T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1061.1 | Environmental Wackos Running Wild | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:50 | 10 |
| ...and what, pray tell, would you have us run our economic engine
with? Fish Oil...bear sweat? It sounds like a very good, well
balanced bill to me. My God, have you ever been to Alaska? It
isn't like they're trying to do this in the Bronx, y'know.
This is the price we have to pay for the society we have created.
I, for one, and not going to ride bikes, drive GEO's, or live without
electricity.
If anyone calls, please support this action. I for one will.
|
1061.2 | You can't be serious | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:57 | 16 |
| Mr. Lennard,
Are you simply being intentionally offensive again?
Have you ever looked into conservation, alternative fuels, proper
insulation in homes, recycling, etc as alternatives to the "we must
have more oil" theory?
Alaska's northshore is an extremely fragile eco-system, similar to
above treeline ecosystems in Colorado. I would far rther they drill in
the bronx or brooklyn, or even in downtown C Springs than drill there.
I would hope you are just baiting again, rather than as seriously
ignorant of the world as your writing appears to be.
Meg
|
1061.3 | NORTH TO ALASKA | KITS::ZEREGA | | Fri Oct 11 1991 15:31 | 6 |
|
I say that if it's up there then lets go get it, otherwise old
mother nature would have put it some where else.
Thanks for the info, I will call in support.
AL:
|
1061.4 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | marriage:nothing down,lifetime to pay | Fri Oct 11 1991 15:49 | 7 |
|
I was going to let this coast - being lazy about calling/writing
as I often, but not always, am.
.1 has convinced me that I must call today with my condemnation
of this bill.
|
1061.5 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Fri Oct 11 1991 15:52 | 13 |
| re. 'have you ever been to Alaska?'
Yes, I have. I lived there for three years. No, I did not live in the
Refuge. However, I learned a fair bit about how little it takes to
kill the arctic tundra upon which the land-based higher life-forms
depend mightily.
I am not now, nor have I ever been, in favour of opening this
particular area up for mineral or fossil fuel extraction. Existing
safeguard-technologies would have to be improved upon by a Zen factor
before I would reconsider my opposition.
Annie
|
1061.6 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Fri Oct 11 1991 15:55 | 3 |
| <== Me too.
('cept I've never been. Not yet, anyway...)
|
1061.7 | Never Met a Grizzly I Liked | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Fri Oct 11 1991 16:59 | 6 |
| No .2, I'm not rabble-rousing. I just dealing with reality. Those
resources are there for us to use, and they are badly needed. If
the caribou have got to go (which I seriously doubt), so be it!!
After all, the last time I checked, we were still in charge and not
the critters. No, the issue is are you as seriously brainwashed by
the environmental crazies as I think you are.
|
1061.8 | pathetic. | SPARKL::BROOKS | | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:02 | 8 |
| .0
Sounds like good ole "dominion over nature" rearing its ugly head again
(where *did* that attitude come from anyway?).
...*thanks very much* for entering this.
D.
|
1061.9 | | PENUTS::JHENDERSON | Spending that renegade peso | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:19 | 18 |
|
Can't there be one place on this planet that can be left as it was in
the "beginning"? Must we endanger every non-human living thing on the
planet so that we don't have to carpool? Must we continue to build
cars that use more gas than they need to to the point that we have to
go to war to keep the oil flowing.
Pathetic indeed. If we have dominion over the animals I hardly believe
that gives us the "power" to destroy them. I believe with dominion
comes responsibility and the bill in .0 is clearly irresponsible.
IMO, of course.
|
1061.10 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:23 | 6 |
| Why should Lennard care? he's only got a few decades left. Let the dummies
that remain pay his bills <snicker> <guffaw>. It was their choice to be born
after him.
Why doncha dump toxic waste into your favorite cutthroat stream, Dick? I
mean, who's in charge here?
|
1061.11 | Lots of alternatives, including biting, not shooting, bullets. | MISERY::WARD_FR | Making life a mystical adventure | Fri Oct 11 1991 17:26 | 13 |
| re: .8 and .9
I'd like to clarify something both of you are misusing:
the term dominion...one does not have dominion *OVER*.
One has dominion *IN*. One can DOMINATE *over*, however.
And in the context you used the words, the more appropriate
word would have been dominate.
And I agree with you both. Humankind does not need to
despoil another area for our collective greed.
