Viktoriastrasse 10 - 18, Berlin.

Wilson will receive the Blue Planet Award in recognition of her twenty-year campaign against the pollution of the Texas Gulf Coast by the chemical industry and her outstanding contribution to protecting the environment.

She has continued her brave commitment despite legal charges, death threats and even assassination attempts. This distinguishes her as a defender of ethical principles in the conflict area between ethics and the economy.

"ethecon - The foundation for Ethics & Economics" will also award a negative prize, the "Black Planet Award", to the company Monsanto. Besides being associated with pesticide contamination and especially with the Vietnam War pesticide Agent Orange, Monsanto is known for the development and marketing of genetically engineered crops, with its aim being to develop a world-wide seed monopoly. The company's aggressive corporate strategy leaves no room for ethical behaviour.
Both awards were designed by Otto Piene - a member of the famous artist group ZERO - and refer to his famous work "Blue Planet".

About ethecon
"ethecon - The Foundation for Ethics & Economics" creates and promotes projects, investigations, meetings, publications and other activities in order to develop alternative economic and social models which respect the environment and humanity. Social impulses must start from the roots, having a critical eye on trust and globalization, and the conflict between ethics and the economy.


Contact
For more information please contact Christina Ledermann
+49 179 450 46 80 (International)
0179 450 46 80 (within Germany)
Email: cl@ethecon.org
Website: http://www.ethecon.org


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bhola 2006-12-01T18:39:31+00:00
Wilson speaks on environmental and legal fight http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/10/wilson_speaks_o.html J R Santo, The Dartmouth, October 20, 2006

Diane Wilson lived a quiet life in her town of 15,000 people on Texas' Gulf Coast. But even though she had her boat, her bay and her fishing, she said she knew something sinister lurked in the bay's waters.

"I was happiest on the bay and loved that it never changed," said Wilson, an author and environmentalist, during a lecture in the Sanborn House on Thursday.

Over time, dead fish floated belly-up on the water, alligators thrashed almost spastically and her lake was clogged with a thick layer of algae floating at the water's surface. The Environmental Protection Agency announced that her town had the most air, water and soil pollution of any town in the United States.

The culprit was a Union Carbide Corporation's waterfront plant, which dumped its chemicals into the bay.

Wilson, who did not attend college, initially questioned if she was the right person to fight Union Carbide, a subsidiary of the massive Dow Chemical Company. But ultimately she led the crusade against the corporation and, in doing so, said she learned what happens when a woman with five kids from the rural south tries to "mess around with" the world's largest producer of plastics.

"When you are complaining about chemical companies and you live in a rural area, they tend to think of ways to stop you from complaining," she said.

Once, a helicopter landed on the front lawn of her house and shot at it, with bullets passing near her mother-in-law and killing her dog, Wilson said.

The company also contacted the spokesman for the fishermen in Wilson's area and hired him as a consultant for tens of thousands of dollars to convince Wilson to stop the fight. The mayor and county judges told her the same.

"Be a good citizen. Drop this," Wilson said they told her.

Wilson's fellow shrimpers felt they could not make a difference.

"They felt like they couldn't fight City Hall," she said.

Only after Wilson took the initiative did her fellow fishermen join the protest.

"People need to get out there and put themselves at risk for what they believe in," Wilson said.

After saving her town, she continued to fight against Union Carbide, though this time she did so on behalf of residents of Bhopal, India.

In Bhopal, the company cut back on precautions at its pesticide plant and as a result 20,000 people died because pesticide leaked and spread throughout the city.

According to Wilson, Union Carbide tried to pay off those who survived and, due to its power over the Indian government, had all of its charges dropped.

Some of the survivors, furious at their government's actions, started a hunger strike. Wilson, who learned about this protest from an acquaintance, began a hunger strike of her own which attracted protesters from eight countries.

Wilson, however, did not stop there. When she served three months in a Texas jail due to one of her protests, she uncovered widespread corruption and racial prejudice in the Texas penitentiary system.

"On average, it takes six months before you see a lawyer. I'm here to tell you we don't have habeas corpus," Wilson said.

People are thrown in jail if they fail to pay a traffic ticket, she said. The conditions in the jail cells, too, are wretched.

Wilson said that closing the gap between the law and its practice for criminal rights will be the new civil rights struggle of the 21st century.

"In the beginning, they called me a nut," Wilson said. "Later, they called me a persistent nut."

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bhola 2006-10-22T13:02:36+00:00
Day 14: Exploding banners http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/day_14_explodin.html BY DIANE WILSON

Had a visit this morning from a little green forest ranger - the forest in this case being Lafette Park. She cautioned us. Again, again she said, that we had to sit within 3 feet of our cloth banners because otherwise its like luggage left unattended in an airport and is liable to blow sky high. So if we're within 3 feet of the explosive banner we will blow up too. Only right that the responsible party gets blown up. This is about the third time she's told us this and it's being listed on their terrorist list.

Normally, the cops are ok if you overlook the times they want to run us outa the park over the radiation/Bush's black sedan scare. It's a far cry from the 2002 vigil in Lafette Park when we were hassled at least 8 times a day on a regular basis. My participation in that 4 month vigil lasted exactly 18 days when I was arrested and thrown out of Washington DC. The judge cautioned me if I showed my face in the city I'd be arrested on the spot.

