Difference between revisions of "Kendra Okonski"
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− | Kendra Okonski works for the [[International Policy Network]] (IPN) in London. Prior to 2001 Okonski worked as a research assistant at the [[Competitive Enterprise Institute]], the Washington -based 'think tank' whose multi-million dollar budget comes from major US corporations like [[Sourcewatch:Philip Morris|Philip Morris]] and Dow Chemicals. | + | {{Template:Climate badge}} |
+ | [[File:Kendra Okonski2.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Kendra Okonski]] in image from the [[International Policy Network]] website 2011]] | ||
+ | [[File:Kendra okonski 2001.JPG|thumb|right|200px|[[Kendra Okonski]], [[Competitive Enterprise Institute]]/[[International Policy Network]], 2001]] | ||
+ | [[File:Adapt or Die.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''Adapt or Die'', climate change denial, Edited by [[Kendra Okonski]], [[International Policy Network]], 2003]] | ||
+ | '''Kendra Okonski''' works for the [[International Policy Network]] (IPN) in London. Prior to 2001 Okonski worked as a research assistant at the [[Competitive Enterprise Institute]], the Washington-based 'think tank' whose multi-million dollar budget comes from major US corporations like [[Sourcewatch:Philip Morris|Philip Morris]] and Dow Chemicals. | ||
− | Daughter of a US lumber industrialist, Okonski grew up in Montana, U.S.A., and Santiago, Chile. She studied economics at Hillsdale College in Michigan, where she also edited | + | ==Education and Career== |
+ | Daughter of a US lumber industrialist, Okonski grew up in Montana, U.S.A., and Santiago, Chile. She studied economics at Hillsdale College in Michigan, where she also edited ''The Restoration'', a libertarian publication for college students. | ||
Okonski has edited a [http://adaptordie.info/about_the_editor_and_contributors.php book] for the [http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=155 IPN] attacking the Kyoto protocol. The book's contributors include several who have been active in the GM debate - [[Martin Livermore]], [[Julian Morris]], [[Barun Mitra]] and [[Philip Stott]]. | Okonski has edited a [http://adaptordie.info/about_the_editor_and_contributors.php book] for the [http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=155 IPN] attacking the Kyoto protocol. The book's contributors include several who have been active in the GM debate - [[Martin Livermore]], [[Julian Morris]], [[Barun Mitra]] and [[Philip Stott]]. | ||
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Okonski is described as the IPN's 'Sustainable Development Project Director.' As part of her job, she writes on trade and globalization, agriculture, and environmental issues. She has also fronted as the media contact for the deceptively named [[Sustainable Development Network]] (SDN). SDN appears to be another guise of the IPN and its director [[Julian Morris]]. | Okonski is described as the IPN's 'Sustainable Development Project Director.' As part of her job, she writes on trade and globalization, agriculture, and environmental issues. She has also fronted as the media contact for the deceptively named [[Sustainable Development Network]] (SDN). SDN appears to be another guise of the IPN and its director [[Julian Morris]]. | ||
− | + | ==Activities== | |
− | But an eyewitness report on the march suggests Giddings' account is highly misleading | + | During the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in 2002, SDN played a key coordinating role for pro-corporate lobbying, including organising a pro-GM march. According to [[L. Val Giddings]], the [[Biotechnology Industry Organization]]'s Vice President of Food and Agriculture, the march was the very first time, 'real, live, developing-world farmers' were given a chance to speak for themselves and reject the 'empty arguments' of the biotech industry's critics. Giddings also claimed that the farmers conferred a 'Bullshit Award', made with two varnished piles of cow dung, upon those that were deepening their poverty by denying them biotechnology. Among the marchers were [[TJ Buthelezi]], [[Chengal Reddy]], and representatives of [[AfricaBio]]. |
+ | |||
+ | But an eyewitness report on the march suggests Giddings' account is highly misleading <ref>[http://www.gmwatch.org/archive2.asp?arcid=1149 Astroturf uncovered in grassroots protest, August 28, 2002]</ref> Many of the marchers were not there to support GM. In fact, the main body of marchers had been recruited in the name of a protest against [http://sdnetwork.net/informals/march.htm limitations placed on street trading] by the Johannesburg authorities. | ||
