Listen Gore: Some Inconvenient Truths About the Politics of
Environmental Crisis
By Mitchel
Cohen
Brooklyn Greens/Green
Party
Al Gore’s film, “An
Inconvenient Truth,” raises the issue of global warming in a way that
scares the bejeezus out of viewers, as it should since the consequences of
global climate change are truly earth-shaking. The former Vice-President does a
good job of presenting the graphic evidence, exquisite and terrifying pictures
that document the melting of the polar ice caps and the effects on other
species, new diseases, and rising ocean levels.
But, typically, the solutions Gore offers
are standard Democratic Party fare. You’d never know by watching this film
that Gore and Clinton ran this country for 8 years and that their policies -- as
much as those of the Bush regime -- helped pave the way for the crisis we face
today.
Gore never critiques the system
causing the global ecological crisis. At one point, he even mourns the negative
impact of global warming on U.S. oil pipelines. Oh, the horror! What it all
comes down to, for Gore and the Democrats, is that we need to shift away from
reliance on fossil fuels and tweak existing consumption
patterns.
Even there, Gore and Clinton
did nothing to improve fuel efficiency in the U.S. -- a topic which Gore talks
about in the movie without any hint that he’d once actually been in a
position to do something about it. The question Gore poses is, Who can best
manage the relatively minor solutions he recommends, the Democrats or
Republicans? For Gore, it’s sort of “trust US, not THEM, to deal
with this situation because they are liars and we’re not.” Well,
should we trust him?
As Joshua Frank
writes, during the campaign for president in 1992 Gore promised a group of
supporters that the Clinton-Gore EPA would never approve a hazardous waste
incinerator located near an elementary school in Liverpool, Ohio, which was
operated by WTI. “Only three months into Clinton’s tenure,”
Frank writes, “the EPA issued an operating permit for the toxic burner.
Gore raised no qualms. Not surprisingly, most of the money behind WTI came from
the bulging pockets of Jackson Stephens, who just happened to be one of the
Clinton-Gore’s top campaign
contributors.”(1)
But failing to
shut down toxic incinerators is just the tip of their great betrayal. In the
film, Gore references the Kyoto Accords and states that he personally went to
Kyoto, giving the impression that he was a key figure in fighting to reduce air
pollution emissions that destroy the ozone layer. What he omits is that his
mission in going to Kyoto was to scuttle the Accords, to block them from moving
forward. And he succeeded.
The
Clinton-Gore years were anything but environment-friendly. Under Clinton-Gore,
more old growth forests were cut down than under any other recent U.S.
administration. “Wise Use” committees -- set up by the lumber
industry -- were permitted to clearcut whole mountain ranges, while Clinton-Gore
helped to “greenwash” their activities for public
consumption.
Under Clinton-Gore, the
biotech industry was given carte blanche to write the US government’s
regulations (paltry as they are) on genetic engineering of agriculture, and to
move full speed ahead with implementing the private patenting of genetic
sequences with nary a qualm passing Gore’s
lips.
You’d think watching this
film that Gore is just some concerned professor who never had access to power or
held hundreds of thousands of dollars of stock in Occidental Petroleum (driving
the U’wa off their lands in Colombia), let alone was the Number Two man
actually running the U.S.
government!
“Gore, like Clinton
who quipped that ‘the invisible hand has a green thumb,’ extolled a
free-market attitude toward environmental issues,” writes Frank, who goes
on to quote Jeffrey St. Clair: “Since the mid-1980s Gore has argued with
increasing stridency that the bracing forces of market capitalism are potent
curatives for the ecological entropy now bearing down on the global environment.
