Bush environmental policies embrace death and
destruction
Don Williams
OpEdNews.com
Most people who despise the policies of George
W. Bush did so long before he invaded Iraq. Why? I wish there was
a polite way to put this, but there isn't. Our environmental
policies are killing people. Thousands have died from
unprecedented heat waves due to global warming, skin cancer caused
by ozone depletion, unprecedented storms, respiratory ailments and
more, and the potential exists for millions to die from nuclear
annihilation and deepening effects of global warming. Bush refuses
to change such policies except to make them mostly worse. He's by
far the worst environmental president we've had.
Across a spectrum of issues, Bush has shown
contempt for our mother earth and the creatures who draw
sustenance from her, including you and me. From the creation of
new generations of nuclear weapons to a practice of coal
extraction known as “mountaintop removal,” from lies about the
air at ground zero to putting our rivers and forests at risk, Bush
has embraced the most contemptible policies that politics permit.
I'll focus on the two most obvious here, then come back to others
in later columns.
* Bush's nuclear policy is the biggest
environmental evil, because it threatens life on Earth. The
president's lack of concern over nuclear weapons stockpiles in the
former Soviet Union should be a scandal. In the first debate, when
John Kerry pointed out it would take 13 years at the present rate
to secure Russia's leftover nuclear stockpiles and weapons grade
materials, and keep them safe from terrorists, Bush had no answer.
But the liberal Kerry isn't the only one questioning the Bush
approach. Esteemed conservatives like Sam Nunn and Sen. Richard
Lugar long ago urged Bush to act while it's still possible.
Instead, Bush went adventuring in Iraq.
What's worse, he's working to create new nuclear
weapons in this country. Even as our government tries to persuade
other nations to abandon their own nuclear programs, Bush would
create whole new classes of “low yield” nukes for use on the
battlefield, especially for penetrating underground bunkers, even
though they're forbidden by existing treaties. “Low yield” is
misleading. These bombs would pack about half the punch of the
ones that obliterated Nagasaki and Hiroshima. The new nuke program
has been spelled out in lots of media. A long, reader-friendly
version was in the July 7, 2003 issue of “USA Today.” More
recent ones abound.
Meanwhile, Bush advocates more spending on
reactors for energy. Despite years of government subsidies and
federal limits on liability, the nuclear power industry still
can't turn a profit. So much for free-market capitalism.
Meanwhile, countries like Iran, Pakistan and North Korea use
so-called “peaceful” nuclear technology as cover for producing
nuclear weapons. Some day, when half the earth is contaminated
enough to set Geiger counters chattering, heaven forbid--we'll rue
the day Bush was selected president.
* Equally perverse is the president's policy
towards global warming. Despite a virtual consensus among
independent scientists, Bush's position has changed
(flip-flopped?) constantly. First he says global warming is
unproven. Then he says, OK, we know it's real but we don't know
the causes. Then he declares we know the causes but can live with
the results. He's declined to mention global warming in some state
of the union addresses, and has stricken the phrase from annual
environmental reports and other documents.
Not only that, he pulled this country out of the
Kyoto Accords that would've set limits on greenhouse gas emissions
for most nations. Yes, the Kyoto pact was flawed, but it offered a
framework we might've modified to make it work. Instead, Bush
contemptuously tossed it in the face of more than 80 nations that
have signed on, including most of the world's democracies. How
mean-spirited and ignorant we must look to them.
More than 10,000 French died of unprecedented
heat waves in 2003, likely caused by global warming, according to
numerous sources. Mountain climbers and geographers note the
famous mountaintop Snows of Kilimanjaro in Africa will be gone in
20 years. The polar ice cap is thinning and shrinking around the
edges. Lakes and ponds worldwide are freezing later each year and
thawing earlier, records show, and scientists have documented
shifts in animal migration patterns towards the north in England
and elsewhere. These phenomena are well documented. The National
Research Council, the Union of Concerned Scientists and many other
organizations have put their prestige on the line in asserting
their truth. Yet Bush embraced a lie-about-it policy in
preparation for this year's political campaigns. According to the
April 4, 2004 “London Observer” and others, the Bush campaign
circulated a “talking points” memo that urged campaigners to
deny global warming. “The scientific debate is closing but not
yet closed,” the memo stated. “There is still a window of
opportunity to challenge the science.” In other words, soon the
debate will be over and everyone will be forced to admit global
warming is a reality, but we don't have to admit it THIS election
year, the memo suggests. You tell me, at what point does denial,
cover-up and lying amount to conspiracy?
And at what point does declining to prevent your
country's industries from killing innocent strangers amount to…
I dare not say the word. It would be too impolite.
---------------------------
Don Williams is a prize-winning columnist for
The Knoxville News-Sentinel, as well as a freelance journalist,
short story writer and the founding editor and publisher of New
Millennium Writings, an annual anthology of fiction,
nonfiction and poetry. His writing awards include a National
Endowment for the Humanities Michigan Journalism Fellowship, a
Golden Presscard Award and Malcolm Law Journalism Prize. He is
finishing a novel, ORACLE OF THE ORCHID LOUNGE, set in his native
Tennessee. His book of selected journalism, Heroes, Sheroes and
Zeroes, the Best Writings About People by Don Williams, is now
available for pre-ordering. For more information, you may email
him at donwilliams7@charter.net. Or visit the NMW website
at www.mach2.com.
originally published in the Knoxville
News-Sentinel