I received the attached essay by Robert Kennedy on another list serve. I
thought I would share it.
Wally Taylor
Published in the Winter 2005 issue of EarthLight
For the Sake of Our Children
by Robert F.
Kennedy, Jr.
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0223-25.htm
I have been an environmental advocate for twenty years, and I've been
disciplined during that period about being nonpartisan in my approach to this
issue. The worst thing that can happen to the environment is if it becomes the
province of a single political party.
Most of the environmental leaders
in our country agree with me. Five years ago, if you asked the leaders of the
major environmental groups in America, What's the gravest threat to the global
environment?, they would have given you a range of answers: overpopulation,
habitat destruction, global warming. Today, they will all tell you one thing:
it's George W. Bush. This is the worst environmental president that we have ever
had. You simply cannot speak honestly about the environment in any context today
without speaking critically about this president. If you go to the Natural
Resources Defense Council's web site you will see over 400 major environmental
rollbacks that have been promoted by this administration over the last three and
half years. It is a concerted, deliberate attempt to eviscerate thirty years of
environmental law. It is a stealth attack, one that's been hidden from the
public.
We found, in 2003, a memo from Frank Luntz, the president's
pollster, to the president saying that if you go through with the evisceration
of America's environmental law, you are going to alienate not just Democrats but
the Republican rank and file. Eighty-one percent in both parties want clean air,
they want stronger environmental laws and they want them strictly enforced.
Luntz said that to the president, and he said, if we do this we have to do a
stealth attack. He recommended using Orwellian rhetoric to mask this radical
agenda: They want to destroy the forest, they call it the Healthy Forest Act,
they want to destroy the air they call it the Clear Skies Act.
Most
insidiously, they have installed the worst, most irresponsible polluters in
America, and the lobbyists from those companies, as the heads of virtually all
the agencies and sub-secretariats and even Cabinet positions that regulate or
oversee our environment. The head of the Forest Service is a timber industry
lobbyist who is probably the most rapacious timber industry lobbyist in American
history. The head of public lands is a mining industry lobbyist who believes
that public lands are unconstitutional. The head of the Air Division at the EPA
is a utility lobbyist who has represented the worst polluters in America for
twenty years. The head of Superfund is a woman whose former job was advising
companies how to evade Superfund. The second in command of EPA is a Monsanto
lobbyist - these are not exceptions, these are the rules across the agencies. I
think it's a good idea to bring business people into government, to bring that
experience and expertise.
These individuals did not enter government
service for the purpose of promoting the public interest, but in each of these
cases, rather to subvert the very laws that they are now charged with enforcing.
We are seeing the impacts of this already. This year, for the first year on
record, the EPA announced that the dead zone in Lake Erie - you remember Lake
Erie was declared dead prior to Earth Day 1970 - is growing. Our water in this
country, according to EPA, is getting dirty for the first time since the Clean
Water Act was passed.
The rollbacks from the Bush administration have
affected the lives of millions and millions of Americans adversely. Consider
just one industry: the coal-burning utilities. One out of every four black
children in New York now has asthma. I have three sons who have asthma. We don't
know why we have this epidemic of pediatric asthma, but we do know that asthma
attacks are caused primarily by two components of air pollution: ozone and
particulates. In the Los Angeles Times recently there was a description of a
study that's about to be published in the New England Journal of Medicine that
shows that even small amounts of ozone pollution do permanent damage to
children's lungs. In San Bernardino, for example, ten percent of the children
have lungs that are permanently damaged, that will never recover; and that lung
injury precipitates in human beings a whole host of other diseases throughout
their lifetime.
We know that the principal source of ozone and
particulates in our air is coming from 1,100 coal-burning power plants that are
burning coal illegally. They were supposed to install controls over fifteen
years ago. The Clinton administration was prosecuting 75 of the worst of those
plants. But this industry gave $48 million to President Bush during the 2000
campaign, and they've contributed $58 million since. One of the first things
that President Bush did when he came to office was to order the Justice
Department to drop all 75 of those suits. The Justice Department lawyers were
shocked. This has never happened in our history before, where somebody running
as a presidential candidate accepts money from a criminal and then lets that
criminal off the hook.
Many of you remember what happened when President
Clinton pardoned Mark Rich and how indignant the press and the public was at
that action. But Mark Rich was one person, and he never killed anybody.
According to EPA, these 75 plants, just the criminal exceedences from these
plants, kill 5,500 Americans every year. After letting these criminals off the
hook, the president then went and rewrote the Clean Air Act, illegally we
believe. We're suing him, we'll win the suit, but it may take ten years, and in
the meantime they'll discharge what they want.
I live in New York State.