He is a passionate disciple of the gospel of efficiency, suffused with an
inchoate technophilia.”(2)
Before
Kyoto, before the Clinton-Gore massive depleted uranium bombings of Yugoslavia
and Iraq, before their missile “deconstruction” of the only existing
pharmaceutical production facility in northern Africa in the Sudan (which
exacerbated the very serious problems there, as we’re seeing in Darfur
today), there was NAFTA, the North American Free Trade Agreement. The task of
Clinton-Gore was to push through this legislation which not even strong
Republican administrations under Reagan or Bush Sr. had been able to do. Since
its inception, NAFTA has undermined U.S. environmental laws, chased production
facilities out of the U.S. and across the borders, vastly increased pollution
from Maquilladoras (enterprise zones) along the U.S./Mexico border and helped to
undermine the indigenous sustainable agrarian-based communities in southern
Mexico -- as predicted by leftists in both countries, leading to the Zapatista
uprising from those communities on January 1, 1994, the day NAFTA went into
effect.
Clinton-Gore also approved the
destructive deal with the sugar barons of South Florida arranged by Interior
Secretary Bruce Babbitt, which doomed the Everglades. (In fact, Clinton was on
the phone with Alfonso Fanjul, Jr., the chief of the sugar barons, while Monica
Lewinsky was busy doing her thing in her famous blue dress under Clinton’s
desk.)
Early in Clinton-Gore’s
first administration, they pledged they would stop the plunder of the Northwest
forests, writes former Village Voice columnist James Ridgeway. “They then
double-crossed their environmental backers. Under Bush Sr., the courts had
enjoined logging in the Northwest habitats of the spotted owl. Clinton-Gore
persuaded environmentalists to join them in axing the injunction. The Clinton
administration went before a Reagan-appointed judge who had a record as a
stalwart environmentalist and with the eco toadies in tow, got him to remove the
injunction, and with it the moratorium on existing timber sales.”(3) Then
Gore and Clinton “capitulated to the demands of Western Democrats and
yanked from its initial budget proposals a call to reform grazing, mining, and
timber practices on federal lands. When Clinton convened a timber summit in
Portland, in April 1994, the conference was, as one might expect, dominated by
logging interests. Predictably, the summit gave way to a plan to restart
clear-cutting in the ancient forests of the Pacific Northwest for the first time
in three years, giving the timber industry its get rich
wish.”(4)
Gore and Clinton sent to
Congress the infamous Salvage Rider, known to radical environmentalists as the
“Logging without Laws” bill, “perhaps the most gruesome
legislation ever enacted under the pretext of preserving ecosystem
health.” Like Bush’s “Healthy Forests” plan, the
Clinton-Gore act “was chock full of deception and special interest
pandering. ‘When [the Salvage Rider] bill was given to me, I was told that
the timber industry was circulating this language among the Northwest
Congressional delegation and others to try to get it attached as a rider to the
fiscal year Interior Spending Bill,’ environmental lawyer Kevin Kirchner
says. ‘There is no question that representatives of the timber industry
had a role in promoting this rider. That is no secret.’”(5) What the
Salvage Rider did was to “temporarily exempt ... salvage timber sales on
federal forest lands from environmental and wildlife laws, administrative
appeals, and judicial review,” according to the Wilderness Society -- long
enough for multinational lumber and paper corporations to clear-cut all but a
sliver of the U.S.’s remaining old growth
forests.
“Thousands of acres of
healthy forestland across the West were rampaged. Washington’s Colville
National Forest saw the clear cutting of over 4,000 acres. Thousands more in
Montana’s Yak River Basin, hundreds of acres of pristine forest land in
Idaho, while the endangered Mexican Spotted Owl habitat in Arizona fell victim
to corporate interests. Old growth trees in Washington’s majestic Olympic
Peninsula – home to wild Steelhead, endangered Sockeye salmon, and
threatened Marbled Murrieta – were chopped unremittingly by the US Forest
Service.”(6)
The assault on
nature continued with Gore’s
blessing.
Around the same time,
Clinton-Gore appointee Carol Browner, head of the EPA, was quoted in the NY
Times as having said that the administration would be “relaxing” the
Delaney Clause (named after its author, Congressman James Delaney, D-NY).
