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Why Trump wants to gut the Endangered Species Act

by The Editor
July 26, 2018
in USA
0
Why Trump wants to gut the Endangered Species Act

In a giveaway to big commercial interests who want the immediate satisfaction of a massive executive payday, Ryan Zinke's Interior Department is planning to ravage irreplaceable American lands and throw open the door to the decimation of rare wildlife. The Endangered Species Act, which in 1973 enjoyed strong bipartisan support, is now on the government chopping block. That means the financial interests of mining, gas, ranching and logging executives may soon outweigh the necessity of protecting the land we all share and the wild creatures that live on it. If you think this is a bad idea, now would be a good time to let Republican lawmakers and their corporate enablers know about it. Republicans have indeed been building to this for a long time. They've spent decades on campaigns intended to undermine a basic belief in science among their voters, and they've largely succeeded. Among our economic peers around the globe, even most social conservatives agree that climate change is real and we have to protect the environment for future generations. Not so in America, where half the country seems to operate under the delusion that we can do whatever we want to our land, our plants and our animals and it will magically have no ill effects on us, our children or our grandchildren. The proposed changes to the Endangered Species Act fall in line with this anti-science sentiment: They drastically reduce the role scientists will have in identifying endangered and threatened species in the first place.The changes would let the views of lawmakers take precedence over the in-depth research and on-the-ground observation of scientific experts. They would also let politicians weigh financial interests against whether plants and animals ought to be allowed to survive — and also against the rights of the rest of us to enjoy the many benefits of balanced and diverse ecosystems. Rare plant species and gray wolves don't have lobbyists; big oil does, and companies pay significant money to get politicians on their side so that they can plunder habitats to make more money. If it's elected officials — whose coffers are filled by corporations — making decisions previously left to scientists and researchers, who do you think will benefit: animals and their environs, or the people holding out cash? What scientists know — and many politicians want to ignore — is that ecosystems are fragile, and they survive in precarious balance. Conservationists don't do their work because they have a particular fetish for Oahu tree snails or Florida bristle ferns; they seek to conserve endangered species because those species are part of a broad biome whose inhabitants are interdependent — and which we as humans also depend on. We are part of it.When this system gets out of whack, or certain species disappear, that can have a domino effect that goes far down the line, wiping out or endangering other species as well, and even affecting our own food supply and security. That impact isn't always immediately foreseeable.The kind of short-term thinking reflected in the administration's proposals to gut the Endangered Species Act is fueled by insatiable avarice that doesn't just affect Northern sea otters and prairie gophers. It sells out the future of our country — the very land you and I, people without a ton of money to throw at politicians, rely on. And it does this for the benefit of a very few. Short-sighted, heartbreaking — and exactly what we've come to expect from this administration. Speak up, and don't let this happen.

Original Article

CNN

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In a giveaway to big commercial interests who want the immediate satisfaction of a massive executive payday, Ryan Zinke's Interior Department is planning to ravage irreplaceable American lands and throw open the door to the decimation of rare wildlife. The Endangered Species Act, which in 1973 enjoyed strong bipartisan support, is now on the government chopping block. That means the financial interests of mining, gas, ranching and logging executives may soon outweigh the necessity of protecting the land we all share and the wild creatures that live on it. If you think this is a bad idea, now would be a good time to let Republican lawmakers and their corporate enablers know about it. Republicans have indeed been building to this for a long time. They've spent decades on campaigns intended to undermine a basic belief in science among their voters, and they've largely succeeded. Among our economic peers around the globe, even most social conservatives agree that climate change is real and we have to protect the environment for future generations. Not so in America, where half the country seems to operate under the delusion that we can do whatever we want to our land, our plants and our animals and it will magically have no ill effects on us, our children or our grandchildren. The proposed changes to the Endangered Species Act fall in line with this anti-science sentiment: They drastically reduce the role scientists will have in identifying endangered and threatened species in the first place.The changes would let the views of lawmakers take precedence over the in-depth research and on-the-ground observation of scientific experts. They would also let politicians weigh financial interests against whether plants and animals ought to be allowed to survive — and also against the rights of the rest of us to enjoy the many benefits of balanced and diverse ecosystems. Rare plant species and gray wolves don't have lobbyists; big oil does, and companies pay significant money to get politicians on their side so that they can plunder habitats to make more money. If it's elected officials — whose coffers are filled by corporations — making decisions previously left to scientists and researchers, who do you think will benefit: animals and their environs, or the people holding out cash? What scientists know — and many politicians want to ignore — is that ecosystems are fragile, and they survive in precarious balance. Conservationists don't do their work because they have a particular fetish for Oahu tree snails or Florida bristle ferns; they seek to conserve endangered species because those species are part of a broad biome whose inhabitants are interdependent — and which we as humans also depend on. We are part of it.When this system gets out of whack, or certain species disappear, that can have a domino effect that goes far down the line, wiping out or endangering other species as well, and even affecting our own food supply and security. That impact isn't always immediately foreseeable.The kind of short-term thinking reflected in the administration's proposals to gut the Endangered Species Act is fueled by insatiable avarice that doesn't just affect Northern sea otters and prairie gophers. It sells out the future of our country — the very land you and I, people without a ton of money to throw at politicians, rely on. And it does this for the benefit of a very few. Short-sighted, heartbreaking — and exactly what we've come to expect from this administration. Speak up, and don't let this happen.

Original Article

CNN

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