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Deceleration Podcast

Deceleration Podcast is talking all things climate and environmental justice, rooted in San Antonio and the South Texas bioregion with global concerns. For the Earth. And all Her families.Eds. Marisol Cortez & Greg HarmanDeceleration.news

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    44: Texas Inmates are Cooking In Record-Breaking Heat—But Reforms May be on the Way

    Send us Fan MailTexas is getting hotter—nearly four degrees hotter in just the last few decades. The last 10 years all rank among the hottest years ever on the planet, with residents forced to navigate sometimes months upon months of 100-plus-degree days. We know our unhoused neighbors, residents without sufficient cooling, or those with medical conditions are highly vulnerable to heat stress and wildly undercounted heat-related death. But imagine trying to survive this monster heat in a 6x9 concrete box—without air conditioning—and you have a recipe for mass suffering and death. A judge already ruled the fact of most Texas prisons having no A/C unconstitutional. Now we’re waiting for the fix. This week, Deceleration speaks with Dr. Amite Dominick, founder & president of Texas Prisons Community Advocates (TPCA), about her long-standing advocacy for the incarcerated. She details how the fight began, the response from those in elected power, and why it’s very possible a breakthrough is right around the corner.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    43: Project Matador: Fermi's 'Hyperscale' Data Center Complex Hitting Resistance in the Texas Panhandle

    Send us Fan Mail“Project Matador” outside of Amarillo, Texas, pairs Fermi America and the Texas Tech University System seeking a pod of “hyperscale” data centers over 6,000 acres across a privately owned and operated electric grid. Already permitted for 6GW of power with 93 planned gas-fired turbines and seeking to build multiple nuclear power plants, this is a truly climate-breakdown accelerating power footprint that brings severe water concerns atop one of the planet’s most imperiled major aquifers that is relied upon by tens of thousands of farmers and ranchers (you know, the folks who produce our food and clothes, at least for those of us not wearing plastic). Deceleration’s guest this week is Kendra Seawright of Women’s March. She is doing the work of organizing the resistance on the ground that is pushing back on the many assumptions and assertions of what this project is good for—if anything. As more MAGA supporters start to split with President Trump on crypto and AI data centers, this means new challenges to foster a diverse hub of voices. We wanted to hear more about what that looks like and what lessons there may be for others in the trenches. “We didn’t expect a rubber stamp,” Seawright told us about the permit already in Fermi’s pocket. “We want real honest communication about what this is going to mean for our health and future generations too.” Next week is the deadline for a new permit application to take power production to 11GW (with a goal of 17GW of power and resulting pollution).Details/Public Comment: https://www.amarilloaction.org/aiPast Deceleration Data Center Coverage:The Texas Data Center Rebellion Has BegunCritical Texas Data Center Fights Happening Right NowSupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    42: Texas Data Center Boom + Todos Agua at Esperanza + Women Lead Drive to Abolish ICE

    Send us Fan MailAcross Texas we’re seeing an explosion of two kinds of industrial warehouses going up: one to fill up with humans in the some of the most miserable conditions imaginable as part of the drive to deport millions (including many being actively stripped of citizenship or refugee protections to do so), the other to fill with an emerging human-like/human-displacing (anti-human?) consciousness. This week, Deceleration speaks with two members of the Data Center Action Coalition, Saunders Drukker and Kay, about what they learned while beating back an AI data center that had its sites on San Marcos, headwaters of the sacred San Marcos River. We speak in advance of a panel being hosted by the Esperanza Peace & Justice Center in San Antonio dedicated to recovering an identity rooted in relationship with water: Todos Agua, now in its third year. Azul Barrientos fills in the details of that convening. And ICE Watch correspondent Roxana Rojas speaks with local organizer Sarah Cruz about how women are leading the fight against the deportation-industrial complex in the state. Data Center Resources:Data Center Action Coalition (Instagram)HARC Research on Data Centers"The Unpaid Toll: Quantifying and Addressing the Public HealthImpact of Data Centers" (UC Riverside)Statement on AI RiskMore about Todos Agua:Esperanza Event ScheduleSubscribe to ICE Watch:Deceleration NewslettersSupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    41: Bill Barker on Extreme Heat, City Planning, and Policies to Save Lives

