Eric Worrall writes:
Weepy Bill McKibben has announced that he is stepping down from his position as chairman of 350.org
According to The Guardian interview;
“I’m stepping down as chair of the board at 350.org to become what we’re calling a ‘senior advisor’. I will stay on as an active member of the board, and 90% of my daily work will stay the same, since it’s always involved the external work of campaigning, not the internal work of budgets and flow charts. I’m not standing down from that work, or stepping back, or walking away.”
Apparently racking up the air miles, in his battle to stop the rest of us from flying, has taken its toll.
“The constant travel of the last seven years has helped a little, I hope, to build this movement, but I’m ready for a bit more order in my life. Don’t worry—I’ll still be there when the time comes to go to jail, or to march in the streets, or to celebrate the next big win on divestment. But I’d like to see more of my wife.”
Enjoy your semi-retirement Bill – we shall always remember you as the guy who helped us to understand, that environmental activism is what people do, when they can’t figure out a plausible way to pose as a member of a persecuted minority. http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/10/17/the-global-warming-cause-one-mans-substitute-for-victimhood/
The background on the “weepy” label comes from Climate Progress in 2009, at the Copenhagen conference. Bill McKibben wrote on December 14, 2009:
This afternoon I sobbed for an hour, and I’m still choking a little. I got to Copenhagen’s main Lutheran Cathedral just before the start of a special service designed to mark the conference underway for the next week. It was jammed, but I squeezed into a chair near the corner. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, gave the sermon; Desmond Tutu read the Psalm. Both were wonderful.
But my tears started before anyone said a word. As the service started, dozens choristers from around the world carried three things down the aisle and to the altar: pieces of dead coral bleached by hot ocean temperatures; stones uncovered by retreating glaciers; and small, shriveled ears of corn from drought-stricken parts of Africa. As I watched them go by, all I could think of was the people I’ve met in the last couple of years traveling the world: the people living in the valleys where those glaciers are disappearing, and the people downstream who have no backup plan for where their water is going to come from. The people who live on the islands surrounded by that coral, who depend on the reefs for the fish they eat, and to protect their homes from the waves. And the people, on every corner of the world, dealing with drought and flood, already unable to earn their daily bread in the places where their ancestors farmed for generations.
Those damned shriveled ears of corn. I’ve done everything I can think of, and millions of people around the world have joined us at 350.org in the most international campaign there ever was. But I just sat there thinking: It’s not enough. We didn’t do enough. I should have started earlier. People are dying already; people are sitting tonight in their small homes trying to figure out how they’re going to make the maize meal they have stretch far enough to fill the tummies of the kids sitting there waiting for dinner. And that’s with 390 parts per million CO2 in the atmosphere. The latest numbers from the computer jockeys at Climate Interactive“”a collaboration of Sustainability Institute, Sloan School of Management at MIT, and Ventana Systems, is that if all the national plans now on the table were adopted the planet in 2100 would have an atmosphere with 770 parts per million CO2. What then for coral, for glaciers, for corn. I didn’t do enough.
I cried all the harder a few minutes later when the great cathedral bell began slowly tolling 350 times. At the same moment, thousands of churches across Europe began ringing their bells the same 350 times. And in other parts of the world””from the bottom of New Zealand to the top of Greenland, Christendom sounded the alarm. And not just Christendom. In New York rabbis were blowing the shofar 350 times. We had pictures rolling in from the weekend’s vigil, from places like Dhahran in Saudi Arabia, where girls in burkas were forming human 350s, and from Bahrain, and from Amman.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Bill has to start a new group, 450.org for obvious reasons.
450 months till the Arctic’s free of ice and kids don’t know what snow is?
CO2 doesn’t really cause CAGW it causes CARW (that’d be regional warming).
I wonder what the temperature curve looks like for each individual thermometer?
Is there a site with each separate piece of data already plotted? (uncorrected of course)
Goodbye, but I sincerely doubt, good riddance
He isn’t saying good-bye. Read the article again. He’s just hiring some schlub to do the grunt work of administrative tasks while he still jets around the globe having a grand ol’ time and lectures us about how wasteful we are. Nice work if you can get it.
