Democratic Underground Latest Greatest Lobby Journals Search Options Help Login
Google

Introducing Bush Administration "Sweet Deals Trail Mix"

Printer-friendly format Printer-friendly format
Printer-friendly format Email this thread to a friend
Printer-friendly format Bookmark this thread
This topic is archived.
Home » Discuss » The DU Lounge Donate to DU
 
Kolesar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Aug-05-03 05:49 AM
Original message
Introducing Bush Administration "Sweet Deals Trail Mix"
Introducing Bush Administration "Sweet Deals Trail Mix"
Stay Energized And Aware On The Trail This Summer

Washington, D.C. -- As Congress heads out on August recess and summer
vacation season peaks, the Sierra Club is supplying many Capitol Hill staff
members with bags of trail mix for their outdoor adventures. Inspired by the
Bush Administration's environmental policies, "Sweet Deals Trail Mix" is
designed to keep energy levels high while informing people about the threats
to America's special places.

"Summer is the time when Americans explore our magnificent natural
treasures, and the Bush Administration is threatening to forever change
these special places," said Carl Pope, Sierra Club Executive Director.
"Trail mix has long been a staple of the avid outdoor explorer, but we've
had to modify the ingredients to reflect Bush Administration policies and
keep Americans energized and aware."

Whether people spend their vacations hiking in California, viewing wildlife
in the Rocky Mountains, paddling in the Pacific Northwest, fishing in
Florida, climbing in the Southwest, camping near the Great Lakes, or rafting
in West Virginia, this trail mix is a reminder that many of these places are
in grave danger from a host of Bush administration proposals that threaten
to carve roads, punch oil wells, or otherwise impair these lands that belong
to all Americans.

"We're sure that four out of five dentists can see right through the
Administration's sugar-coated names for anti-environmental policies, like
the Clear Skies plan which would allow polluters to pollute far more than
the current law," said Pope.

Recipe for Bush Administration "Sweet Deals Trail Mix":

Swedish fish (mercury): The Bush Administration plans to allow more mercury
released from power plants than under the existing Clean Air Act. Mercury
released from coal power plants rains back to earth and accumulates in fish
that are sometimes eaten by people. Communities around the country advise
people not to eat local fish because of high mercury content. Mercury can
cause brain, lung, and kidney damage, as well as reproductive problems,
particularly in children.

Black Licorice (coal): The Bush Administration's energy plan encourages
increased use of coal while the Administration's Clear Skies Initiative and
other changes to the Clean Air Act will weaken the protections we have from
the pollution produced by coal. Out of the entire electric industry,
coal-fired power plants contribute 96% of sulfur dioxide emissions, 93% of
nitrogen oxide emissions, 88% of carbon dioxide emissions, and 99% of
mercury emissions. These pollutants contribute to asthma-inducing smog,
acid rain, global warming and other public health risks.

Fireballs (wildfires): The Bush Administration used last summer's wildfires
to introduce the ill-named "Healthy Forests Initiative," a thinly-veiled
attempt to increase logging under the guise of "fuel reduction." Instead of
using limited resources to protect homes and lives, the Bush Administration
is ignoring sound science with a plan to allow timber companies to log deep
in the backcountry, miles from communities. This legislation passed in the
House and now moves to the Senate.

Tootsie Rolls (logs): After failing to defend the landmark Roadless Area
Conservation Rule in court, the Bush Administration finally got around to
axing the rule. By settling with the State of Alaska to exempt the Tongass
from the rule -- wiping out a full quarter of the protected area -- and
allowing individual states to seek exemptions, the Bush Administration is
now moving forward to erase historic wild forest protections state by state.

Sticks of Gum (roads): Across the West, state and local governments are
exploiting a loophole in a vague, long-repealed road statute to lay claim to
thousands of miles throughout our public lands. Earlier this year the Bush
Administration reopened this loophole, known as RS2477 (Revised Statute),
that allows special interests the opportunity to criss-cross America's
National Parks, Wildlife Refuges, National Monuments, Wilderness Areas, and
other special places with roads and development.

Gummi Bears (grizzly bears): Grizzly bears, protected by the Endangered
Species Act in 1975, are a key indicator of the health of wildland
ecosystems in the Western United States. However, the Bush Administration
has approved the proposed Rock Creek Mine under northwest Montana's Cabinet
Mountains Wilderness, impacting the region's threatened grizzly bears and
bull trout. The mining operation and associated activities would doubtless
disturb the handful of grizzlies clinging to existence in the area, while
also destroying some of the best habitat left in the ecosystem.

Root Beer Barrels (oil barrels): Public lands across the West are being
targeted by the Bush Administration's unabashed efforts to dramatically
increase oil and gas leasing. In its first year, the Bush administration
increased the number of leases for oil and gas development and coal mining
on public lands by 51 percent. This spring, the Bureau of Land Management
approved the drilling of 82,000 new oil and gas wells in the Powder River
Basin in Montana and Wyoming, including 66,000 coal bed methane wells, which
would span 12 million acres.

Rock Candy (mountaintop removal mining): The Bush administration and its
friends in the coal industry support a form of strip mining known as
"mountaintop removal mining." This practice blasts off the tops of mountains
and pushes the so-called "mining waste" into the mountain valleys below,
forever burying the headwaters of some of West Virginia's pristine mountain
streams.

Gum Coins (corporate donations): En route to the White House, President Bush
raised more than $191 million, and corporate lobbyists have since been
swarming the nation's capital seeking paybacks. The Sierra Club has sued the
Bush Administration to find out exactly who the Cheney Energy Task Force met
with in secret. The American public deserves to know how much influence
polluting industries had over the Administration's destructive energy policy
that is the basis for the disastrous energy bill currently before the
Senate.

To request a bag of "Sweet Deals Trail Mix," please call Annie Strickler at
(202) 675-2384.

For more information, please visit:
http://www.sierraclub.org/wildlands/summer2003/index.asp
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top

Home » Discuss » The DU Lounge Donate to DU

Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.1 Copyright 1997-2002 DCScripts.com
Software has been extensively modified by the DU administrators


Important Notices: By participating on this discussion board, visitors agree to abide by the rules outlined on our Rules page. Messages posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums are the opinions of the individuals who post them, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Democratic Underground, LLC.

Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals |  Store  |  Donate

About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.

© 2001 - 2011 Democratic Underground, LLC