Most of the fish in New York are now unsafe to eat from mercury contamination. I
live two miles from the state of Connecticut; in Connecticut every freshwater
fish is now unsafe to eat. Last week, the Fish and Wildlife Service announced
that in 19 states it is unsafe to regularly eat any freshwater fish, and in 48
states at least some fish are unsafe to eat. The mercury is coming, largely,
from those same 1,100 coal-burning power plants. We know a lot about mercury
that we didn't know five or ten years ago. We know that one out of every six
American women of childbearing years now has so much mercury in her womb that
her children are at risk for a grim inventory of diseases: cognitive impairment;
mental retardation; autism; blindness; kidney, liver or heart disease. I have so
much mercury in my body, I was told by Dr. David Carpenter, who is the national
authority on mercury contamination, that if I were a woman of childbearing years
and produced a child, that the child would have cognitive impairment, and, he
estimated, a permanent IQ loss of five to seven points. There are 630,000
children born in this country every year who have been exposed to dangerous
levels of mercury in the womb.
Recognizing this threat to the American
public, the Clinton administration reclassified mercury as a hazardous pollutant
under the Clean Air Act; that triggered the requirement that those companies
remove 90 percent of that mercury within three and a half years. It would have
cost, according to EPA, less than one percent of the revenues of those plants
for them to do that. That's a great deal for the American people, but it's still
billions of dollars for that industry. Eight weeks ago, Bush announced that he
was scrapping the Clinton-era rules and substituting, instead, rules that were
written by the industry's lobbying firm Latham and Watkins. On their face, they
say that they have to clean up, within fifteen years, 50 percent of the mercury.
But they've woven so many loopholes into the new rule that they will literally
never have to clean up. The chief lobbyist for the firm who wrote it is now the
head of the Air Division at EPA.
We are living today in a science
fiction nightmare, a world where, because somebody gave money to a politician,
our children are brought into a world where the air is too poisonous for them to
breathe. This is a world where, because somebody gave money to a politician, my
children and the children of millions of other Americans can no longer enjoy the
seminal, primal activities of their youth - which is to go fishing with their
father or mother and come home and eat the fish. I live two hours south of the
Adirondack Mountains. This is the oldest protected wilderness area on the face
of the Earth; it's been protected since the 1880s. Today, one-fifth of the lakes
in the Adirondacks are sterilized from acid rain which is coming from those same
coal-burning power plants, and this president has put the brakes on the
statutory requirement that those companies remove the materials that are causing
the acid rain.
I flew recently over the coalfields of the Appalachians.
I saw something that if the American people could see there would be a
revolution in this country. We are cutting down the mountains, literally cutting
them down. The coal companies blow off the tops of the mountains, using 2,500
tons of dynamite in West Virginia alone every year. They fire the workers: When
my father was fighting strip mining in West Virginia in 1968 there were 114,000
coal miners digging coal out of West Virginia. He told me that strip mining was
not only going to destroy the economy of West Virginia in the long term but it
was designed to destroy the jobs so that they didn't have to employ union labor.
Now, there are only 12,000 miners left to get the same amount of coal. They do
it by blowing off the tops of the mountains, and they take that rubble and they
dump it into the adjacent river valley. They've already covered up 1,200 miles
of our streams.
We are destroying, flattening this landscape that is a
part of American history. It's the source of our values, our virtues, our
character as a people; the landscapes, the mountains where Davy Crockett and
Daniel Boone roamed, and we are cutting them to the ground. Of course it's
illegal, you cannot take rubble and debris and toxic waste and dump it into a
river without a Clean Water Act permit, and the Clean Water Act could never let
you get a permit to do that. So we sued. Joe Lovett, the attorney from West
Virginia, sued the Bush administration and the Army Corps of Engineers for
allowing this practice to happen. We won the lawsuit, and the judge enjoined all
mountain top mining. Two days from that victory, the Bush administration rewrote
the Clean Water Act to allow mountain top mining to continue forever; not only
that, but changed the structure of the act so that anybody can dump rubble and
debris simply by getting a rubber stamp permit from the Corps of Engineers.
If you ask the people in the White House who are promoting this
legislation, Why are you doing this?, what they'll say is: We have to choose
between economic prosperity and environmental protection - that is a false
choice. In 100 percent of the situations, good environmental policy is identical
to good economic policy. We want to measure our economy based upon how it
produces jobs and how it preserves the value of the assets of our community. If,
on the other hand, we want to do what the Bush administration has been urging us
to do, which is to treat the planet as if it were a business in liquidation, to
convert our natural resources to cash as quickly as possible, to have a few
years of pollution-based prosperity, we can generate an instantaneous cash flow
and the illusion of a prosperous economy. But our children are going to pay for
our joy ride. They are going to pay for it with denuded landscapes and poor
health and huge cleanup costs that are going to amplify over time and that they
are never going to be able to pay. Environmental injury is deficit spending.
