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The Nation
ActNow 11.28.2004
Peter Rothberg

Bush vs the Planet

With the election won, the Bush Administration and its Congressional allies are moving
rapidly ahead with plans to radically revamp the country's environmental laws with the
general aim of making it cheaper and easier for corporations to pollute.

    The favors are already being parceled out, as Ari Berman
    reported recently in The Daily Outrage. This month Congress
    authorized drilling in the protected Yukon Wildlife Refuge in
    Alaska, opened up the East Coast's largest undeveloped island
    for commercial exploration, defeated an amendment eliminating
    subsidies for timber corporations, and slashed clean water
    spending by $242 million.

    Moreover, in keeping with its first-term rejection of the Kyoto
    Accords on climate change, the White House is working to keep
    an upcoming eight-nation report from endorsing broad
    international policies designed to curb global warming, as Juliet
    Eilperin revealed recently in the Washington Post.

Fortunately, there are plenty of groups determined to protect the environment from the
Administration, and it's critical that they receive support to carry on these next four years.
The widely known organizations like
Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, the NRDC and the
League of Conservation Voters are all gearing up for the fight of their lives. There are also
hundreds of other grassroots environmental groups vowing to resist Bush's second-term
assault on the planet. You can help the environment by helping them.

"We have fought a three-year battle to blunt a string of radical environmental attacks by
this Administration and we're not about to stop now," says Rodger Schlickeisen, president
of
Defenders of Wildlife. "Though we fully realize that those fights may get harder in the
next Bush term, we stand ready to meet the challenge, and to protect our natural heritage
for our children and grandchildren."

Clean Water Action is trying to combat various Administration proposals that threaten to
undermine the safety of many municipal US water systems. "We made sure our members
got to the polls and we will make sure they continue to stand up for healthier communities
during the second Bush Administration," said Bob Wendelgass, the group's director.

Environmental Defense, a group dedicated to linking "science, economics and law to
create innovative, equitable and cost-effective solutions to society's most urgent
environmental problems," is in the forefront of the
Living Cities movement, which is
organizing support for things like mass transportation, solar-powered stoplights, tax credits
for farmers' markets, more green space in new developments, financial incentives to
revitalize abandoned industrial lands, and a decrease in the use of fossil fuels generally.

The
California Wilderness Coalition is the only organization specifically dedicated to
protecting California's wild places and native biodiversity. Through advocacy and public
education, CWC builds support for threatened wild places and works with community
leaders, businesspeople, local organizations, policy-makers, and activists in an effort to
promote a broader view on the value on conservation.

It's also, of course, more important than ever to stay informed. One of the best ways to
keep up on environmental news is by reading
Grist, an online magazine which tackles
environmental topics with irreverence, intelligence, and a fresh perspective. The mag's
feisty Seattle-based staff publishes new content each weekday, and its reporting, cartoons,
interviews with activists, book reviews, and
environmental advice column offer some of the
sharpest eco-news around.

Republican Senator John McCain had it right when he recently criticized the
Administration's environmental record as "disgraceful." With a president concerned far
more with politics and profits than safeguarding the planet for future generations, a
powerful grassroots movement is the only defense against rapid ecological devastation. So
join, volunteer with, contribute to and otherwise support one of the many environmental
groups operating in the US today.

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Last Edit : 2005.09.23
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