    Send us Fan MailHumankind didn't evolve in heat like this. It's been well over 100,000 years since the planet has seen the sort of scorching temperatures that have become the norm in the last few years. And that goes for Texas, too, where many are still tempted to shrug and claim, 'This is Texas. It's always been hot.' But this is not the heat (or the humidity) of our parents or grandparents. And it's claiming lives. Obviously, until we transition away from fossil fuels and begin the work of ecological repair the world over to bring these temperatures back down the work of adaptation will be needed. So how can we design our cities and towns to help more people survive?Bill Barker has worked as director of planning at VIA Metropolitan Transit, as executive director of Solar San Antonio, and has spent years thinking about heat, cities, and adaptation. Lately, he's been making his case for local action with presentations to groups small and large. Deceleration had a chance to sit down and hear from him recently about the situation in San Antonio. But the lessons here are relevant to communities the world over.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    40: Liam Ramos, Gaige Davila on Gulf Coast Fights, Defeating Climate Behemoth, More

    Send us Fan MailLiam Ramos and father freed from Dilley Detention, but Federal Judge Biery's words need to be heard by those who snatched him. Plus: Extended dialogue with Gaige Davila about his years chronicling Texas Gulf fights over colonial extraction and plans for a new Deceleration newsletter, 'Coastlines & Faultlines.' Plus words from Syris Valentine on defeating Climate Behemoth and Sulma Franco on the crimes of immigration detention. Enjoy!Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    39: 10 Years of Deceleration: Talking Year Behind, Year Ahead w/ Marisol Cortez & Syris Valentine

    Send us Fan MailStrange times, indeed. Deceleration turns 10 this year. Founder/Managing Editor Greg Harman speaks with Executive Editor Marisol Cortez and contributor/Alternative Futures correspondent Syris Valentine about the year behind and year ahead for Deceleration. More video is part of the recipe, so join us as we dust off some of these innerwebbings.Marisol's recs for 2025 stories:Her Body Was 126 Degrees After She Died; Bexar County Medical Examiner Blames DrugsMessages from Jess’s Last Days—A Social AutopsyAs Trump Works to Crush Climate Efforts, Local Projects Persevere at the GrassrootsFemme Friendship as Eco-Resistance—From Barton Springs Attack to Poland’s ‘Sister Rivers’New Cli-Fi Novel Gropes for Happiness through the Dark of Texas Blackouts and Louisiana HeatOn the Responsibility of Latin@ Academics, Artists, and Cultural WorkersPODCAST: Building Radical Democracy Into Climate Struggles w/ Ashish Kothari‘Vanishing Ice, Melting ICE’—A Deceleration Quarterly Creative Review‘SUNAK’ (‘Awaken’) Music Video Release Celebrates Migration as a Birthright of All BeingsVictims and Survivors of Martial Law Under Autocrat Ferdinand Marcos Sr. Remembered in a Moment of U.S. Authoritarian PerilA few of Greg's favs:Jaguar Watch: What ‘Finishing the Wall’ Means for Borderland CatsSpace Industry’s Explosive Growth Could ‘X’ the Earth’s AtmosphereICE Abuses, Punishing Floods Show the Cesar Chavez March in the RGV is Still NecessarySupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    38: Building Radical Democracy Into Climate Struggles w/ Ashish Kothari

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration’s Marisol Cortez speaks with Ashish Kothari on his work with the Global Tapestry of Alternatives, recently returned from the People’s Summit and COP30 in Belem, Brazil. An activist and author based in Pune, India, Kothari has been at the forefront of movements both in India and globally to imagine and enact on-the-ground alternatives to “development” as a colonial and often environmentally destructive paradigm. We talk with Kothari about radical democracy as the “missing debate” from climate discussions and the importance of maintaining focus on the work of “yes” as much as the work of “no.” Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    37: Antiwar Vets Urge Soldiers to Claim their 'Right to Refuse' Illegal and Immoral Orders

    Send us Fan MailIn a community conversation closing out a gallery exhibit organized by ABOUT Face: Veterans Against the War, panelists from Texas and California discuss the histories of veteran activism against war and occupation and why soldiers today have a “right to refuse” Trump administration orders to deploy against US cities. This panel was the concluding event of the multi-day Veteran Voce, hosted by Galeria E.V.A.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    36: ‘Curtains of Rain’ Author Anel Flores Examines South Texas Environmental Racism in Queer Coming-of Age Story