Frederick
|
1061.12 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | I am not my fault | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:17 | 12 |
| re .7
And it is attitudes like yours Mr. Lennard that have us in the
environmental mess we are in today. It is the attitude of ME FIRST
and the rest of the world be damned that has created the problem.
Man may be in charge, but he sure has mucked the whole thing up. Maybe
the critters should be in charge.
IMHO, of course
Karen
|
1061.13 | re .1 | DECWET::PCATTOLICO | E Pele e! | Fri Oct 11 1991 18:47 | 12 |
| RE: .1 by COOKIE::LENNARD
...and what, pray tell, would you have us run our economic engine
with? Fish Oil...bear sweat?
And the answer is: hemp.
Visit your library and check it (the subject) out.
Pat
|
1061.14 | The other side of the coin. | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Fri Oct 11 1991 19:29 | 35 |
|
Maybe those of you against the bill are overestimating what
oil drilling can do. I can't believe that nature is so delicate
that the second we start looking for oil, entire species will vanish
off the face of the earth. Do you think life in general would have
survived so long?
Yes, we need to conserve, and recycle, and research into alternate
fuel sources. And yes, if we are haphazard and irresponsible, we can
be responsible for wiping out a species. Either way, we will still need
the oil.
It is easy to be indignant and look down on those who have that
"Me First" attitude.
But, will you still be happy that the Grizzly and the Snow Geese are
roaming without our presence thousands of miles away when it is
10 degrees outside and getting any kind of warmth will cost an arm
and a leg?
Is it better to look for oil in our own country in a responsible
manner? Or to have to deal with those who use our dependancy on oil
to their own advantage (I am refering to the Mid-east)?
If you believe this bill to be irresponsible in nature, then you should
speak up. I'm just pointing out that it may be possible to drill for
oil and NOT destroy thousands of miles of free range.
Admittedly, I don't know too much about this bill. And, I also don't
see those behind it having a responsible drilling approach in mind.
That's what institutions like Greenpeace are for. They (and we) have to
keep the checks on them.
john...
|
1061.15 | and to me it is not worth the price! | MR4DEC::EGRACE | Friend of Sappho | Fri Oct 11 1991 19:46 | 15 |
| It has been proven that this particular part of the world *is* that
delicate. Protecting the Alaskan Wildlife Refuge is a battle that has
been going on for nearly 10 years.
It is not that we will be innocously looking for oil; we will be
*drilling* for oil. This is a very traumatic process for the earth.
Something that many people do not seem to understand is that if we
eliminate 1 species, we endanger the species that depend on that first
one. And to quote an old shampoo ad: and so on and so on and so on.
I don't remember the statistic specifically; I am sure someone here
will. But I believe ~300 forms of life are becoming extinct every
year.
E Grace
|
1061.16 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Sat Oct 12 1991 00:33 | 9 |
| cookie, to me it's not your opinion that's offensive, it's your
characterization of those who disagree with you on this as
"environmental crazies". It seems to me that this fits a pattern -
insulting labels for those who don't share your lifeviews in their
entirety. This tactic tends to close the ears of those who hear
you.
Even when you're right, there's a difference between being right, and
being effective. It's best to strive for both, imo.
|
1061.17 | Blustering is just noise | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Mon Oct 14 1991 10:21 | 19 |
| Mr. Lennard, Sarah has it right. It's fine for you to feel that all
resources should be exploited to the fullest (even if you are wrong
imnsho) However, to refer to those who don't agree with your views as
crazies, buffoons or what have you is not going to create effective
dialog. It makes it hard for me to read anything you write as
intelligent or factual or anything but added noise.
I would still suggest that you read a little bit about what the artic
tundra is and how much disturbance it can repair in under, say 25
years, before you classify those of us who oppose drilling and
development of the north shore as wierdo's.
You might also wish to learn a little about some petro-chemical
alternatives which can be grown on marginal land, right here in the
good old USA. I would suggest Hemp for Victory, a USDA film from the
1930's as a good start.
Meg
A true environmental crazy and proud of it
|
1061.18 | NOW TELL US | KITS::ZEREGA | | Mon Oct 14 1991 11:29 | 7 |
|
I wonder how .2 and .9 get to work?????? do they walk???????
I also wonder how many cars are in there family?????????????
AL:
|
1061.19 | ... | SPARKL::JOHNHC | | Mon Oct 14 1991 12:06 | 19 |
| Did somebody bring this up already? Or is Al Zerega the first one to
bring up the point that environmental awareness and automobiles are
incompatible (and that having both is therefore hypocrisy)?
