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Joan E. Dowlin

Joan E. Dowlin

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House Majority Leader Eric Cantor's Moral Compass is Off Line

Posted: 05/27/11 10:23 PM ET

As the weather gets nastier and deadlier with more and more record breaking tornadoes and floods and wildfires around the country, the majority party in the House of Representatives have done the unspeakable. They have played politics with Federal Disaster Aid. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor said Monday that tornado victims in Joplin, MO would only get emergency relief if money could be diverted from somewhere else in the federal budget.

The GOP are so obsessed with reducing the deficit and debt that they are losing their sense of moral priorities. While balancing spending sounds sensible, I just have three questions. Firstly, where were these Congressmen and women when the deficit started exploding in 2004 when they took over Congress and a fellow Republican was in the White House? I heard nary a peep when billions were spent on two wars, a new Homeland Security Department, and tax breaks were given to corporations and the wealthy. Conservative fiscal responsibility? I think not.

Secondly, how can anyone in good conscience put disaster relief on the table? Is not the main function of government to protect and support its citizens? If FEMA funding is put to question, why not also the Pentagon spending or entitlements or tax reform (raising taxes for the top 1% and big business)?

Thirdly, why do the Republicans in the House want to ax a clean-car program to pay for the FEMA funds? The under-funded Advanced Technology Vehicles Manufacturing Loan Program at the Department of Energy was designed to help the nation wean off fossil fuels and also create cleaner air and cut down on CO2 emissions which, according to many scientists, contribute to global warming.

But the GOP have their heads in the sand, vehemently denying such a thing as climate change exists as the polar caps are melting, islands are disappearing, oceans are getting warmer and rising while dangerous weather patterns over the globe are becoming more severe and more frequent.

The irony is that if more is not done to create green energy, cut CO2 emissions, and clean up polluted air and water, these climate related disasters will continue and in fact, worsen in numbers and size.

I believe part of the reason we are in such an economic mess is because we have had to pay so much in disaster funds over the last decade. In 2010, FEMA reported 81 disasters after having 60 years of averaging 33 a year. Economic damage exceeded $6.7 billion. And that doesn't include 2011 with its record tornadoes and floods. So yes, the cost should be scrutinized but solutions to prevent these weather events should be explored. Cutting green energy initiatives is not the answer. In fact, it is idiotic. It's like pouring gasoline on a burning barn.

As Brad Johnson from the Wonkroom put it, referring to the Joplin, MO tornado:

"The deadliest twister in U.S. history since 1947 is the latest multi-billion-dollar climate disaster in this season of unprecedented death and destruction. Scientists have warned for decades that our climate system would grow deadlier as greenhouse pollution from coal and oil increases, with greater floods, heat waves, droughts, wildfires, and storms. Instead of responding to reality by mobilizing our nation to protect people from climate disasters and build a resilient, green economy, Republicans are keeping us tethered to big oil."

With the GOP in charge, it's a vicious circle of pollution caused climate disasters creating economic costs, cutting green energy (thus not bringing any solutions), leading to more weather related disasters etc.

No wonder everyone gave so much attention to Harold Camping who predicted the end of the world. The way we are going, it makes me fear for tomorrow's generations. I have heard many Republicans speak of how we are mortgaging our grandchildren's future with a mountain of debt. How about leaving them with a polluted planet with rising temperatures and continued natural disasters? Which is worse: debt or no planet? It's a no brainer to me. But then it is hard to see the light with one's head in the sand.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeWebster
Always happy.
02:40 AM on 06/07/2011
The legacy of GOP policies will be both debt and a devastated environment for future generations.

Clearly the environmental issue is more important, because it carries with it the risk of the extinction of the entire human species.

Both GOP problems spring from the same place though. An ideological blindness to what the evidence shows is happening in the real world. This is why they continue to push failed policies of reducing revenue, reducing services, and providing tax cuts to the rich. This is why they are incapable of taking responsible action on the single most important issue to ever face humanity - AGW.

The evidence for AGW is overwhelming, and consists of hundreds of lines of evidence, some of which incontravertibly prove that the Earth is warming due to increasing atmospheric concentrations of CO2. The delusional ideological blindness of the Republicans - and indeed of politicians of all persuasions in the face of clear and unequivocal evidence, shows that American democracy is now broken and corrupted by a culture of deceit and spin.

A very good article - from another musician.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joan E. Dowlin
Love will find a way.
11:17 AM on 06/07/2011
Thanks, Mike. From one musician to another, the only reason I can see for the GOP to cling to ignorance on this issue is because they are controlled by big oil.
04:16 PM on 06/06/2011
Joan Dowlin has it right. Clarity and simpllicity of the real solution: Politicos and oh so clever money manipulators out and artists of mature thought in -- with access to the ear of the much too "free market" besotted Pres.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Joan E. Dowlin
Love will find a way.
07:36 PM on 06/06/2011
Thank you. My question is, if the scientists are right, shouldn't we err on the side of caution? What is so wrong with clean air and water? Cutting down on CO2 emissions just makes sense.