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Mon, 19 Sep 2005 18:56:27 GMT

M

Left Behind

 

 

http://www.motherjones.com/commentary/columns/2005/09/left_behind.html

 

Left Behind

 

Commentary: Bush's Holy War on Nature

 

By Chip Ward

 

September 16, 2005

 

 

 

Introduction by Tom Engelhardt

 

When Katrina hit, it blew away yet another administration-managed

scrim of irreality. First for scores of reporters and then for

millions of Americans, it connected so many things (including what was

happening in Iraq and here) that might otherwise have remained

unlinked for months or years more. It suddenly revealed, at an

extreme, the world Bush has made for us. New Orleans is now a vast

toxic dump (and, as at Ground Zero in New York after 9/11, a toxic

cover-up is sure to follow, endangering relief workers today and

returning residents tomorrow); the city's embattled wetlands are in

dismal shape; a superfund toxic waste site remains underwater; the

whole area may prove an " underwater Love Canal " ; parts of the Gulf of

Mexico are now covered with huge, if unacknowledged, oil slicks; and

much of the damage, long and short-term, had a human hand associated

with it.

 

As relief expert David Langness wrote at Juan Cole's Informed Comment

website on his return from New Orleans, the city is

 

" under a toxic brew of foul water, sewage, oil, gas, lead, PCBs,

carcasses both human and animal, etc. I saw thousands upon thousands

of poor people set adrift; America's most vibrant city stilled and

stinking; alligators feasting on the dead? The television and

newspaper photos are nowhere near sufficient to convey the scope and

magnitude of the destruction... [He then noted various man-made causes

for the disaster including:] the building on and subsequent erosion of

the Mississippi Delta's natural hurricane buffer the barrier

islands... the repeated Federal failure to provide budget funds for

levee reinforcement that everyone knew we would eventually need; the

gradual sinking of New Orleans as the energy industry pumps out more

water and oil and natural gas from underneath the city; the federal

government's finally giving in to developers of the outlying areas in

the Delta by underwriting insurance policies for new building, which

private companies had previously declined to provide; and of course

the general, overall greed and stupidity of continuing to build a

major coastal city below sea level without requiring elevated

foundations and a flood-ready infrastructure.

 

" This leads me to wonder whether all disasters are man-made...

[W]e have come to the point where we know where and where not to site

and situate human habitation; and how to build it so that it

withstands wind, water, fire and earthquake. We know which acts of

commerce and agriculture create risk from weather, and increasingly

understand how we make our own weather. We know that we can protect

people by doing certain basic things to keep them safe. In other

words, we know how to adequately warn and prepare for most ?natural'

disasters. Natural disasters used to be called Acts of God, didn't

they? Now I think we can begin calling them something else entirely. "

 

Meanwhile, far from our media focus on the devastation visited upon

New Orleans and the Mississippi coast, another devastating reality

lurks. Much the same -- hardly noticed -- has been happening in

slow-motion elsewhere, sailing (unlike Katrina) just under the

national, and media, radar screens thanks to this administration's

stealth environmental policies. Without the hurricane, without the

shocked reporters, without the poor left behind to fester and die,

another kind of unnatural disaster -- in the form of a fierce Bush

assault on the environment -- has been taking place for years now. As

Chip Ward, environmentalist and author of Hope's Horizon: Three

Visions for Healing the American Land, points out below, it's been one

way the administration has been able to feed its corporate cronies,

while throwing some red meat to its fundamentalist Christian base.

Take in the picture Ward paints and it adds up to the environmental

equivalent of blood lust and slaughter, part of an ongoing holy war

which Bill Moyers recently discussed in a remarkable piece, 9/11 and

the Sport of God:

 

" We're talking about a powerful religious constituency that claims

the right to tell us what's on God's mind and to decide the laws of

the land according to their interpretation of biblical revelation and

to enforce those laws on the nation as a whole. For the Bible is not

just the foundational text of their faith; it has become the

foundational text for a political movement... What's also unique is

the intensity, organization, and anger they have brought to the public

square... These are the foot soldiers in a political holy war financed

by wealthy economic interests and guided by savvy partisan operatives

who know that couching political ambition in religious rhetoric can

ignite the passion of followers as ferociously as when Constantine

painted the Sign of Christ (the 'Christograph') on the shields of his

soldiers and on the banners of his legions and routed his rivals in Rome. "

 

They have proudly raised the bloody pelt. Now, consider what that

means for the rest of us.