Problem with environmental issues: solutions get sidetracked easily.
While the conscientious ones struggle to clarify the apparent
contradictions, they often lose track of what the already established
mechanisms for environmental destruction are doing.
Zerega and Lennard are not worth the effort it would take to persuade
them. It only takes one opposing vote to cancel their
influence. Energy spent making the next generation more aware of the
mindless destruction is likely to show more results.
Just pick up your phone and call your legislators. This is one
environmental nightmare we can foresee and possibly forestall.
John H-C
|
1061.20 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:08 | 17 |
| .7
Well, we environnmental crazies know better tha to think that we are in
charge. Just what do you consider the human species to be if not
just another form of critter?
Remember those in charge people who built houses on Chatham's beach
front only to lose them to, gasp, nature? Imagine they just couldn't
control that wind and water, could they, although they must have done
a lot of in charge shouting about it.
Resources there for us to use. Uh-huh. Sure. Obviously the whole
universe revolves around the human species. Keep kidding yourself.
It feels better than to know the truth.
Maia
|
1061.21 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:27 | 26 |
|
Of course it's compatible to be an environmentalist and drive
an automatible.
The reason is quite simple: you see, as *consumers* living in
the US, we have no choice but to drive, because the federal govt
has been heavily sudsidizing this form of transportation (to the
exclusion of other less energy-intensive forms) for many, many
decades.
General taxes pay for roads, interstates, bridges, and parking lots.
Meanwhile, urban transit systems, Amtrak, and alternative energy
research all get next to nothing. Bicycle trails and racks - again,
nothing.
If users of automobiles were made to *pay* for the things they
*use*, you can damn well bet people *would* find an alternative -
and gladly.
But, for now, simply from an economical point of view, I must drive.
That's because I am both an environmentalist and an ordinary consumer.
Meanwhile, I have written to the president and my congressman and
senators with my ideas for turning things around so that we as a nation,
are less dependent on foreign oil *and* begin to decrease pollution.
|
1061.22 | | PENUTS::JHENDERSON | Spending that renegade peso | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:44 | 14 |
| RE .18
I drive to work and I own one car (my household consists of me).
-1 explains it better than I can..
Jim
|
1061.23 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey... | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:54 | 16 |
| > Did somebody bring this up already? Or is Al Zerega the first one to
> bring up the point that environmental awareness and automobiles are
> incompatible (and that having both is therefore hypocrisy)?
Al was the first to raise that red herring. The fact that one does not
live one's life in an environmentally pure manner (which happens to be
impossible) does not undo the good things that one does for the environment.
While personal transportation is arguably worse than public transportation,
the fact is that public transportation is only less bad and is not at all
"good." Therefore the best environmental solution is no transportation,
save foot or hoof. Clearly this is unreasonable.
Justifying the pillaging of resources because one drives a personal
automobile is egregiously cynical and deserving of a slap. :-)
the Doctah
|
1061.25 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:32 | 25 |
| re .21
A nit, but an important nit:
> the federal govt has been heavily sudsidizing this form of
> transportation
> If users of automobiles were made to *pay* for the things they
> *use*, you can damn well bet people *would* find an alternative -
> and gladly.
The set of people who are paying the taxes that pay the above
mentioned subsidies is pretty close to the set of people who
derive benefit from the use of automobiles. Therefore, for
all intents and purposes, the users *are* paying for the
things they use.
The thing is, the mechanism of paying through taxes tends to
obscure the connection between the real costs of driving
and the cost you pay whenever you turn the ignition key.
Make the costs more visible and direct, and the pressure for
alternate modes of transportation should increase.
Tom_K
|
1061.26 | no nukes...the sun is within reach | GUCCI::SANTSCHI | violence cannot solve problems | Mon Oct 14 1991 15:58 | 18 |
| for once, i'd like to see some real support for renewable energy
sources....like the sun for instance.
photo voltaic cell production has now improved the price/performance
ratio. if PVCs were used in new construction, the cost is almost the
same as conventional heating/cooling/power for residences. of course,
it being a renewable technology, the dependence on the power utilities
would lessen. we might even have enough oil for our cars! what a
concept. personally, i am investigating solar energy for the home i
will build in the next few years. it will be energy efficient, and
powered by renewable sources BECAUSE i don't want to spend my
retirement dollars on utilities that continue to increase their prices
without increasing their efficiencies or for finding renewable sources.
it can be done today....and could be done more cheaply but for the
powerful utility lobbies. oil=bush
sue
|
1061.27 | Nits, red herrings, and other hobgoblins | GEMVAX::JOHNHC | | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:07 | 25 |
| Alas, the subject of this note has, indeed, been sidetracked by the
question about the environmental conscientiousness of driving an
automobile.
