Concerto for blunt instrument

An irregular heartbeat from d.o. to you. Not like a daily kos, more like a sometime sloth. Fast relief from the symptoms of blogarrhea and predicated on the understanding that the world is not a stage for our actions, rather it is a living organism upon which we depend for our existence.

Saturday, April 08, 2006

Revelations from Tom Delay’s voice mail

As former U.S. House Majority Tom Delay Leader slinks away from Capitol Hill in what can perhaps best be described as an awkward retreat, media reports indicate that the disgraced Republican claimed, "God wanted him to get out of that race". It was assumed that Delay was referring to his upcoming race in Texas for his Senate seat. A report in the New York Times, stated that Delay informed Rev. Rick Scarborough, the founder of some far-right operation called Vision America, that he had received the message from God in just the past few days. However, transcripts of Delay's voice mail leaked to the press recently reveal that the only message from God to the former Leader was four years old. The message reads: "Tom, you’re a disgrace to the human race. Get out!" Apparently the message was either overlooked or misinterpreted by Delay's aides.



Delay’s relationship with God has been a troubled one. While the former Leader has spoken of his wish to transform the U.S. government into a pious theocracy, his actual actions often reflect un-Christian like sentiments. His record on violations of the Ten Commandments has raised more than a few eyebrows among some religious leaders. Like many former members of the Young Republican campus organizations, Delay has a long history of arrogance, smarmy hostility towards those they disagree with, and deceptive actions that even Jesus wouldn’t forgive. Calls to God for comments on this story were not returned by press time.



In a related story, a spokesman for the industry group Pesticide Applicators for America announced that their organization has revoked the former Leader’s pesticide applicators license and has no plans for hearing any appeals, should Delay choose to follow that course. Delay was in the pesticide business before running for office. An aide for the totally disgraced Republican stated that Delay had no intention of returning to his previous vocation and that he could be just as effective as a lobbyist.

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

Windpower advocates’ tunnelvision on Cape Wind

A recent screed by wind power advocate Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute states: "Although media attention focuses on communities with a not-in-my-backyard (NIMBY) response to wind turbines, such as the large, off-shore wind farm planned off Cape Cod, in most of the country wind farms are enthusiastically welcomed". Brown's use of the term "NIMBY" evokes the corporate line so often used to promote the sitting of Earth-trashing facilities in beleaguered communities. It's a throwaway comment that serves no useful purpose other than to further polarize the debate. Brown should be ashamed of himself.



Cape Wind surely doesn't qualify as an Earth-trashing facility, but it is not without its ecological and aesthetic drawbacks. Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., one of the most respected voices in the U.S. on issues of the environment, has made it clear that the proposed Cape Wind project is indeed problematical. Other high-profile figures in the U.S. enviro movement oppose Kennedy's position, some have even attacked him. Healthy and respectful debate is a good thing, but resorting to cheap corporado stunts and mean spirited rhetoric serves no useful purpose. It's time to cut the crap.



As one who has spent a lifetime visiting, exploring and defending Cape Cod, though I do not live there, I value its uniqueness in a world gone mad. The very creation of the National Seashore, made possible by the Kennedy family and others, was an effort to save what is left of our fragile coastline from the forces of development. Anything, ANYTHING, erected within the boundaries of the Cape coastline detracts from its unparalleled beauty and ecological fragility. Actually, commercial and residential development in the fabricated world humanity has created is not all that different from cancer in the human body. Sound crazy? Checkout the similarities. To this writer, development for the most part is a cancer on the living planet.



But getting back to Cape Wind specifically, one of the issues Kennedy pointed out was that Cape Wind is another example of the privatization of the Commons. Nantucket Sound is public property and Cape Wind is a corporation. Do we really need to lose more of the commons to the corporados? I don't think so. I find it curious that outfits like Greenpeace and other progressive organizations who have railed against corporate america in the past and privatization in general, make exceptions for Cape Wind.




Also, there is the issue of the project's potential effects on wildlife living in and passing through Nantucket Sound. The Humane Society has highlighted many of these effects and is part of a coalition of environmental groups opposed to the sitting. Bill McKibben and others seem to be making the argument that non-humans would benefit in the long run from Cape Wind's project due to its possible lessening of the effects of climate change. I don't buy the anthropocentric trade-off. Given the grim scenarios of climate disruption that won't be effected by ANYTHING we do; the journey past the tipping point, it seems most "humane" (if that term has any integrity left) to protect our non-human neighbors here and now from potential death and maiming.



So this writer, who struggles daily with the forces of greed and ecological destruction, is a purest when it comes to what remains of our unspoiled coastlines or wild places. My position has always been: yes wind power, put it where there is wind AND existing development. Assuming Lester Brown is correct when he states: "in most of the country wind farms are enthusiastically welcomed", then go and erect them IN most of the country and not in ecological jewels like the Cape coastline.