“As I watched them go by, all I could think of was the people I’ve met in the last couple of years traveling the world: the people living in the valleys where those glaciers are disappearing, and the people downstream who have no backup plan for where their water is going to come from.”
Their water source is the melting glaciers. The glaciers are “disappearing” because they are melting. If they want them to stop melting, then they need to be hoping that current interglacial period will end.
I’m guessing that 350.org revenue is down because some of the donors/funders aren’t getting the return on investment that they expect. To me, this appears to be an attempt at face-saving while coping with a reduced budget. I’m sure Bill has the rent and 3 squares/day still covered, but air travel might have been squeezed out.
Wait up! Santa only uses his sleigh one night a year. Maybe Weepy Bill could borrow Santa’s ride now and then for air travel, that is if a flying sleigh drawn by eight reindeer is considered green transportation. If money is tight, Bill can offer to put in some time on the toy assembly line for a few rides. Win-win.
(Hey! At WUWT, we’re always here to help.)
That’s about it – the fossil fuel companies no longer see any need to dollop money on these green terrorists.
The Reindeer died because the North Pole melted…right?
I suspect 350.org is under financial duress. The McKibben departure will allow the board and a new president to quietly wind it down, rather than collapse in a PR disaster for the Green Cause. McKibben probably ran 350.org in a similar reckless disregard for cashflow as how fellow Progressive Jon Corzine destroyed MF Global.
Much money from Green investors was put into groups like 350.org, and they got a negative return on that investment. These groups are so closely tied to the Obama Administration and his EPA, and now anything Obama is becoming toxic. In the run up to the 2016 election, it si clear that Hillary and her supporters will have to throw Team Obama under the bus. So it’s best to get a far away from the coming Democrat melee.
Believe me, if you are a Diamond Class traveler (1 Million Miles+), you get a lot of perks.
Like 11 miles for every mile you fly.
So a round trip to South Africa from the States @ur momisugly 18K miles gets you 198K frequent flyer miles.
Plus you get double that by paying with the correct Credit Card.
Flying anything other than business/first class is for the little people…
It would certainly make transportation “greener” if Santa would release some of the technology that sleigh must have hidden in it. Like the faster-than-light drive, or the gadget that lets him stuff tons and tons of toys into a bag less than two meters across. Or even the magic beam that opens a polynya for him whenever he needs to take off or land at his home.
I love the way he describes himself and his qualifications to pontificate.
Wish we could skip it all and go straight to the part where we find him weeping in Jail. GK
What a big girls blouse.
I would love to see the job application form for his replacement
Where do you see yourself in five years (jail, bail or fail)
Which famous climate fraud would you invite to dinner and why ?
List any three climate alarmist predictions that have come true (optional. no penalty for leaving blank)
Good one.
“As I watched them go by, all I could think of was the people I’ve met in the last couple of years traveling the world… But I just sat there thinking: It’s not enough. We didn’t do enough. I should have started earlier.”
They didn’t “do enough” what? Traveling the world? How would that have helped? Had they “started earlier” to increase their carbon footprint, what good would that have done? Perhaps if they had practiced what they preached and shown that they actually believed what they said about reducing CO2, people might have taken them more seriously. But traveling the world is so much more fun.
this is what I say: this is a virtue cult.
the insiders are a special few who have received the insider information.
just like any cult.
the rest of the world has to be framed as ‘the bad guy,’ not just a bunch of unconcerned.
just like a cult.
doomsday scenario.
just like a cult.
thought-blockers to fend off the arguments that tear down the impending-doom logic.
just like a cult.
“small, shriveled ears of corn from drought-stricken parts of Africa” willl love a little extra CO2 in the air. It will help them grow larger and make them more resistant to drought.
Where do you think the unexplained extra CO2 is going, Bill? The plants are eating it. And we’ll all be better off for it.
Like so many others his iconship is a fool who’s primary weapon is incessant lying.
His cause is so great he wears mendacity as a badge of honor.
He is above any possible shame and demonstrative of how people like him will never accept that anything is wrong with their beliefs, science or tactics.
…..just because….