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration’s Marisol Cortez speaks with Anel Flores about their new novel Curtains of Rain/Cortinas de Lluvias (Jaded Ibis Press, 2025), a queer coming-of-age story that explores the intersections of homophobia and transphobia with environmental racism in South Texas, specifically the industrial contamination inflicted on Mission, Texas, for decades by companies like Monsanto. But it’s also a book about the beauty and sacredness of queer familia and the landscapes that hold us all, in all our relations, in spite of these histories of violence. Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    35: Remembering Jack Elder: Activist, Peacemaker, Defender of Human Rights & La Madre Tierra

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration’s Marisol Cortez remembers our friend and neighbor Jack Elder who passed away last month, speaking with friends and comrades George Cisneros, Carlos Nicolas Flores, and Leslie Provence. Elder came to national attention in the 1980s for his work in the Sanctuary Movement, which aimed to assist refugees and asylum-seekers from the US-backed wars in Central America. But he was also a math teacher, a friend, a father of five and grandfather of seven and an all-around good neighbor who was active in San Antonio’s movements for social and environmental justice. For many years he volunteered at Catholic Worker House, washing dishes and tending to the gardens there. He walked and rode his bike everywhere, until Parkinson’s made that too difficult, and until the end of his life he cultivated beautiful xeriscapedfront and backyards. In every way he modeled what it means to live close to the Earth and in service to others, and we’re honored to have known and learned from him.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    34: Fighting Authoritarianism While Winning Water & Energy Justice in Texas

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration’s Greg Harman speaks with Dave Cortez, Executive Director of the Lone Star Sierra Club, as part of Preparing to Protect, a series of interviews with those most targeted by the eliminationist engine of MAGA on how they are organizing to bash back to keep our communities safe. Topics in this podcast include right-wing organizing and rising autocracy in the United States, failures of organizing in Texas environmental movements, strategies to mobilize people around pocketbook concerns, and why we need to take the time for basic self-care in a world on fire. Dave also shares what’s percolating inside the state Sierra Club—including campaigns around energy and water justice—and how people can tap into those efforts.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    33: Gentrification, Displacement, Heat Deaths, & the Robert E. Lee Tenants Union

    Send us Fan MailIt’s the hottest year ever…again. Heat-related deaths have been spiking year over year. As Deceleration wrote recently, there were nearly 600 heat-related deaths in Texas last year. In Bexar County, 12 local residents died from the heat that same year, according to data released to the Texas Tribune. Border counties have seen hundreds die from the heat since 2010, according to data released to Deceleration. So how are cities responding? What emergency hearings have been convened, let’s say, in San Antonio, Texas? Here we’re building a baseball field downtown and throwing possibly thousands of people from their homes to do it. Aside from the deep injustice of such measures, displacement is particularly cruel as we know (thanks to communities that track heat deaths, such as in Maricopa County, Arizona) that it is those without homes who are most at risk of dying from heat exposure. Among the nearly 650 Maricopa County deaths that were logged in 2023, 75 percent of them occurred outdoors. And 45 percent were unsheltered individuals with limited access to cooling. Research by now Deceleration Executive Editor Marisol Cortez from several years ago shows that, even with $2,500 relocation assistance, forced evictions can be deadly. Evictions often force multiple moves, as Cortez explains, costing far more than that meager moving allowance. Currently, residents of nearly 400 units at the Soap Factory in downtown San Antonio are fighting a slide toward displacement and demolition of their units. Meanwhile, a few blocks away, residents of roughly 70 units at the Robert E. Lee Apartments are likewise being targeted. For this new Deceleration Podcast, Episode 33, we make room for the residents of the Robert E. Lee Apartments to describe their experiences of downtown living and gathering efforts to head off forced dislocation. There are lessons here for working-class residents everywhere who have ever been targeted for the Next Big Thing, even as the current big thing actually requiring our full attention—that is, our climate unraveling—goes largely unaddressed in local communities.What Displacement Does:Vecinos de Mission Trails Report: Making Displacement Visible: A Case Study Analysis of the 'Mission Trail of Tears'Understanding Who Heat KillsMaricopa County 2023 Heat Deaths Report…San Antonio Specific ResourcesCoalition for Tenant JusticeTexas Organizing ProjectTexas Rio Grande Legal AidPueblo Over ProfitOppressed Revolutionaries for Worker PowerSupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    32: SpaceX Wastewater, LNG in the RGV, & Sustained Indigenous Resistance

    Send us Fan MailBoca Chica, the “little mouth” of the Rio Grande/ Rio Bravo is increasingly the epicenter of NewSpace new colonizing impulses bridged by an explosion of billion-dollar LNG projects seeking to feed Texas-fracked methane to the world market. It’s here in the lower Texas coast that has so far avoided much of the spoilage of the upper and middle coasts, themselves awash with petrochemical and fossil fuel facilities and all the risk and damages they pose to the land and peoples of the region. Next week the community of greater Boca Chica, let’s call it the Rio Grande Valley, or, as our guest reminds us this week: the sacred birthplace of the emergence of the Carrizo/Comecrudo peoples, is being challenged on two fronts.October 15: In spite of an August rejection by a DC Circuit Court of a trio of LNG-related projects, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is putting the Texas LNG project back in motion and inviting public comments concerning the potential environmental threats of the project. Comments needed before 5:00 pm EST on October 15, 2024.October 17: Two days later, Brownsville will host a public hearing on a state wastewater permit being sought by SpaceX, Elon Musk's colonizing mission to Mars now colonizing South Texas, that increasingly dominates the land and lives of this area. As the South Texas Environmental Justice Network writes, the wastewater permit with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) will permit polluted waters "on Boca Chica Beach and lands sacred to the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas." TCEQ will host a public hearing about SpaceX’s plans in Brownsville on October 17, 2024. Here’s a link to the TCEQ permit notice.Our guest this week to discuss both of these matters in deep context is Christopher Basaldú, PhD, a member of the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas and co-founder of the South Texas Environmental Justice Network. Basaldú organizes in opposition to SpaceX, LNG, and border militarization in the state and for the recovery of Indigenous lifeways and values. Basaldú earned his undergraduate degree at Harvard University and later a masters in American Indian Studies and doctor of philosophy in anthropology from the University of Arizona.Guest: Christopher Basaldú, PhD, Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of TexasMore on Oct. 17 from the Regeneration calendar. More from the STEJN.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    Arturo Escobar: A Decelerated Community Conversation

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration Conversation: An April 2023 community conversation with Colombian decolonial scholar-activist Arturo Escobar, produced by Deceleration in partnership with UTSA. Financial support from the La Fundación Estudio, Mediación, Paz y Resolución de Conflictos (CEMPROC).Guests: Arturo Escobar, Scholar/Activist; Diana Lopez, Southwest Workers Union; Society of Native Nations; Kimiya Factory, Black Freedom Factory; Maria Turvin, Yanawana Herbolarios. Facilitator: Marisol Cortez, DecelerationMore via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    31: Kara Jordan on Reweaving the Social Fabric of Climate Action

    Send us Fan MailWhat do building relationships of trust and care between neighbors have to do with climate justice? Everything, according to local organizer Kara Jordan, an herbalist, regenerative agriculture specialist, and mother whose work highlights the interdependence of all beings. Focusing on social and environmental justice, Jordan explores the spaces between grassroots and institutional initiative with curiosity and play. Her passion for food sovereignty is the thread that weaves these efforts together. In our conversation today, we hear some report backs from her mutual aid work around extreme heat in her Eastside neighborhood, as well as from her involvement with the City of San Antonio's new Climate Ready Neighborhoods program. In the process we reflect on the importance of affect, social infrastructure, and inside/outside approaches to climate action. To support the work of the Eastside Heat Team, call or text 210-463-5194. You can donate your time, money, or specific heat-busting items like water bottles, electrolyte packets, sunscreen, chapstick, fans, umbrellas, and more. For updates on the next Mother's Rebellion action, look on Instagram for @mothers_rebellion_satx. Guest: Kara Jordan, Mother's RebellionMore on this topic via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    30: Rose Jones & Uncovering Extreme Heat's Hidden Impacts

    Send us Fan MailWe've heard that this summer has been one of the hottest the Earth has seen since long before official record-keeping began. But policymakers and public health officials too often strain to understand how that heat is impacting people. Medical anthropologist Rose Jones has called the systems of tracking and understanding heat a “train wreck.” Here in dialogue with Deceleration Jones explains why our understanding of heat's impacts is so poor—including unnecessary politicization and official disinterest—and how we can go about fixing this huge public health failure.Guest: Rose Jones, Medical AnthropologistMore via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    29: Talking w/ Edwin Lyman re: Nuclear Power, Nazi Terror, and Energy Security in Texas

