"There is no doubt that the environments
of wealthy, developed countries are considerably healthier today than on
the first Earth Day. Air and water are cleaner. Human life expectancies
are longer. Forests are abundant and growing. Developed countries have
wanted improved environments and they have been wealthy enough to afford
them......................................................................................But the story is much different elsewhere. Indeed, for much of the rest
of the world, conditions are worse than they should be. Ironically, the
very movement that made its presence felt in rallies across this country
in 1970 and that thrives in the developed world today must shoulder
much of the blame for the developing world's sorry state. It is impeding
both economic and environmental progress due to an agenda that is
anti-development, anti- technology and, in the final analysis,
anti-human........................................................................................For
example, today's eco-activists boast that they have blocked more than
200 hydroelectric projects in the developing world over the past two
decades. It is true that hydro power has a large ecological footprint,
creating lakes and filling valleys. But it is a renewable energy that
makes it possible to read after the sun goes down, boosting literacy in
poor areas. It provides controlled irrigation for better crop yields and
mitigates flooding and the loss of life and property damage..........................................................................................Moreover,
green groups have zero-tolerance policies when it comes to genetically
modified crops. This includes the genetically modified "golden rice"
that could help prevent blindness
in Asian and African children (as many as 500,000 go blind every year,
according to the National Institutes of Health) plus hundreds of
millions of others who suffer from vitamin A deficiency. Because of
activist opposition to GM crops, it will be at least five years before
golden rice can be planted in many parts of the developing world. That
means another 2.5 million kids could go blind even though no human or
natural risk is associated with planting this crop............................................................................................Indeed,
many GM crops such as cotton and corn can make impoverished families
wealthy enough to have dignified lives, educate their children and
afford clean water and sanitation -- things we in the developed world
take for granted. Farmers in Indonesia, China, Brazil, India and the
Philippines are now benefiting from this technology with no demonstrable
harm. Yet Greenpeace and other environmental groups oppose all GM crops
and are succeeding in blocking them in many countries...........................................................................................The
fear of GM crops, fed by environmentalist hysteria in Europe and the
United States, has prompted a number of African countries, including
Zambia and Angola, to ban U.S. food aid because it may contain GM corn.
Desperate Africans have broken into government silos to take GM food aid
donated by the United States that is being denied them. Yet you can go
into any supermarket in these countries and buy Kellogg's corn flakes
and hundreds of other prepared foods that contain GM ingredients. There
are no restrictions on these foods. The people who can afford to buy
them do so; yet the people too poor to purchase their next meal are
denied the same foods. These policies border on genocide in the name of
environmental concerns, yet environmental groups support them.................................................................................................Or
consider that the pesticide DDT has been proven to radically reduce
malaria in South Africa, while activist groups such as the World
Wildlife Fund push for a total ban on its use. It only needs to be
sprayed inside houses, where it poses no threat to the external
environment, to make it effective. Despite the ability to stop malaria
in its tracks with DDT -- as the United States had already done before
its use was prohibited here -- 300 million people will become infected
every year and at least 1 million will die, according to the World
Health Organization."........................................................................................He doesn't mention it here but Moore has also spoken out against the movement's hard-core anti-mining and anti-chlorine positions. He obviously thinks that those are anti-human, too.
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6 comments:
These things remind me of the book written by Ayn Rand, "The Return of the Primitive", all about the anti technology tree hugging environmentalists. And more.
Another quote from Mr. Moore, "Environmental extremists care more about fish eggs than they do about children."............A lot of people have tried to tar Mr. Moore because of his consultant work with the logging and mining industries. Of course what they neglect to inform us is that same advice has actually made their practices a lot more environmentally friendly.
Will: Genetically Modified food sources should be treated with some concern...Yes, there are many potential benefits but just be aware of the potential dangers too. I personally would prefer to eat food that hasn't been monkeyed with but this is becoming more difficult...The subject is extremely contraversal. I don't think this makes me a "radical environmentalist"
You're eating GMO everyday. You just don't know it.
Will: I think we both might agree that the GMO fears are so much luddite paranoia that it is hard to sift through the rants to find valid concerns.
Anyway, it is all over and has been. Corn, for example: genetically modified by Native Americans for thousands of years. And rest assured, none of them filed environmental impact statements, or had to put up with Jeremy Rifkin.
I mean, I would rather roll the dice on this golder rice and prevent mass starvation and blindness than have to listen to Greenpeace on it.......No, they're not radical.
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