This is a great opportunity to meet Wenonah Hauter, the Executive Director of Food & Water Watch, as she tours to promote her important new book, Frackopoly: The Battle for the Future of Energy and the Environment.
Wenonah will discuss one hundred years of political influence-peddling by the oil and gas industry and the resulting deregulation that has devastated communities across the country. But her vision is not bleak: she reminds us of the groundswell of public support for a clean energy revolution, and the ascendance of a grassroots movement fighting to ban fracking and taking back our democracy in the process.
Copies of her book will be available to purchase, and Wenonah will sign books after her presentation and Q & A.
Wenonah Hauter is a compelling speaker and one of the most important minds of her generation. This is an event definitely not to miss!
Frackopoly: The Battle for the Future of Energy and the Environment shines a fresh light on the influence the oil and gas industry has in politics today and chronicles the political power generated by an exciting grassroots movement that is fighting to ban fracking, keep fossil fuels in the ground and help take back our democracy.
The event is free, so feel free to bring friends. We look forward to seeing you there!





Nicolas Schou, award-winning investigative journalist, author of “Kill the Messenger: How the CIA’s Crack Cocaine Controversy Destroyed Journalist Gary Webb,” exposes government operatives altering media stories and films. He names names and spotlights flagrant examples of collusion, of respected reporters selling out to powerful agencies. For the first time, Schou gets CIA officers, Hollywood consultants, reporters, and entertainment executives to go on record about the ways “true stories” come about and how the CIA has embedded itself in Hollywood to ensure that the agency gets the hero treatment on-screen. We learn about how some of Hollywood’s brightest stars gain unique access inside agency headquarters — and what price they pay for that access. Schou relates how the CIA routinely vets articles on controversial topics such as the drone assassination program, granting friendly reporters background briefings on classified material, while simultaneously prosecuting ex-officers who release damaging information.