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Advice To
Green Team:
Take Off The Gloves
by John
Borowski, CommonDreams.org
July 16, 2002
Stung
by the documentation of children manipulation, defenders of those
powers who abuse resources and try to hoodwink teachers into using
manufactured lies about old growth forests or global warming have
struck back with vicious accusations. An expose titled, "Bastion
of Ecological Literacy Under Siege: Our Public Schools",
offered insights into the powerful "Wise Use" movement's
foray into environmental education and documented their fabrications,
allegiance to corporate polluters and utter shamelessness in using
children as mere pawns to further their agenda.
Having
penned this piece, I have received blistering email. There is
a common thread in these diatribes, a redundant use of words like
communist, socialist, eco-maniac, and wacko-environmentalist.
My favorite was a commentary written by Alan Caruba for CNSNews.com
entitled, "Specious Science in Our Schools". And the
outcome was predictable and seems to take on a well-worn, yet
effective pattern: use aggressive language, invent data, and ignore
scientific truth and defend rape and pillage of nature as humankind's
birth- right.
As
an ex-iron worker, now teacher of environmental science for two
decades, I have come to a gut felt conclusion: despite their lies,
the friends of environmental despoilers play hardball. They make
no excuses, they stay on message, they use fiery rhetoric, and
they give no apologies for misinformation or inaccuracies. Some
members of the environmental community, especially the environmental
education community, have chastised me for what they call, "playing
the bad guy's game" or using inflammatory responses. Based
on the current state of globe's ill health, I say, "Take
off the gloves green team." When your children's future is
being mortgaged, when corporate America sees your children as
part of a cost/benefit analysis that justifies profit over illness
and the sanctity of public school is threatened to be flooded
by the worst of PR campaigns to purport the myth of sustainable
growth, it is time to say: no more.
Pragmatists
in the environmental movement, an eclectic hodgepodge of entities
that rarely agree on any forceful strategy to combat those who
defend tobacco or DDT needs to make a comeback, will claim; "woe
is us". The bad guys have appurtenance beyond a calculator's
count, intoxicating arrogance of having one too many politicians
in their stables, and surrogate mouthpieces galore on the television
and radio. Yes, their propaganda ability is legendary and they
have clones that preach the doctrine of ecological illiteracy.
Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Alan Caruba, Steve Milloy, John Stossel,
and Tony Snow form a puppet troupe that predictable refute the
danger of climate change, our mass extinction of species and our
shrinking supply of drinkable fresh water.
I
pray a clarion call will rise from parents. Their maternal and
paternal instincts will trigger a mass response to the theft of
their children's inheritance and this document may be the catalyst.
One
reasonable glance at the World Wildlife Federation's "Living
Planet Report 2002" a remarkable document by an environmental
organization with some backbone illuminates scientific trends
that are undeniable sobering:
Human
economic activity has reduced by 35% the number of surviving animal
and bird species, as well as freshwater and marine fish species.
Led by the United States consumptive prone lifestyle, we are using
the world's resources by more than 20% higher than replacement
levels. Within 50 years the planet will face a sharp drop in living
standards.
This
ominous set of facts is no surprise for the ecologically literate.
And you can be sure that industry's "Pinocchio's" (Hannity,
Limbaugh, and their merry band of obfuscators and illusionists)
will put the best spin on this information.
The
mean, anti-green team has as Achilles' heel of immense proportions,
and now is the time to sever it. Despite their bite, pundits like
Caruba and Stossel have weakness in their commonly used arsenal.
They are woefully ignorant in ecological science and never will
deal with hard questions. I have emailed a number of these charlatans
and they never address the direct questions.
I
call it the Project Learning Tree strategy (Project Learning Tree
is the vehicle for the timber industry to avoid answering hard
questions in schools).or the worst type of a lie is omission.
The Alliance for America, who defends the likes of Weyerhaeuser,
Peabody Coal, and Exxon will not answer my questions about why
they are mute on the 1872 Mining Law, massive timber subsidies
and illegal timber cutting on public lands and the slaughter of
predators on federal lands. And their silence speaks volumes about
the contempt they have for common working people, their health,
their communities, their children and their right to a sustained
planet. When was the last time you saw or heard an educated environmentalist
on the talk show circuit? Why.because once confronted with the
truth, these pundits dry up and blow away. John Stossel will not
answer questions about using children to further his anti-environmental
education mantra, even though his own producers tried to dupe
me into being on his "Tampering With Nature" debacle
and lied several times when questioned.
Environmental
activists need to turn up the heat on these empty suits, and show
them for what they are: highly paid liars and cheats. Parents
must demand that environmental science be a prerequisite for graduation
of high school, citizens must boycott television stations that
refuse to have rational discussions on pressing issues like extinction
or corporate sponsored educational materials in schools. Politicians
who use the Congressman John Kyl approach (Kyl glibly stated that
environmentalists are to blame for forest fires on national forests,
and when he found out his data was wrong, he didn't apologize)
must be shamed in public and held to the highest standards of
representing the will of the people, not the will of their corporate
task masters.
