Bush and the “New
Environmentalism”
by
A.M. Siriano
It came
as no surprise to me that columnist Dick Morris, in a recent editorial,*
urged President Bush to go with the “coming green revolution,” but also no
big shocker that, in the same editorial, he counseled Al Gore to consider
running in 2008 (as if Gore hasn’t thought of it at least once every
waking hour over the last five years), or that he advised Hillary Clinton
to make environmentalism her pet issue.
Morris is no more a conservative than he is a
liberal, which is why he seems at times a double-agent for the right and
the left. For example, he is an unabashed Clintons-basher, but hardly
remorseful for his part of the Clintons’ legacy of decadence and neglect.
He has extolled George W. Bush for being a “smooth operator “ and
commended him for fighting terrorists, but was one of the first to call
the campaign in Iraq a “disaster.”
Little of this is driven by ideology. Morris is a
strategist, a gamester. He is not always correct in his analyses, but he
is not one to be ignored either. He loves the game too much for that.
Now Morris is telling Bush that greenism is
growing like a weed in this country (all puns intended) and he had better
run with it. This makes me think that Morris should give a fresh shine to
his crystal ball, that perhaps it is clouded by latent liberalism from the
Clinton era. Apparently he has bought into the junk science of man-made
global warming, which allows for no dissent among liberals. He might as
well be taking his cues from Barbara Streisand when he says,
"People realize that the key is to stem the
addiction [to oil] by converting to alternative fuels rather than to
temporize by seeking new oil fields. And they get that even if we find
more oil we will still find ourselves slowly destroying our planet and
rather quickly energizing hurricanes and other weather catastrophes."
Huh? Has Morris gone moon-batty? Well, not
likely. Morris is not concerned with the truth of what people “get,” but
that they get it. The question is, are more people really getting these
“truths” or is he spending too much time in green-happy blue states?
There is little doubt that too many people are
thinking irrationally green, simply because the large majority of them
believe whatever they hear repeatedly. Remember when pollutants were
blocking sunlight and creating a giant greenhouse effect? That was the
80’s. In the 90’s the opposite was detected: too much sunlight was coming
through. But by that time, our global greenhouse was a reality to people
the world over, created by all those nasty corporations. The leftists
suddenly had a new hook in their obsessive drive to control people, and to
unseat their enemies. The truth was beside the point.
Morris is simply going with his gut here, of
course, saying to politicians on both sides: Seize the day! You can worry
about truth later. Make the green issue your own and you will succeed.
But Morris goes too far. Regardless of a growing
atmosphere of Machiavellianism in this country (liberals embrace it
openly, conservatives deal in it reluctantly), truth still matters. Morris
goes on to accuse President Bush of being “incapable of responding to the
new environmentalism” and perpetuates the misperception that the Bush
family’s Big Oil connections drive all of their politics. Meanwhile, the
pro-environment policies of the present administration go largely
unnoticed and outright denied. Rather than urging the President to go
green, why doesn’t Morris use his influence to tell the world just how
green-conscious Bush really is?
The Bush administration is pushing for all the
things Morris is saying he should push, but what chance does Bush have in
claiming them? Little or none in a media ruled by liberals and naysayers.
According to Morris, “Other than California’s Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger
(R), nobody has staked out the need to switch to hydrogen, wind, biofuels
and solar energy as alternatives to oil dependency.” Has Morris spent any
time lately with the enormous amount of information at the Department of
Energy? Has he heard of the Energy Policy Act, which offers incentives to
companies and buyers to steer toward hybrids and fuel-efficient trucks?
Al Gore is seen by many to be the true champion
of environmentalism and energy awareness, but his advocacy is laced with
kookiness and a track record that shows little more than words. But were
he to make it through the next Primaries, the media would be painting him
as defender of a soon-to-be hydrogenized people and the bane of Big Oil
(with no mention of his own family’s connection to Occidental Petroleum
and other large corporations).
And so, the myth of Republican antagonism toward
the environment continues, even though great strides in environmental
protection has occurred under Republican leadership, notably with Nixon
and Reagan, but also with Bush I and Bush II. Americans, whether left or
right, are no more eager to say no to alternative fuel sources than they
are ready to give up their cars. Our present sensible administration knows
this, and believes that progress with energy and the environment can be
made within a framework of good policy that protects our ideals and the
economy (the opposite was true during the Clinton years, when bad policy,
applied willy-nilly, limited progress for the sake of bowing to the rising
religion of environmentalism). In the meantime, President Bush quietly
applies pressure, via the Department of Energy and other organizations, to
find solutions as fast as possible.
Does
Morris propose that Bush, in the process of jumping on the green
bandwagon, return us to a Clinton-style environmentalism, which had us
more concerned with owls, lizards and insects than people? Or does
greenism mean something else to him? If so, perhaps it means what the Bush
administration is already doing, which is to safeguard our present natural
resources without ignoring our national sovereignty, while at the same
time looking to the future for answers.
Reference: Bush Ought
to Lead the Coming Green Revolution, “ by Dick Morris, Vote.com, October
5, 2005,
http://www.vote.com/magazine/columns/dickmorris/
column60360678.phtml
The opinions expressed in
this column represent those of the author and do not necessarily reflect
the opinions, views, or philosophy of TheRealityCheck.org, Inc.