I wasn't that concerned about resurfacing knowing the turf battle that existed between the park police and the secret service and the city police. None of them liked to share their information, so if you got arrested by the secret service the first time, the second time you get arrested by the city police. Which I did. After 2 weeks of being banned from Washington DC, I showed up for a Codepink rally and got arrested by the city cops. Nice as pie. Handcuffs lightly
applied. They had no idea I was banned.

On another track,this is day 14 into the hunger strike. I've ended two of the seven hunger strikes I started in Texas at 14 days because I got exactly what I wanted. A recent hunger strike supporting the demands of the Bhopal survivors in India ended after 5 days. Again, they got almost all of their 7 demands. One old Bhopali woman who had survived the 1984 pesticide leak by Union Carbide in India and who had walked, along with hundreds of others, 500 miles to the Prime Minister
of India, said that they could carry her corpse home to Bhopal. She wasn't eating until the Prime Minister of India agreed to their demands. And in 5 days he did.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-21T09:21:05+00:00
Day 12: Buffalo Wings http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/day_12_buffalo.html BY DIANE WILSON

Let's talk about *buffalo wings. Conversation came up the other day from Geoff Millard, an Iraqi War veteran who had been
speaking out against the war. He was from Buffalo, New York and wanted to know why everybody called buffalo wings 'buffalo wings' while the folks from Buffalo call them 'chicken wings'? Well, I didn't know the wings were named after a city in
New York. I thought it was named after, well...buffaloes. Maybe an old native American delicacy.

A hunger strike is just like in the movies about starving POW's sitting in a circle and reminiscing. Conversation goes straight to food and what they're going to eat when they get out—or in our case, get off this strike. Yesterday I had a hankering for barbque potatoe chips. Usually it's pizza or Mexican food. One fella that fasted for a week said he ate so much after getting off the fast that he made himself sick. Ate four meals in one day.

I have been cautioned about my lack of caution on how I end a hunger strike. Most authorities ( even Doc Gregory) say
start sloooooow on diluted juices for one week, then broth for a week, then... Well, you get the picture. My first hunger strike I ended with a pizza, the second ended with Mexican food, the third with Pizza, fourth with Mexican food, etc etc. My only rule of thumb is alternate Mexican food with pizza. I have no idea why my stomach doesn't totally rebel but I believe it has to do with my philosophy about sickness. Just ask my kids. We were shrimpers, scraping a living, and health insurance was not in our vocabulary. So every time one of the kids got sick , I said, You're not sick. "You're ok." And usually they were. Then too, there was all that poison ivy that wove a mat across the pasture and ditches and trees. Every time I got one little bubble of ivy trouble, I'd look at it and say, "Go away." And usually it did.

I recently saw a documentary on Link TV about a tribe in Africa that never experienced sickness and when they were asked how
that was possible, the natives said they just said "No!" to sickness. That's kinda my attitude about the pizzas and the Mexican food, I just tell my stomach, "No!"

*Buffalo's chicken wings*
Deep fry a batch of chicken wings. Nothing added.
Just fry. Mix melted butter with Frank's red hot sauce and add to fried chicken wings. Eat 'till you're full.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-21T09:20:18+00:00
Day 11: Skunk News http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/day_11_skunk_ne.html BY DIANE WILSON

Fast wise, this day isn't much different than yesterday. But im not fooled. Eleven days into a fast is the equivalent of 200 feet in a mile run. Best policy is to take it one day at a time. And interesting enough, one sure thing that a fast will automically deliver to your door is a very calm spot where only the 'now' is present. Yesterday doesn't bother you, tomorrow doesn't bother you. Heck, even Fox News doesn't bother you.

I had the real unfortunate task of being on Fox News. Hannity and Combes. What can I say. I had only seen them in passing by
a tv set, but their reputation for rabid skunkness was everywhere. I sure didn't want to do it, disliking talking as I do. But news stations always get these real nice guys to do the coaxing. They just wanted my comment on the Ragiing Grannies version of the star spangled banner and about the hunger strike. There was a choice of Medea Benjamin or myself, and I
was pulling for Medea. After a long conversation in a car, everybody figured Fox goes for the emotional so I should go on.

Lucky for me, I was eight days into the hunger strike and hadn't had coffee in as long so I was calm to the point of falling off my Fox chair. The skunkness didn't come right off, it waited on the dark haired one who interrogated me on Cindy Sheehan and everytime I started to say something, Original Skunk yelled, "Answer the question! Answer the question! Yes or no! Yes or no!" After about 4 attempts to say something and being interrupted every time, I finally told Original Skunk to "shut up and let me talk." So im very appreciative of my newfound calmness. It helps when you go on Skunk News.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-21T09:17:52+00:00
Day 9: Doc Gregory http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/day_9_doc_grego.html BY DIANE WILSON

Holding this water bottle pretty close. I try not to use a different plastic bottle every day and end up polluting the earth with more trash. We've got enough landfills. The car that has the water jugs is out at the capitol so ive got an empty water bottle. Oh well, so much for drinking water. Dick Gregory, the legendary faster and our official 'doctor' said drink at least a gallon of water a day and I certainly don't do that. Probably more like 2 pints. Maybe that's the reason my voice gets lower and lower; its gotta be a water issue there.