There
are no "win-win" scenarios, to be found with those who
spike tobacco or justify poisoning children to sell pesticides
for profit, there is no compromise to be made with those who are
liquidating our children's options in the future. We must act
like elders and protect our offspring and we must start now.
There
are those who question the act of "standing up in defiance
of tyranny." And they say, put your trust in God. I do. I
walk in the shadow of my savior. And when Jesus stated, "turn
the other cheek", he didn't intend for us to take a beating.
This action meant, "I am not afraid of you, and you will
acknowledge me." And for those who twist religious words,
I say shame. Matthew stated in the bible, "No one can serve
two masters. Either he will hate the one and love the other, or
he will devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve
both God and Money." In protecting children, we serve God
and our duty to be loving parents. In protecting the creation,
we fulfill a promise to be the stewards of creation. Only the
educated and motivated masses can tear down the idols of greed
and deceit that falsely shape our economic and cultural status.
Knowledge can be the sword and the eyes of our children our shield.
The
road to sanity will begin with a solitary stare.and the message
that the gloves are off. Anything less is morally inexcusable.
John
F. Borowski is an environmental and marine science teacher of
two decades who lives in Philomath, Oregon. jenjill@proaxis.com.
His pieces have appeared in the UTNE Reader, N.Y. Times, PR Watch,
Forest Voice, CommonDreams.org, Liberal Slant, and CounterPunch.
Source:
http://www.commondreams.org/views02/0716-09.htm
Say
It Ain't So Senator Daschle
Or Shame On Environmentalists?
by
John Borowski
Quislings,
losers, quitters, and cowards: all these words have a despicable
ring to them. And those who desecrate the natural world are now
using those terms to label environmentalists. Americans have always
relished those who stand behind their principles and fight to
achieve them. Robert F. Kennedy told us, " Only those who
dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly."
Despite
having the best interest of children at hand, equipped with irrefutable
science and the moral high ground, the big green team knowingly
plays a game of pragmatic defeatism. Why are they afraid to ask
for what they want, battle to the bitter end, and let the collective
chips fall where they may? The collective silence from National
Audubon, Sierra Club and other mighty greens on Senator Tom Daschle's
frontal assault on the nation's forests will only embolden the
despoilers of nature to take on these lightweights. And our grandchildren
will not look fondly on us.
Daschle,
the Senate Majority Leader, and proclaimed friend to the Sierra
Club and other eco-groups, slipped "a special exemption"
into a defense supplemental bill, that would allow cutting of
forests to occur in the Black Hills, found in his home state,
while disregarding current environmental law. A lapdog to the
Democratic Party, the environmental community believes that any
Republican who threatens the health of nature is to be scorned.
Yet, a Democratic Judas is left with no rebuke or public demands
to atone.
South
Dakota's Black Hills' forests most imminent danger may not be
fire, but the forest mismanagement dictated by those who see forests
as nothing more than paper and pulp, using any excuse to achieve
their conquest. Daschle's move will only open "Pandora's
box" with republican leaders now suggesting that his model
be used nationwide as well. Forests will fall, environmentalists
will wring their hands, and our protective environmental laws
will be left toothless.
Instead
of addressing clear cut logging, the replacement of native forests
with overcrowded rows of mono-cultured trees, the outright liquidation
of the precious and small acreage of virgin forests left in this
nation, Senator Daschle joined the Republican mantra: let's act
like Medieval barbers and cut the forests back into health. Those
who now run the bureaucratic eco group are silent, claiming that
they are seeking consensus, the "middle ground" and
Senator Daschle is usually a friend. Yet the "middle ground"
position has left the national forests strewn with clear cuts,
or as my wife Trish calls them, "stump graveyards."
And if Daschle is supposedly a friend, I fear him more than the
enemies of environmental laws.
Giving
away the moral ground on forest issues is not a new phenomenon
for environmentalists. Back in 1989, then Senator Mark Hatfield
of Oregon orchestrated the Section 318 rider or sufficiency language,
where national environmental laws were neutered to help timber
barons.
The
Sierra Club and Audubon Society actually supported the decision
in the name of political correctness, and the results were devastating.
Over 8 billion board feet of timber were cut, the habitat of endangered
species was sacrificed, and native forests, known for their ability
to withstand wildfires because of their thick bark shields, were
sheered into oblivion and replaced with sterile rows of trees.
Keep in mind that less than 4% of our nations' forests are virgin
and native. Add the policy of putting out all forest fires and
the time was ripe for nature to try to recover balance in the
woods.
The
time is well past for timber companies to provide the nation's
wood and paper supply from their privately managed tree farms,
and let the national forests stand as untouched ecosystems fulfilling
the nation's need for clean water, wildlife corridors and bastions
of biological evolution.
