<br><div class="gmail_quote">---------- Forwarded message ----------<br>From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Brad Johnson, Forecast the Facts</b> <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:forecast@engagementlab.org">forecast@engagementlab.org</a>></span><br>
Date: Tue, Nov 13, 2012 at 8:01 AM<br>Subject: Thank you for breaking the silence<br>To: Tika Simone <<a href="mailto:tikasimone237@gmail.com">tikasimone237@gmail.com</a>><br><br><br>
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<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px">Dear Tika,</p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px">For months, Forecast the Facts members like you have joined us in pushing for the presidential candidates to end their climate silence. Thanks to your petition signatures, powerful comments, sharing of online content, and generous contributions, <strong>we unified the climate movement around a clear demand to end climate silence, and fundamentally changed the national conversation on climate.</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px">We’re thrilled with the impact that we’ve had, and we wanted to say how grateful we are for helping us make it happen. You can read more below about the highlights from the Climate Silence campaign. </p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px">Thank you,<br>Brad, Jordan, Daniel, and the rest of the Forecast the Facts team</p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px"><strong>P.S. With the election over, what are your thoughts? <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/521?t=1&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">Please let us know here.</a></strong></p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px">P.P.S. The devastation of Hurricane Sandy has made the urgency of addressing climate change even clearer. You can help by contributing to the relief efforts <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/482?t=2&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>
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<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px"><strong>Here are some of the Climate Silence campaigns key successes:</strong></p>
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<li><strong>Both President Obama and Governor Romney were directly confronted about their climate silence.</strong><br> We researched past presidential debates, and revealed the fact that 2012 was the first series of presidential debates <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/465?t=3&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">since 1984</a> to completely ignore climate change. This led to a key victory when MTV’s Sway Calloway cited our research, and did what every debate moderator had failed to do: <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/472?t=4&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">he asked President Obama</a> about climate change. Days after Superstorm Sandy, Mitt Romney was interrupted at a campaign rally by a climate activist inspired by our work with a banner reading <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/522?t=5&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">“END CLIMATE SILENCE."</a> Both confrontations were re-broadcast on national television and reported in newspapers across the nation.</li>
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<li><strong>We brought in voices from across the movement, and strengthened the call to end climate silence.</strong><br> We partnered with Friends of the Earth Action to launch Climate Silence. Soon thereafter, Public Citizen and the National Wildlife Federation joined with us, and thousands of their members signed our petition to Governor Romney and President Obama. Passionate student activists, organized by Energy Action Coalition, <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/523?t=6&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">enthusiastically plead</a> for an end to climate silence at the presidential debates. Thousands of movement heroes, from climate scientist Michael Mann to climate leader Bill McKibben, joined in our online protest against the silence. And in the run-up to their national tour (initiated this week), McKibben’s organization, 350, promoted our campaign and the need for political leaders to “Do the Math.”</li>
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<li><strong>We generated tons of media buzz, etching the climate silence frame into the campaign narrative.</strong><br> Over the summer, there were murmurs about climate silence from a handful of progressive commentators and columnists. But it wasn’t until our campaign launched that media outlets adopted our terminology, and media criticism of climate silence really poured in. The New Yorker’s Elizabeth Kolbert <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/524?t=7&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">aptly summarized</a> the problem of climate silence in several persuasive columns. Coverage of our campaign ranged from well-read online sources like <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/529?t=8&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">Politico</a> and <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/525?t=9&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">Huffington Post</a> to traditional media like the <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/526?t=10&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">New York Times.</a> Editorial boards nationwide, from local papers to the <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/527?t=11&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">Washington Post</a>, excoriated the candidates for their refusal to address climate change. And <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/444?t=12&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">on MSNBC</a>, Chris Hayes dedicated an entire segment to the subject, and spoke powerfully about the need to end climate silence.</li>
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<li><strong>We helped ensure that climate silence was adopted by major influencers.</strong><br>The October surprise of the campaign ended up being a horrific, fossil-fueled storm, prompting a huge outcry for an end to the climate silence. Governors, Senators, and mayors who represent the regions affected by Sandy all ended their own climate silence. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/498?t=13&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">endorsed</a> President Obama, citing the need to address climate change as the chief reason why. Former President Bill Clinton and former Vice President Al Gore both spoke out for forceful climate action. And it wasn’t just politicians. <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/528?t=14&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">Journalists, actors, comedians, writers, and musicians</a> all made the case against climate silence—prominent names like David Letterman, Alec Baldwin, Rachel Maddow, and Arianna Huffington.</li>
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<li><strong>We boldly fought the influence of the coal industry, and provided an outlet for activists frustrated by the coal-pandering of both candidates.</strong><br> When President Obama’s campaign launched an ad in swing states attacking Mitt Romney for once criticizing coal pollution, we responded with <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/410?t=15&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">a petition</a> urging the Obama campaign to pull the ad. Thousands signed our petition, and <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/423?t=16&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">The Hill</a>, the <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/422?t=17&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">Washington Post</a>, and <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/424?t=18&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">BuzzFeed</a> all covered our efforts. President Obama’s campaign ultimately withdrew the ad. We produced <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/465?t=19&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">a video</a> exposing the appalling (and historic) way that the candidates neglected climate change in the presidential debates, choosing instead to compete for who could burn more fossil fuels.<sup> </sup>The video generated thousands of views and a major wave of media coverage.</li>
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<li><strong>We helped expose Mitt Romney’s climate denial through the “most brutal ad” of the election cycle.</strong><br> After Hurricane Sandy devastated the Atlantic coast, Mitt Romney’s callous mockery of sea level rise looked particularly un-funny. We produced <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/481?t=20&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">an ad</a> juxtaposing Romney’s joke with footage of the destruction left by Sandy. The video went viral, receiving over 800,000 views in just three days. Grist.org’s David Roberts called the ad <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/517?t=21&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">“the most brutal”</a> he had seen all election cycle, and many media outlets <a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/530?t=22&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank">agreed.</a> Hundreds of you chipped in to help us run the ad, which exposed Mitt’s climate mockery in the crucial battlegrounds of Ohio and Virginia days before the election.</li>
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<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px"><strong>None of this would be possible without the support of members like you.</strong> Thank you to your dedication and commitment to ending climate silence. <strong>Please let us know what you think by taking this quick survey:</strong></p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px"><a href="http://act.engagementlab.org/go/521?t=23&akid=287.136120.NDn9k_" target="_blank"><strong>Click here to tell us your thoughts post-election</strong></a></p>
<p style="margin-top:1em;margin-right:0px;margin-bottom:1em;margin-left:0px">Factually yours,<br> Brad, Daniel, Jordan, and the rest of the Forecast the Facts team</p>
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