Earth Day Re-Visited: A Tale Of Two Administrations

The contrast in environmental and energy policy from Bush to Obama couldn’t be more stark.
The objectives of the Bush/Cheney administration in the realm of energy policy was a secretive cabal of corporate interests determined to carve up the world amongst themselves right out of the gate– procuring thousands of domestic drilling permits during the Bush years for the Lee Raymond‘s of the world along the way, that to this day, many go undeveloped, stagnating in a sort purposefully hoarded limbo, or environmental purgatory.
It started early in the Bush administration, with Dick Cheney’s Energy Task Force assembled at the White House in January 2001. What followed was massive energy shortages and blackouts in California on the backs of Enron market manipulation followed by the Northeast blackout of 2003.
Moving forward, into the bombing and invasion of Iraq, Bush warned Iraqis in the pre-dawn Shock and Awe public address to the American people on March 17, 2003, in ominous baritone nonetheless, proceeded to say: “And all Iraqi military and civilian personnel should listen carefully to this warning: In any conflict, your fate will depend on your actions. Do not destroy oil wells, a source of wealth that belongs to the Iraqi people.“
Ha. Yeah, sure it did. When Judicial Watch sued for documents under the Freedom Of Information Act in 2001 in regard to Dick Cheney’s Energy Task Force meetings, what they received in 2003 depicted a Bush/Cheney administration that was laser-focused on Iraqi oil fields and the eventual corporate divvying up, even listing “potential suitors” to the bounty of il-gotten gains of Iraqi sovereignty, with the privatization of Iraq’s natural resources achieved, saying nothing of the cultural genocide and WMD’s Bush dropped on millions of people in the process. Iraq’s constitution is based on blood for oil and the document drafters made sure to include what to do with the oil in Article 108 and 109.
So, they got what they wanted from their Iraq adventure.
Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan, finally said what many of us had claimed all along in the Fall of 2007 in his Memoir he said plainly– “Everyone knows: The Iraq war is largely about oil”
Thanks for the honesty, Alan Greenspan.
$1.49 per gallon to $3.25 by the time the party was over.
Dick Cheney was formerly accused of suppressing and manipulating climate science data, while the administration’s solutions to all of this involved some lip-service and pruning around the edges, like halting supplies to the U.S. Strategic reserve, but basically fell back on policies of even less environmental regulation, some slight adjustments in auto-fuel standards, and complained about not drilling in ANWR. He also told us that “America is addicted to oil” and when asked in 2008 what he thought about gas prices reaching $4.00 a gallon, he replied, “that’s interesting. I hadn’t heard that.”
Oil companies like Exxon Mobil raked in record profits, historic profits, actually. As in, never-before-achieved annual profits by a U.S.-based corporation. Bush hailed the profit-making as a result of the marketplace. Exxon Mobil paid no Federal Income Tax in 2009.
But you knew that wasn’t enough, right?
In 2008, The Bush administration’s Department of the Interior, more specifically, top officials at the department of The Mineral’s Management Service, was discovered by the department’s Inspector General, Earl E. Devaney, to have been engaging in “coke parties and orgies” with industry lobbyists and various energy representatives. Mr. Devaney called it “a culture of ethical failure.” According to reporting by The New York Times, two other investigative reports focused on “a culture of substance abuse and promiscuity” in the department’s Royalty-In-Kind program– a part of the agency responsible for collecting about “$4 billion a year in oil and gas, rather than cash.”

That’s some legacy.
George W. Bush did get to keep Saddam’s pistol for the sacrifices the American people have made. It’s proudly displayed in his $300 million dollar Legacy Library.
But let’s take a look at the here and now, shall we?