Bill McKibbens 350.org anthem
“This is the song that never ends, yes it goes on and on my friend. Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was, and they’ll continue singing it forever just because…This is the song that never ends, yes it goes on and on my friend. Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was, and they’ll continue singing it forever just because…
es it goes on and on my friend. Some people started singing it, not knowing what it was, and they’ll continue singing it forever just because…
Sing along….
http://bussongs.com/songs/this-is-the-song-that-never-ends.php
McKibben is a genuine nutter.
770.ORG….Has a ring to it. I can jet set around the world extolling the virtues of CO2! First stop, Hawaii where, you know, they measure the stuff where I can also snorkel Hanama Bay all day in search or coral bleaching. Then on to France, where I will drink fine wine, hug fine French women and espouse the benefits of CO2 for grape production.
Next stop, the Bahamas, where I’ll board a large, expensive yacht teaming with topless beauties, encouraging the owner’s CO2 belching ways. A small tear will develop, almost imperceptibly, as I recieve graciously recieve another Margarita from Marie, as I realize the great good I am bestowing upon my world by my munificent acts.
666.org 🙂
I actually tried to reason with this dufus about a year ago. We both live in Vermont where our Governor has appointed a “Public Service Board” (more bad language tricks) who determined that dynamiting our ridgelines and installing industrial pinwheels is our solution to CAGW. Expect they’ll be at it again as soon as any subsidies resume.
From Billy –
“it is a hard call–for me, we need to do some of everything we can, to make up for the fact that as westerners we’ve poured so much carbon into the atmosphere and made life so impossible for the rest of the world; at the moment we think 400k people a year die of the effects of climate change. but i understand the reluctance around wind; i’d not like it near me, but i’ve had more direct contact with this crisis than most people, and i am of course glad to see the environmental impulse at work to protect our ridgelines, even if in this case i think the emergency we’re in outweighs it”
So I shared some data with him about Global Warming over last 15-20 years. He bailed. Please, not the facts!
Last summer, I believe it was, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund merged 350.org and 1sky.org and finished co-opting Billy and then sent him out crusading. He doesn’t even realize that his posturing is helping them move from others coal to their gas and oil.
http://www.1sky.org/about/donors
Over 1 million to 1sky and Billy
http://www.rbf.org/grants_grantees/search/results?tid=15&pgoal%5B%5D=36&field_grant_amount_value%5Brange%5D=&date_filter%5Bmin%5D%5Byear%5D=2003&date_filter%5Bmax%5D%5Byear%5D=2014&keys=1SKY&sort_by=field_grant_award_date_value&sort_order=DESC&items_per_page=5
Sad. Or maybe his hands have been dirty all along. He didn’t earn his professorship, like many of us did. It was gifted to Middlebury along with the Environmental Writing Program by the Schumann Family. He’s a “distinguished scholar”.
Feel free to send him a few Terabytes of data. He’s not picky. Any data will do.
bill.mckibben@gmail.com
” at the moment we think 400k people a year die of the effects of climate change”
Strange that the climate is also allowing the world’s population to increase 1.4 million per week.
I’ve explored the beaver ponds (Steam Mill Road then Natural Turnpike north to South Lincoln) and mountains east from Middlebury. It is an amazingly beautiful and relatively untouched landscape. Going there in autumn is incredible.
Glad you enjoyed whats left. Come all the way up to the Northeast Kingdom and visit the Wind “Farms”. The infrasound vibrations are driving families from their homes. Visit Bill, if he isn’t in jail – or visit him in jail. Take in a hot air speech by Bernie.
When we moved here 25 years ago, it was truly special – and most of it still is. But, that is no longer the agenda.
Thanks for the link, Bubba.
I searched on 350.org and found that the funding from RFB Foundation decreased $50,000 from 2013 to 2014. I didn’t see any money for 2015, although some money may be awarded in 2015. Then again, maybe not.
http://www.rbf.org/grants_grantees/search/results?tid=15&pgoal%5B%5D=36&field_grant_amount_value%5Brange%5D=&date_filter%5Bmin%5D%5Byear%5D=2003&date_filter%5Bmax%5D%5Byear%5D=2014&keys=350.org&sort_by=field_grant_award_date_value&sort_order=DESC&items_per_page=5
It was about 25 years ago that I visited Vermont several times. A friend of mine was attending Middlebury college becoming a hard rock geologist. So of course we went walking along streambeds while he described the significance of various rocks.