    Send us Fan MailAttacks on US energy infrastructure across the US are increasing. Incidents in Texas logged by the US Department of Energy shot up in 2021 and 2022. Meanwhile, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission is mulling shifting more security obligations from plant owners to local law enforcement. Deceleration spoke with with Edwin Lyman, director of nuclear power safety at the Union of Concerned Scientists, about all this and more.Guest: Edwin Lyman, Union of Concerned ScientistsSupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    28: Voices from Climate Justice Alliance's Our Power Communities Summit

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration Podcast #28: In the middle of October, San Antonio played host to the Climate Justice Alliance's Our Power Communities Summit. The gathering called together roughly 50 frontline community environmental-justice organizers from around the nation to “reground” the alliance members and begin developing a collective response to emerging so-called false solutions to the climate crisis.Guests (in order of appearance): Christian Rodriguez, Ironbound Community Corp; Angel Ramos, The People's Port Authority; Mackenzie Marshland, Florida Rising; Alejandria Lyons, New Mexico No False Solutions; Ayana Grace, Detroit Black Community Food Sovereignty Network; Katt Ramos, Richmond Our Power Coalition; Christine Cordero, Asian-Pacific Environmental NetworkSupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    27: Armon Alex and the Climate Movement's 'Clean Slate' Challenge in Corpus Christi

    Send us Fan MailIn the shadow of the port shipping most of all US crude oil to the rest of the world, four 'Clean Slate' candidates are running for local City Council seats. They are bound together by shared values and policy interests—including a prioritization of clean air and water and the defeat of proposed desalination projects being built almost exclusively to benefit industrial users. One candidate is the president of the local teacher's union. One is a history professor and Sierra Club member. Another helps lead the local League of Women Voters. And our guest today, Armon Alex, is a climate organizer and activist who has worked in a variety of interesting roles highlighting the immense challenge and opportunities of this moment of increasing climate destabilization. Learn more about the candidate at https://www.voteclean.org/.Guest: Armon Alex, Council CandidateMore about Clean Slate via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    26: Thanos Was An Ecofascist (But You Don't Have to Be)

    Send us Fan MailThis week, Deceleration speaks with the amazing team behind the Anti-Creep Climate Initiative, who utilize Marvel characters to educate the public about the dangerous fallacies behind fascistic thinking on global environmental challenges. Their webzine is a powerful and gorgeous read. In it they demonstrate how many of these dangerous concepts come straight out of Western environmental canon. They also show clearly why they are logically wrong. And who they ultimately serve. Wanna help stop the creep of ecofascistic ideas informing the manifestos of racist mass murderers? Here's some powerful food for thought. Write to the creators themselves at: [email protected]. Image: Courtesy MarvelGuests: April Anson, Cassie Galentine, Shane Hall, Alex Menrisky, & Bruno SeraphinMore on the Anti-Creep Climate Initiative via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    25: Cris Eugster & Evergreen Bringing New Solar Model to Texas

    Send us Fan MailSomewhere in between decentralized rooftop solar and sprawling rural utility-scale solar farms is a middle path that could allow companies go 100-percent renewable in under a year. New solar startup Evergreen is about to unleash the "Goldilocks" of solar with a trio of projects in South Texas. And they expect to scale up quickly in this overlooked niche, says Evergreen CEO Cris Eugster. Local listeners may recognize that name as the former CPS Energy COO and one-time sustainability manager. "I feel like we have a once-in-a-generation opportunity to figure out this energy transition and to tackle climate change," he said.Guest: Cris Eugster, EvergreenMore on Evergreen via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    24: Who are the Tree and Bird Protectors of Brackenridge Park?

    Send us Fan MailWho are the Tree and Bird Protectors of Brackenridge Park? They've been smeared as disinformation agents for linking a campaign to forcefully dislocate a thriving rookery of migratory birds the Brackenridge bond project that would claim more than 105 trees, ostensibly to restore and repair historic structures in the park. After saving the trees they pivoted to resist ongoing efforts to drive migratory birds away from Brackenridge's headwaters and uncovered evidence of forced displacement inside the SA Zoo. Guests: Alesia Garlock & Daniel ArmstrongMore via Deceleration.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    23: 'His Name is Albert': Climate, Housing, Displacement, Mutual Aid