 

Left Behind

Bush's Holy War on Nature

By Chip Ward

 

Hurricane Katrina showed us how difficult it has become to

distinguish between natural disasters and man-made ones. First, the

Army Corp of Engineers decides it can build a better river than Mother

Nature and in the process deprives the delta of storm-absorbing

wetlands and barrier islands while allowing the ground under New

Orleans to subside into a suicidal bowl. Then a storm hits and...

well, you know the rest of the story. The lesson is simple: we are

embedded in natural systems and whether we acknowledge that or not can

be a matter of life and death.

 

What follows next you've heard a hundred times: the Bush

administration's environmental record is lousy. More than lousy, it is

potentially disastrous. But why? At first glance, it's easy enough to

understand. Philosophically, Republicans believe in the power of the

marketplace to shape behavior. Their animosity toward government

regulation is long-standing. They emphasize the rights of

private-property owners over any notion of the commons, and so are

comfortable letting corporations pursue profit at the expense of air

or water quality. Obviously, a Texas oilman like George W. Bush and a

former Halliburton CEO like Dick Cheney aren't about to object to

opening the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to drilling. Caribou, they

certainly believe, are expendable if they get in the way of our urge

for faster-bigger-more.

 

The Bush administration's assault on environmental quality has,

however, been so deliberate, destructive, and hostile that the usual

explanations -- while not wrong -- are hardly adequate. During their

time in power, Bush's officials have worked systematically and

energetically to undo half a century of environmental law and policy

based on hard-learned lessons about how to sustain healthy

environments. Strikingly, they have failed to protect the environment

even when they could have done so without repercussions from

special-interest campaign contributors. Something more is going on.

 

The notion that the environment matters is ingrained in Americans,

even those of us who do not think of ourselves as environmentally

inclined or sympathetic. Democrats and Republican alike have learned

the hard way that the decisions we make about what we allow into our

air, water, and soil get translated into our blood and bones. As polls

regularly indicate, most Americans agree that it is wise and prudent

to collectively practice restraint and precaution when making

environmental decisions. This is one of the great accomplishments of

the environmental movement. We are no more likely to hear someone

question the importance of a healthy and functioning environment than

we are to hear someone question the wisdom of child labor laws or the

ending of racial segregation. The environmental policies of the Bush

administration are hard to fathom exactly because they fly in the face

of these shared values and beliefs.

 

To Hell with Public Health

 

Just consider the Bush record. Take toxins, for instance. Most of

us already carry " body burdens " of mercury, dioxins, and lead that are

close to or above what sound science considers safe. Today, one in six

American women has so much mercury in her womb that a child she

carries is at risk for a grim inventory of afflictions, including

blindness, mental retardation, kidney disease, and possibly even

autism. These are expensive problems to treat and we all share the costs.

 

All fish in 19 states are now unsafe to eat because of mercury

contamination and at least some fish in 48 states are unsafe. We know

where most of the mercury comes from -- coal-fired power plants -- and

we know how to clean it up. The technology is available and

affordable. But the first thing Bush did when he entered office was to

dismantle the Environmental Protection Agency's mercury-emissions rules.

 

As with mercury, so it goes with a long list of other

environmental toxins. Bush-appointed bureaucrats now allow into our

drinking water: higher levels of arsenic; 20 times the levels of

perchlorates that the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommends

using the best science available; and 12 times the levels of

contamination allowed by law for the herbicide atrazine. The chemical

captan, which is typically found in household pesticides and

fungicides, has been downgraded from a " probable " human carcinogen to

" not likely " -- without any new evidence being produced. Standards

have been relaxed for the release of selenium, which we know causes

massive deformities and deaths in waterfowl. Fertilizers that grow our

food can now contain much higher levels of toxic residues. Likewise,

the EPA has used a 3-fold safety standard rather than the typical

10-fold test to determine that organophosphorous pesticides pose no

danger for children. By rewriting the New Source Review provision of

the Clean Air Act, the Bush administration has permitted industrial

polluters to pump additional ozone and particulates into the air that

aggravate millions of cases of asthma and cause thousands of deaths

each year.