Poor poor Bill,
He claimed he is so sad that the africans are starving after doing everything he could to starve them to death. The tears just won’t stop.
But his tears are a poor replacement for the water that coal powered electricity generated irrigation would have provided. In addition the food and medication distribution and preservation, lighting, air conditioning, and infrastructure development that he worked so tirelessly and successfully to prevent in Africa. Countless lives lost, political turmoil stirred, disease incubated, crops failed because Bill McKibbon lobbied to prevent the World Bank from investing in cost effective (coal powered) energy development in Africa.
Keep crying Bill.
But I can’t help but think he is actually shedding tears of not-so-secret joy at the destruction and death he has wrought for the cause of “Global Warming.”
McKibben
“millions of people around the world have joined us at 350.org”
Really?
More than once The Guardian has done a 350 slide show on its big day each year. The photos of the gatherings are usually tightly cropped to disguise the fact that there are barely a dozen people demonstrating in most places. The only wide shot one year showed the main square of a Scandinavian country – can’t remember which one – where it was impossible to distinguish between 350 demonstrators and the oblivious general public going about their business, although there were clearly vastly more of the latter.
One might assume that 350 was the number of supporters they could only dream about having in most major cities.
He did accomplish something important. He showed that actors do have a place in advocacy, in case Hollywood declines further.
Please don’t tell me he is comparing himself to Martin Luther King. What a nauseating thought. The only thing McKibben might go to jail for is tax invasion and the only thing he would march for is donations.
His career is a good study in who is more delusional, McKibben or the societies or the groups within a society that could ever value him as a leader.
I suspect he’s gitten’ while the gitten’s good. CO2 is edging on, if it’s not already climbing past, 400ppm. An organization with the moniker, ‘350.org’, is, like, so last year, dude. To keep the funds raining in he’s gotta’ be relevant.
“Sustainable” to McRib is code for a “consistent source of funding so that I can go out and obtain more consistent sources of funding.”
Bill might be “in denial”…
4 Dec: The Conversation UK: Why climate change experts and activists might be in denial themselves
by Steffen Bohm, Professor in Management and Sustainability, and Director, Essex Sustainability Institute at University of Essex and Aanka Batta, Lecturer in Marketing at Uni of Essex
Disclosure Statement
Steffen Bohm has received funding from the ESRC, British Academy, the East of England Cooperative Society and the Green Light Trust.
Recent meetings have failed to make significant progress. Yet, this year there are high hopes that the US-China climate deal and the New York UN Climate Summit will allow Lima to provide a stepping stone for a binding emissions agreement at next year’s meeting in Paris.
However, even if a deal can be reached – despite the urgent need for it – there is no guarantee that global greenhouse gas emissions will actually come down significantly and dangerous climate change can be averted. Psychoanalytic theory provides disturbing insights into why this may be so – and it is all to do with the split psychological make-up of those who work at the forefront of climate science, policy and activism…
Vested interests such as the Koch brothers in the US and other conservative forces have cleverly exploited this unconscious response by supporting a small group of scientists, politicians and think tanks to spread the message of climate scepticism and denial.
This stuff works. Climate denial is undoubtedly on the rise, particularly in those media-saturated markets of North America, Europe and Australia. The Kochs and others are clearly filling a psychological void…
***This is also true for those climate experts who fly around the world, going from one global climate change summit to the next. The very carbon emissions associated with their work can be seen as part of a denial strategy.
In fact, one could argue that those who are very close to the reality of climate change are particularly prone to a need to split their identity. The knowledge they have, and the images they have seen, might unconsciously lead them to the above-mentioned counter-balancing and coping behaviours. Not a good omen for the latest round of climate talks in Peru.
http://theconversation.com/why-climate-change-experts-and-activists-might-be-in-denial-themselves-34903
“I’ll still be there when the time comes to go to jail…”
That’s the spirit!
There’s a few other names I would like to see making us that promise.
So…
45 days of semi-retirement before Obama appoints him as “Keystone XL Czar?”
Bet he got a Grand Golden Parachute!
Well, yes: http://www.rightlivelihood.org/