It's a way of loading the costs of our generation's prosperity onto the backs of
our children.
There is no stronger advocate for free-market capitalism
than myself. The free market spawns efficiency, and efficiency means the
elimination of waste. Waste is pollution, so in a true free-market economy you
would eliminate, as nearly as you can, pollution. In a true free-market economy
you can't make yourself rich without making your neighbors rich and without
enriching your community. Polluters make themselves rich by making everybody
else poor. They raise standards of living for themselves by lowering the quality
of life for everybody else, and they do that by escaping the discipline of the
free market and forcing the public to pay their production cost. You show me a
polluter, I'll show you a subsidy. Corporations are externalizing machines; they
are constantly trying to figure out a way to avoid their own costs and foist it
out on the public.
I'll give you an example. When the coal companies,
the utilities, discharge mercury into the air they are avoiding one of the costs
of bringing their products to market, which is the cost of properly disposing of
a dangerous processed chemical. When they avoid the costs they can out-compete
their competitors, they can out-compete gas and oil and wind power. But the
costs don't disappear. They go into the fish, they make children sick, they
permanently injure children's lungs, they put people out of work, they acidify
the lakes in the Adirondacks and they've destroyed the forest cover of the
Appalachian Mountains all the way from Georgia up into Quebec. Those impacts
impose costs on the rest of us that should be reflected in the price of that
product. All of the federal environmental laws are meant to restore free-market
capitalism in America. I don't even consider myself an environmentalist anymore.
I'm a free marketeer. I go out into the marketplace, I track down the polluters
and I say to them, We are going to force you to internalize your costs the same
way that you're internalizing your profits. Americans have to understand that
there is a huge difference between free-market capitalism which democratizes our
country, that brings us prosperity and efficiency, and the kind of corporate
crony capitalism which is as antithetical to democracy in America as it is in
Nigeria.
I work a lot with farmers trying to fight industrial hog meat
production, which is not only one of the primary threats to the American
environment but also one of the primary threats to the American worker. It's
allowing a few monopolies to control our food supply and to put farmers out of
business. Fifteen years ago there were 27,000 independent hog farmers in North
Carolina, today there are none. They have been replaced completely by 2,200 hog
factories, 1,600 owned or controlled by Smithfield Foods, one large corporation.
They produce such huge amounts of waste they have to dispose of it illegally,
and so they have to corrupt political officials in order to continue operating.
I gave a speech a group of 1,200 farmers in Clear Lake, Iowa, and I said
that I am more frightened of these large multinationals than I am of Osama bin
Laden. I got a standing ovation from all the farmers in the room, but I got six
months of abuse from the farm bureau. I stand by what I said. It's the same
thing that Teddy Roosevelt said, that our country was too strong and too
committed to ever be destroyed by a foreign enemy, but our democratic
institutions would be subverted by what he called "malefactors of great wealth,"
who would destroy them from within. Another great Republican, Abraham Lincoln,
during the heat of the Civil War in 1863, said, I have the South in front of me,
and the bankers behind me and for my country, I fear the bankers more.
From the beginning of American history our greatest political leaders -
Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, John Adams and Andrew Jackson - have warned
America against allowing large corporations to dominate our political systems
and our lives. Another Republican, Dwight Eisenhower, the most famous speech he
made was warning America against the domination by the military-industrial
complex. Franklin Roosevelt said that the domination of our nation by large
corporations is the definition of fascism. I have an American Heritage
Dictionary, and the definition, if you look up fascism, says, "the domination of
government by large corporations driven by right-wing ideology and bellicose
nationalism" - that's getting to look pretty familiar. The problem with letting
large corporations dominate our government is that it erodes democracy, it
erodes our capacity to participate in public life, our capacity for dignity, and
it allows these entities to squander resources that belong to our children.
But the thing that we've squandered worst of all is our natural
heritage: the air that we breathe, the water that we drink, the wildlife, the
lands - all these things that make us proud to be American. This administration
has taken the conserve out of conservatism. They claim to like the free market,
but what they are really embracing is corporate welfare capitalism, socialism
for the rich. They claim to love property rights, but only when it's the right
of a polluter to use his property to destroy his neighbor's property or to
destroy the public property. They claim to like law and order, but they are the
first ones to let the large corporations and their corporate contributors
violate the law at public expense. They claim to love local control and states'
rights, but it's only in those instances when they're taking down the barriers
to large corporations.
