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Health & Fitness

Keystone Sludge Asks: "May We Borrow America?"

Climate change is not in Venice's best interest; nor is the Keystone pipeline, which will line other pockets, not ours.

 

 

  “We can be the generation that finally frees America from the tyranny of oil.”
— President Barack Obama

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I am strongly opposed to the approval of the proposed Keystone XL Pipeline. And, brothers and sisters, you should be, too—passionately, adamantly, with the urgency of fleeing a burning building, with your child in your arms.

There will be a march against permitting Keystone XL Pipeline to “borrow” America, on Feb. 17 at City Hall in Los Angeles.* 

It will be in support of the largest climate march in history—in Washington D.C. on the same day.
I hope I can convince you to join the local march, or at least explain why it is so important to me. Here is why I will be there:

Keystone XL of Canada wants to pump extremely “dirty” tar sands – 800,000 barrels/day - thousands of miles, through our country, to be exported overseas.   And forcing some farmers off their land to do it.

Producing and processing tar sands oil results in roughly 14 percent more greenhouse gas emissions than the average oil used in the U.S.  See

 

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Looking at the historical records of carbon-dioxide levels and global temperatures, we see a strong connection between the two. Temperatures have rapidly increased. Climate scientists have carefully looked for the reasons: Is it changing Earth orbits, sunspots, solar intensity, cosmic rays, water vapor, volcanoes, Earth’s “wobble” on its axis, etc.?
Answer: For our current warming, increased carbon-dioxide levels (up almost 40 percent) emerge as by far the main factor in resetting the earth’s “thermostat." Click here to read a comparison of "Is it Fact or Fraud?" see

 

Global Warming Debate is No Debate At All

 

http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2013/01/global-warming-debate-is-no-debate-at-all/



We have known about carbon dioxide's warming effects for more than116 years (first published by Svante Arrhenius), so it is not such a surprise. One can easily demonstrate its warming ability in a high school science lab.

So, how would using the Keystone tar sands effect Americans? Is it a boon, or a boondoggle? Click here and decide for yourself whether Dr. James Hansen, chief climate scientist at NASA, is right or wrong about the arguments in his New York Times oped, "Game Over for the Climate. See

 

Game Over for the Climate

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/10/opinion/game-over-for-the-climate.html?_r=1&



"Moving to tar sands, one of the dirtiest, most carbon-intensive fuels on the planet, is a step in exactly the opposite direction, indicating either that governments don't understand the situation or that they just don't give a damn," writes Dr. Hansen. "People who care should draw the line."
“If Canada proceeds, and we do nothing, it will be game over for the climate," he adds.

We are currently at 390 ppm (parts per million) of carbon-dioxide. If only 50 percent of the tar sands were exploited, carbon-dioxide would increase by about 62 ppm, bringing us past the "red line" of 450 ppm, where our climate would likely be out of control and nothing we do could stop the tragic consequences for us all.   At this point, sea levels would rise to 50 feet.


To see what a sea level rise looks like, check out the global sea level rise map by clicking here. The link will take you to a website where you can explore what, for example, a 40-foot (13M) sea level rise looks like in maps of New York, Venice, San Francisco, New Orleans, the Netherlands, the East Coast, etc. See

 

Global Sea Level Rise Map

http://geology.com/sea-level-rise/



And of course, it is the poor who will be most hurt. So, this is also a social justice issue. As a wise man once asked, “If I am for myself only, what am I?”


Exploiting the Canadian tar sands would also gobble up boreal forests the size of Florida and destroy their ability to take up carbon dioxide.

Some in Congress will tell you America will benefit greatly from Keystone. They say it will reduce the price of oil. Actually, it may raise the price of Midwest oil, according to the Christian Science Monitor. See

 

How much would Keystone pipeline help US consumers?

http://www.nbcnews.com/id/46689167/ns/us_news-christian_science_monitor/t/how-much-would-keystone-pipeline-help-us-consumers/%22%20/l%20%22.UQVUzOj-2IY

 

Or, they say, we need the 6 billion dollars the project would bring.  But, if the CO2 emissions bring just one more Katrina and one more Sandy and just one more Midwest drought than “normal” (and it will, at least!) our nation will be hit with a $200 billion bill.

Some will tell you we need this oil because it will create jobs. Will it? Not much.  Not only are those jobs numbers exaggerated*** but far more jobs are created in stimulating Green Energy.**

Some will say it will increase “energy security,” and there is no reason not to approve Keystone. (Yet I feel far less secure, looking at Keystone.)  That is like a junkie saying, “I would feel so much better if I could get my heroin locally.”

Tell Mr. Obama we just don’t want to gamble that virtually every climate scientist—and our own citizens’ experience with a pattern of off-the-charts drought, storms, forest fires, sea level rise, and rapid melting of ancient Arctic ice—is wrong.

Tell Mr. Obama we strongly support his views given in his recent inaugural speech.  He asks your support.
Come to the march against the Keystone XL Pipeline gathering on Feb. 17 at City Hall.* Me? I’m going to take the Gold Line to Union Station and walk from there.
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*http://www.wilderutopia.com/february-17th-rally-solve-the-climate-crisis...
Sunday, Feb. 17, 1 p.m.
Starting Place: Olvera Street, the southwest side of Paseo De La Plaza.
Destination: City Hall, South Side Steps.

** About 136,000 people work in the coal industry, according to the National Mining Association. However, the number of green employees far exceeds this—in each of three states along. For example, New York has more than 185,000 green workers, already bypassing the national coal employee numbers. On top of that, Texas has upwards of 144,000 green employees, and California—not surprisingly—has a whopping 318,000-plus green laborers.
U.S. Green Technology (http://s.tt/1wvTY)

*** In Pipe Dreams? Jobs Gained, Jobs Lost by the Construction of Keystone XL, (PIPE DREAMS? - Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor)

 

The Global Labor Institute says more jobs could be destroyed than created by the pipeline. 

 

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