Could
you imagine "sufficiency language" enacted for one year
to circumvent the First Amendment? Maybe that will come next under
Mr. Bush's new world disorder, but whoever thought his co-conspirers
tarnishing the environment would be liberal democrats?
Even
with victories at hand, the inept green team fears asking for
what is right. Early in the 1990's Judge William Dwyer (a Ronald
Reagan appointee on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals) found
the Forest Service had violated national environmental laws and
was ignoring the fate of hundreds of sensitive species. Millions
of acres of public forests were put off limits by a scathing injunction:
mind you, this occurred during a republican president's tenure:
President George Bush (senior). When pseudo-friend of the environment
took office, President Bill Clinton, he begged his green colleagues
to back off some of the blocked timber sales. He was a new centrist
democrat, and didn't want to rock the corporate boat. Clinton
even threatened to use sufficiency language to overturn environmental
laws, claiming the environmental community had to "give back
a little" so that his administration could forge a "forest
plan". And forge they did, a deal with the devil, and nature
paid the price. Ancient forests began to fall, as much as 40%
of the existing old growth forests in the nation were on the chopping
block, and many in the environmental community claimed victory!
Despite a call from many "grassroots greens" to fight
and not give in, the Washington greens now claimed they were "FOBs"
or "friends of Bill". Once again the once powerful protectors
of the earth would grovel, and tough grassroots leaders were marginalized
as radical. Clinton's dedication to forests only came to life
in his waning days, and even then, environmentalists acted like
an abused spouse in a troubled marriage.
When
Muhammad Ali stated, "Champions are made from something they
have deep inside them: a desire, a dream, a vision" he obviously
wasn't thinking about the green beltway boys. Sierra Club visionaries
like John Muir and David Brower must be in heaven looking down
sadly at the dismantling of nature with the aiding and abetting
by its' own proclaimed stewards.
The
current fires in our national forests have been the result of
politics over science; common sense cashed in for profits and
a total disregard for the "way" nature constructs a
forest ecosystem. 400,000 miles of roads have invaded our national
forests, fragmenting a once proud cloak of green into tatters
of its' once proud self. Like so many acres of corn, native forests
have been converted in fiber farms, where habitat, water storage
and natural diversity have been forgotten.
Earlier
this summer, republicans tried to blame environmentalists for
appealing timber sales, stating that as many as 40% of these appeals
targeted fire reduction plans. The actual number was less than
1%! Lies and prevarications from those who want to cut taxpayer
owned ecosystems, yet no apologies, no national discussion on
forest use and the public looked to the environmental organizations
for leadership. And what they found was nothing more than a scare
of the month envelope in the mail, as if the subscription to a
glossy magazine will save nature from fools. Audubon will claim
that they are centrists, but are there any birds to see in a forest
minus the trees? Sierra Club members will say they don't want
to alienate their "democratic friends" in the Senate.
Yet, is there a single champion of the environment in the Senate,
democratic or republican? Fighting republicans like Senators Orrin
Hatch or Frank Murkowski is easy, they are cro-magnons on environmental
issues. But the likes of Senator Daschle are supposedly friends
to nature, not charlatans dropping out of a Trojan horse.
The
last time this nation cut trees to help forest health was in 1995.
Attached to a bill to appropriate money to the victims of the
Oklahoma City bombing victims, the "salvage rider" was
intended to clear forests of their thick underbrush and density
of trees. President Bill Clinton signed this "logging without
laws" legislation, and the timber industry had an orgy. The
only problem was that big, healthy money making trees were cut!
The bill stated that "sick, diseased, dying and dead"
trees could be surgically removed, and that "associated"
trees were eligible also. In other words, more smoke and mirrors,
because eventually all trees become dead or dying.
I
have worked on environmental issues for the last 25 years and
this approach of "cutting deals" with those who despoil
the environment has shaken the public's confidence in environmental
groups. How, can an organization know what is right, know the
immediacy of addressing environmental problems, yet: is content
with receiving half, of a half of a loaf? Compromise is often
not possible when the consequences of inaction are so dire, for
so many.
Senator
Daschle should be ashamed and should face immense public criticism.
Tossing environmental laws into the fires of forest mismanagement
will solve nothing: in the long run. And politicians should have
the foresight to think about the future.
No,
Americans revile a team that "fixes" the score of a
game, or shaves points. We like a straight match, with no excuses,
no rationalization of losing. And if the environmental community
wants to lead, they must have the decency and fortitude to go
all the way. Win or lose, their opponents will pause and wonder
and will take heed the next time a critical issue is on the national
stage. Or as the best environmental president, Theodore Roosevelt
stated, "the credit belongs to the man in the arena, whose
face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly.if
he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly so that his place
shall never be with those timid souls who know neither victory
or defeat." If being an environmentalist means being a timid
soul, afraid of winning and even more fearful of losing, don't
call me an environmentalist.
John
F. Borowski is a Teacher of environmental and marine science
eMail:
mailto:jenjill@proaxis.com
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