Dick said don't go to the doctors if you get sick because they don't know nothing about fasters. They're only interested in those that have been eating. Have no advice other than, "start eating!"

I find that pretty amazing especially as research with rats (or maybe its mice) have shown that starving them a little bit lengthens their life. So if this hunger strike doesn't kill me then im sure I'll live to a ripe old age. Another little amazing fact is that when you start fasting, the body burns the fat cells for energy and the fat cells is where chemicals you have been exposed to are stored. So fasting releases those contaminates from your body and hopefully with all that water you're drinking, you get rid of a lot of bad stuff. Probably why you live so long.

'Doc' Gregory comes down to the park every day. Very well dressed man. I wont even guess at his age but he does discuss Babe Ruth and folks like that. Yesterday he was in sharp looking white suit and he looked like he just stepped off a model ramp. Fasting has certainly not harmed that man. He's on a juice fast and the last time he did a juice fast he was on it for 270 days. Gregory also said he use to weigh 300 pounds. Now he's about 125 pounds dripping wet.

I've done 7 hunger fasts so ive got a good idea of how it works. The first 4 days is usually the worst and then it starts getting better. You're not hungry anymore, although a woman yesterday in our evening circle said she was "hungry!!!". I know ive been on strikes before and at 20 days I feel that maybe im mistaken; maybe im not on a hunger strike at all. The 'Doc' says this is because the body's own morphin is cruising through your body. Its an automatic reaction to the fasting. 'Doc' says when you see all those starving kids in Africa with bloated bellies and tiny arms and legs and you wonder why they don't swat off all those flies, its because they're high as a kite. That's what the 'Doc' says.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-21T09:16:38+00:00
Day 4: "Radiation" http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/day_4_radiation.html BY DIANE WILSON

I started a letter on the first day but pooped out. Probably it was that 2 mile walk in the hot hot sun that did it. Dick
Gregory, who's famous for his hunger strikes on the Viet Nam war, made a speech under the trees and said if you're on a fast its real important to pace yourself, don't exercise, don't walk 50 blocks to a July 4 parade. But on the first day, even with seven hunger strikes under my belt, I walked all the way to the parade. Then the rest of the day I sat under
a tree, red-faced and exhausted. Not a good start.

But here I am, fourth day into the strike or fast or whatever you want to call it. Feeling much better. Energy aint bad. I'm a cafeein nut; drink coffee all day long and I'll tell you a little secret, I've always felt my high energy came from all that coffee.. But I haven't had coffee in 4 days and still my energy comes. It sneeks upon me like a small green snake wiggling across the yard.

Some of the women felling weak and are having little fainting spells. Not actually fainting, but getting dizzy and nauseous. They get pass that stage, though. Day four is a breaking point. I don't get faint at all. Don't know why, maybe it's from being from Texas. Reason enough.

Out of the 4 days of fasting, we've been rained out twice and run out by the cops twice. For no apparent reason, here come the fellas yelling at everybody to get clean outa the park. Nobody allowed. First time that happened, a big dignitary was arriving at the White House. The next time it happened, the prime minister of Canada was coming and going at the White house and here come the cops. I'd like to describe them more than just "cops" but frankly Im not sure who's at the bottom of this. The secret service, the swap team, and the K-9's were involved so I'm a little unsure of who was really incharge. The second time the cops came, we just got close to the road between the White House and Lafette Park with our banners to bring the troops home and refused to move. The cops came up and said we had to move. Get out. It was for our own security. We said, "Why?" and they said there's harmful emissions out there and the alarms are going off all over the place. We said what harmful emissions and they very dead faced and serious.

"Radiation."

Well why weren't the cops wearing masks? Why did they look so calm about the whole thing if radiation was running rampant? What about that poor president over there? Wouldn't the radiation affect the president? Did the EPA know about the radiation problem?

Well the cops didn't worry about the president because doctors would take care of George Bush, it was just our health they were worried about, so get outa the park. Eventually we stonewalled and asked enough questions that even the visitors that got ran out got tired and started coming back in. Then it was sure enough ruin for the evacuation. Now they just clear the road and leave the park to us. Victory comes in small doses.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-21T09:15:32+00:00
Day 2: Troops Home Fast http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/day_2_troops_ho.html BY DIANE WILSON

The first hunger strike I did on a shrimp boat in Texas is kinda like that tree in the forest illustration. You know, does it make a sound if nobody hears it. I was hunger fasting on a shrimp boat and that was 1991 and I was still ignorant of the uses of cell phones, So there I was on a shrimp boat and a lot of folks were putting me thru the ringer on it. My mom and sisters and two brothers included. The only folks that knew about the hunger strike was the Formosa Plastics, a petrochemical plant, that I was fighting. So every day, here came the corporate officers in their black suits and they'd tell me how stupid I looked. Didn't I realize how stupid I looked. Well, no I didn't so I stayed there until the captain of the shrimp boat showed up and told me to get off his dang boat or he'd throw me overboard.

Amazingly, after 14 days I won everything I wanted on that hunger strike.

