PDA

View Full Version : "The Green Imposter" (St. Clair on Gore)



Virgil
03-17-2007, 02:13 PM
http://counterpunch.org/stclair03172007.html
----------------------------------------------

St. Patrick's Day Weekend Edition
March 17 / 18, 2007
When Al Gore was Veep
The Green Imposter

By JEFFREY ST. CLAIR

The official version of the political battles over the environment in the late 1990s goes something like this:

As the Republican Visigoths swept into control of the 104th Congress, in January of 1995, trembling greens predicted that not an old-growth tree, not an endangered species would be spared. The Republicans' threats were terrible to behold. They proposed to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling. They vowed to establish a commission to shut down several national parks; to relax standards on the production and disposal of toxic waste; to turn over enforcement of clean water and air standards to the states. They uttered fearsome threats against the Endangered Species Act. They boasted of plans to double the amount of logging in the National Forests.

Then, the official myth goes on, the president, Gore and the national greens fought off the Visigoths.

American politics thrives on simple legends of virtue combating vice. As regards the environment, the Republican ultras did not carry all before them. They didn't need to. Clinton and Gore had already done most of the dirty work themselves. The real story begins back in the early days of the administration, when Clinton and Gore had what might be called an environmental mandate and a Democratic Congress to help them move through major initiatives. But the initiatives never happened. Instead, those early years were marked by a series of retreats, reversals and betrayals that prompted David Brower, the grand old man of American environmentalism, the arch druid himself, to conclude that "Gore and Clinton had done more harm to the environment than Reagan and Bush combined."

The first environmental promise Al Gore made in the 1992 campaign, he soon broke. It involved the WTI hazardous waste incinerator in East Liverpool, Ohio, built on a floodplain near the Ohio River. The plant, one of the largest of its kind in the world, was scheduled to burn 70,000 tons of hazardous waste a year in a spot only 350 feet from the nearest house. A few hundred yards away is East Elementary School, which sits on a ridge nearly eye-level with the top of the smokestack.

On July 19, 1992, Gore gave one of his first campaign speeches on the environment, across the river from the incinerator site, in Weirton, West Virginia, hammering the Bush Administration for its plans to give the toxic waste burner a federal air permit. "The very idea is just unbelievable to me", Gore said. "I'll tell you this, a Clinton-Gore Administration is going to give you an environmental presidency to deal with these problems. We'll be on your side for a change." Clinton made similar pronouncements on his swing through the Buckeye State.

<snipped>

DemonFighterLives
03-18-2007, 07:37 AM
There was an incinerator built in MPLS that keeps millions of tons from being buried in a landfill. The ash has been used in making asphalt roads/etc. From my understanding the smokestacks have scrubbers and I don't know what the water emissions are.
I do know that planting all of this American waste in the landfill is not any better. Humans do more pollution by putting things where they don't belong. Landfills leak and plastics etc, take a long time to deteriorate.

Overall the article had a lot of points to investigate, but like it says at one point- Al Gore is the best chance out there. I'm sure the Greens can find fault and would find fault with anyone including me. I try hard to balance environmental things with modern day life in America. I'm sure some of the Greens themselves have problems in our disposable society.

Since this ia all about Gore, I should mention that he has spent 30 years on environmental research etc and is one of the smartest in the field. See: "An Inconvenient Truth" for a glimpse at his world. He was only a VP and the Clinton crowd surely but the brakes on him a few time. Any politician has to balance environmental issues with the interests of the rest of the population.



:)