    Send us Fan MailWhat do we learn from a year-long intervention on behalf of an unhoused neighbor who lost limbs to Winter Storm Uri? That it takes dozens of interveners to make up for San Antonio’s broken safety net and lack of climate preparation. A serialized intervention by Deceleration Co-Editor Marisol Cortez. Guests: Maria Turvin, Yanawana Herbolarios; Rachel Tucker, Office of Councilmember Teri Castillo (D5); Marisol Cortez, Deceleration Co-Editor, Author; Hosting: Greg Harman, Deceleration Co-EditorMore via Deceleration.Update: RIP Albert Garcia.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    22: George Garza Jr. On The New Deceleration Theme Musics

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration talks to San Antonio musician George Garza Jr., well known and loved for this work with Pop Pistol and other projects, about the ideas and processes that went into creating the new Deceleration theme music. Some sound recordings came right off the street, but that world-to-come vibe came straight from the heart.Guest: George Garza Jr.More about George Garza Jr. Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    21: Talkin' Trash with Mary Elizabeth Cantú of Spare Parts

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration talks to Mary Elizabeth Cantú, founder and director of the Spare Parts Center for Creative Reuse, on their decade of work using ethics of reuse to assist underfunded educators in promoting creative work and critical thinking. How can waste open up space for thinking about the ecological and human labor devalued within capitalist economies?Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    20: Darby Riley and CPS Energy Lawsuit

    Send us Fan MailSeveral incoming San Antonio Council members want to freeze utility disconnections, reform CPS Energy rates, and close the Spruce coal plant early. They'd do well to listen to the attorney fighting CPS Energy's lawsuit to preserve the people's right to reform the utility by petition.Guest: Darby RileySupport the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    19: Karla Aguilar, the Alamo, and How to Recover from White Supremacy

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration caught up with Karla Aguilar, development director of American Indians in Texas at the Spanish Colonial Missions about a number of pressing political issues, including potential state recognition for the Tap Pilam Coahuiltecan Nation, now pending at the Texas Legislature. We speak at some length about the Settler/Colonial mindset at an outgrowth of white supremacy and how such ways of thinking manifest in the struggles around the redvelopment of San Antonio de Valero, aka The Alamo.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    18: Words for Birds, Day One (2021)

    Send us Fan MailDay One of the 13th Annual "Words for Birds": A Poetic Celebration and a Cry for Protection! Featuring Masauki & Guadalupe Lagunes Jimenez, Dyhanara Rios, RitaMaria Contreras, Eddie Vega, Erika Maria Garza Johnson, Javier Fuentes Vargas, Alesia Garlock, the puppeteering of Mobi Warren, Kamala Platt, Laura Schultz, Megha Sood, Norma Jean Moore, and Odilia Galván Rodríguez, Author.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    17: San Antonio's 'War on Birds' Keeps Expanding

    Send us Fan MailTwo years ago, the City of San Antonio launched a war on the bird of Elmendorf Lake. The target was the hundreds of cattle egrets who have been roosting at this Westside ecological gem for decades. By razing the island to the ground, and dismantling possibly hundreds of nests, the assault destroyed the nesting ground for many related migratory birds. Many young were killed. The action was justified as protective of military flights at Kelly Air Field on the Southeast side. Data points to one bird strike per year linked to cattle egrets, while literally thousands of strikes per year at all city airfields are logged to other species. Yet the harassment with pyrotechnics and lasers has followed the birds across City park system and even along the river in artsy Southtown. Yesterday, Deceleration caught up with local bird photographer, friend, and defender Alesia Garlock about the newest warning signs: "Bird Mitigation Plan" signage promising dawn-and-dusk bird harassment at Woodlawn Lake. We spoke as dozens of Yellow-Crown Night Herons nuzzled and roosted above us. At least one mother to be was obviously splayed over her eggs. Can San Antonio's War on the Birds end here?Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    16: Ralph Garcia, the Polar Vortex, & San Antonio's Disabled Community

    Send us Fan MailWith much of Texas icing over due to Arctic weather's dangerous slide across the Plains over normally not 10-degree San Antonio, Ralph Garcia has had access to power for no longer than 45 minutes at a time for the last 48 hours. In this sustained cold-weather assault, millions have lost power because of the failure of state energy planners and reduced energy flowing from all power networks, but most conspicuously gas power plants. The climate crisis is no game. But the disabled community is an overlooked, incredibly vulnerable, demographic that often goes overlooked. Now 24, Ralph was born with Muscular Dystrophy and requires a range of treatments every day that require access to electric power. Without power, as hundreds of thousands of San Antonio residents, Ralph and his mom have closed themselves off in his bedroom, packed the window with sheets and blankets to try to stay work. His mother, struggling with the impact of radiation treatment for cervical cancer, was sleeping on the floor beside him during this interview.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    15: Homelessness Advocate Molly Wright is on a Hunger Strike in San Antonio