The real issue here, IMO, is that we are suddenly offered an
opportunity to say something about some environmental legislation.
Most environmental laws get passed as riders on other, unrelated bills.
That is how the Cleanwater Act got its new lease on life earlier this
year. Normally, the environmentally detrimental laws such as the one
referenced in .0 get passed in much the same way.
You just don't hear about it unless you read your "junk mail" from
some of the environmental lobbying organizations.
So here is a bill that you have heard about. Please, call your
representatives and tell them you don't want the "energy" companies
trashing another fragile environment.
While you're at it, you might feel like mentioning how you feel about
drilling for oil and gas through the few coral reefs left alive in the
Gulf of Mexico. The EPA isn't taking recommendations on that one from
the public after October 29.
John H-C
|
1061.28 | All I can do is my best | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:13 | 19 |
| Yes my family owns and drives one car. I live in Colorado Springs
where the busses run intermittantly at best and only from the hours of
7am to 630pm Monday through Saturday. Although expanding bus service
was one of the "clean air" goals that got the city of the EPA's *hit
list 10 years ago, the powers that be have steadily reduced the bus
routes to the point that it is useless. (Yes I have been trying to
Vote the rascals out.)
However we do most of what we can on foot or on bike (Two kids, frank
and myself) We also do make an effort to reduce our impact on
resources, and increase conservation, beginning at home. We recycle,
compost, attempt to buy goods made from recycled materials, have been
steadily decreasing the energy losses from our home, use low flush
toilets and low flow shower heads and keep the temperature of the water
heater down to a reasonable level. If everyone else did just that
little bit, I'm sure there would be a lot more of that precious oil
available for your automobile, as well as mine.
Meg
|
1061.29 | | KITS::ZEREGA | | Mon Oct 14 1991 16:21 | 7 |
|
RE:23
Thanke Doctah, I needed that. :^) :^)
AL:
|
1061.30 | | DENVER::DORO | | Mon Oct 14 1991 17:36 | 10 |
|
re .27.
Do you have reference numbers? Are the bills already in frontof the
House/Senate?
Thanks -
Jamd
|
1061.31 | re: .30 | GEMVAX::JOHNHC | | Mon Oct 14 1991 17:43 | 2 |
| Government seems to be taking a holiday today.
|
1061.32 | | GEMVAX::BROOKS | | Mon Oct 14 1991 18:02 | 6 |
|
.27
Thanks, John, I think we all needed that.
Dorian
|
1061.33 | | COOKIE::LENNARD | Rush Limbaugh, I Luv Ya Guy | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:06 | 22 |
| Well, after all the bruhaha over my .1, I decided to go back and read
.0 again. No surprise, but I still feel the same way. Seems like a
reasonable bill to me. I probably over-reacted to the word NIGHTMARE.
Given what we now know about drilling and transporting oil and natural
gas, as well as nuclear safety, we should be able to exploit all
available resources safely. It's certainly not a "nightmare". Of
course there will be spills...of course there will be nuclear
incidents....., but we do have the controls in place to lessen the
probability. Does it make sense to leave all that oil in the ground?
Does it make sense to periodically fight a war in the Mid-East when we
could lessen or dependency on them? I say go for it!
I believe that nuclear power is absolutely necessary to our survival.
Many European countries (like France) seem to be able to handle the
problem very well. We should be able to do the same. I don't like
it, and I didn't always feel this way, but I have changed my mind.
Sun and wind and thermal sources are nice, but they aren't going to
cut it....that's silly. They will always be secondary sources. Maybe
a hundred years from now...but not now. Anyhow, sorry to get so many
people upset, but the last I heard I was entitled to my opinion also.
|
1061.34 | | GUIDUK::GOODHIND | Whistle while you note... | Tue Oct 15 1991 14:43 | 55 |
| > Given what we now know about drilling and transporting oil and natural
> gas, as well as nuclear safety, we should be able to exploit all
> available resources safely.
