CIVIL DEFENSE PERSPECTIVES
November 1997 (vol. 14, #1) 1601 N Tucson Blvd #9, Tucson AZ 85716 c 1997 Physicians for Civil Defense
ACTS OF WAR
Suppose that a person or a group committed the following acts in your town: released a man-eating tiger near a school; killed livestock; drove out a number of businesses; extracted large sums in ``protection money'' from businesses that were permitted to survive; set up a partial blockade and kept many needed goods from being delivered; bribed or threatened officials to pass and enforce an ordinance forbidding effective forms of self-defense, including passive barriers; interfered with maintenance of drainage canals, levees, and firewalls; shut down sources of energy; dispatched agents of influence to subvert community loyalties; and unleashed propaganda blaming the residents for all of their own troubles and taking credit for saving them from certain disaster.
You would not call such a person a friend, a leader, a savior, an ally, or a benefactor.
If the town were a nation, and the perpetrator were someone like Saddam Hussein, these would be acts of war, even if no shots were fired and no bombs were detonated.
Then consider the following facts:
In Colorado, there were 246 black-bear attacks and 127 mountain-lion attacks against people between 1995 and 1996. The number has increased steadily since trapping was banned. Since 1986, there have been nine cougar attacks in California, more than were recorded in the entire United States in the previous 100 years. In February, 1997, a coyote attacked a four-year-old girl in Los Angeles. In 1994, farmers lost 520,600 sheep to bear and wolf attacks, and in 1995, 117,400 cows were lost in the same way (The DeWeese Report, June, 1997).
Toledo, Ohio, stands to lose 5,000 new jobs if General Motors scraps a plant now on the drawing board because of new regulations, and many communities already on the brink of bankruptcy will be forced to spend millions to clean air that is already 70% cleaner than in 1970 (The DeWeese Report, August, 1998; Heartland Institute, Candidate's Guide to Environmental Issues).
New rules will, according to the EPA, cost farmers and small farm-related businesses about 3% of sales. One study estimated that Chicago alone would have to spend $2.5 to $7 billion/yr to comply with new particulate and ozone standards.
Even without new regulations, U.S. businesses, according to the EPA's own figures, spend $3 billion and 115 million hours each year completing its required paperwork. This is probably an absurdly low estimate. A study by Thomas D. Hopkins of the Rochester Institute of Technology showed that federal rules cost American firms $677 billion this year, not counting decreased productivity and other indirect costs. Firms with fewer than 20 workers (90% of American businesses) spent almost twice as much per worker ($5,532) as companies employing more than 500 ($2,979).
To obtain the freon they need for refrigeration equipment, Americans are paying black-market prices and risking criminal penalties (multi-million dollar fines and 70 years in federal prison). CFCs are the second most lucrative smuggled commodity, after illegal drugs. While converting cocaine to crack brings a four-fold profit, sale of a canister of freon can bring a 23-fold profit. Methyl bromide, essential for the safety and adequacy of our food supply, will be contraband in Jan. 2001.
In the age of nuclear proliferation and chaos in the country with the most nuclear weapons and ICBMs, the U.S. is still abiding by the ABM Treaty. The Administration has committed $11 billion over eight years to buy seven Boeing 747s outfitted with high-energy lasers. They are evidently supposed to dogfight in airspace over North Korea awaiting missile launches.
Meanwhile, U.S. conventional warfighting capability would be seriously jeopardized by fuel restrictions imposed by the Kyoto Global Warming [Energy Rationing] Treaty to be signed in Dec. 1997. Training maneuvers in particular would be limited.
Civil defense has been deleted from both federal and state lexicons and operations. Mobile civil defense displays and radiation meters have been surplused. (Physicians for Civil Defense now owns the Arizona display.) The Emergency Management Institute at Emmitsburg, MD, does have some radiological monitoring courses in the curriculum (along with debris management, response to floods, etc.), but nuclear power plant accidents and transportation accidents are the recognized threats. And what will state and local ``radiological maintenance and calibration staff''
-if any remain-use for instruments?Prime agricultural land in Northern California has suffered devastating flood damage due to regulators' interference with the construction of needed dams, the repair of levees, and timely release of water from reservoirs.
If the global warming alarmists truly cared about atmospheric carbon dioxide levels, they would suggest replacing coal with uranium for large-scale generation of electricity. Instead, they are silent about this option, their goal of shutting down nuclear construction in the U.S. having been achieved already. Meanwhile, U.S. reactor companies are lobbying Congress and the Administration for permission to compete with France, Canada, and Russia in supplying $60 billion worth of civilian nuclear reactors to China. (China has environmental deals in the works to ``combat global warming.'') U.S. utilities see this business as vital to the survival of their industry.
Americans who object to increasingly oppressive regulations are portrayed
-by government as well as by activists-as greedy, predatory capitalist polluters. Farmers who brought materials refuting claims about methyl bromide to a meeting found that they disappeared into the trash within minutes. The only booklets that got into the hands of meeting attendees looked just like the ones with bright red covers and the title ``Barons of Bromide''-except for a tiny ``from the...'' at the top.Schoolchildren are being ``browbeaten into an irrational rejection of consumption, economic growth, and free market capitalism'' in school programs that use biased, inaccurate materials. The EPA has authority to spend about $13 million on environmental education and has given grants to 1,200 such projects (NY Times 4/22/97).
EPA head Carol Browner said about Clean Air regulations: ``When it comes to children's health, I will not be swayed.''
A federal judge said about complex EPA regulations: ``The people who wrote this ought to go to jail.''
Americans need to examine the facts and draw their own conclusions.