Isaac and Rudy join Chad Montrie, author of numerous books on the intersection of workers’ movements and the environment for a discussion on the often ignored facets of working class environmentalism. We begin by discussing Chad’s earlier work To Save the Land and People, on the worker and farmer opposition to strip mining in Appalachia in the 1970s, and how that movement interfaced with the United Mine Workers of America and the Sierra Club. We continue by reflecting on what the definition of environmentalism should be, and how the workers’ changing relationship to nature has been reflected in workers’ movements from the Lowell Mill Girls to the United Auto Workers’ outdoor camps that led to Earth Day, topics covered in Chad’s book The Myth of Silent Spring. We also discuss Wilbur Thomas’s talk “Black Survival in our Polluted Cities” and the Civilian Conservation Corps before finishing with a reflection on the false jobs vs nature dichotomy.