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration talks with housing justice activist Molly Wright about her decision to begin a hunger strike to protest the City of San Antonio's inadequate response to homelessness and housing insecurity.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    14: Rights of Nature Movement Reaches San Antonio

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration talks with attorneys and organizers affiliated with the Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights (CDER) about the Rights of Nature movement globally, as well as what it might look like locally in San Antonio.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    13: Fabiola Ochoa Torralba on Decolonizing Dance

    Send us Fan MailCommunity-based dancer Fabiola Ochoa Torralba discusses her research on "bird movement vocabulary" and the wider projects of decolonizing dance.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    12: Jim LaVilla-Havelin on Words for Birds

    Send us Fan MailSan Antonio poet Jim LaVilla-Havelin discusses the origin and significance of National Poetry Month's Words for Birds and reads one of his poems included in the digital zine "Words for Birds 2020: Poetics for Pandemics."Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    11: Liberty Heise on Monarchs, Marathons, and Migration

    Send us Fan MailDeceleration speaks with local runner, writer, and environmental educator Liberty Heise about her participation in the Monarch Ultra, a 4300km, transnational run that follows the migratory path of monarch butterflies from Ontario, Canada to the Sierra Madre mountains in Central Mexico.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    10: March for Science San Antonio

    Send us Fan MailSpeaking with Peter Bella, organizer for March for Science San Antonio, and Gunnar Schade, atmospheric scientist at Texas A&M University about MfS, San Antonio's draft climate action plan, climate denialism, Greg Abbott, and more.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    09: Voices of San Antonio's Climate Plan

    Send us Fan MailMembers of San Antonio's Climate Action & Adaptation Plan's Technical Working Groups and Steering Committee (plus one consultant) describe their experiences helping develop what could be the city's first climate plan—and their hopes and concerns for its future implementation After more than a year in the making, the plan is being released for public consideration on Friday, January 25, 2019. More at: https://deceleration.news/2019/01/18/san-antonio-climate-action-planning-members-speak/Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    08: Our Climate Commitments and the World's Island States

    Send us Fan MailA conversation with Ursula Rakova of Tulele Peisa, a nonprofit formed by the elders of the Carteret Islands to direct the relocation of their communities from their low-lying island chain to the “big island” of Bougainville in Papau New Guinea. While the Paris framework considered 1.5 Celsius an aspirational target, increasingly cities are declaring 1.5 their goal right out of the gate, as has San Antonio. This movement from 'less-than-two' to 1.5 or less is hardly incidental but rather life or death for many of the world's low-lying island states, representatives of which pushed back hard on the 2-degree Paris proposal, insisting they needed “1.5 to stay alive.”Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    07: Pocacito: 'From Eight to Infinity'

    Send us Fan MailThis morning, Deceleration had the opportunity to interview representatives of Pocacito (Post-Carbon Cities of Tomorrow), an initiative of Ecologic Institute whose goal is to build trans-Atlantic solidarity and intellectual exchange around local creative efforts for a renewable economy and planet. As part of their “Eight to Infinity” tour (think eight cities, then lay the eight on its side to invoke ideas of a permanent economy/culture), they are on a mission to seed community building efforts around climate and environment with an understanding of the circular economy.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    06: Indigenous Resistance and the Global Climate Action Summit

    Send us Fan MailNot all was well at this month's Global Climate Action Summit, heralded as a significant milestone in the world struggle with climate crisis. And not all the solutions were being found inside the conference rooms and banquet halls. Outside, protestors, led by indigenous leaders from around the country and beyond, were warning that in order respond effectively to this moment of dangerous imbalance requires bottom-up and community-level engagement. Greg Harman of the Texas Sierra Club speaks with Frankie Orona, executive director of the Society of Native Nations, and Juan B. Mancias, tribal chair of the Carrizo/Comecrudo Tribe of Texas, about their anti-extraction work and attendance at the San Francisco summit.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    05: Nuclear Wastes West Texas

