you guys seen this? Any chance we can get permission to reprint it somewhere? paul
By Jon
Gensler
posted March 1, 2010 at 10:49 am EST
Cambridge, Mass. —
As a captain in the Army, I was used to seeing the blasted, wasted landscapes
of unfamiliar countries. From the window of a plane or the door of a helicopter,
they were a familiar sight, the last high-level view before descending
into a nasty fight.
I expected such images of destruction in Iraq and Afghanistan. But not
in West Virginia.
Yet the ugly reality of mountaintop removal coal mining is what greeted
me on my return home after a year-long tour in Iraq. Seeing the land I
fought to protect being abused in such reckless fashion hit me in the gut,
hard. It took years to recover my motivation to continue to fight for what
I believe in back home.
Appalachian families are facing serious decisions about their future, and
these decisions are intimately linked with America’s future.
Our energy policy is limiting our global competitiveness, hurting our national
security, and destroying our heritage of wild, natural beauty. We need
comprehensive energy and climate legislation to ensure our way of
life this century.
These national priorities are acute in my home state. Demand for southern
West Virginian coal is expected to drop by half over the next decade, yet
our political and business leadership refuse to take a serious look at
how we can replace the jobs that will be lost.
To maintain a relevant position in the energy economy, West Virginia must
look beyond our short horizon of trying to fill up the next train load,
and think about what will happen if we don’t push harder for economic
diversification. The 30-plus years of decline we have experienced will
merely accelerate. As the world moves on to cleaner energy sources, we
will be left behind with a wounded land, a wounded people, and wounded
pride, battle scars from a lost war.
I came home to an America full of cars with “Support our Troops” bumper
stickers. Real support would entail sacrifices, because so long as we’re
addicted to foreign fossil fuels, our soldiers will be called on to safeguard
supply routes. Additionally, the oil money we send to foreign dictators
every day is directly funding the terrorists we are fighting against. All
of this means more brave men and women losing life and limb overseas.
Climate change is intensifying the national security threat. The Central
Intelligence Agency and the Defense and State Departments agree that climate
change presents risks that must be dealt with.
The Pentagon’s just-released Quadrennial Defense Review for the first
time ever recognizes climate change for the destabilizing force that it
is. With increased droughts, famines, and migrations, we should remember
that it is our soldiers who will be called upon to help these people in
their need, and to respond with force to the terrorist havens that often
arise in the wake of failed states. The burden will fall on America –
and disproportionately on West Virginia.
This fight is not new. It has raged through our mountains for decades.
In the Mine Wars of the early 20th century, workers organized and took
a stand against the coal companies whose only goal was to expand their
bottom lines at the expense of the people of our state. Hundreds of miners,
soldiers, and corporate thugs lost their lives in a struggle over a worker’s
right to an honest day’s wage for an honest day’s labor.
Today’s fight is similar: King Coal would have us believe that as coal
goes, so goes West Virginia; that our worth as a people is to be measured
by what we can rip from the ground and sell to the highest bidder; that
we are indeed a 21st-century Company State, bought and paid for with our
destroyed heritage.
This is wrong.
Setting the right course is worth fighting for. We need a price on carbon
to eliminate the financial uncertainty that is preventing investment in
clean-energy technologies. Such investments are crucial to drive future
growth in today’s fledgling industries. Additionally, we should call for
an aggressive national renewable portfolio standard to create demand in
the short term, which is the best option to drive down energy costs for
consumers.
Now is the time to honor the sacrifices of our miner heritage. We are at
a tremendous crossroads, and taking these steps is the right thing to do
to honor our past, and the right thing to do for tomorrow. Let’s work
for a better future that gives West Virginians – and all Americans –
the freedom to thrive in a new energy economy rather than slowly dying
with the old.
I believe in you, West Virginia. Strap on your boots and fight with me.
Jon Gensler, a former Army captain who served in the Iraq war, is studying
for master’s degrees at Harvard Kennedy School and MIT Sloan School of
Management.
--
Mary Anne Hitt
Deputy Director, Beyond Coal Campaign
Sierra Club
304-876-7064 (w)
540-239-0073 (c)
maryanne.hitt@sierraclub.org
www.sierraclub.org/coal