 

Creative environmental regulators have become an endangered

species under this President. Federal watchdogs have turned into

lapdogs, so superfund sites -- lands contaminated by enough hazardous

waste to pose a risk to human health -- no longer get cleaned up; old

coal-fired power plants are not fixed; SUVs belch smog; and polluters

cheat. New environmental problems are not identified, researched, or

targeted. The best example of this is global climate disruption. In

the West, erratic, quick melting snowpack results in record spring

floods that are becoming as common as the massive wildfires we now

expect during our increasingly parched summers.

 

The Wilderness Goes to Hell

 

Human health isn't the only vital asset to suffer under the

onslaught. In my home state of Utah, whole landscapes and ecosystems

have been attacked and degraded by oil and gas speculators, road

builders, lumber and mining companies, hordes of off-road vehicle

drivers, and nuclear utilities that want to dump their wastes in

America's deserts. All of this is being done under a regime of

Orwellian labels: Policies that invite havoc into our lungs are

shamelessly labeled the Clear Skies Initiative; policies that degrade

the land, protecting trees from the ravages of nature by sending them

to lumber yards and paper mills, go under the rubric of " healthy forests. "

 

Under Bush, the Bureau of Land Management, charged with the

management of millions of acres of public land, has been told that

issuing new leases for oil and gas exploration is its highest -- often

its only -- priority. A boom of damaging speculation is underway from

which even rare wilderness study areas and national parks are not

exempt. In western Colorado, ranchers have had their gates bulldozed

away by oil drillers for corporations that own surface mining rights

and now feel free to take their heavy equipment into privately

operated ranches without permission or notification. Many of our last

untouched landscapes will soon be covered with a patchwork of crude

roads leading to dry holes and temporary wells -- none of which will

significantly affect our increasing dependency on foreign oil.

 

Bush's " leave no road-builder behind " policy is especially evident

in the Forest Service's 2005 rescission of its " roadless rule, " a

Clinton-era regulation that protected federally owned forests not --

like most of our public forests -- already crisscrossed by more miles

of roads than are included in the Interstate highway system. When

enacted by Clinton, the roadless rule got more public support -- over

a million supportive messages came in to the Forest Service -- than

any regulation in history. Now it's gone and, in Utah at least, 4

million acres of roadless forest are open to road-building, clearing

the way for lumber, energy, and mining corporations to get in and take

what they want. The impact is even greater in the wilds of the

Northwest where new roads are sure to aggravate the silting up of

streams and rivers in which depleted stocks of salmon are struggling

to hang on.

 

Everywhere you look, the Bush administration's war on the

environment defies public opinion. Utah is home to such beloved

national treasures as the Bryce, Zion, Arches, Canyonlands, and

Capitol Reef national parks and the new Grand Staircase-Escalante

National Monument. Its southern half, arid and isolated country with

little potential for energy resources, mining, timber, or grazing, is

nonetheless a redrock wonderland. Nine million acres of publicly owned

land there have been identified as meeting the legal criteria for

formal wilderness designation and protection; and it already draws

millions of awed visitors each year. The recreational dollars

generated are more of an economic engine than its extractive

industries ever were, yet its status is now in play and hotly contested.

 

The Road to Hell is Paved with Interventions

 

Under cover of the weekend in March, 2003 when we invaded Iraq,

Bush's Secretary of the Interior Gale Norton signed a Memorandum of

Understanding with Utah's then-Governor Mike Leavitt (who went on to

head the EPA and is now Secretary of Health). It allowed the state to

claim that thousands of dirt tracks and paths through public lands

were actually " highways " under an obscure law -- RS2477 -- designed in

the nineteenth century to allow prospectors access to mining claims.

The agreement validates delusional maps drawn up by Utah's rural

county commissioners that show roads running up cliff faces and down

the middle of rivers. Any faint rut where a jeep so much as backfired

or a horse farted is now imagined as a future paved road by rural

politicians who fantasize a world where mines, oil wells, and pastures

of lowing cattle replace " useless " redrock wildlands.