Your interpretation doesn't follow the facts...pardon me for
not making the same logical leap. Last I checked, we were not
doing the real spiffy job in this area that your comment would
indicate.
> Does it make sense to leave all that oil in the ground?
Does it make sense to pump it all up in less than 300 years? Doesn't
sound like a good investment strategy. Clearly it's use as a fuel
gave us the technological revolution we're now enjoying, but that
was a jump-start. We can do better, cheaper and cleaner.
> Does it make sense to periodically fight a war in the Mid-East when we
> could lessen or dependency on them?
Great case for alternative energy. Too bad we didn't pay attention
when Carter made the same case for energy independence. We're the
ones who drive the economy of middle-east war through our consumption
of oil.
> Sun and wind and thermal sources are nice, but they aren't going to
> cut it....that's silly. They will always be secondary sources. Maybe
> a hundred years from now...but not now.
As long as the goverment subsidizes the existing forms of production
as opposed to doing R&D, you've got a point. As a citizen of the
US, I'd like to encourage my country to start working on longer term
plans than those of politicians whos interests revolve around the
next re-election.
I suppose if I was convinced the world would blow up in a few years
I might not care, but I want to invest in an energy/environmental
strategy doesn't leave my children to deal with my mistakes.
Also, current work in certain areas are having an almost equal pay
back on solar facilities. Given economy of scale, the sun could
easily provide alot of the power...in one way or another it already
supplies all of it. We're talking a couple of pennies a Kw/hr
difference. How do you figure "silly" applies?
Then there's biomass---wouldn't the farmers love that! Good for our
economy and leaves out the messy hydrocarbons---still got the CO2
problem, but the plants that you convert into alcohol offset that
with photosynthesis...solar power again.
> Anyhow, sorry to get so many people upset, but the last I heard I was
> entitled to my opinion also.
Last I checked, we were allowed to disagree with 'em...no grief here.
-larry 8^)
|
1061.35 | Count me against it as well.... | SKIVT::L_BURKE | Cherokee Princess, DTN 266-4584 | Tue Oct 15 1991 16:34 | 22 |
|
I just wanted to add my support against the previously mentioned bill.
Not because I don't think we need the oil but because I don't believe
it is the best alternative.
Oil people, like most businesses, are out for the highest return on the
dollar. If they can go somewhere that has oil available within a
"shallow" depth they will do so no matter what the environmental
consequences.
Being from Oklahoma I am somewhat familiar with the oil business,
besides my husband was a field engineer out there in the oil boom of
the early eighties. I happen to know of many wells that were capped
because the oil/gas was so deep that its regulated cost was higher.
Those sources are still there.
I also know the terrible mess an oil rig makes. Between heavy
equipment, salt water and run off oil it contaminates ~3 to 5 acres of
land. It seems a waste to me to invade these pristeen places when
there is oil still available in previously used sites.
Linda B
|
1061.36 | thanks | RANGER::SCHLENER | | Tue Oct 15 1991 17:02 | 22 |
| I am really happy to see all the discussion going on. I've gotten some
grief (I did enter the note in a few notefiles) about the bill and the
wording, but I take a very firm stance on protecting the environment
and I don't care about the hassle I've been getting.
Re .33, In 30 years, we'll probably look back at this time and say that
we were so ignorant on many issues, namely nuclear power. We don't know
everything and that's what scares me. What's going to happen in 30, 50,
100 years if we keep using our resources at the rate we're going. What
happens if the oil runs out (which it will)? What happens if we have a
nuclear accident (Seabrook) which makes a 50-100 mile radius
inhabitable? Can we afford that? NO!
So we have to make a stand now! I'm not going to use up my children's
future so I don't have to worry about the environment. I can't take
the easy way out - ride the wave....
Someday all this garbage is going to come back to haunt us. It's
already starting.
Cindy
|
1061.37 | engage brain before activating ^Z | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Oct 16 1991 08:19 | 7 |
| re:.36
I thought this area was already 'inhabitable'?
:-)
ed
|
1061.38 | Eco-Nightmare charge is a crock ! | CSC32::S_HALL | Wollomanakabeesai ! | Fri Oct 25 1991 12:09 | 115 |
|
Senate Hears Hype on Damage to Arctic Refuge
by Warren T. Brooks
The U.S. Senate is about to debate the National Energy
Strategy Bill. That bill is one of the most pleasant
surprises to hit Capitol Hill in a long time. While it
generates three times as much "new energy" from
conservation as it does from production, for the first time
we have a real "pro-growth" energy strategy.