Now here I am on my 8th hunger strike in Washington DC and a hot day in Washington is whole lot like Texas minus the humidity. I had spent my first night in Washington dc on a porch swing, the wind on my face, and not a single mosquita around. Nobody rushed me to get up, I had an automatic alarm clock-- old shrimping habits. Not counting the hunger strike, we have a pretty generous schedule. All us fasters and supporters were suppose to met at 10am under the trees across from the white house It is a lot more generous than the first codepink vigil back in 2003, pre Iraqi war, when we sat on stone cold bences in lafette park at 7am on very cold morning. Its not bad under the trees. We've got a bunch of Codepink banners left over from a hundred protests that we sit on and after a prayer and some singing, our day begins.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-21T09:14:07+00:00
Why I am doing a hunger strike http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/why_i_am_doing.html DIANE WILSON, OUTSIDE THE WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON DC

When I did my first hunger strike on a shrimp boat in Texas in l991, an environmentalist friend said it was the stupidest thing he had ever heard of. "Nobody does hunger strikes in Texas!" Still, I sat, not eating, until a local shrimper threatened to throw me overboard if I didn't get off his dang boat. I had never done a hunger strike before. I was a woman shrimper. What the heck did I know about civil disobedience? I grew up in the '60s all right, but I wasn't a flower
child. I was a solitary teen who loved hot Texas bays and spent half my time sitting in the tide.

But there comes a time when the orthodox route takes you to a place you're unwilling to go. In l991 it was toward a gigantic
petrochemical expansion by Formosa Plastics, a notorious polluter that was coming to Texas. The hunger strike was my last ditch attempt to save my home bay.

A hunger strike comes from the heart. It isn't a coincidence that Gandhi's hunger strikes were decided suddenly. The planning might take some time, but the decision doesn't. Gandhi called it "soul power". I didn't call it nothing back in 1991, but I knew, intuitively, to NOT think long and hard about that hunger strike. So, while I had no resources - things like money and people to support me - I did have myself and a living, breathing bay and so I started a hunger strike nobody believed in. That first hunger strike succeeded beyond my wildest hopes, well, good enough that folks figgered a bold man
must be behind me somewhere.

Now, fifteen years and seven hunger strikes later, I'm fixing to start another hunger strike to save lives. Last May I
joined a CodePink Mother's Day vigil at the White House and walked in a silent march to a big green field where thousands of boots representing dead soldiers and dead Iraqi civilians lay. The most common sign was 'Out of Iraq, NOW. Peace, NOW.' Every speech boiled down to one message: 'Peace. Not tomorrow. Not in a year. NOW. Its pretty much what Martin Luther King said when he called for freedom from fear and oppression in the '70s. WE WANT IT NOW.'

Those words echo polls that show a majority of Americans don't want this war and want the troops to come home. Not because war is too tough or that some folks are lily livered and want to cut and run, but because this war is based on lies and a lot of tangled agendas clearly having to do with oil. The question that remains is: are those who want the killing to stop as committed to peace as those who are committed to war. The war machine will certainly commit the lives of our children and Iraqi children. But will we commit our own lives? Would we exchange our lives for those of the soldiers being shipped out or barricaded in the "Green Zone" in Baghdad? Would we risk our lives so Iraqi children could live?

I grew up with a Pentecostal church nearly in my back yard, and I've retained one thing besides the gospel singing: we are our brothers' and our sisters' keepers. I find it baffling that with all the jostling over who's side God is on or who's the better 'born again' fella, nobody takes that peaceful phrase beyond the paper it is written on.

I was ten when John F Kennedy was inuagurated, and I remember something he said that puzzled me at the time. He said,
"Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." Was he asking me to join the Peace Corps? I volunteered as an Army medic during the Viet Nam War, but I don't think he was talking about that. Forty-five years later, I know what Kennedy meant. He believed that the potential greatness of this country starts and ends with WE, THE PEOPLE. Not "We, the President." Not "We, the Congress." Not "We, the corporations." That is why I am beginning this hunger strike: to stop an insane war and bring the troops home, and also to keep this country from going where we seem to be heading.

I believe it is better that we put our lives on the line than that our children put their lives on the line. It is better that we put our lives on the line than that innocent Iraqi children give up their lives. If we can do this, maybe, maybe, we can create a safe space where peace can grow. I am not certain that this will happen, but I know that when we lose ourselves, we find ourselves.

And I'm willing to stake my life on it.

Visit the Codepink "Troops Home Fast" site

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bhola 2006-07-18T20:15:21+00:00
The latest from the Code Pink hunger strike to bring "troops home fast" http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/for_the_latest.html Updates from the fast site are carried daily on http://www.codepinkalert.org.

Check http://www.troopshomefast.org/article.php?list=type&type=144

What we're doing today:

Wednesday 12 July

10 am - Attend a hearing on the rights of Guantanamo detainees. House Armed Services Committee, 2118 Rayburn building. (Meet at 9:30 am at the front entrance of the Rayburn building, on Independence Ave, between 1st and South Capitol, SW)

11 - 3 pm - Ben Cohen from Ben and Jerry's will be in DC to scoop up their new flavor: American Pie. This flavor also highlights this country's misplaced funding priorities. (Upper Senate Park, on Constitution Avenue between Delaware and New Jersey Avenues)

5 - 7 pm - Local activists working to call attention to the G8 Summit being held this month, will connect the G8 and struggle in Ecuador to the war in Iraq. (Lafayette Park)



What we did yesterday:

Tuesday 11 July

Fasters and CODEPINKers attended two hearings today, a Judiciary Committee hearing on the Guantanamo military tribunals, and the confirmation hearing of torture advocate, William Haynes.

