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Jim Hightower
Jim Hightower
25 Nov 2009
Giving Thanks for America's Good Food Movement

What better day than Thanksgiving to celebrate our country's food rebels! I'm talking about the growing … Read More.

18 Nov 2009
The Worthiness of Banker Charity

"Repent," the preacher cried out, startling those who heard him. This was no street evangelist … Read More.

11 Nov 2009
Real Recovery Is Easy to Spell: J-O-B-S

The recession is over! The economy is growing! The Dow Jones is above 10,000! Bankers are pocketing profits … Read More.

Bush Gives Lump of Coal to People of Appalachia

Let's say that you're CEO of a coal corporation, and you want to get at the deposits of black gold deep inside the beautiful, verdant mountains of Appalachia. You have a choice.

You could adopt modern methods that combine industrial ingenuity and environmental finesse to extract the coal. Or, what the hey, why not just ram tons of explosives into the terra firma, blow up the entire top third of those peaks, bulldoze the resulting rubble down the mountainsides into the streams below, then — voila! — simply scoop out the exposed coal? Yes, mountain decapitation is brutish and nasty, but, wow, it's so much more profitable for your corporation. What's a CEO to do?

Blowing the tops off mountains might give you pause, but it's just another day's work for America's coal barons, who do not hesitate to grab an extra dime in profit by resorting to what they euphemistically call "mountaintop removal." These are people who'd bring a sledgehammer to peel a grape.

What they're sledgehammering in West Virginia, Southern Ohio and Eastern Kentucky is the heart of America's — and maybe the world's — oldest mountain range. These ancient ridges and valleys are forested with broadleaf trees, laced with pristine streams and blessed with uncountable species of flowers, fish, woodland animals, birds and other living creatures. It's an invaluable natural treasure.

To see what the coal giants are doing here is to witness a brutal environmental rape.

First, they scalp the mountaintops. All the trees and brush are clear-cut, bulldozed into huge piles and burned as trash. Next, they scrape the forest floor down to the bedrock, shoving all plant life, organisms and topsoil into piles.

Then come the fireworks. Holes are drilled into the mountain core and filled with explosives that have 10 times the force that Tim McVeigh used to destroy the federal building in Oklahoma City. This explodes the top third of the mountains into rubble.

Finally, all those tons of rock, soil and so forth (which are dubbed "spoil" by the industry) must be removed so the companies can get to the coal.

Do they truck it away? Good heavens, no! That would cost money, making mountaintop removal unprofitable. Instead, they merely shove the spoil down into the valleys below, burying streams, animals, habitat and anything (or anyone) else in the way. At this point, the spoil is given a new, almost bucolic name by the coal barons: "valley fills."

Some 1,600 miles of Appalachian streams have already been destroyed by mountaintop removal, and we'll lose another 100 more miles of streams each year the practice continues.

Shouldn't such rank profiteering be against the law, you ask? It is. Since 1983, the Clean Water Act has banned coal operators from dumping their mountaintop spoil within 100 feet of streams. Good rule. Unfortunately, Big Coal's political clout has kept regulators from enforcing it.

In recent years, though, spunky grassroots groups in Appalachia have won lawsuits to require enforcement. This has led the Bush administration to rush into action — not to protect the mountains and the people who live there, but to protect the coal corporations (which just happen to have been generous financial backers of George W).

Now, just in time for the holidays, Bush has literally put lumps of coal in the Christmas stockings of folks in Appalachia. Claiming that the 100-foot buffer requirement needed "clarification," Bush and Co. issued a new rule this month that is a classic semantic sham. It declares that dumping spoil near streams continues to be prohibited — unless a corporation shows it has a need to dump in the stream. Also, the sham rule insists that coal operators must minimalize their harm to streams "to the extent practicable."

This is a license to "shoot and shove," as the industry so delicately terms its mountaintop-removal process. The rule change was announced by the head of Bush's council on environmental quality, James Connaughton. Guess who he is. Yes, a former lobbyist for the coal giants.

To see photos of the environmental grotesquerie that the Bushites have sanctioned — and to learn how you can help overturn this shameful regulatory giveaway — go to www.ilovemountains.org.

To find out more about Jim Hightower, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


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