Dear Dr. Ignacio Chapela
I had
worked for the USDA until I was 65, and was not granted permission to
keep working because I believe that I had done well enough to get
promoted to a GS 14 when it would be possible to hire a GS 12 just out of
college at a lower salary. It is true however, that I was old
enough so that I had developed a sleep disorder. For this reason, I
was told at the day of my termination by my immediate supervisor that I
might have applied for a years medical leave and been treated for
this. I found out about this too late to act.
I would
like to cite a speech published by the former President Ronald
Reagan in a speech published by the Press and Information Office of
the Government of the Federal Republic of Germany in a collection of
speeches "Remembrance, Sorrow and Reconciliation,
Speeches and Declaration in Connection with the 40th Anniversary of
the End of Second World War in Euro5pe". The speech made by
Ronald Reagan at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, May 8,
1985, it was clear to me that he stressed the value of cooperation
with Germany and France in working for International peace. This
is certainly not what he did when our president ignored their wishes by
invading Iraq without their approval. I have a copy of this book
because I wrote to Chancellor Helmut Kohl and expressed interest in the
actions taken on the 40th Anniversary of the end of World War II.
If you are interested in what I consider vast differences of opinion
between Ronald Reagan, and President George W. Bush, I will be glad
to send you one of the speeches by regular mail, or the address of
Press and Information Office in Bonn.
My phone number is 515-382-2871, but my email is working.
I have no
information as to the presence or absence of hazards in transgenic foods
and I don't suppose you have either, but you prefer to err on the side of
caution.
At 10:35 PM 07/07/2003 -0500, you wrote:
How's this for a profile in
courage! Patrick Bosold
A quote from below:
Indeed I have long stood against
the folly of planting 100 million acres with transgenic crops each
year,
without knowing even the simplest consequences of such a massive
intervention in the biosphere.
> 1. BAN-GEF: DR CHAPELA BEGINS PROTEST TODAY
> (06/26/03 ....It has been suggested that the extraordinary delay
in
> reaching a decision on my tenure case without ostensible reason may
be
> the result of, even retribution for, my advising our campus,
academe,
> the government and the public against dangerous liaisons with
the
> biotechnology industry, as well as my concerns regarding the
problems
> with biotechnology itself... Ignacio H. Chapela Assistant
Professor
> (Microbial Ecology) Department of Environmental Science,
Policy and
> Management [log in to unmask])
>
>
> Subject: Dr. Chapela begins protest today
>
> Berkeley, California, 26 June 2003
>
> We asked the captain what course of action he proposed to take
toward a
> beast so large, terrifying, and unpredictable. He hesitated to
answer,
> and then said judiciously: "I think I shall praise
it."
>
> Robert Hass
>
>
> Dear friends, dear colleagues,
>
> Beginning at 6 o'clock this morning, as I enter the final days
of my
> contract as a faculty member at the University of California
at
> Berkeley, I intend to mark and celebrate them, by doing what I
believe a
> professor in a public university must do: to further reason
and
> understanding. For the brief time that remains of my terminal
contract
> at Berkeley, I shall sit holding office hours, day and night,
outside
> the doors of California Hall. This is the building housing the
Budget
> Committee of the Academic Senate, and the office of the Chancellor,
the
> two arms of our university governance in charge of my file.
>
> I am saddened by the failure of the administration and the
Academic
> Senate to resolve in a timely fashion whether to grant me tenure
at
> Berkeley. I believe that I have contributed to the mission of
the
> university and my heart and intellect are also vested in its health
and
> growth. All but one of the colleagues who witness my everyday
teaching
> and research in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy
and
> Management have repeatedly stated their support for my tenure, and
so
> have a set of external expert reviewers and the leadership of
my
> College. To the extent that reason can assess, I do not know
of any
> other academic information on the case that might suggest that
a
> negative decision should be reached. Yet as of tonight, well
over a
> year into the part of the process conducted in secret in
California
> Hall, no decision has been made, as far as I am aware. I
must
> therefore conclude that there is another set of criteria that
> counterweigh the strength of the case, but that such information
cannot
> be publically shared. In the face of such lack of
transparency and
> accountability, I choose to hold office hours in public, in the
open,
> and in the midst of our beautiful campus. I do so in
celebration of my
> vocation and my time at Berkeley, and not in the expectation that
such
> an action will change the course of the decision process, whatever
that
> might be.
