Thank you for taking the time to comment on the previous post
pertaining to global climate change. I’ve
received dozens of emails in addition to the published comments. Many of the opinions have been from people
telling me horror stories about how their land and the air they breathe have
been polluted by one industry or another.
Unfortunately, the topic of Global Warming or Climate Change or as I
like to refer to it, Chaotic Climate or Climate Related Mayhem, is both
contentious and sometimes difficult to dissect.
The polluting industries and their comrades including the Rightwing Media
have spent millions of dollars attempting to distort the issue and muddle the
available data. They realize that if the
public opts for prudent and rational behavior then their abilities to profit at
the expense of the land will be greatly diminished. In the end, this is less about a cleaner
environment than it is about a small group of people continuing to reap great
profits while destroying the planet. In
the clinical sense their actions would be defined at the very least as
“hyper-instrumental” in that they will use anyone or anything as an instrument
to get what they want with no feelings of guilt, remorse or anxiety. In its most extreme form it is called
sociopathology. But ask yourself: Isn’t
it better to have clean water, breathable air, genuine forests (not tree
groves), and a landscape that isn’t choked with toxins and carcinogens? If we can work towards those goals then the
topic of global climate change becomes moot.
It is, after all, our continued desecration of the earth that has raised
these broader issues.
I received emails from people who have experienced the terror
of living in areas where intense gas well drilling is occurring. One correspondent from the town of
Hebbronville, Texas said that parts of the town have a nauseating smell as a
result of the drilling. He said that an area
to the west near a small town called Catarina is also enduring the effects of
both toxic air and polluted subsurface water from hydraulic fracturing or
“fracking.” Another letter was from a
lady who said her husband’s COPD was greatly exacerbated by the air pollution
in the city where she lives. She added
that she has become active in educating others about what polluted skies do not
only to those suffering from respiratory diseases but also to children with
developing lungs. One particularly poignant
email came from the great state of West Virginia where a company called
ironically “Freedom Industries” spilled two extremely toxic chemicals into the
Elk River and poisoned the drinking water for about 350,000 people. You might recall the CEO of Freedom
Industries appearing on national television replete with a bottle of pure
drinking water and complaining that it had been a long day and he was tired and
(swig, swig) he just wanted to go home.
It reminded me of the CEO of British Petroleum (BP) who during the
devastating oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico where millions of people were
impacted and great swaths of shoreline were forever damaged and eleven men lost
their lives said that he “just wanted to get [his] life back.” Both of those men are prime examples of
hyper-instrumental behavior. In the
email the writer from West Virginia said that her family has been shattered by
the leaking poisons and that they fear many of the local residents might have
to eventually relocate. In other words,
they have possibly lost their homes.
For most of us who meet at this blog-site the central issue
revolves around our ability to enjoy nature.
Whether we are bushcrafters or birders or native plant aficionados or
all three combined we share a deep connection to the land and to preserving the
wilds. Thus anything that threatens our
love for nature also threatens us both as individuals and as a collective
group. We don’t just sit idly by as the
land and the air is polluted by those who could not care less about nature and
whose sole motivation is to profit at the expense of others. Judging from the letters and from the
friendships I have made through this blog I gather that we are all very much
the same and that most of us are active in the cause of saving the land, the
water and the air we all breathe. In
other words, when others destroy the natural world then they are in effect
destroying us. And that is why we are
passionate about topics like clean water, unpolluted skies, and diverse natural
habitats. We revel at the sight of a
bird or when we hear it singing; we are filled with emotion upon looking at
mountains in the distance; we hunger for quiet walks in the forest; and we are
appalled when others speak of bulldozing a prime patch of nature or when we see
where callous and selfish people deliberately poison our underground water
supplies and fill our skies with contaminants.
And perhaps most of all—judging from the comments and emails I’ve
received over several years of blogging—we are not of the type to just sit back
and be victims. Yes, it seems that those
of us who gather at this blog-site are fighters each and every one. So please let’s keep the dialogue going. I enjoy reading your opinions whether in the
comments section or in emails. Discussion
is the key to understanding and analysis.
Thanks,
Arturo Longoria