Some were allowed to hold "Close Guantanamo" signs through the entire hearing. Former Army Colonel Ann Wright was arrested for standing up in a detainee's orange jumpsuit and condemning the confirmation of William Haynes! She was released this afternoon and is doing fine.

Art Laffin from Dorothy Day Catholic Worker House told us about the trip to Cuba where they held a solidarity hunger fast outside of the Guantanamo detention center. It was a moving presentation.


Upcoming actions:

Thursday 13 July

8:30 am - Breakfast meeting with Senators Durbin and Obama (902 Hart Senate bldg)

TBA - Congressional Press Conference

5 - 7 pm - Raed Jarrar will lead a seminar on the Iraq Peace Plan.

Friday 14 July

TBA - Press Conference at Mitch Snyder Homeless Shelter, to highlight the cost of war to the local community.


July 12 to August 15

We'll be fasting publicly from 10 am - 7 pm

During "peak hours," 12 - 2 pm and 5 - 7 pm, we'll have teach-ins, skills sharing and group activities at the White House. If you have something to offer, email dc@codepinkalert.org. We'll also be promoting on-going grassroots campaigns, including the Voters for Peace pledge, the Cities for Peace local anti-war resolutions, and the Declaration of Peace.

August 16 to September 2

The Fast will move to Camp Casey in Crawford, Texas

For more info: call 202 265 1671 x3; or email dc@codepinkalert.org

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bhola 2006-07-12T09:13:00+00:00
"Troops Home Fast!" - support the Code Pink hunger strike! http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/07/troops_home_fas.html THE WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON DC, JULY 4, 2006

Diane Wilson and other activists of Code Pink began an indefinite hunger strike today to end the war in Iraq. Calling the action "Troops Home Fast", a group of about 200 people staged a rally for peace in the morning, then settled into their protest camp in front of the White House where they will bring the message of the hunger strike to President Bush and the hordes of tourists who visit daily.

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Two protesters, Geoffrey Mallard, a 25 year old disabled veteran from Iraq, and Chloe Jon-Paul, a 71 year old woman were arrested by more than a dozen police officers on motorcycles and horseback when they tried to join the Independence Day parade with their message of peace. Medea Benjamin, co-founder of Code Pink and one of the long term hunger strikers said it was "ironic that an Iraq veteran who had certainly earned the right to march was not allowed."

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Later in the afternoon, the core group of about 60 hunger strikers gathered under some shade trees to share ideas and inspiration for the fast. Cindy Sheehan and two other mothers of young men killed in Iraq, as well as mothers of soldiers still on active duty were among the fasters.

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So far more than 3,000 people have signed up on the website to fast and support the hunger strike. I brought a message of support and solidarity from the people of Bhopal to the group and told them how we had protested the Iraq war in Bhopal before it even started.

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Visit the website www.troopshomefast.org to follow the news and sign up for the fast.

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bhola 2006-07-08T00:00:47+00:00
Cindy Sheehan, Dick Gregory, Diane Wilson, Susan Sarandon, Sean Penn and Hundreds more launch hunger strike to end the Iraq war http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/06/cindy_sheehan_d.html FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, June 27, 2006 CONTACT:
Meredith Dearborn 650 208 2788 Gael Murphy 202 412 6700

PRESS CONFERENCE: 5pm, July 3, 2006 – Penn. Avenue between 15th and 17th

The “Troops Home Fast” begins after a final meal in front of White House

On July 3, 2006, CODEPINK: Women for Peace, Global Exchange and Gold Star Families for Peace will announce a historic hunger strike against the war in Iraq. At 5pm, they will sit down in front of the White House to eat their last meal and hold a press conference before beginning the fast at the same location in the morning of July 4 at 10am.

“We’ve marched, held vigils, lobbied Congress, camped out at Bush’s ranch. We’ve even gone to jail. Now it’s time to do more,” says peace mom Cindy Sheehan. “While others are celebrating July 4th with barbeques, we’ll be showing our patriotism by putting our bodies on the line to bring our troops home.”

Hundreds of celebrities, veterans, mothers, and concerned citizens across the country will participate in a rolling fast. Strikers include musicians Willie Nelson and Michael Franti, actors Danny Glover, Sean Penn and Susan Sarandon, Gold Star parents Cindy Sheehan and Fernando Suarez, legendary faster and comedian Dick Gregory, environmental activist Diane Wilson, Iraq war veteran Geoffrey Millard and Gulf War vet Michael McPherson, labor leader Dolores Huerta and CODEPINK cofounders Medea Benjamin, Jodie Evans and Gael Murphy.

The organizers call on a long history of fasts for political purposes, claiming their place among the Suffragettes, Mahatmas Gandhi and Cesar Chavez. In honor of this rich history, the fasters will gather at the Gandhi memorial statue a Massachusetts and 21st NW on July 3 at 3pm, then march to Pennsylvania Avenue for the meal and press conference at 5pm. In other parts of the country, people will engage in rolling fasts, passing the fast from person to person every 24 hours.