 

The out-of-court settlement of a lawsuit, signed that same weekend

by Norton and Leavitt, stripped millions of acres of public lands

throughout the West of safeguards that helped maintain their pristine

character pending congressional action to designate them wilderness

areas. In Utah alone, 6 million acres of land that meet all the

criteria for wilderness designation and protection can no longer be

managed that way. Established by the Wilderness Act of 1964, the very

concept of " wilderness, " the most popular and important conservation

tool ever created, has now been stripped of its meaning and power.

 

The acts of Norton and Leavitt proved typical of Bush-era

strategies meant to skirt otherwise unpopular decisions that could not

stand up to public scrutiny or involvement -- or survive legal

challenges, even in courts packed with Bush-friendly judges. Industry

has learned that if you bring a suit, however legally laughable, you

can count on Bush's bureaucratic facilitators to settle quickly out of

court for whatever you want; or you can just get your lobbyists to

write a memorandum that will be signed on a Friday night when the

public isn't watching the television news. The latest move: The

administration is working hard to eliminate provisions of the National

Environmental Policy Act that facilitate public participation in

environmental decisions.

 

It was no surprise, then, that the Bush administration opened

public lands to a frenzy of oil and gas drilling that respects no

limits. Its willingness to turn public lands into Off Road Vehicle

theme parks has been a bit harder to understand. Although the emerging

ORV threat is far below the radar screen of most Americans, many

conservationists now consider the detrimental impacts of ORVs to be

equal to the more traditional threats of resource-extracting industries.

 

ORV ownership in Utah alone, for instance, has grown from under

10,000 vehicles in 1979 to more than 150,000 today -- and the ORVs are

bigger, ever more supercharged, and often driven by aggressive, barely

regulated drivers unmindful of the destruction they wreak in the

remote corners of our public lands they can now reach. Their vehicles

cause erosion, destroy delicate nitrogen-fixing soils, and spread

invasive species like cheat grass that crowd out native plants and

fuel wildfires. The scarring they have caused to pristine landscapes

has rightly been called the public-land equivalent of covering the

Statue of Liberty with gang graffiti.

 

The ORV lobby, made up of manufacturers, retailers, and riders, is

nowhere near as powerful as the hired guns of oil and gas. Bush is not

beholden to them. The conservation of public lands as parks and

wilderness is very popular. (Even in Utah, notorious for its

conservatism, polls show overwhelming support.) Yet the critical

Resource Management Plans that the federal Bureau of Land Management

use to govern our wild landscapes are being revised in ways that allow

the ORV hordes to inflict their wounds at will.

 

Perhaps the most lasting legacy of the Bush administration will be

its undermining of environmental and conservation science itself.

Cases of silenced government scientists and experts, censored reports,

disbanded scientific advisory panels, and withheld evidence abound.

(The National Resources Defense Council has listed dozens of examples

on its website.) No administration has ever shown such levels of

contempt for science as a means for informing and guiding policy and law.

 

And You Can Go to Hell, Too

 

Elected on the premise that government is ineffective,

incompetent, and wasteful, the Bush administration has devoted its

time in office to proving its own point -- something Hurricane Katrina

brought home to Americans with a resounding bang. But the Bush record

on the environment is in a category all its own. Only when we begin to

grasp that those who are driving Bush environmental policies do not

share the most basic values and beliefs that have guided such

policy-making for over half a century, does their behavior start to

make sense.

 

This much is clear: The Bush administration does not respect a

broad American consensus that the quality of our lives is directly

linked to the integrity and health of the environment. Differences in

philosophy about property rights, the role of government, and the best

means to change self-destructive behaviors will translate into

different approaches to environmental policy -- for example, whether

to curb pollution by creating market incentives or by passing tough

laws. But until now Republicans did not reject the need for

environmental policy altogether. What happened?

 

The answer is a familiar one: Bush's righteous base, the rightwing

fundamentalist Christians, are having their way -- the zealots who

think Revelations is the only guide to foreign policy and that Nature

is a mere stage for their personal salvation drama -- men like

Majority Leader Tom DeLay who have publicly proclaimed that they do

not believe in evolution, or other Republican congressional leaders

who got 100% ratings from the powerful Christian Coalition, including

House Speaker Dennis Hastert, presidential hopeful Bill Frist, Policy

Chair Christopher Cox, National Leadership Chair Rob Portman, powerful

senators like Mitch McConnell, Kay Hutchinson, Rick Santorum, George

Allen, and many more who are, environmentally speaking, the American

Taliban.

