By Alan
Caruba
What the
midterm voters wanted was an economy that returned to its average 3.3% annual
growth since the end of World War II. For six years of the Obama presidency,
growth has all but disappeared. In 2013, as measured by the World Bank, it was
barely 1.9% That translated into a lack of jobs, stagnant middle class income, and
what Obama correctly called the Great Recession, but could not end.
Instead,
in the lead-up to the midterm elections, he was still talking about “climate
change” as the greatest threat to the nation and the world. For the voters,
however, climate change wasn’t even on its list of priorities and with good
reason, there is nothing anyone or any nation can or should do about the great
forces of nature that determine what the Earth’s climate will be; starting with
the Sun.
The day
after the elections two major environmental organizations, the Sierra Club and
Friends of the Earth (FOE), wrote to their members. Their message was similar
and their conclusions were absurd.
“The
election’s over and the planet lost,” wrote Erich Pica, FOE president. “The
next Congress will be controlled by politicians elected with millions of
dollars of the Koch brothers’ oil money—putting at risk the vital environmental
protections we’ve fought so hard to achieve.” FOE has more than 2 million
activists in 75 nations including the U.S.
What Pica
does not mention in his letter is the estimated $85 million spent on six Senate
races by what The Hill described as “the nation’s top environmental groups
including the League of Conservation Voters, the Sierra Club, the Environmental
Defense Fund, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and billionaire Tom
Steyer’s NextGen Climate…”
So the Koch
brother’s money is evil, but environmental organizations’ money is okay?
As far as
FOE’s Pica is concerned, “The truth is, President Obama hasn’t always done the
right thing for the environment. He should have denied the Keystone Pipeline
years ago, he should be rolling back unchecked fracking, and he should have
taken stronger action on climate both at home and in international
negotiations.”
FOE could
care less about the thousands of jobs the Keystone pipeline would create, plus
the revenue from refining the oil it would transport to the Gulf States. As for
fracking, it is not “unchecked.” It has to be done within the context of safety
and environmental laws. As for the climate, China and India are just two
nations increasing the use of coal to generate the electrical power they need
to stimulate industrialization and improve the lives of their citizens by
bringing power where he has never been before.
Michael
Brune, executive director of the Sierra Club, wrote that “Friends of Big Oil
have taken control of the Senate” claiming they have “a 100-day action plan
that reads like Big Oil’s wish list. Our opposition is about to have free reign
to implement their anti-environment agenda. And approving the Keystone XL
pipeline and destroying proposed environmental regulations top their
list.”
Oh,
really? If the polls and elections are any indicator, a lot of Americans want
to see the pipeline construction. As for the “anti-environment agenda”, that
too is pure fiction. What Americans oppose is the forced closure of electricity
generation plants in the name of a global warming that is not happening. Or a
climate change over which no government has any role or control.
To drive
home his doom-and-gloom message, Brune added that “Rare species of wildlife
already hanging by a threat will not survive this onslaught.” Consider the absurdity of the claim that a
Republican controlled Congress will be responsible for species extinction. For good measure, Brune, like the FOE,
mentioned the Koch brothers, labeling them “big polluters.” Since when is
drilling for oil and providing it to a world that runs on it “pollution”? It’s
not. It’s progress that benefits humanity.
Commenting
on the elections, Dr. Jay Lehr, the Science Director of The Heartland Institute, a free market think tank, characterized them as “the repudiation of
the President’s policies” and the nation’s political pundits all agree. Dr. Lehr
called for “a bill to require the construction of the Keystone XL Pipeline
which has bipartisan support and has passed every environmental test.”
Dr. Lehr
called on Congress to “require the government to open up public lands to
environmentally safe mineral and energy exploration as well as speed up
approval of permits to drill and mine for resources on already approved lands.
This will ensure our resource independence in both areas for centuries to
come.”
High on my
list of priorities was reflected by Dr. Lehr’s call for Congress “to take
charge of the funding of the Environmental Protection Agency which has gone
rogue in efforts to impede virtually all economic development in our nation,
and eventually phase out the EPA, passing on its responsibilities to a
committee of the whole of our fifty state environmental protection
agencies.”
A November
6 article, “Climate change supporters suffer losses”, published in The Hill,
reported that “Despite millions spent to make climate change a wedge issue
during the midterms, environmentally friendly candidates didn’t fare well on
Election Day.” Even so, the Sierra Club’s Brune was quoted saying, “Public
support is solidly behind action to tackle the climate crisis. While we have
lost friends in Congress, we are gaining them in the streets, as our movement
grows stronger and broader.” NOT!
Frances
Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council, echoed Brune’s
empty boasts. “Whatever may have driven individual races, the American people
want action on climate change.” NOT!
As far as
the environment is concerned, it is way down on the list of the voter’s
priorities and the change of leadership and control of Congress reflects that.
The voters don’t want a lot of vapid, idiotic talk of climate change and other
environmental fantasies. They want jobs. They want an economy that will provide
them. They want a better future for themselves and their children. And whether
they know it or not, they want a conservative approach to government.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
No comments:
Post a Comment