Message from Carl Pope re: the CAFE standards vote.

I am ashamed.

Monday, thousands of  watts of light from 88 searchlights pierced through
the New York haze to make the 6 month anniversary of the tragedy of the
World Trade Center.  This, New York seemed to say, was the moment to
remember, and honor, those who struggled, and those who lost, heroically,
on September 11.

But already, as the green beams thrust skyward, a stain of fear and deceit
was spreading across America.  Powered by the transmitters of dozens of
television stations across rural America -- a few hundred watts in Fargo
North Dakota, or a few thousand in Omaha, Nebraska, or perhaps a thousand
in Butte, Montana,  television station by television station, a superbly
orchestrated, sleekly packaged campaign of dishonesty was telling rural
Americans that at this moment, six months after the war on terrorism began,
their government was coming to take away their pick-up trucks.

Earnest farming faces stared out from the ads -- millions of dollars worth
of ads, saturation in places like Rapid City, South Dakota -- and declared,
"It's awfully hard to load the hay in a subcompact. "   Only the analysis
in the New York Times business section alerted us that the anxious farming
faces were from "stock photos" and the quotes from  family farmer General
Motors.

Who, actually, was coming to repossess the family pick-up?  Two war heroes,
in fact -- Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona, and Senator John
Kerry, Democrat, of Massachusetts, who on Friday, had come together to say
that Americans deserved to drive cars, and SUV's, and yes pick-ups,
engineered with the very best technology Detroit could muster, engineered
to reduce our dependence on oil, to weaken the connection that deprives our
foreign policy of freedom of action in the Middle East, to ease the
consumption of carbon dioxide and other pollutants that threatens both our
lungs and the climate of the planet.

Kerry and McCain had offered a compromise -- one that gave the auto
industry time, ample time, and flexibility, perhaps a tad too much. They
said, "Enough is enough.  We want to drive cars that don't threaten our
national security, give asthma to our children, or threaten the world with
global warming. You have the technology to do it.  Fifteen years is long
enough to install it in the vehicles you sell in your showrooms."  Kerry
and McCain wanted the Ford Explorer improved so that instead of getting 19
miles to the gallon it earned 34.  They wanted better transmissions, more
efficient tires,  a wider choice of hybrid vehicles, more streamlined
hoodlines, multi-valve engines.  They had suffered in our wars, and knew
that when it came time to fight, America demanded the very best for its
troops.  They simply thought that if technology could make fighting less
likely, and less necessary, we owed that to our troops as well.

I am ashamed.

Detroit had a choice.  It could follow Henry Ford, and lead the world with
a new way of making cars.  Or it could follow the path of the early 1970's,
conclude that beating the Japanese auto companies in improving technology
was just too hard. It could  luxuriate in the fat $20,000 mark-ups it makes
on that 19 mpg Explorer, profit margins bloated by the lack of investment
in new technology and better cars. And it could cover up its laziness by
proclaiming that only Detroit was defending the hard-working plumber, the
farmer, the window glass installer, who otherwise would be reduced by Kerry
and McCain to loading their tools onto a -- well perhaps the Ford Aspire
that I drive, since I don't have to carry anything bulkier than a briefcase
to my office.

Six months after the assault on the World Trade Center, as American troops
died closing in on yet one more El Qaeda stronghold in Paktia Province, as
American emissaries travelled the Middle East trying to figure out how to
keep the oil flowing while staunching the bloodshed, Detroit decided. It
chose the past.

William Clay Ford himself had travelled to Washington to urge McCain to sit
this battle for his country out.  When McCain refused, the lies began.  In
an unprecedented blitz the auto industry set out to terrify rural America,
claiming that if fuel efficiency standards were increased, SUV's and
pick-ups would vanish from their production lines.  Enough voters were
panicked to produce the requisite "flood" of telephone calls to Senators
from rural states.  (Polls had previously showed that pick-up owners in
states like Nebraska strongly favored higher fuel economy standards --
after all they pay the gas bills.  But a few hundred panicked phone calls
are emotionally a lot more frightening than a poll)  Those  Senators who on
Friday were patriotically prepared to stand with Kerry and McCain and
defend America's long term energy, security, economic and environmental
interests, suddenly found a higher calling -- defending soccer moms.
Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland rose and said, "American women love
their SUV's and minivans ... because of their safety." (Mikulski has met in
her career with insurance industry actuaries.  She knows better.)  Senator
Christopher Bond of Missouri proclaimed, "about the only way we could get
there is to put everybody into glorified golf carts."  (Bond knew that
everyone listening to him knows better.)

I am ashamed.

Panicked, the Senate voted, overwhelmingly, to defeat Kerry and McCain.

A great victory for the American auto industry?  Not everyone thought so.
One thoughtful lobbyist for the industry emerged, ashen, like a man given a
death sentence. He knew that his bosses had just opted for a short,
profitable future for Detroit -- until the foreign manufacturers take over
the SUV and pick-up market with better technology (and fuel economy.)
They'd opted for a future long-enough, like Enron's, to secure executive
pensions, but one with fewer and fewer opportunities for American workers.

I called a Detroit auto executive who has been working with
environmentalists for several years to try to move the American
manufacturers into a position of technological, and environmental,
leadership. The Executive did not support Kerry-McCain.  He felt that the
industry needed more time, that capital was short, that relief was needed
from pension and health care costs.  But he never pretended that the issue
was the ability of the industry to produce SUV's and pick-up's that met
tougher fuel economy standards. So our conversation should be sobering to
shareholders in the Big 3:

I began by saying, "We need to talk about these ads."

"They disgusting aren't they." he said.

"Yes, they are," I replied.

"And they aren't true, are they," he said.

"No, they're not.  But your company paid for them, didn't it."

"Yes, we did."

"You've really decided that you can't compete with the Japanese for
quality, haven't you."

"Yes, we have. "

So, I am ashamed.  I am ashamed that six months after the attack on the
World Trade Center the US Senate caved in, not to Osama bin Laden, but to
lies from the auto industry.  But while I am ashamed, I am not going to
despair.  I am also angry.  And today, talking to my 31 year old son, or a
friend's 16 year old daughter, I know that millions of other Americans are
angry. Listening to the fury in the voice of that auto executive, or the
determination in the lobbyist who told the Sierra Club, "we still have to
talk.  We have to make this happen," I believe  Americans must, can, and
will demand leadership from our leaders.  We cannot let OUR future be
shaped by those who care only about THEIR present.  One by one, neighbor to
neighbor, letter to the editor by letter to the editor, post card by post
card, and finally, vote by vote, we can shape an energy future that will
make our grandchildren proud -- not ashamed.

The Sierra Club is, the Sierra Club has been, and the Sierra Club must be,
part of that struggle.

I may be ashamed as an American, but I am proud to be one of you.



Forwarded by
Erin Jordahl
Director, Iowa Chapter Sierra Club
3839 Merle Hay Road, Suite 280
Des Moines, IA 50310
515-277-8868
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