Congress had inserted this clause into section 409 of the federal Food, Drug and
Cosmetic Act in 1958. It prohibited FDA approval of any food additive found to
cause cancer in humans or animals. Alone among all food-related directives, this
legislation put the onus on the manufacturers to demonstrate that their products
were safe before they were allowed to become commercially available. (7) A
federal appeals court in July 1992 expanded the jurisdiction of the Delaney
Clause, ruling that it was applicable to cancer-causing pesticides in processed
food. Browner retracted her comment, claiming she’d never said it, but the
proof was in the pudding. The ban on cancer-causing additives (the
“Precautionary Principle”) that had held through the Eisenhower,
Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Reagan and Bush, Sr. administrations was finally
removed, not by the Republicans but by the Clinton-Gore administration. Instead
of expanding the Delaney clause to protect produce and other unprocessed foods,
the new Food Quality Protection Act permitted “safe” amounts of
carcinogenic chemicals (as designated by the Environmental Protection Agency) to
be added to all food. (According to Peter Montague, editor of Rachel’s
Weekly, no one knows how ‘safe amounts’ of carcinogens can be
established, especially when several carcinogens and other poisons are added
simultaneously to the food of tens of millions of people.) Nevertheless, the
Clinton-Gore administration spun this as
“progress.”
The Clinton
administration, with guidance from Gore’s office, also cut numerous deals
over the pesticide Methyl Bromide despite its reported effects of contributing
to Ozone depletion and its devastating health consequences on farm workers
picking strawberries.
Much is being
made these days about the need to save the Arctic Wildlife Refuge. But
Clinton-Gore opened the National Petroleum Reserve — 24 million untouched
acres adjacent to the refuge, home to a large caribou herd and numerous arctic
species — to oil drilling. The chief beneficiary of this was Arco, a major
($1.4 million) contributor to the Democratic Party. At the same time, writes
James Ridgeway, “Clinton dropped the ban on selling Alaskan oil abroad.
This also benefits Arco, which is opening refineries in China. So although the
oil companies won the right to exploit Alaskan oil on grounds that to do so
would benefit national development, Clinton-Gore unilaterally changed the
agreement so that it benefits China’s industrial
growth.”(8)
Not once in the
entire film does Gore criticize this awful environmental record or raise the
critical questions we need to answer if we are to effectively reverse global
warming: Is it really the case that the vast destruction of our environment that
went on under his watch and, continuing today, is simply a result of poor
consumer choices and ineffective government policies? Is the global
environmental devastation we are facing today rectifiable with some simple
tuning-up, as Gore proposes?
Neither he
-- as point man for the Clinton administration on environmental issues -- nor
Clinton-Gore’s Energy Secretary Bill Richardson (with major ties to
Occidental Petroleum), nor the Democratic Party offer anything more than putting
a tiny Band-Aid on the earth’s gaping wounds, which they themselves helped
to gash open.
Clearly, the vast
destruction of the global ecology is a consequence not just of poor governmental
policies but of the capitalist system’s fundamental drive towards Growth
and what passes for Development -- Grow or Die. Environmental activists
won’t find in Gore the kind of systemic analysis that is needed to stop
global warming. Instead, we need to look elsewhere for that sort of deep
systemic
critique.
NOTES
1.
Joshua Frank, Counterpunch, May 31, 2006,
http://www.counterpunch.org/frank05312006.html. Frank is the author of Left Out!
How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, and edits
www.BrickBurner.org
2. Jeffrey St. Clair,
Been Brown So Long It Looked Like Green to Me: The Politics of Nature, Common
Courage Press, 2004.
3. James Ridgeway,
“Eco Spaniel Kennedy: Nipping at Nader’s Heels,” Village
Voice, Aug. 16-22, 2000.
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0033,ridgeway,17335,6.html
4,5,6
Joshua Frank.
7. The battle over the Delaney
Clause has been ably documented by Rachel’s Weekly, at
www.rachel.org
8. Ridgeway, op
cit.
Posted: Thu - March 1, 2007 at 11:27 AM