Diane Wilson, who has engaged in several hunger strikes in her history as an environmental activist, says she will not set an end date to her fast. “My goal is to bring the troops home. I don’t know how long I can fast, but I’m making this open-ended,” she says. “I plan to take this as far as I’ve ever taken anything in my 58 years. I fear our future is at stake, and I’m ready to make a major sacrifice.”

The fast will last until September 21, International Peace Day, when activists around the country will initiate a week of nonviolent actions against the war as part of the Declaration of Peace.

For more information, including a full list of fasters, please see www.troopshomefast.org.

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bhola 2006-06-29T00:39:53+00:00
Diane Wilson named Eco-Hero in Alternet poll: Congratulations Diane from all your friends in Bhopal http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/05/celebrating_our.html ALTERNET EDITORIAL April 22, 2006.

When Vanity Fair announced its special "green issue," focusing on the environment and those who fight on its behalf, it seemed a watershed moment, a sign that talk of global warming has officially broken into the mainstream. With ample scientific evidence that clearly shows the negative impact human beings are having on the planet, it's long past time we started asking how we can stop it, rather than naively pondering whether it's going on at all. This Earth Day, we can all celebrate this shift in focus -- and the people who have fueled it.

But the magazine focused almost exclusively on the rich and powerful figureheads of the enviro movement, leaders like Al Gore, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Julia Roberts. In doing so, Vanity Fair missed the very people who offer the most hope in solving the problems we're facing: the grassroots activists and leaders that push environmentalism ever forward.

When we asked readers to nominate their grassroots eco-heroes, we received hundreds of names. It's a testament to the number of people, often uncelebrated, who continue to fight for our planet. It is one thing to champion a cause, another to live it. And while Julia Roberts and George Clooney look great in green on the Vanity Fair cover, these nine eco-heroes are responsible for making our entire planet look better and greener.


Rebecca Aldworth, Humane Society

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Rebecca Aldworth (Credit: HSUS/Brian Skerry)

Rebecca Aldworth is director of Canadian Wildlife Issues for the Humane Society of the United States. For the past ten years, she has campaigned to stop the commercial seal hunt in Canada. Every year, she serves as a witness to the hunt, bringing journalists, parliamentarians and scientists to observe the savage competition, which routinely involves skinning the animals alive. Aldworth's tireless efforts to bring the slaughter of seals into the public eye have paid off. This year, Greenland stopped its trade in Canadian sealskins -- no small feat considering that over the past two years it has been the recipient of some 90,000 skins. Aldworth is devoted to finding constructive solutions to end sealing by working to create compensation programs to dissuade fishermen from the practice. In addition to Greenland, Mexico, Belgium, Croatia and Luxembourg have all recently taken steps to ban their trade in seal products.

These steps are critical to ending a practice that many aren't even aware is still going on. As Aldworth explained, back in the 1970s and 80s when this campaign was at its height globally, the seals became the symbol of the animal protection and environmental movements. In the 1980s, when the EU banned the import of newborn seal skins, the victory "turned us from protesters into the politically powerful. We changed from a movement that stood in the streets and didn't really effect policy to one that convinced governments around the world to take action." But in the 1990s, Canada's federal government subsidized the return of the hunt. Despite the setback, Aldworth is optimistic about the future, noting that she believes this may be the last year we have to see the slaughter of baby seals in Canada. "This is a victory we simply have to win," she notes, "and I think we will win it."


Janine Blaeloch, Western Lands Project

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Janine Blaeloch

On paper, a land trade where the government takes in 33,000 acres for public use in exchange for just 7,200 acres of national forest seems like a win-win, right? Not if the company that's offering up the land is paper giant Weyerhauser. According to Janine Blaeloch, the founder and director of the Western Lands Project, the deal would have given up thousands of acres of native forests in exchange for "rocks and stumps." This proposed deal spurred the creation of the Western Lands Project, a Seattle-based nonprofit whose aim is simple: to keep public lands public.

Blaeloch says that, in addition to preserving public lands by keeping them out of the hands of developers and companies like Weyerhauser, the WLP's work helps to raise public awareness of the kind of backroom deals that happen between the federal government and corporations. It's the kind of work that's all the more important now, when the federal officials who are responsible for safeguarding public lands have recently worked for the same industries they're supposed to be supervising.

In the ten years since Western Lands took on Weyerhauser -- and won a major victory in 1999, preventing the transfer -- Blaeloch says she's been consistently impressed at just how much the public cares about the land. "All these public lands are something the U.S. has that no one else in the world has. It's also the one elemental thing that we all share, that we all have in common." And that's something everyone agrees is worth fighting for.


Vivian Chang, Asian Pacific Environmental Network

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Vivian Chang

As executive director of Oakland, Calif.'s Asian Pacific Environmental Network, Vivian Chang wears many hats. As it notes on its website, APEN believes "the environment includes everything around us: where we live, work and play."

Chang -- like APEN itself -- works on grassroots levels to build leadership and solidarity within underprivileged communities, and direct organizing is where her group's heart lies. APEN's much-respected Bay Area projects include the five-year-old Laotian Organizing Project (LOP) in Richmond, which is also home to the 11-year-old Asian Youth Advocates program for young women (focusing on environmental and reproductive health and justice, community activism and cultural identity); and the four-year-old Power in Asians Organizing (PAO) which works with a pan-Asian immigrant community in Oakland.

