Wednesday, April 20, 2005

Despoilers of the land at work

Larry Schweiger has a review of Rick Bass's new book, Caribou Rising: Defending the Porcupine Herd, Gwich-'in Culture, and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge:
"Each year," Bass writes, "I become more ashamed and mortified by my government, and by the widening disparity between the people's will and the secret practices, secret allegiances, of big business and government."
(Longtime readers of Ghost Town Orange [are there any?] may remember my post on one of Rick Bass's short stories.)

Meanwhile, in Washington DC the anti-environmentalists are busy at work:
WHEN NOVELIST MICHAEL CRICHTON took the stage before a lunchtime crowd in Washington, D.C., one Friday in late January, the event might have seemed, at first, like one more unremarkable appearance by a popular author with a book to sell. Indeed, Crichton had just such a book, his new thriller, State of Fear. But the content of the novel, the setting of the talk, and the audience who came to listen transformed the Crichton event into something closer to a hybrid of campaign rally and undergraduate seminar. State of Fear is an anti-environmentalist page-turner in which shady ecoterrorists plot catastrophic weather disruptions to stoke unfounded fears about global climate change. However fantastical the book's story line, its author was received as an expert by the sharply dressed policy wonks crowding into the plush Wohlstetter Conference Center of the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research (AEI). In his introduction, AEI president and former Reagan budget official Christopher DeMuth praised the author for conveying "serious science with a sense of drama to a popular audience." The title of the lecture was "Science Policy in the 21st Century [transcript pdf]."
[Source: Mother Jones, with a hat tip to Grist, emphasis added.]

Mother Jones has the details on ExxonMobil's funding of anti-environment propaganda--ExxonMobil has pumped more than $8 million into more than 40 think tanks; media outlets; and consumer, religious, and even civil rights groups that preach skepticism about the oncoming climate catastrophe. The American Enterprise Institute has received $960,000 from ExxonMobil. No wonder they provide a platform for Mr. Crichton's imagination: "Shady ecoterrorists plot catastrophic weather disruptions to stoke unfounded fears about global climate change."

God our security,
who alone can defend us
against the principalities and powers
that rule this present age;
may we trust in no weapons
except the whole armor of faith,
that in dying we may live,
and, having nothing, we may own the world,
through Jesus Christ. AMEN
--Janet Morley, All desires known, 1988