    Send us Fan MailThe "Say No to Radioactive Waste" tour crossing Texas this week features a giant inflatable 'cask.' It represents the effort of state, national, and international anti-nuclear groups to shut down a proposal that would have nuclear power plants shipping their high-level radioactive waste from around the United States to a West Texas facility for long-term storage. Following a press conference outside San Antonio's Alamodome on Wednesday, September 26, 2018, Deceleration had the following conversation with Karen Hadden (SEED Coalition), Diane D'Arrigo (NIRS), and Kerstin Rudek (Bürgerinitiative Umweltschutz).Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    04: CAAP: Buildings as Carbon Sinks

    Send us Fan MailWhat is a truly sustainable building? Is it about how much dirty energy it consumes? The clean energy it produces? What about the building materials themselves and the “embodied carbon” they represent? What if those materials also were able to absorb greenhouse gases from the atmosphere and sequester it from the environment? This is the subject of sustainable buildings leader Bruce King's coming lecture at San Antonio College.It's a message of special value in San Antonio today, as the City pursues the development of its first climate action plan.So far, the staff and volunteers working on San Antonio's Climate Action & Adaptation Plan have discussed changing building codes, promoting “green” roofs and passive solar. But when considering the potentials of carbon sequestration the CAAP's “Community Measures” focus primarily on the landscape: “increasing plant material, restoring the soil landscape, and all high-tech solutions.”Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    03: Can San Antonio's CAAP Seed a Food Revolution?

    Send us Fan MailRising temperatures, stronger storms, depleting global fertilizer supplies all mean extractive industrial agriculture is going to take a big hit from climate change. As the City's first climate plan percolates, a local foods revolution continues to quietly gather steam in San Antonio. Join the Alamo Group of the Sierra Club for a conversation with some of the leaders of the local food movement.Guests include: Mitch Hagney is the founder of the LocalSprout Food Hub, an urban farm and solar-powered gathering spot for small food businesses. Kate Jaceldo is a co-founder of the Compost Queens, a family business tackling the food waste side of that equation, helping residents and businesses convert discarded food into fresh soil. Nadia Gaona is founder of San Antonio Permaculture, a group of people from diverse backgrounds who come together to learn and share experiences of growing their own food and to discuss ways to create more regenerative communities.Hagney, Jaceldo, and Gaona join Lone Star Sierra Club organizer Greg Harman to discuss the burgeoning local foods movement that could help San Antonio evolve into a more sustainable city and ultimately a carbon sink, absorbing climate pollution from the atmosphere, a goal of the Sierra Club and Climate Action SA.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    02: Tupac Enrique Acosta talks DACA, Abya Yala, and Planetary Constitution

    Send us Fan MailTupac Enrique Acosta of Tonatierra speaks with Deceleration's Marisol Cortez on the March 5th DACA deadline from an Indigenous perspective, and the need for catalytic cultural shifts in how we conceptualize citizenship and constitutionality.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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    01: Lanny Sinkin: 'The Kingdom of Hawai'i is Within You'

    Send us Fan MailIn San Antonio, Lanny Sinkin is known as the former director of Solar San Antonio. Today he is known as Ali`i Mana`o Nui, adviser to Edmund Keli’i Silva Jr., who he considers the rightful leader of a soon-to-be-restored Kingdom of Hawai'i. Here I speak with Sinkin about his transition from solar advocate to king's advisor, his work with the Temple of Lono, fighting the Thirty Meter Telescope at the sacred mountain of Mauna Kea, the evolution of Dolphinville, and the ethics of swimming with whales and dolphins.Support the showDeceleration.news: 'For the Earth. And all Her families.'

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Deceleration Podcast is talking all things climate and environmental justice, rooted in San Antonio and the South Texas bioregion with global concerns. For the Earth. And all Her families.Eds. Marisol Cortez & Greg HarmanDeceleration.news

HOSTED BY

Marisol Cortez & Greg Harman

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Deceleration Podcast have?

Deceleration Podcast currently has 45 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Deceleration Podcast about?

Deceleration Podcast is talking all things climate and environmental justice, rooted in San Antonio and the South Texas bioregion with global concerns. For the Earth. And all Her families.Eds. Marisol Cortez & Greg HarmanDeceleration.news

How often does Deceleration Podcast release new episodes?

Deceleration Podcast has 45 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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You can listen to Deceleration Podcast on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Deceleration Podcast?

Deceleration Podcast is created and hosted by Marisol Cortez & Greg Harman.
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