Thursday, July 16, 2020

Where's your Planet B?

Do you remember, during the last campaign for POTUS, Donald Trump asked "What do you have to lose?" in an appeal for the votes of black voters? I hope by now it's clear what black voters, and the rest of US, have to lose. For one example, in the midst of a pandemic, with more than 130,000 dead in the United States alone, CDC no longer in charge of the nation's COVID-19 data. Health experts are concerned. If anyone doubts this is the beginning of magically making the pandemic end before November of this year, by manipulating or hiding the actual numbers, I have some fracking company stock to sell them.

Trump has already begun attempted intimidation of more liberal, urban locales such as Portland, Oregon: Federal officers severely wounded a Portland protester. Local leaders blame Trump.

Closer to home, in Minnesota, recent reports note that:
It’s well known that the Trump administration has done enormous favors for Antofagasta, the Chilean-owned mining company behind Twin Metals, the proposed copper-sulfide mine at the edge of the Boundary Waters. Not only did the administration resurrect expired mineral leases, effectively breathing new life into this controversial project, but it’s becoming more apparent that federal agencies have allowed Twin Metals to set the terms.
The Trump regime is now in the process of trying to loosen National Environmental Protection Act rules to make it even easier to preclude local interests from participating in setting terms for potentially polluting projects that often offer few, if any, local benefits. (Trump Revised Rules Are Set to Cut Project NEPA Review Time)

who protects this northern Minnesota trout stream
Photo by J. Harrington

If you read this blog even occasionally, you may have noticed that all too often we find cause to criticize decisions made by our public agencies. That's frequently due to their failure to follow established rules and procedures. Minnesota may not (doesn't in my opinion) have the most stringent environmental rules governing mining. It does have one of the best, if not the best, Environmental Rights Acts.
The legislature finds and declares that each person is entitled by right to the protection, preservation, and enhancement of air, water, land, and other natural resources located within the state and that each person has the responsibility to contribute to the protection, preservation, and enhancement thereof. The legislature further declares its policy to create and maintain within the state conditions under which human beings and nature can exist in productive harmony in order that present and future generations may enjoy clean air and water, productive land, and other natural resources with which this state has been endowed. Accordingly, it is in the public interest to provide an adequate civil remedy to protect air, water, land and other natural resources located within the state from pollution, impairment, or destruction. [emphasis added]
The preceding language is much stronger than the comparable "Purpose" section of the National Environmental Policy Act.

If enough of us don't become too complacent, or just plain lazy, to vote come November, and actually create not only a blue wave but a blue tsunami, I'd strongly recommend a follow through by pushing for a National Environmental Rights Act, comparable to Minnesota's, separately or as part of any Green New Deal. It's time to get our priorities straight. Jobs on a dead planet aren't worth much unless there's a different home planet where the workers live. Where's your Planet B?


Work Song, part 2: A Vision


by Wendell Berry


If we will have the wisdom to survive,
to stand like slow growing trees
on a ruined place, renewing, enriching it,
if we will make our seasons welcome here,
asking not too much of earth or heaven,
then a long time after we are dead
the lives our lives prepare will live
here, their houses strongly placed
upon the valley sides, fields and gardens
rich in the windows. The river will run
clear, as we will never know it
and over it birdsong like a canopy.
On the levels of the hills will be
green meadows, stock bells in noon shade.
On the steeps where greed and ignorance cut down
the old forest, an old forest will stand,
its rich leaf-fall drifting on its roots.
The veins of forgotten springs will have opened.
Families will be singing in the fields.
In their voices they will hear a music
risen out of the ground. They will take
nothing from the ground they will not return,
Whatever the grief at parting. Memory,
native to this valley, will spread over it
like a grove, and memory will grow
into legend, legend into song, song
into sacrament. The abundance of this place,
the songs of its people and its birds,
will be health and wisdom and indwelling
light. This is no paradisal dream.
Its hardship is its reality.


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Please be kind to each other while you can.

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