Showing posts with label government. Show all posts
Showing posts with label government. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 24, 2015

Keystone XL Pipeline VETOED!!!...And why this isn't as good as it sounds




I'm someone who considers herself to be deeply connected the environment that surrounds my home. When I heard about the Keystone XL Pipeline and all of it's not-so-secret detrimental effects to the environment, I took up arms and banners against it. I protested and posted blogs.  I let my friends on social media and the poor interns at my senators' and representative's offices have it.  I was angry.

I still am.


1) The Keystone XL Pipeline infringes upon thousands of acres of valuable corridor habitat. These places allow migratory species to rest and refuel before continuing their journey to their summer or winter homes.

2) KXL carries the severe potential to leak.  While the the organizations who have vouchsafed the material that the pipeline would be constructed out of, they either could not or would not test the junctions, which is where most major leaks occur.

3) The process to extract and refine tar sands oil is inefficient and costly.

4) The "thousands" of jobs created are part-time and does not create a sustained job market.

BUT...Who is invested in this project?

If we just look at the list above, you see 2 investors:
            1) The United States (Government and People)
            2) Canadian Fuel Market

But (hold onto your socks, they're about to get knocked off) we're not the only ones who matter in a global market.

Are we honestly so arrogant to think that if we stop KXL from being built that Canada will just say, "Oh, OK. If the US doesn't want our oil, then we just won't develop this highly coveted resource"?

I was. I thought about my home.  Nebraska farmers and city-folk alike came together and submitted claims of unconstitutionality against KXL.  I thought about about the sandhills and the bluffs and the rivers, all unique environments desperately needed by the migratory birds that we are so famous for in early spring.  I thought about my air and water quality and the economy that I participate in.

But, in the grand scheme of things, I don't matter.

Let's give ourselves a brief pat on the back, U.S.  Even though we are still far from acceptable, the United States has set, maintained, and (more importantly) enforced certain environmental standards that are among the best and most rigorous in the world. And that's just on a federal level. State-wise, there can be additional regulations and consequences to reduce contamination and detrimental development.  (Insert happy dance).

But don't get too happy. In 2010 study, we still ranked 25th out of 25 developed and typically Western countries with environmental standards.  And, if we are so low, imagine the types of standards and level of enforcement (or, perhaps more fitting, lack thereof) in less developed countries or in those countries that are even more isolationist than we are.

Let's look at China, another heavy hitter and high bidder for this valuable, but dangerous resource. In a very brief comparison summary of Chinese vs US air quality standards, you can see that Chinese air contamination (and lack of strict environmental regulations) severely affects the quality of life of the people, especially children, living there. Primary school students have to be taught how to breathe shallowly in order to minimize their exposure to pollution.

Now let's get hypothetical:
The US has broken off all ties to Canada's tar sands oil.  We've explicitly stated we will not permit it within our borders.  China, now the highest bidder, gets the oil.
              Problem 1: Oil can only be exported to China via oceanic oil tankers. Great.  Before we even get the fuel to China, we have to deal with an increased risk of oil spills in the Pacific. 
Once the oil gets to the various Chinese plants and stations that require it, it is burned.
             Problem 2: Depending on the location of these plants/stations, environmental regulations cannot be reliably enforced. Cool. So, omitting the disastrous levels of pollution that get put out in the extraction and refining processes AND  the pollution and risk of spills to get the oil to these plants/stations [both of which hold similar variables in the US's version of this equation], there might not be any actual environmental regulation on how much of this oil can be burned at once/how to get rid of any dangerous by-products/etc...

In this hypothetical situation, the net negative of the US not having KXL outweighs the net negative of the US building KXL.  In this situation, one of many like it, the US was actually globally irresponsible in refusing the oil.

Back to the point: the president vetoed the bill to approve the construction of KXL today.
For the US regional ecosystem, this is undoubtedly a win.
In order for it to also be a win on a global scale, we have to look past our economy, our environment, our small but significant lives.
At the grandest scale, we need to eradicate the need for oil.
At the present scale, we need to eradicate the need for this particular Canadian tar sands oil.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

An Open Letter to President Obama and the 113th United States Congress

Mr. President, Senators, and Representatives,

I would like to express my extreme displeasure at the way you look at your homeland.  You stare at it with greedy eyes, reminiscent of the cartoon characters we used to watch on Saturday mornings.  Your soul eats evil green paper like it is the food of the gods and your belt of morality gets tighter and tighter until you take it off and all you have left is your hunger.

This is unacceptable.

America is not a run down gas station that needs more brown oil oozing through its cracks and faults.  It is not a bank account that you can withdraw from and then, when you're overdrawn, you just get a slap on the wrist.

America is a landscape, a factory, a conversation.  It takes effort, critical thinking, and maintenance, not magic, petty grovelling, and band-aid solutions.  We are better than that.  You are better than that.  Wake up and realize this.

