'Our Biggest Obstacle Has Been Comfortable Liberals': An Interview With <em>Bidder 70</em>'s Climate Hero

I spoke at length with DeChristopher about hacking the Democratic party, arcane but vulnerable processes like elections and auctions, why Americans really should spend more time in prison, and other tragicomic matters of consequence. Read up, plug in, turn out.
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An environmental idealist stops an illegal oil and gas auction by bidding for parcels he can't possibly afford. Savaged by an exponentially accelerating climate crisis, a once-proud nation rewards him... by throwing him into a hole.

Along the vertiginous fall, he tumbles through a dystopia that denies his rights, then creates a case against him out of thin air. He fumbles through a prison complex way too in love with mind-raping solitary confinement. Eventually, he emerges a free man, resolved to wreak electoral vengeance against those who sold him out. Good thing the cameras were rolling.

But the bizarre arc of Tim DeChristopher's life -- documented in , opening Friday in New York and parts outward, often with him in attendance -- is sadly far from singular. Pop-cultural analogues can be found from Carroll to Kafka to Hitchcock (especially 's hacked auction) and beyond. But back here in our far more surreal Reality, there are too many compromised political prisoners to count.

"One of the things I found out while I was locked up was that the injustice involved in my case was not unusual," DeChristopher told me by phone after wrapping up a two-year sentence last month. "By any means. In fact, it's the status quo for how our legal system works."


Image courtesy First Run Features

But the status quo must go, or we will. DeChristopher's climate activism has only been energized by the tumultuous experiences chronicled by Bidder 70, because he knows the environmental verdict is in: With CO2's preventable 400 ppm limit now fading in the rearview mirror, runaway climate change is more ready than ever to put the war in global warming.

We need each other now, to save us from each other tomorrow.

"Going down a path of extremely rapid change with an ignorant, apathetic citizenry afraid of its own government, which is under the thumb of corporate power, is terrifying to me," DeChristopher said. "That is a very dark future. However, going down that path with an educated and engaged citizenry, unafraid to hold its government accountable and corporations subservient to the will of humanity? Well, that has a lot of opportunity. That is a much brighter future."

To achieve this ideal citizenry -- argues the environmental idealist, who has likely served more time than you for his faith -- environmentalists need to starting taking down our own. Republicans are a dead brand. That leaves what's left of the sellout Democrats and Big Green groups that thought environmentalists would chill while Exxon scored another record-breaking quarter or President Barack Obama signed off on Keystone XL.

"If we want lasting change, we have to start taking people out of office," DeChristopher explained. "And with the power we have right now, that means Democrats."

I spoke at length with DeChristopher about hacking the Democratic party, arcane but vulnerable processes like elections and auctions, why Americans really should spend more time in prison, and other tragicomic matters of consequence. Read up, plug in, turn out.

Morphizm: Following your case over the years has been a sanity test. So how have you managed to stay sane?

Tim DeChristopher: [Laughs] Well, one of the things I found out while I was locked up was that the injustice involved in my case was not unusual. By any means. In fact, I found it's the status quo for how our legal system works. Pretty much everyone I met had a case that, while different in detail, had similar levels of injustice.

Morphizm: Bidder 70 well documents that legal injustice, which as you say is standard operating procedure. How would you advise climate activists about what they're up against if they take on the status quo?

Tim DeChristopher: The legal system is a tool of those in power, which is what I found in my case. They basically invented a charge to lock me up for something that had never been done before. The main charge used against me had never been used before. It was a brand new charge, with no case history. So they essentially defined the law around what I had done, because they couldn't find a law that fit what I did. Even the judge was instructing the jury around the facts of my case, rather than what the law said. He had shaped and interpreted the law to fit what I had done.

Morphizm: Are you concerned that climate activists will be increasingly targeted by these precedent-free, precrime stratagems as the climate crisis worsens, before they even put their bodies on the line?

Tim DeChristopher: Yeah, I think more and more climate activists will face prison time like I did, but I don't necessarily think that's a bad thing. One thing I learned was that prison wasn't nearly as bad as I expected. I think more will go to prison, but I also think they can handle it. Also, it was effective: The fact that I went to prison exposed so many people paying attention to my case to the realities of our justice system, which helps to undermine the authority of our government, and its status quo. That's why pretty much every social movement that has created major change in American history has included civil disobedience, because it undermines government authority. Ultimately, I think that -- throughout my whole legal process and time in prison -- I hurt the government worse than they hurt me.

Morphizm: Americans seem loathe to take to the streets the way they did last century, when socioeconomic and racial disparities were much more visible. Do you have a sense that is changing with the climate crisis?

Tim DeChristopher: We're seeing that throughout my generation, and the climate movement. That's been one of the big changes I've seen over the past few years, and one I'm encouraged by. When I first started talking about civil disobedience in 2008 and 2009, most professional activists and environmentalists looked at me like a turd in a punchbowl. [Laughs] You know? Like I was speaking out of turn or something. But now, civil disobedience is really accepted by most as an essential part of a diverse movement. It's now a mainstream position, which is a tremendous shift.

Morphizm: Do you think that shift has become more established because mainstream activists and environmentalists finally have a clearer picture of what they're up against, or whether they actually believed civil disobedience wouldn't have any effect and have now suddenly changed their minds?

Tim DeChristopher: I think the main reason is the big D.C.-centric green groups completely failed. Through 2009, that part of the movement kept everyone in check by saying, "Listen, we know how to create change. We know how things work in Washington. This is what is politically feasible. You have to do it our way." And they failed, largely because they didn't have a movement behind them. They completely fell on their face without even accomplishing the false solution they were putting forward. That created a lot of space for the grassroots to step up and say, "OK, we tried it your way. Now we're going to do it our way. We're going to start with what actually needs to be done, rather than what is politically feasible." That empowered the grassroots part of the movement that had long been repressed, because it's much less connected to the status quo and much more willing to make sacrifices. And that's why we see an increasing willingness to engage in civil disobedience, takes risks and push boundaries. The driving force behind the environmental movement now is no longer those big green groups with multimillion dollar budgets.

Morphizm: The increasing disillusionment with the Big Green is concurrent with increasing disillusionment with Democrats, and their promises to get serious about climate change. In a sense, you're a bipartisan victim, given the roles that both the Bush and Obama administrations played in your Kafkaesque trial.

Tim DeChristopher: Well, it actually all happened under the Obama administration. The illegal auction happened under the Bush administration, but I wasn't indicted until several months into Obama's first term.

Morphizm: Right, so throw those compromised political and corporate operators together with sellout greens and it's no wonder that grassroots environmentalists are taking matters into their own hands.

Tim DeChristopher: Yeah, absolutely. There's a growing awareness that our biggest obstacle for awhile has been comfortable liberals, especially those in power in the Democratic party. If we're serious about shifting our power dynamics and regaining democracy in this country, then the first thing we have to do is get rid of those obstacles in the Democratic party standing in the way of genuine progressive action...

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