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Bill Gates has recanted earlier predictions of gloom and doom. But the Father of Climate Panic, former Vice President Al Gore, remains steadfast, if increasingly marginalized.
Let's start with probably the best-known environmental organization in the world, the Sierra Club. According to a recent New York Times report, the club thrived when it seemed laser-focused on the environment. But then, during Donald Trump's first term, "its leaders sought to expand far beyond environmentalism, embracing other progressive causes. Those included racial justice, labor rights, gay rights, immigrant rights and more."
As a result of the effort to morph into a catch-all for a myriad of social justice causes, the Times noted that by 2022 the Sierra Club "had exhausted its finances and splintered its coalition." By August, according to the Times, the number of Sierra Club "champions" – "a group that included dues-paying members as well as supporters who had donated, signed petitions or participated in events" – was "down about 60 percent from its high in 2019."
Despite the upheaval, few lessons seem learned. The Times noted that "in recent weeks, supporters who clicked on the group's website for 'current campaigns' were presented with 131 petitions, some out of date, like calls to support clean-energy funding that Mr. Trump has already gutted, or to support a voting-rights bill that died in 2023."
Asked whether he had any regrets, the club's current board president, Patrick Murphy, summoned the spirit of Kamala "not a thing comes to mind" Harris and replied, "I have a hard time pinpointing how I believe we should have made different choices." Alrighty then.
Also falling on hard times is 350.org, which first gained notoriety for its successful efforts to block the Keystone XL oil pipeline during the Obama administration. As Politico reported this month, the group "will 'temporarily suspend programming' in the U.S. and other countries amid funding woes."
Executive Director Anne Jellema said 350.org "had suffered a 25 percent drop in income for its 2025 and 2026 fiscal years, compelling it to halt operations," and would subsequently reduce its global staff by about 30 percent.
"The group had endured economic hardship over the years, including problems of financial management and several rounds of layoffs that eroded its influence," Politico reported. Jellema said the organization was facing its challenges "with our ambition intact." But apparently not much else.
An implosion of a different kind is from the world of "green banking." NBA star Kawhi Leonard's endorsement contract with the pro-environment group Aspiration is alleged to have been a vehicle for Leonard and the Los Angelas Clippers to skirt NBA salary cap rules.
As reported by ESPN, Aspiration Partners was a company founded in 2013 to provide "socially-conscious and sustainable banking services and investment products." Their slogan was, "Do Well. Do Good." Catchy. Operating like an environmentally conscious digital bank, Aspiration promised to "never fund fossil fuel projects like pipelines, oil rigs and coalmines." The company's products included "an option to plant a tree with every purchase roundup."