To my point, Representatives and Senators who have supported the Keystone XL Pipeline:
Shame on you.  You are lacking in perhaps the most important aspect of governance and that is working towards sustainability.  The founding fathers wrote the Bill of Rights knowing full well that it would have been easier to explicitly state all of the rights that individuals, state governments, and the federal government had because limitations would make working within the system easier.  However, they knew that it was not sustainable and they had to reach a compromise that allowed for ambiguity, uncertainty about the changing times, in order to maintain a thriving United States.

The bill you are pushing through has no such concessions for uncertainty and evolution of American culture.  It is a bedazzled eye-sore that you are forcing, unwanted, upon us American citizens who still believe that this crazy system is working.

Mr. Obama:
It has come out that, while you may still veto the approval of the Keystone Pipeline, you may use it as a bargaining chip in the future.  Mr. President, our country is not a bargaining chip and if you think that our country only extends to the urban environments, then you are sorely mistaken.

The facts are there: the jobs created by the Pipeline are temporary and we could be putting our construction industry to far better and more sustainable use.  The pipes are structurally strong in the middle, but the junctions are untested, which is where leaks occur.  Most of the revenue that is expected to come out of this project will not even stay in the US.  By enabling Canada's fracking, which is widely accepted as a danger process for both the human and environmental elements, the US would send a message to the world that the end, however temporary, justifies the means.

But clearly facts are not at play here.  Science, once picked up by the political system, becomes meaningless.  And it is for this reason, that I am imploring you on the basis of your humanity, your appreciation of beauty, and your faith in the American people to take the high road: Please do not approve of the Keystone XL Pipeline.

We are better than that.


-----
To contact your senator, visit:
http://www.senate.gov/reference/common/faq/How_to_contact_senators.htm

To get more facts about the Keystone XL Pipeline, visit:
http://www.factcheck.org/2014/03/pipeline-primer/

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Government may have shut down, but its People can still rise up

It's time to get angry.
I'm not talking about venting-to-a-friend angry.  I'm definitely not talking about going-for-a-long-hard-run angry.  I'm not even talking about so-pissed-off-you-could-walk-up-to-a-tiger-and-punch-it-in-the-face angry, not that I condone violence to animals.

It's time to get angry enough to swallow your pride.
It's time to get angry enough to sacrifice a part of yourself for the greater good;
To step back from your anger and take the time to look at yourself, no, I mean really look and make sure that your theories fit with the facts and that you're not trying to fit the facts to your theories.
To learn that enough is enough and to realize that leadership requires consent from those whom you are leading, and that if you stray from them, then you are no longer fit for their representation.

It's time to get angry enough to realize that this morning, on the first of October, two thousand thirteen, the conservative GOP Tea Party in the United States of America cared more about being "right" and protecting the status quo than it did about its hundreds upon thousands of constituents who did not have access to affordable health care.  The consequences of this serious misplacement of priorities resulted in the loss of over 800,000 jobs and several "non-essential" branches of the government be shut down or drastically reduced.  Some of these "non-essential" branches include NASA which represents the future of the USA's global standing in science and technology; the Environmental Protection Agency along with many national parks, museums, monuments, and zoos, which represents the USA's natural resources and its rich, melting-pot history; and the Department of Education which helps fund the curiosity and enthusiasm of the true future of the USA.

This government shutdown, the climax to the national healthcare argument that started 3 years ago, was intended to show the foolishness of this "universal healthcare".  It was intended to show the leaders of the opposing side that there are consequences of allowing Obamacare to go into effect.  But that's not how I see it.

I see the government shutting down all access that the American people have to our future.  By failing to resolve the budget, Congress has eliminated our opportunities to learn about our nation's history, about our nation's vast and wondrous environment, to find statistically important trends in disease migration and socioeconomics and the physical universe on this planet and those outside of it.  Congress has reduced our ability to foster an environment where its replacements can learn about legislation and politics and precedent.  And meanwhile, the GOP Tea Party caucus is failing to show the American people the consequences of Obamacare because, even as all of these definitively beneficial programs are halted, thousands of citizens are signing up for affordable health insurance for the first time.  Thousands of people can finally get help and treatment that was previously unavailable to them.

"If you want to know what a man's like, take a good look at how he treats his inferiors, not his equals," said Sirius Black in J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.  This remark is brilliantly insightful and pertinent.  Look at the way Americans treat those who are inferior to them, and this will show you our true character.  We will deprive our inferiors of affordable health care, limit their resources towards personal and professional development, and then, when we finally have created an opportunity for them to gain what the rest of us already have access to, we will shut down the institution that has created such an opportunity.  This is the mark of our character today, but it does not have to be this way.

There are many dissenting Americans who feel the same way I do.  I feel like this shut down is silly, rash, and irresponsible.  And so it is time for me to get angry.  It's time for me to ask for others who feel like I do to realize that this problem can no longer be someone else's problem.  We can't afford to ask what someone else is going to do about it.  We have to make this shutdown our problem and we have to do something about it.  So speak up.  Call your senator, representative, both local and federal.  March in protest.  Put up flyers.  Graffiti.  Chalk. Everything and anything you can do.  Just make sure you're loud.  Because even though the government has been shut down, We the People can still rise up.