 

Our President himself recently declared " the jury is still out " on

evolution. The administration's push to satisfy its base by devaluing

and discrediting evolutionary theory has profound implications for

environmental policy and law. If you don't believe in the evolutionary

sciences, chances are you also don't heed or trust the ecological

sciences that underlie environmental law and policy. When conservation

biologists talk about keystone (or endangered) species,

fundamentalists are far more likely than most Americans to listen

skeptically. The value of biodiversity as a measure of ecosystem

health is going to be of little concern to those who do not understand

or accept the critical role that species interaction plays in keeping

ecosystems resilient in the face of disturbance and stress.

 

In fact, fundamentalist Christians often have only contempt for

ecological science, which they view as nothing more than the cover

Pagans use to push a godless, nature-worshiping agenda. To many

fundamentalists, enviros are the new commies. Utah's righteous

patriarchal politicians cannot even utter the term " environmentalist "

(usually pronounced environ-MENTAL-ist, as if it were a psychological

disorder) without attaching the adjective " extreme " to the term.

 

If you believe that God made the world for you and instructed you

to dominate it and be fruitful, then you are likely to see yourself as

above and beyond the natural world. If you are God's chosen, then how

can you fear that he will not provide for you no matter how large your

numbers grow or what you do to your surroundings? God, after all, can

change nature's laws, which are part of his " intelligent design " in

the first place. So you are unlikely to fret about practicing

environmental restraint or worry about environmental toxins --

righteousness being the best prophylactic against disease in a world

where God's will is done.

 

If you believe that the world's end is imminent, then why not use

it before you lose it? If you believe that when the world-ending

moment arrives, you will be " raptured " away and Christ will return to

rule at last, then, hey, bring it on! Those who are " left behind, " as

fundamentalist Tim Lehaye describes it in his bestselling novels,

deserve to suffer because they failed to accept Christ as their

personal savior. So the President's fundamentalist base favors the

present over a future they disown.

 

Perhaps the greatest gap between the belief systems of

fundamentalists and environmentalists is the difference between hubris

and humility. Fundamentalists have a death grip on truth and do not

entertain doubt; while one of the key insights of the ecological

sciences is that nature may not only be more complex than we thought,

but more complex than we can think. Conservation biologists respect

the intricate and reciprocal nature of living systems and realize that

even the most seemingly insignificant species may turn out to play an

unexpected and important role in them. Such insights underlie

precautionary approaches.

 

According to Bush's political base, the future is theirs; nature

was put here for us to use as we please; God will provide; and foolish

unbelievers will be abandoned, like those desperate refugees at the

New Orleans Super Dome, in a trashed and shredded world. We had our

chance, but decided to listen to scientists, believe in dinosaurs, hug

trees, and wring our hands over pupfish, spotted owls, and the odd

centipede or two. While our jaws drop at their arrogant and reckless

behaviors, they just shake their heads and chuckle condescendingly at

all of our " liberal whining. " It's a holy war, after all, and they are

most righteous.

 

Bush's assault on the environment makes perfect sense once you see

the bargains that drive it. The fundamentalists give Bush political

power; his corporate cronies get free reign to plunder the land for

their profit; and the fundamentalists get the heads of

nature-worshipping enviros on an arsenic platter. The rest of us, of

course, get left behind.

 

Chip Ward, assistant director of the Salt Lake City Public Library

System, is a political activist and leader in the struggle to keep the

Great Basin Desert from becoming a nuclear waste dumping ground. He is

the author of Hope's Horizon: Three Visions for Healing the American

Land (Island Press).

 

Copyright 2005 Chip Ward

 

This piece first appeared at Tomdispatch.com.

 

 

 

 

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* Left Behind: Bush's Holy War on Nature

* Petrotheism

* The companies that ate Iraq are about to eat New Orleans.

* Roe in Troubled Waters

 

 

 

This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National

Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from

generous readers like you.

 

© 2005 The Foundation for National Progress

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