A week before a march had taken place in Johannesburg involving thousands of poor, evicted and landless people, but it drew almost no media coverage. By contrast the 'pro-GM' march, despite involving only a few hundred people, captured [http://www.mindfully.org/GE/GE4/Fake-Parade-Matthews3dec02.htm press coverage] on five continents. [http://www.gene-watch.org/genewatch/articles/16-2matthews.html Subsequent comment] has focused on the fact that the organizers' [http://sdnetwork.net/media/farmers_march.htm press release] gave Kendra Okonski as the media contact. Okonski was also the media contact on the [http://www.libertyindia.org/events/bullshit_award_28august2002.htm press release] for the 'Bullshit Award', which was not conferred by farmers, as Giddings claimed, but by a right-wing pressure group - the New-Delhi based [[Liberty Institute]], a part of the [[Sustainable Development Network]]. | A week before a march had taken place in Johannesburg involving thousands of poor, evicted and landless people, but it drew almost no media coverage. By contrast the 'pro-GM' march, despite involving only a few hundred people, captured [http://www.mindfully.org/GE/GE4/Fake-Parade-Matthews3dec02.htm press coverage] on five continents. [http://www.gene-watch.org/genewatch/articles/16-2matthews.html Subsequent comment] has focused on the fact that the organizers' [http://sdnetwork.net/media/farmers_march.htm press release] gave Kendra Okonski as the media contact. Okonski was also the media contact on the [http://www.libertyindia.org/events/bullshit_award_28august2002.htm press release] for the 'Bullshit Award', which was not conferred by farmers, as Giddings claimed, but by a right-wing pressure group - the New-Delhi based [[Liberty Institute]], a part of the [[Sustainable Development Network]]. | ||
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Among other counter-protests, Okonski was the organiser of the Washington-area [http://www.mccullagh.org/image/d30-16/kendra-okonski.html 'Walk for Capitalism']. She also protested outside Starbucks, to counter demands that the milk [http://www.enterstageright.com/archive/articles/0301starbucks.htm Starbucks] served should come from cows not treated with Monsanto's genetically engineered cattle drug rBGH - a drug banned in the main industrialised countries other than the United States. | Among other counter-protests, Okonski was the organiser of the Washington-area [http://www.mccullagh.org/image/d30-16/kendra-okonski.html 'Walk for Capitalism']. She also protested outside Starbucks, to counter demands that the milk [http://www.enterstageright.com/archive/articles/0301starbucks.htm Starbucks] served should come from cows not treated with Monsanto's genetically engineered cattle drug rBGH - a drug banned in the main industrialised countries other than the United States. | ||
+ | ==Affiliations, Publications, Resources, Notes== | ||
+ | ===Affiliations=== | ||
+ | [[Liberalni Institut]], consultant to its [[Center for Environmental Studies]] <ref>Liberalni Institut [http://www.libinst.cz/stranka_en.php?id=32 Center for Environmental Studies], accessed 22 march 2011</ref> | ||
+ | ===Publications=== | ||
+ | *K. Okonski, 2001 '[http://replay.waybackmachine.org/20010803015742/http://www.counterprotest.net/libertarian_activism.htm Taking our message to the streets]' Written for Liberty Magazine (unpublished to date), CounterProtest.net, retrieved from the Internet Archive of 3 August 2001. | ||
+ | *Adapt or Die (2003), | ||
+ | *Environment and Health (2004), | ||
+ | *The Water Revolution (2006). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Resources=== | ||
+ | *Ciaran McCullagh Photography, [http://www.mccullagh.org/image/d30-16/walk-for-capitalism-1.html Free-market enthusiasts gather at end of Walk for Capitalism, the first global rally for economic freedom] Location: Arlington, Virginia Date: December 2001. | ||
+ | *Okonski's website: http://www.counterprotest.net/ Now defunct. Internet Archive holdings: http://waybackmachine.org/*/http://www.counterprotest.net | ||
− | ==Notes== | + | ===Notes=== |
<references/> | <references/> | ||
− | [[Category:GM]] | + | [[Category:GM|Okonski, Kendra]][[Category:Far-Right Think-Tanks (GM)|Okonski, Kendra]] |
+ | [[Category:Think Tanker]] |
Latest revision as of 22:24, 22 March 2011
Kendra Okonski works for the International Policy Network (IPN) in London. Prior to 2001 Okonski worked as a research assistant at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the Washington-based 'think tank' whose multi-million dollar budget comes from major US corporations like Philip Morris and Dow Chemicals.
