Re: Gale Norton

From: SteamDoc@aol.com
Date: Wed Jan 03 2001 - 10:51:26 EST

  • Next message: Vandergraaf, Chuck: "RE: Gale Norton"

    In a message dated Wed, 3 Jan 2001 8:58:34 AM Eastern Standard Time,
    "M.B.Roberts" <topper@robertschirk.u-net.com> writes:

    << Can you inform an old colonialist whether Gale Norton is a bad thing for
    the environment >>

    I suppose this is not off-topic since stewardship of creation is on-topic.
    Since Norton (for those unfamiliar, she has been nominated as Secretary of
    the Interior by President-elect Bush; the Interior Department, among other
    things, manages most of the land owned by the U.S. Government) is from my
    home state of Colorado, I can offer a few thoughts.

    Of course it depends on one's view of what is "bad." From my point of view
    (concerned about stewardship of creation but not as "left" on the environment
    as Greenpeace or even the Sierra Club), I would say "somewhat bad, but
    probably not as bad as some fear."

    What has people scared is that Norton's first job out of law school was
    working for James Watt at his Mountain States Legal Foundation (see
    www.mountainstateslegal.org), which fought for the rights of corporate
    America to pillage the environment in the West. Watt became Reagan's
    Secretary of the Interior, was highly controversial and confrontational, and
    was eventually canned. Watt was influenced by a belief that the Second
    Coming was near, and he dismissed the idea of stewardship for future
    generations, saying that Jesus would return before the future generations
    arrived. He was later implicated (and I believe convicted, though I could be
    wrong) on some charges of corruption; I don't recall the details. Watt was a
    disaster not only for environmental stewardship, but also for public
    perception of Christians in politics.

    Gale Norton has taken pains to distance herself from Watt. Certainly in
    style, but also in substance to some extent. While she is no
    environmentalist by any stretch of the imagination, she did act as Colorado
    Attorney General to punish illegal polluters and to get the Rocky Flats
    nuclear site cleaned up. She lost a Senate primary a few years ago because
    she was too "moderate" for the conservative-dominated Colorado Republican
    Party.

    So, the accusation that she will be "James Watt in a skirt", as one
    environmental activist put it, is unfair. But clearly she will carry out the
    policies advocated by Bush in the campaign, which means no concern for energy
    conservation, much less concern for environmental protection, and more
    emphasis on increasing energy production and removing regulation of private
    use and exploitation of land. I think that's somewhat bad, but your mileage
    may vary.



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