At the EPA, there’s Lisa P. Jackson.
At the Department of the Interior, there’s Ken Salazar.
At the Department Of Energy, we have Secretary Dr. Steven Chu– distinguished scientist and co-winner of the Nobel Prize for physics(1997).
We do things differently now.
And in case you didn’t know, Vice President Biden is, thankfully, no Dick Cheney.
I’ll let the Vice President tell you about some of the more detailed changes we’ve made as a country, and where we’re headed, under the leadership of President Barack Obama.
Meanwhile, The Republican Party has made a mockery of 21st century energy and environmental policy and simply demanded, Drill, Baby, Drill!!!
It’s a little more complicated than that, kids.
Public Schools and Parents
Public Schools have been vilified, mocked, and targeted, as the cause for most of America’s shortcomings as a convenient whipping boy for all of society’s problems.
“It’s the schools! It starts with the schools!”
“Just another victim of the public school system…”
I’ve always considered public schools to be supplemental, or a fail safe education, for over-worked and under-educated, or just un-involved parents for the benefit of their children. The cooperative guarantee between citizen and state of a basic foundation for knowledge as a minimal insurance policy for a better society.
It’s the parents’ responsibility to expound and expand a child’s learning. To reinforce, with proper context, the teachings of public schools. To implement your own knowledge and experiences to better cultivate well-rounded individuals of the world community.
It’s one thing to blame the schools for a lack of an educated populace, but when do parents take responsibility? Simply paying your taxes doesn’t excuse you from being an uninvolved parent.
When are the parents held accountable for their lack of education, or their responsibility to their community and schools, to work with public schooling to broaden the child’s education?
It’s easy to blame the schools and the government.
It’s difficult to look yourselves in the mirror and find actionable fault. To do so would be an admittance of culpability in your child’s lack of education, or understanding.
Dropping your kid off at school and telling the school and the community, “here, my child is in your hands”– is lazy and irresponsible.
It really does take a village. Due diligence and constant reinforcement.
That means cooperation. Public schools are an affirmation, and sometimes, a cruel reminder of who you are as a parent. If you think public schools are the primary source for the “dumbing down” of the country, you’re part of the false-narrative, and not as smart as you think you are, perhaps.
There’s more to providing an education for your children than to just drop them off, pick them up, and do it all over again the next day, and blame the school when a child falls behind, acting as gravity for society’s knee-jerk condemnation of the rights to basic education the government established.
It’s not easy to be a good parent. But it’s easy to place the blame elsewhere.

Jon Stewart, Your Mets Give Us Nothing!
Jon Stewart seen here not doing his best to lose to the Cubs.

Alright, Stewart.
This is go time!
Cubs @ Mets. Tonight!
This past weekend, your NY Mets(4-8), flopped two out of three against the Central division-leading St. Louis Cardinals(8-4, no thanks to your Mets) falling three and a half games out in the East and negating a chance for my futile Cubs to not lose a game in the Central Division standings after our dismal showing against the lost and confused Houston Astros(3-9: you’re welcome, Houston).
So, it’s go time, Stewart! and by “Stewart,” I mean, Stewart!
Nothing outside of a World Series appearance for my Cubs would give me more satisfaction than helping out your NY Mets on their inevitable journey to Washington Nationals’ whipping-boy status this year.
And don’t just think that just because I wasn’t even born in 1969, that I have forgotten baseball’s biggest overlooked scandal– this side of my worthless Pete Rose autographed baseball– that your Mets fiendishly co-opted the Muhammad Ali rope-a-dope and deployed a poor, defenseless, black cat to the Cubs’ on-deck circle to cement your Mets’ historically self-evident cheating ways( I really have no evidence to back this up) sneaking their way into a National League Pennant, besting my Cubs in the last weeks of the season– denying us yet again, a shot at glory. Glory that has eluded us while we’ve been forced to observe, in excruciatingly, teeth-gnashing, shockingly horrific development– the Chicago White Sox surging to a World Series title and the ensuing World Series ring fight they partook in after the fallout had seemingly, and mercifully, subsided. I know a guy that knows a guy who knows a guy that knows on a hunch that the grounds-keeper and his distant cousins all received World Series rings.
I will be watching re-runs of Glenn Beck to see if his chalkboard connects the dots between the 1919 ‘Black Sox’, the 2005 Chicago White Sox World Series, and your 69′ Mets.
Scared, yet?
So, I know it’s early, yet. There’s about a hundred and fifty of these days to go.
But the road to ruin begins Tonight-eh!
Bundle up because it’s going to be a chilly week at El Estadio De Los Mets.
The Cubs are coming, you hear that?! The Cubs are coming…
and hell-freezing-over is coming with them!
