Unfortunately, #CalEnviroScreen doesn't map race. But all those polluted red areas are the places where poc live.pic.twitter.com/Xm94SiCBkE
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Yet when it comes to the environment and climate change, these are our conversations to have. They're our conversations to lead.
I know the environmental movement has been phenomenally tone deaf when it comes to people of color. Trust....
Like conservationists are more concerned about white polar bears than they are about black human beings omg it's so awkward.
Not to mention the anti-immigrant rhetoric from certain hateful environmentalists smh. Or the China = bad climate change folks.
But I'm tweeting #EnvironmentalRacism101 today because I'm encouraged about what people of color have already done, and can still do.
Please join in if you can: how polluted (or not) is your neighborhood—and how does that intersect with race? #EnvironmentalRacism101
You've heard of Porter Ranch, right? I'm guessing this is #CalEnviroScreen's take before the big gas leak...pic.twitter.com/8Jpqgi9n1G
Porter Ranch is 60% white, nearly 30% Asian-American. People were suffering from a gas leak—so there were evacuated (as they should be).
What about neighboring Sun Valley? It's a toxic neighborhood. It's also 70% latino... So no one's getting evacuated.pic.twitter.com/lf7jX5w9BW
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