As Chang and APEN's development director, Manami Kano, concisely summarized in a piece for Grist Magazine, "We all know things are terribly wrong, that the frameworks of liberalism and environmentalism have failed, and that no social movement -- environmental, labor, racial justice, women, LGBT -- is being spared from the right's consolidation of power."

Sadly, yes -- AlterNet knows "things are terribly wrong." This is what makes Chang, and her work with APEN, all the more inspiring -- for the brave, important work she has dedicated her life to.


Theo Colburn, Our Stolen Future

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Theo Colborn

Genital malformations. Declining sperm counts. Breasts on toddlers. According to Theo Colborn, these increasingly common phenomenons are our fault. Dr. Colborn is the pioneer-scientist on studies supporting the "Endocrine Disruptor Hypothesis," a theory that synthetic chemicals, created and released into the environment by humans, are mimicking hormones in our bodies and essentially "neutering the population."

Concern for water quality drove Colborn back to college at the age of 51. She received a doctorate in zoology at the age of 58 and went on to co-author Our Stolen Future. The book, a synthesis of her findings supporting the Endocrine Disruptor Hypothesis, created quite a stir in the scientific community, and there were efforts to censor the studies featured in it. It was precisely this kind of censorship that encouraged her to keep pushing to get the truth out. She believes the only way to continue working toward a more environmentally sustainable future is for people with courage to continue pushing independent media coverage and educating the public.

These days, Colborn can be found in Colorado fundraising for her nonprofit organization The Endocrine Disruptor Exchange (TEDX) and driving around the mountains in her Prius looking for new spots to go birding.


Juliet Ellis, Urban Habitat

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Juliet Ellis

If environmentalists are ever going to make progress, environmental and social advocates must cooperate with government officials and business leaders to change the way our society operates. Juliet Ellis, the executive director of Urban Habitat, an Oakland based nonprofit is working to do just that. Ellis and her associates at Urban Habitat approach the complex mission of creating an environmentally just society through policy and advocacy, research and education, and by building multi-interest coalitions to hold politicians and businesses responsible for their actions. So far, their work has "helped to broaden and frame the agenda on toxic pollution, transportation, tax and fiscal reform, and the nexus between inner-city disinvestments and urban sprawl."

Ellis earned her M.B.A. with an emphasis in environmental and urban studies from San Francisco State University. Before becoming the director of Urban Habitat, she worked as a program officer for Neighborhood and Community Development at the San Francisco Foundation. She currently serves on the board and steering committee of the Bay Area Transportation and Land Use Coalition, the Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Communities, the Capital Community Investment Initiative, Girls After School Academy, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and the Partnership for Working Families.


Cynthia Pryor, Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve

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Cynthia Pryor

In her work as executive director of the tiny 501(c)3 Yellow Dog Watershed Preserve, Cynthia Pryor of Big Bay, Mich., works -- tirelessly and solo -- to protect the pristine wilderness, streams and ground water in Michigan's largely unpowered, unpaved Yellow Dog Plains.

Pryor founded YDWP in 1995, and as its only employee, she's had her work cut out for her. Things began heating up in 2002, when mining company Kennecott Mineral Explorations discovered a small mineral deposit of nickel and copper on the plains. The company wanted to develop harmful underground sulfide mining there, potentially damaging both the Salmon-Trout River (which provides spawning and nursery ground for a rare native breed of Michigan trout) and the Yellow Dog River, which supports many rare species from the moose and the wolf to the peregrine falcon.

"Since Kennecott announced its plans, we've been aggressively opposing sulfide mining in Michigan. We've developed a statute, rules, and have been getting the whole community involved. It's just not good for the town -- such a water-rich place -- and it's not good for Michigan," Pryor tells AlterNet.

And her small Big Bay community (population: 250) tends to agree. Pryor has recruited a "broad coalition of folks opposed to sulfide mining," and most locals have aligned with her to fight the proposed mining.

"Kennecott has not been successful yet," Pryor notes, with a tinge of disdain for the "arrogance" displayed by this large corporation (Kennecott is part of the second-largest mining company in the world). "They thought they could come in and do whatever they wanted," she says. "They thought they would just come to our little remote location, and that no one was going to oppose it."

But, clearly, with eco-warriors like Pryor in their midst, Kennecott was dead wrong when it decided to mess with Yellow Dog.


Michael Reynolds, Earthship Biotechture

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Michael Reynolds (Credit: Cer!se.)

Back in the '70s, Michael Reynolds took watching the news to a new level. Having seen a report on the growing number of beer cans thrown over streets and highways immediately after watching a report on a growing shortage of timber, Reynolds began incorporating beer cans in the building materials he used in home construction. Over the next 30 years, Reynolds synthesized this common sense approach, using unconventional materials and sustainable technologies, to create his company -- Earthship Biotecture. Using solar and thermal heating and cooling, wind electricity, water harvesting, and contained sewage treatment, Reynolds has developed off-the-grid housing that is both environmentally and economically viable.

Based in New Mexico, the growing interest in Biotecture has led to the creation of three communities in Taos. Reynolds' vision, however, is distinctly global. Reynolds leads disaster relief crews, focusing on providing immediate housing that can be efficiently integrated into long-term sustainable housing, with the underlying focus on transferring the knowledge to local groups and citizens. It's an ambitious goal, but it has already seen successes in such varied places as India, Spain, Bolivia, Honduras and Belgium. Reynolds has dedicated his life to his ideals, emphasizing the simplicity and necessity of sustainable living. As his website states,

The condition of our planet tells us we must now begin to take responsibility for what happens beyond the reach of our fingertips. There is no mystery involved in Earthship electricity. There is no unknown source of water. There is no magical black hole that sucks up all our sewage. Instead, we work in harmony with the earth to deal with these issues -- taking what it has to give us directly and giving back what it wants to receive. With this harmony ringing in our minds we evolve the Earthship Systems.


Neil Turner, Citizens Advocating Responsible Development

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Neil Turner

As president of Citizens Advocating Responsible Development, Neil Turner fought the construction of a proposed 520-megawatt gas-fired electric power plant in the Glenville Industrial Park (GEP) near Schenectady, N.Y., starting in 1999. With wealthy, powerful backers like General Electric and Duke energy, and bought-off, rubber-stamping politicians ushering its progress, the project appeared a done deal. But after constant pressure from Turner and a careful tactical approach, years of fighting paid off.

The original project plans by plant developers had the GEP buying water from the city of Schenectady and using the nearby village of Scotia's sewer system for waste water disposal. With pressure from Turner, Schenectady's City Council eventually opted against selling the GEP water, and the town government of Scotia voted to deny use of the sewer system. Both Duke Energy and General Electric eventually pulled out of the project, putting the developer's dreams on ice. By the end of 2003, the power park was doomed, and the project's offices were closed.

When he was told that AlterNet readers had voted him as an environmental hero, Turner responded, "I almost hate to classify this myself as environmentalist. What it takes is persistence. When we embarked on the campaign to stop the power plant in Scotia, everyone told us, 'Oh it's a done deal.' But we kept going for five years and pushed them back. We stopped the power plant on technicalities, cutting off their source of water and stopping their sewage. This wasn't heroics; this was persistence."


Dr. Rosalie Bertell, Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart

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Rosalie Bertell

In the mid-1980s, two catastrophes rocked the world in quick succession: the 1984 Union Carbide explosion in Bhopal, India, which killed more than 15,000 people and sickened as many as 600,000; and the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear reactor meltdown that sickened and killed thousands, and graphically revealed the dangers of nuclear power. Both of these disasters continue to wreak havoc on people in the affected areas.

Dr. Rosalie Bertell, a mathematician, a nun in the order of the Grey Nuns of the Sacred Heart, and renowned human rights activist, helped raise awareness of not only the immediate destruction caused by these tragedies, but their ongoing effects. To this day, thousands of people in Russia and India are suffering from their exposure to these accidents.

But this was neither the beginning nor the end of Bertell's work. She has devoted her life to documenting and fighting the threats posed to human health and the planet by nuclear power, rampant militarism and unchecked corporate pollution. Bertell is an outspoken opponent to the use of depleted uranium and successfully fought for the first moratorium on a nuclear power plant in upstate New York.

Bertell founded the International Institute of Concern for Public Health in 1984 and has authored several books about the threats to the planet, most recently 2001's Planet Earth: The Newest Weapon of War. But as a 2005 biography of Bertell puts it, she is a scientist, eco-feminist and visionary. A 1998 profile in the Toronto Star says Bertell "believes that if women had more decision-making power, the world would be a better place. If all women were like her, that seems a safe bet.


Diane Wilson, Code Pink

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Diane Wilson

Diane Wilson is a fourth-generation shrimper from the Texas Gulf Coast. After reading a newspaper article in 1989 listing her native Calhoun County as the biggest polluter in the country, she decided to do something about it. Despite facing contempt from many of her neighbors and threats from polluting interests, Wilson forced the toxic practices of companies like Formosa Plastics into the public spotlight by going on a hunger strike and constant campaigning toward her local legislature. Last April, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality fined Formosa $150,000 for violations of air pollution laws, including releases of toxic chemicals like vinyl chloride.

Sixteen years of hard campaigning for public health and the environment from her hometown, Seadrift, Texas, has netted Wilson a pile of awards, including: National Fisherman Magazine Award, Mother Jones 'Hell Raiser of the Month, Louis Gibbs' Environmental Lifetime Award, Louisiana Environmental Action (LEAN) Environmental Award.

Wilson is a co-founder of Code Pink and continues to lead the fight for social justice. Wilson recently wrote a book about her encounters with corporate polluters and Texas Politicos, An Unreasonable Woman. Upon being told that AlterNet readers had voted for her as an environmental hero, Wilson responded, "I can't believe it. Pretty amazing. I don't quite know what to say. AlterNet is always a place where I get my news -- I'm honored."

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bhola 2006-05-04T14:57:00+00:00
Day three, Diane on hunger strike outside George Bush's ranch, signs up 25 more fasters http://www.bhopal.net/diane/archives/2006/04/day_three_diane.html FROM AID, AUSTIN. BHOPAL INITIATIVE

April 15, 2006: Indefinite hunger strike Day 3

As the fast moves into its third day, Diane is in Crawford, TX today in a rally in front of George Bush's ranch. Gauri spoke to Diane and learnt that Diane has been very vocal about Bhopal and has got 25 more folks signed up to continue our relay fast!!!

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bhola 2006-04-17T17:42:44+00:00