Contents
Education and Career
Daughter of a US lumber industrialist, Okonski grew up in Montana, U.S.A., and Santiago, Chile. She studied economics at Hillsdale College in Michigan, where she also edited The Restoration, a libertarian publication for college students.
Okonski has edited a book for the IPN attacking the Kyoto protocol. The book's contributors include several who have been active in the GM debate - Martin Livermore, Julian Morris, Barun Mitra and Philip Stott.
Okonski is described as the IPN's 'Sustainable Development Project Director.' As part of her job, she writes on trade and globalization, agriculture, and environmental issues. She has also fronted as the media contact for the deceptively named Sustainable Development Network (SDN). SDN appears to be another guise of the IPN and its director Julian Morris.
Activities
During the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in 2002, SDN played a key coordinating role for pro-corporate lobbying, including organising a pro-GM march. According to L. Val Giddings, the Biotechnology Industry Organization's Vice President of Food and Agriculture, the march was the very first time, 'real, live, developing-world farmers' were given a chance to speak for themselves and reject the 'empty arguments' of the biotech industry's critics. Giddings also claimed that the farmers conferred a 'Bullshit Award', made with two varnished piles of cow dung, upon those that were deepening their poverty by denying them biotechnology. Among the marchers were TJ Buthelezi, Chengal Reddy, and representatives of AfricaBio.
But an eyewitness report on the march suggests Giddings' account is highly misleading [1] Many of the marchers were not there to support GM. In fact, the main body of marchers had been recruited in the name of a protest against limitations placed on street trading by the Johannesburg authorities.
A week before a march had taken place in Johannesburg involving thousands of poor, evicted and landless people, but it drew almost no media coverage. By contrast the 'pro-GM' march, despite involving only a few hundred people, captured press coverage on five continents. Subsequent comment has focused on the fact that the organizers' press release gave Kendra Okonski as the media contact. Okonski was also the media contact on the press release for the 'Bullshit Award', which was not conferred by farmers, as Giddings claimed, but by a right-wing pressure group - the New-Delhi based Liberty Institute, a part of the Sustainable Development Network.
Okonski has a long track record of organising 'protest'. She co-founded and managed the website counterprotest.net. In an article entitled, Take it to the streets, Okonski argues for 'a new approach to marketing libertarian ideas'. Of particular importance, she says, is 'the need to imitate the tactics of our opponents (environmentalists, human and civil rights groups, anti-globalization groups), both in the short run and the long run'. According to Okonski, 'Protesting, or counter-protesting, not only secures press for our views, but more importantly, steals media attention away from groups we oppose'. Okonski also claims the 'anti-globalization movement uses developing world spokespeople... and a variety of "indigenous" individuals to oppose technological progress, free trade, and change itself.' Counter-protesters must learn, Okonski argues, 'to give our ideas the same sort of compelling emotional appeal'.
Among other counter-protests, Okonski was the organiser of the Washington-area 'Walk for Capitalism'. She also protested outside Starbucks, to counter demands that the milk Starbucks served should come from cows not treated with Monsanto's genetically engineered cattle drug rBGH - a drug banned in the main industrialised countries other than the United States.
Affiliations, Publications, Resources, Notes
Affiliations
Liberalni Institut, consultant to its Center for Environmental Studies [2]
Publications
- K. Okonski, 2001 'Taking our message to the streets' Written for Liberty Magazine (unpublished to date), CounterProtest.net, retrieved from the Internet Archive of 3 August 2001.
- Adapt or Die (2003),
- Environment and Health (2004),
- The Water Revolution (2006).
Resources
- Ciaran McCullagh Photography, Free-market enthusiasts gather at end of Walk for Capitalism, the first global rally for economic freedom Location: Arlington, Virginia Date: December 2001.
- Okonski's website: http://www.counterprotest.net/ Now defunct. Internet Archive holdings: http://waybackmachine.org/*/http://www.counterprotest.net
Notes
- ↑ Astroturf uncovered in grassroots protest, August 28, 2002
- ↑ Liberalni Institut Center for Environmental Studies, accessed 22 march 2011