This week on CounterSpin: Powerless in the United States: How Utilities Drive Shutoffs and Energy Injustice is an ongoing project from the Center for Biological Diversity, the Energy and Policy Institute and Bailout Watch. It tracks utility service disconnections and corporate profiteering—because, it turns out, they’re flip sides of a coin.
You and I may think that in disastrous weather conditions (with no signs of stopping), and a pandemic and low wages and a hike in prices, it’s a time to acknowledge workers’ sacrifices and support them. Silly us. Actually, it’s a moment for powerful companies to raise prices on consumers—not to recoup losses, but just to raise profits, as their shareholder speeches will proudly reveal—and why would that gouging stop at life-saving vaccines or medicines? Why not also shut off the power to the homes of struggling families? Seriously, why not? If Wall Street will reward you for it, and corporate media won’t call you out or even seriously, humanistically report on what you’re doing? Or even easier, one might think, argue for the basic transparency that would allow that reporting?
Electric utilities have disconnected US households more than 4 million times since the beginning of Covid, preceding the Russian war on Ukraine. At the same time, shareholder payouts went up by $1.9 billion, increases that could have paid those households’ bills five times over. Our guests’ work illustrates how energy bills take up more and more of families’ earnings, and how the actions of corporations take a tough, in some cases life-threatening situation, make it worse, and then hand it off to their allies in the press corps, who they know will present it as “business as usual if regrettable,” but, above all, nothing worth looking in to or talking about seriously.
Our guests aren’t just complaining; they have ideas about what’s needed to address the situation. Shelby Green is research fellow at the Energy and Policy Institute. Selah Goodson Bell is energy justice campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity. We’ll hear from both of them this week on the show.
Plus Janine Jackson takes a quick look at press coverage of the police killing of Tyre Nichols.
The post Shelby Green and Selah Goodson Bell on Utility Shutoffs & Profiteering appeared first on FAIR.
Best of CounterSpin 2020
Lisa Gilbert on Lame Duck Trump, Dean Baker on Trickle-Down Economics
Jessica Martinez on Gutting Worker Protections, Mitch Stoltz on Breaking Up Big Tech
‘This Order Puts the Weight of the Federal Government Behind Anti-Antiracism’
Kimberlé Crenshaw on the Equity Gag Order
‘These Executions, Disturbing as They Are, Have Flown Largely Under the Radar’
‘The Chairmanship of Ajit Pai Has Been a Disaster’
Liliana Segura on Trump’s Execution Spree, Gaurav Laroia on Ajit Pai’s FCC
‘Emancipation Never Really Came to Agriculture’
‘The Ones With the Most Risk Are the Ones We’re Most Ill-Prepared to Reach with the Vaccine’
‘Trump Has Let the Military Establishment Do Everything It Wants to Do’
Ricardo Salvador on US’s Dysfunctional Food System
‘Media Sources in the Democratic Party Tend to Be More Right-Wing’
Ravi Gupta on Vaccine Infrastructure, Murtaza Hussain on Trump’s War on Yemen
‘We Basically Made Recovery Much, Much Harder Than It Has to Be’
Julie Hollar on Moving Democrats to the Right, Josh Bivens on Pandemic Unemployment
‘Proposition 22 Is a Backlash to Victories Workers Have Had’
‘These Lawsuits Are Incredibly Rinky-Dink’
Steven Rosenfeld on Vote Counting, Rey Fuentes on Rigging the Gig Economy
‘We Have the World’s Largest System to Imprison and Exile Immigrants’
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