US banks are sacrificing poor communities to the climate crisis | Ben Jealous and Bill McKibben
It took decades to force banks to abandon racist redlining. We don't have decades to avert catastrophic climate crisis
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank will bring many forms of fallout. One of the most obvious consequences is that the biggest banks - Chase, Citi, Wells Fargo, Bank of America - will probably get even bigger. That is why we're joining protests across the United States outside hundreds of those banks' branches on Tuesday, 21 March: if they're going to hold that much power over the planet's economy, we need them to recognize and help with our great crises. We need them not to do what they did last century, which is to ignore or exacerbate our deepest troubles.
Beginning in the 1930s, the federal government mapped America, grading neighborhoods to decide which ones were worthy of investment, literally drawing red lines on maps to make it crystal clear. Many mainly Black and Brown neighborhoods ended up with low grades, and most US banks made sure money didn't flow in their direction. Nearly a century later, these neighborhoods still suffer. Lacking trees and parks, they are degrees warmer than nearby leafy communities. Their residents are condemned to a myriad of health issues, from asthma to kidney stones.
Ben Jealous is the executive director of the Sierra Club, the former executive director of the NAACP, and the author of Our People Have Always Been Free
Bill McKibben is the founder of Third Act, which organizes Americans over the age of 60 for action on climate and democracy
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