The credit for this amazingly good bill belongs to Senate
Energy and Natural Resources Chairman Bennett Johnston,
a Louisiana Democrat, ranking Republican Sen. Malcolm Wallop
of Wyoming, Energy Secretary James Watkins and deputies
Henson Moore and Linda Stuntz.
Sadly, the environmental zealots led by Democratic Sens.
Timothy Wirth of Colorado, Joe Lieberman of Connecticut
and Paul Wellstone of Minnesota have adopted a "scorched
earth" strategy to derail this bill over its proposal to
drill for new oil on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge,
which offers the largest potential new field in the United
States.
Americans who watch this debate will be subjected to florid
rhetoric about the "violation of this pristine wilderness"
by "greedy oil companies." The same folks who said the
Exxon Valdez spill "forever destroyed" the fisheries in Prince
William Sound ( which in 1990 and 1991 registered the biggest
salmon catches in history ) are now raising money by telling
fibs about the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
Last May 4, the Natural Resource Defense Council's Lisa Spear
told a hearing of the Senate Environment Committee that the
conmmercial oil development at Prudhoe Bay on the north slope
of Alaska had produced "the destruction of thousands of acres
of wildlife habitat and a decline in local populations of
bears, wolves and birds."
On May 11, Republican Sen. Steve Symms of Idaho, referring to
Spear's testimony, asked U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director
John Turner, "Does the data available to the Department of the
Interior support he claims with respect to the bear population?"
Turner said, "No, Mr. Chairman." Asked Symms, "How about
the caribou population?" Said Turner, "They have gone up
substantially." Asked Symms, "How about a loss in the
bird population?" Responded Turner, "We certainly haven't
documented that." Then asked Symms, "How about the health of
local fisheries ?" Turner replied, "We have not documented
substantial loss."
In fact, the Alaska Fish and Game Department records record numbers
of grizzly bears now using the Prudhoe field area for habitat and
mating. The snow geese population has gone from 50 nesting
pairs to 302. The caribou population has more than quadrupled
sing 1970. Symms accused Spear of using her appearance on a
C-Span televised hearing to "raise money for the Natural Resource
Defense Council."
One week later, an "Urgent Environmental Dispatch" from the
Natural Resources Defense Council asked recipients to contribute
money for the Natural Resource Defense Council to go to
court and "keep oil giants our of Alaska's Arctic wildlife
refuge," repeating Spear's charge of declining animal
populations at Prudhoe.
Natural Resources Defense Council Executive Director John Adams
warned that "virtually the entire domestic oil industry are
mobilizing to commence drilling by summer's end..." In fact,
even congressional approval would not mean drilling before the
year 2000.
"At stake is the only refuge in North America that protects -
in an undisturbed condition - all of the various Arctic ecosystems.
And I can tell you firsthand that it won't even take an oil spill
to destroy forever the incredibly fragile beauty of its
coastal plain," warned Adams.
In the first place, the drilling and production area will cover
fewer than 13,000 acres, which is 0.07 percent of the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge's 19 million acres. In the second
place, the "coastal plain" is in fact covered with ice and
snow for nine months of the year and in the summer has such a
barren crop of mosses, lichens and dwarf shrubs, it looks more like
a green moonscape than a wilderness.
Compare this with the Wilderness Society's description of this
"coastal plain" as "America's Serengeti....and Arctic wilderness
of boreal forests, dramatic peaks, and tundra." But area 1002 of
the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, where drilling is proposed,
has no trees or mountains in sight. Any relationship between
the heavily animal-populated Serengeti plain with its 80-degree
temperature and 3 million animals is purely a figment of green
imaginations.
As for the "ecological nightmare" promised by the Natural
Resources Defense Council's Adams, he should call his friends
at the National Audubon Society, which now earns money at
three of its sanctuaries with oil exploration and production --
on the 26,800 acre Rainey Wildlife Sanctuary in Louisiana, the
Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary near Naples, Florida, and the Baker
Wildlife Sanctuary in Michigan, which found "the birds breeding
in habitats adjacent to the oil well site were not noticably
disturbed by the presence of the humans or the noise of oil
drilling." That agrees with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
evaluation on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge that
"exploration and development drilling activities would
generate only minor or negligible effects on all wildlife
resources..."
|
1061.39 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | A spider's kiss | Fri Oct 25 1991 12:30 | 1 |
| Things that make you go Hmmm.
|
1061.40 | | BLUMON::GUGEL | koatamundi whiteout | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:20 | 17 |
|
re .38:
Who is Warren T. Brooks?