They claim to embrace Christianity while
violating the manifold mandates of Christianity: that we are stewards of the
land, and that we are meant to care for nature. They have embraced this
Christian heresy of dominion theology, which James Watt was the first to
enunciate when he told the Senate, I don't think that there is any point in
protecting the public lands because we don't how long the world is going to last
before the Lord returns. The woman he mentored for twenty years, Gale Norton, is
running the Department of the Interior.
The reason that we protect
nature is because it enriches us. It enriches us economically, yes, the base of
our economy, and we ignore that at our peril. But it also enriches us
aesthetically and recreationally, culturally and historically, and spiritually.
Human beings have other appetites besides money, and if we don't feed them we're
not going to become the kind of beings that our Creator intended. When we
destroy nature we impoverish ourselves, we diminish ourselves and we impoverish
our children. We're not protecting those ancient forests in the Pacific
Northwest, as Rush Limbaugh loves to say, for the sake of a spotted owl. We are
protecting those forests because we believe that the trees have more value to
humanity standing than they would have if we cut them down.
I'm not
fighting for the Hudson for the sake of the shad or the sturgeon or the stripped
bass but because I believe my life will be richer; my children, my community
will be richer if we live in a world where there are shad and sturgeon and
striped bass in the Hudson. Commercial fishing on the Hudson is 350 years old.
Many of these people come from Dutch families that learned the same fishing
methods that they're using today from the Algonquin Indians during the Dutch
colonial period. I want my children to be able to touch them when they come to
shore to repair their nets or wait out the tides, and in doing that, connect
themselves to New York history and understand that they are part of something
larger than themselves. I don't want my children to grow up in a world where
it's all Unilever and 400-ton factory trolleys 100 miles offshore strip mining
the ocean with no interface with humanity, and where we have no family farmers
left in America; where we've driven the final nail into the coffin of Thomas
Jefferson's vision of an American democracy rooted in tens of thousands of
freeholds owned by family farmers, each with a stake in our democracy. I don't
want a world where we've lost touch with the seasons and the tides and the
things that connect us to the ten thousand generations of human beings that were
here before there were laptops, and that connect us ultimately to God.
I
don't believe that nature is God or that we ought to be worshiping it as God,
but I do believe that it's the way that God talks to us most clearly. God talks
to human beings through many vectors: through each other, through organized
religion, through the great books of those religions, through wise people,
through art, literature, music and poetry - but nowhere with such clarity,
texture, grace and joy as through Creation. We don't know Michelangelo by
looking at his biography, we know him by looking at the ceiling of the Sistine
Chapel. We know our Creator best by studying Creation, which all of the
religious texts mandate us to do. If you look at all of the great, central
epiphany in every religious tradition in mankind's history, the revelation
always occurs in the wilderness. Buddha had to go into the wilderness to
experience self-realization. Mohammed had to go to the wilderness of Mount Hira
in 629 and wrestle an angel in the middle of the night to have the Koran
squeezed out of him. Moses had to go onto the wilderness of Mount Sinai to get
the Commandments. The Jews had to spend 40 years in the wilderness to purge
themselves of the 400 years of slavery in Egypt.
Christ had to spend 40
days in the wilderness to discover his divinity. His mentor was John the
Baptist, a man of the wilderness who lived in a cave in the Jordan Valley and
dressed in the skins of wild animals. All of Christ's parables are taken from
nature: I am the vine; you are the branch; The Mustard Seed; the little swallows
the scattering, the seeds on fallow ground. He called himself a fisherman, a
farmer, a vineyard keeper, a shepherd. That's how he stayed in touch with the
people. He was saying things to them that contradicted everything that they had
heard from the literate, sophisticated people of their time. They would have
dismissed him as a quack but they were able to confirm the wisdom of his
parables about the fishes and the birds through their own observations of the
natural world. They were able to say: He's not telling us something new, he's
simply illuminating something that's very, very old.
When we destroy
these things, we're cutting ourselves off from the very things that make us
human, that give us a spiritual life. And for these people on Capitol Hill to be
saying that they are following the mandate of Christ by liquidating our public
assets, what they are really doing is a moral affront to the next generation.
That's why we preserve nature. Not for our sake, but for the sake of the future.
That obligation is expressed by the term sustainability. All that word means is
that God wants us to use the things we've been given, to enrich ourselves, to
improve our quality of life, to serve others - but we can't use them up. We
can't sell the farm piece by piece in order to pay for the groceries; we can't
drain the pond to catch the fish. We can't cut down the mountain to get at the
coal. We can live off the interest; we can't go into the capital that belongs to
our children.
What you can do: To track the Bush record on the
environment, go to www.nrdc.org/bushrecord at the website
for the Natural Resources Defense Council, where you will also find alerts,
updates on victories, and opportunities for action.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
To view the Sierra Club List Terms & Conditions, see:
http://www.sierraclub.org/lists/terms.asp