>
> It has been suggested that the extraordinary delay in reaching
a
> decision on my tenure case without ostensible reason may be the
result
> of, even retribution for, my advising our campus, academe, the
> government and the public against dangerous liaisons with the
> biotechnology industry, as well as my concerns regarding the
problems
> with biotechnology itself. Without doubt, the uncertainty and
reproach
> implicit in the silence on campus surrounding my case has had
grave
> consequences for my professional, public and personal life.
But such
> are the wages of doing work that has significance for the world, and
it
> will be up to those sifting through the files of this case to
discern
> the twists and turns that brought us to this moment, and to pass
the
> judgment of history on the motives and actions of those involved,
within
> and beyond our community. It is difficult to blame otherwise
principled
> individuals for not voicing their best understanding. Fear is
justified
> when even the president of the country equates with criminal acts
any
> questioning of the wisdom of deploying transgenic crops. Against
the
> desire of some to banish critical thinking from the birthplace of
the
> Free Speech Movement, I choose to sit, openly available for
discourse,
> in the heart of our campus.
>
> At least one person has said that I should be banned from the
academic
> system, implying that my work harms the public role of the
university as
> a hothouse for the agbiotech industry. Indeed I have long
stood against
> the folly of planting 100 million acres with transgenic crops each
year,
> without knowing even the simplest consequences of such a
massive
> intervention in the biosphere. An increasing number of
scientists seem
> to be reaching the same position. It seems also true that
research in
> my laboratory has prompted serious public concerns that the
industry
> would rather not address. An industry on the crutches of
public subsidy
> for a quarter of a century, an industry that trembles in the face of
the
> simplest token of precautionary research, is hardly an industry
that
> deserves to carry the public trust, much less our best hope
for
> recovery in a flagging economy. It would seem rational that
our
> university - and the public - should strive to keep an
independent
> source of advice on the wisdom of supporting such an industry.
> Rationality, however, must take a back seat when the university
becomes
> grafted to a specific industry. Such has increasingly been the case
at
> Berkeley and at other universities.
>
> At a time of rampant obscurantism and irrationality, I am proud of
the
> privilege vested in me by the public as a professor at
Berkeley. In
> fulfillment of the duty attached to that privilege, I intend to
share
> the light of rationality during office hours over the next five
days,
> together with those who might wish to join me.
>
> Fiat lux.
>
> Ignacio H. Chapela Assistant Professor (Microbial Ecology)
Department of
> Environmental Science, Policy and Management
>
>
> ** Logistical details and contacts:
>
> I will sit in an "office" without walls. This means
that I will most
> likely not have direct access to an AC electric wall outlet.
> Nevertheless, I will have a battery-operated cell phone
(USA-510-207
> 7331). My cell phone will need to be recharged occasionally; if you
do
> not get an answer, please leave a message and I will call
back.
>
> My email address is [log in to unmask] In case of
server
> breakdown, please use [log in to unmask] - email responses may
be
> delayed for some hours.
>
> I will foreseeably be in my "office" 24 hours a day
(except for short
> unavoidable breaks) from Thursday to Monday midnight,
circumstances
> allowing. Three chairs will accommodate myself and two others
in this
> transparent office. Bring your own portable chair if you need
to. I
> hope to be able to offer tea and biscuits, but that is not a
promise.
> These last days have been on the hot side, but with any luck the
natural
> "breathing cycle" of the Bay Area will bring fog relief
for at least
> some of the mornings between Thursday and Monday. At meal
times, I will
> have space for company, although the seating may be less than royal,
and
> the menus are still being planned.
>
> Despite President Bush's emphatic demands this week, the House has
yet
> to pass the BioShield legislation, and there may be further delays
in
> the Senate. Nevertheless, I am making efforts to comply
with the
> current spirit on our campus and across the nation by surrounding
my
> office with protective, gray, duct tape, for added security.
Visitors
> from Toronto and elsewhere in the world, please note that I will
also
> have protective face masks and rubber gloves at hand.
>
> After midnight on Monday, I will be travelling to the
Gen-ecology
> laboratory in Norway until 22 July. I will be underway for a
week,
> subsequently available via my alternate email account:
> [log in to unmask]
>
> Please feel free to forward this email as you see fit. I
hereby decline
> all copyright.
>
> - ---
> [This E-mail scanned for viruses at mail.fiam.net]
>
>
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To get off the IOWA-TOPICS list, send any message to:
[log in to unmask]
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp