A nascent national movement about climate change that made a swing through
Madison last week gets front-page treatment in
The New York Times:
In recent weeks, college students on dozens of campuses have demanded that university endowment funds rid themselves of coal, oil
and gas stocks. The students see it as a tactic that could force
climate change, barely discussed in the presidential campaign, back onto
the national political agenda.
This was a prominent tactic some years ago to get colleges and universities withdrawing their endowment funds from businesses that doing business in South Africa in the apartheid era, the Times notes:
The divestment demand is so new that most administrators are just
beginning to grapple with it. Several of them, in interviews, said that
even though they tended to agree with students on the seriousness of the
problem, they feared divisive boardroom debates on divestment.
That was certainly the case in the 1980s, when the South African
divestment campaign caused bitter arguments across the nation.
... the campaign required
prominent people to grapple with the morality of apartheid, altering the
politics of the issue. Economic pressure from many countries ultimately
helped to force the whites-only South African government to the
bargaining table.
What an incredible stupid thing to do. Petroleum and natural gas are the most useful and practical forms of energy that we have. The climate changes naturally and is actually getting more beneficial to life on earth overall. This is probably just a phase they are going through that they will eventually grow out of.
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