Where was this article published?
> "How about a loss in the
> bird population?" Responded Turner, "We certainly haven't
> documented that." Then asked Symms, "How about the health of
> local fisheries ?" Turner replied, "We have not documented
> substantial loss."
Well, of course they haven't documented it if they didn't bother
to look for it. Great.
|
1061.41 | | CSC32::S_HALL | Wollomanakabeesai ! | Fri Oct 25 1991 14:48 | 22 |
| > <<< Note 1061.40 by BLUMON::GUGEL "koatamundi whiteout" >>>
>
>
> re .38:
>
> Who is Warren T. Brooks?
>
> Where was this article published?
Warren T. Brooks is a syndicated columnist. He writes for
the Detroit News. His research and columns in recent years have
focused on debunking environmentalists' hyperbolic statements.
The article was published locally in the Colorado Springs
Gazette Telegraph ( on the editorial page ).
Note that the paragraph following the interview excerpts
refutes more explicitly the NRDC's claims of declining animal
populations in the Prudhoe Bay area.
Steve H
|
1061.42 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Aauugghh! Stupid tree! | Mon Oct 28 1991 10:51 | 1 |
| Some of Mr. Brooks' comments seem a bit hyperbolic too, no?
|
1061.43 | What do you mean by "CROCK"? | DENVER::DORO | | Mon Oct 28 1991 14:33 | 35 |
| <Set mode tone=sarcastic>
"..environmental zealots..."
"..[environmentalists are pursuing a] 'Scorched earth' strategy to derail
this bill.."
"..[innocent, trustingly naive public and lawmakers are ] subjected to
florid rhetoric.."
"[environmentalists are] telling fibs.."
Certainly no rhetoric from the proponents of this bill!
<set mode sacarasm off>
A major contributing factor to the lack of consensus on bills of this
type is that many "facts" are presented out of context or with little
qualifying data.
".. this bill will generate only minor or negligible effects on all
wildlife resources.."
Sez who? What's 'minor' or 'negligible'? Do you *really* mean *all*
wildlife? what *specific* effects does this bill entertain as
possible?
I'm against this bill... I guess I'm one of those environmental
zealots.. (reminds of the old saw.. I'm firm in my convictions, but
YOU're pig-headed!) Anybody interested in looking at long term effects
of NOT taking the time to consider the effects might read _Sea of
Slaughter_ by Farley Mowat. Excellent book... and disturbing... Oh,
and also... based on facts.
Jamd
|
1061.44 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | a good dog and some trees | Tue Oct 29 1991 09:11 | 21 |
| what caught my attention was the reference to the coastal plain as more like a
"green moonscape than a wilderness". I can't buy this one. Those are bogs,
wetlands whose permafrost underlies the seasonal melt that supports vast insect,
and hence vast bird, populations. The anti-eco-freak freaks seem just as eager
to view the land in through lenses of their own definitions, as they accuse the
ecologists of doing.
Just one that pops to the top of the stack of my memory, that illustrates an
example of agenda-driven view of the land and it's population (human and not).
When Europeans first arrived in New England, they saw (my beloved) woods and
forests as a Wilderness -- evil, unChristian, needing to be tamed and subdued;
not as a natural garden. Did the land support tens of thousands of people in a
sustainable way? No matter (actually not even seen). Cut it down, for ships'
masts and lumber and fields and cattle. Burn it off (as was done here in Vt, I
read recently) and sell the ash to the British Canadians (early Federal period),
to clear the land for sheep. There is now more forest cover in all of New
England than there was 100 or 150 years ago; and I believe only one remnant of
the original mixed-species old-growth virgin forest.
Sara
|
1061.45 | | TENAYA::RAH | Hit next unseen | Wed Oct 30 1991 21:42 | 6 |
|
so what are y'all planning to burn in your cars and oil fired heaters?
you say you're all planning to ride bikes to work?
what a laugh. its a pity there is no oil in NE..
|
1061.46 | | PENUTS::JHENDERSON | Spending that renegade peso | Thu Oct 31 1991 13:01 | 10 |
|
Re -1....see .21 in this string.
Jim
|