Let's start out by noting Felicity Barringer who's done an amazing thing in the paper this morning -- and on the front page, no less. "
Old Foes Soften to New Reactors" is worthy of attention because how often does the
New York Times run, on the front page, an editorial? Or is it and adver-torial? Is it some combination between advertisement and editorial?
Whatever it is, it doesn't appear to pass the news test. Has Barringer been getting tips from Rudith Miller? Or maybe her article's been badly edited with whole parts, needed parts, being tossed aside? Maybe, it's been rewritten, by someone other than her, to allow it to speak in one rah-rah, Love a NUKE!, voice?
Several of the nation's most prominent environmentalists have gone public with the message that nuclear power, long taboo among environmental advocates, should be reconsidered as a remedy for global warning.
Their numbers are still small, but they represent growing cracks in what had been a virtual solid wall of opposition to nuclear power among most mainstream environmental groups. In the past few months, articles in publications like Technology Review, published by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Wired magazine have openly espoused nuclear power, angering other environmental advocates.
Where to begin? "Several." How about there? How about with "several." You know that group whose "numbers are still small?" Whose numbers are apparently, in fact, three.
"Several?" Three. It's like a line out of
Shampoo. You can almost hear Julie Christie shooting back, "Three's not even several."
And did I miss the group memo? Apparently I did. Apparently
Technology Review became the Green bible while I was out of the room. Someone should have brought me up to speed!
Oh, that's right,
Technology Review is not an enivornmental publication. Nor is
Wired. They are techonology publications. Who edited this article? Who decided to spin these magazines as though they were
Mother Earth News?
Probably the same thinker or thinkers that felt Fred Krupp of Environmental Defense qualifies as an upstanding "environmentalist."
Let's go to
In These Times, to Jeffrey St. Clair's September 4, 2000 article entitled "
Cash and Carry: George W. Bush's environmental menace:"
Bush also has huddled with Fred Krupp, director of the conservative Environmental Defense Fund, which has been pushing market-oriented ideas, such as pollution credits, for years. EDF helped fashion the Clean Air Act revisions of 1990, which President Bush cited as one of the cornerstones of his presidency. This spring, Krupp advised the younger Bush on sweeping changes to Texas clean air standards, which for the first time attempted to regulate emissions from old, "grandfathered" power plants. In describing the bill, Bush said: "I believe government and industry, jobs and the environment can coexist. The old command and control school is not what I am for. I'm for setting standards and letting industry comply." But Bush left out a key word: "voluntarily." Those old power plants are on the honor system when it comes to meeting the new air standards, and there are no penalties for violating the rules.
Is the Times that stupid or just that willfully stupid?
I believe "several" just lost one valid voice. We could address the other two (the split in how Lash is seen, for example, with some seeing him as a visionary and others see him as a corporate lobbyist willing to sell out).
But where's the reaction from the environmental community? Where in the article do we hear any of those voices?
Is the issue so unimportant that there's no need for reaction among the community? It's "important" enough to front page, right? It goes on and on about "several" and John McCain and Joe Lieberman.
Why does it all come off so one-sided? Why does the article read like the decision's been made for you, so shut up and go along? (To quote
Eddie from his e-mail this morning.)
Let's suspend any questions about the two remaining voices (Lash, Speth) and just think about the fact that they are proposing something that "breaks with the pack." Why is the "pack" not heard from?
The editors who ran with this article might want to study the recommendations made by the
Times panel last week. They might also want to go over this article and ask themselves what and who got left out and why it reads as though an agenda is being pushed?
Finally, with the reports (including in the
Times) that followed (but often didn't attribute) Anne-Marie Cusac "
Fire Hazzard" (
The Progressive, August 2004) why didn't the
Times find the space to address that serious topic?
From the opening of Cusac's article:
On June 16, the commission charged with investigating the events of September 11 announced that Al Qaeda's early attack plans had included "unidentified nuclear power plants." You might think the Bush Administration would respond by doing all it could to prevent a terrorist-triggered disaster at these plants.
Think again.
The Bush Administration is actually relaxing the fire safeguards there.
Instead of insisting that the plants have heat-protected mechanical systems in place that will shut down reactors automatically in case of fire, which is the current standard, the Bush Administration would actually let the power companies rely on workers to run through the plants and try to turn off the reactors by hand while parts of the facilities are engulfed in flames.
"The result could be catastrophic," says a March 3 letter from Representative Ed Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts, and Representative John Dingell, Democrat of Michigan, to Nils J. Diaz, chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). "This would assign reactor personnel the duty of rushing directly to the shutdown equipment located throughout the reactor complex to shut down the reactors manually, and would potentially take place in station areas affected by smoke, fire, and radiation and possibly under attack by terrorists."
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[Note: This entry originally appeared at
The Common Ills.]