For those who don't know, Pete Coors' bid for
senatorship was defeated in last year's election;  I
don't recall the margin but a majority of Coloradans
didn't think he'd have our best interests at heart.

> Gary Denton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
<snip> 
> His earlier article "Crimes Against Nature" is here:
> 
> http://www.commondreams.org/views03/1120-01.htm 

"...Coors founded the Mountain States Legal Foundation
in 1976 to bring lawsuits designed to enrich giant
corporations, limit civil rights and attack unions,
homosexuals and minorities. He also founded the
right-wing Heritage Foundation, to provide a
philosophical underpinning for the anti-environmental
movement. While the foundation and its imitators --
the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the American
Enterprise Institute, the Reason Foundation, the
Federalist Society, the Marshall Institute and others
-- claim to advocate free markets and property rights,
their agenda is more pro-pollution than anything else.
>From its conception, the Heritage Foundation and its
neoconservative cronies urged followers to "strangle
the environmental movement," which Heritage named "the
greatest single threat to the American economy."
Ronald Reagan's victory gave Heritage Foundation and
the Mountain States Legal Foundation immeasurable
clout. Heritage became known as Reagan's "shadow
government," and its 2,000-page manifesto, "Mandate
for Change," became a blueprint for his
administration. Coors handpicked his Colorado
associates: Anne Gorsuch became the EPA administrator;
her husband, Robert Burford, a cattle baron who had
vowed to destroy the Bureau of Land Management, was
selected to head that very agency. Most notorious,
Coors chose James Watt, president of the Mountain
States Legal Foundation, as the secretary of the
interior. Watt was a proponent of "dominion theology,"
an authoritarian Christian heresy that advocates man's
duty to "subdue" nature. His deep faith in
laissez-faire capitalism and apocalyptic Christianity
led Secretary Watt to set about dismantling his
department and distributing its assets rather than
managing them for future generations. During a Senate
hearing, he cited the approaching Apocalypse to
explain why he was giving away America's sacred places
at fire-sale prices: "I do not know how many future
generations we can count on before the Lord
returns..." 

I've mentioned before that unregulated use of
antibiotics in 'factory farmed meat' was likely a
source of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, but couldn't
find any studies to back that up.  Lo, in the second
paragraph quoted below, we find one reason why:

"...The EPA's inspector general received broad
attention for his August 21st, 2003, finding that the
White House pressured the agency to conceal the
public-health risks from poisoned air following the
September 11th World Trade Center attacks. But this
2001 deception is only one example of the
administration's pattern of strategic distortion.
Earlier this year, it suppressed an EPA report warning
that millions of Americans, especially children, are
being poisoned by mercury from industrial sources. 

This behavior is consistent throughout the Bush
government. Consider the story of James Zahn, a
scientist at the Department of Agriculture who
resigned after the Bush administration suppressed his
taxpayer-funded study proving that billions of
antibiotic-resistant bacteria can be carried daily
across property lines from meat factories into
neighboring homes and farms. In March 2002, Zahn
accepted my invitation to present his findings to a
convention of family-farm advocates in Iowa. Several
weeks before the April conference, pork-industry
lobbyists learned of his appearance and persuaded the
Department of Agriculture to forbid him from
appearing. Zahn told me he had been ordered to cancel
a dozen appearances at county health departments and
similar venues..."

Speaking of salmon:
"...Later [after Oct 2001], she [Gail Norton] and
White House political adviser Karl Rove forced
National Marine Fisheries scientists to alter findings
on the amount of water required for the survival of
salmon in Oregon's Klamath River, to ensure that large
corporate farms got a bigger share of the river water.
As a result, more than 33,000 chinook and coho salmon
died -- the largest fish kill in the history of
America. Mike Kelly, the biologist who drafted the
original opinion (and who has since been awarded
federal whistle-blower status), told me that the coho
salmon is probably headed for extinction...Norton's
Fish and Wildlife Service is the first ever not to
voluntarily list a single species as endangered or
threatened. Her officials have blackballed scientists
and savaged studies to avoid listing the trumpeter
swan, revoke the listing of the grizzly bear and
shrink the remnant habitat for the Florida panther.
She disbanded the service's oldest scientific advisory
committee in order to halt protection of desert fish
in Arizona, New Mexico and Texas that are headed for
extinction..." 

Not only is the next generation going to pay for the
massive deficit, but they'll have more asthma,
neurological diseases and heart disease to impair
their working potential.  (When I have the time, I'll
see if I can find out how much mercury is in a vaccine
series vs. what's in canned tuna -- it's not
negligable, since pregnant women are warned to consume
no more than a 6-oz can/week for fear of fetal
damage.)

Debbi
Religion? Nay, Cheney Is Far More Evil Maru


                
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