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The Mountain That Lost Its Top
It's the one environmental crime that no US politician will confront – the destruction of Kentucky's mountains. Leonard Doyle visits the Appalachian peaks being blasted by Big Coal
The road slicing through the thickly forested hills of eastern Kentucky used to be called the Daniel Boone Parkway. It was named for the controversial American folk hero who fought his way across Indian country to settle a state where many of his descendants still live.
That was before the coal industry began blowing up the Appalachian Mountains as a cheap way of getting at the black stuff below, behaviour decried by the environmental group Appalachian Voices as "one of the greatest human rights and environmental tragedies in America's recent history".
Daniel Boone's road is now the Hal Rogers Parkway, named after one of the Kentucky coal industry's closest friends in Washington, a Republican Congressman of 34 years. It passes through a mountain range older than the Himalayas and is blanketed in broadleaf forests rivalled only by the Amazon basin in its biodiversity.
But the canopy of trees which lines the parkway as it rises from the bluegrass horse country to the mountains is a trompe l'oeil. The lush forest gives way to scraggly trees along the ridge-line, and behind those trees is evidence of unspeakable ecological violence. In a process known as mountaintop removal an upland moonscape is being created, which is incapable of regenerating trees. As far as the eye can see, the land is grey and pockmarked with huge black lakes, filled with toxic coal slurry.
This has come about because of America's insatiable appetite for cheap coal to generate electricity, a process enthusiastically backed by the Bush administration as it tries to displace the consumption of imported oil. And the Democrats are little better. They control Kentucky and neither Barack Obama nor Hillary Clinton have dared to challenge "King Coal" while campaigning.
The devastation being wrought on Appalachia is best appreciated from the air. An organisation called Southwinds offers people an eagle-eye view of the carnage, not readily appreciated from the road. Another way to see what's going on behind the ridge-line is to take a Google Earth virtual tour of an online memorial to the 470 mountains blown up and levelled in recent years.
The act of destroying a million-year-old mountain has several distinct stages. First it is earmarked for removal and the hardwood forest cover, containing over 500 species of tree per acre in this region, is bulldozed away. The trees are typically burnt rather than logged, because mining companies are not in the lumber business. Then topsoil is scraped away and high explosives laid in the sandstone. Thousands of blasts go off across the region every day, blowing up what the mining industry calls "overburden".
The rubble is then tipped into the valleys - more than 7,000 have already been filled - and more than 700 miles of rivers and streams have disappeared under rubble and thousands more soiled with toxic waste.
The process has accelerated wildly under George Bush. His pro-business-at-any-price credo led to the tossing out of strict federal restrictions against dumping mining rubble within 250 feet of a mountain stream. The toxic spoil laden with heavy metals, which results from blowing up mountains, was renamed "fill", enabling the mining companies to use the cheapest method possible of disposing of it. Once the rock is blown up and the coal separated out, the flattened mountaintops can only support a thin cover of grass. Tens of thousands of acres of mountain have been transformed in this way in Kentucky, West Virginia and Virginia.
Deep in the Kentucky woods McKinley Sumner's yapping dachshund was no match for the mine company's bulldozer. It arrived unannounced on Mr Sumner's land earlier this year and was soon snapping off full-grown trees as if they were twigs.
Mr Sumner, in his seventies, recalls putting on his high-top boots "because the copperheads and rattlesnakes were still out" and hotfooting it up the small mountain at the back of his house, to confront the miners by himself.
By the time he had shooed them off what he calls the "Sumner estate", all 93 acres of it, and had obtained a restraining order against the mining company the damage was done. The forest his parents had started homesteading in the 1930s, and which he has worked since he was a boy, had been devastated by the blade of the bulldozer. Trees were piled one on top of the other and all the topsoil had been shoved into the valley below.
With the help of a lawyer and a social justice organisation called Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, Mr Sumner won his court battle and the mining company was ordered to repair the damage to his land. Instead of doing what the court has ordered, the company is trying to break him in other more subtle ways. Mr Sumner's lands have been listed in the local paper every one of the past five weeks as earmarked for "mountaintop removal", something he has never agreed to.
Company executives have put the word out that he is "holding up mining in the area", setting him against the coal mining families in the area. Strange people showed up on his land to remove the markers of a land survey, which cost $6,000, in order to delineate his hillside from a neighbour's, which has been approved for mountaintop removal.
"I feel just awful," Mr Sumner, said. "We live in a democracy and this is not supposed to happen in a democracy. They are taking our rights away from us."
The daughter and sister of miners, Teri Blanton is a self-described anti-coal activist and prime mover of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth. As a young single mother she returned to Harlan County from Chicago in search of what she hoped would be a healthier lifestyle for her children. What Ms Blanton could not have known is that the well water her family and community were drinking from was contaminated by the toxic chemical run-off from a mining equipment repair shop.
"They had this great big vat filled with degreasing chemicals which they would dump into the ground every few months," Ms Blanton said. "They even sprayed the gravel roads with the stuff in summer to keep the dust down."
At 29, Ms Blanton developed cancer, which she survived. But many of her friends and neighbours from Harlan County died young, and she has dedicated the past two decades of her life to helping those threatened by coal-mining interests and getting the word out to an uninterested American public about the ecological devastation which is taking place in Appalachia.
"For the last 100 years Kentucky has provided the coal that fuelled America's growth and wealth," she said. "But our wages are low and our schools and hospitals are lousy. This is one of the poorest places in America and I often think that it is deliberately so, so that they can do whatever they want to this polluted community."
The headwaters of several major rivers on America's eastern seaboard rise in the Kentucky Mountain. They should be teeming with steelhead trout at this time of the year, with fishermen working the banks. But the rivers have been dead for much of the past 100 years, and the Kentucky Tourist Authority came up blank when asked to find a fly fishing destination within 50 miles of where the mountaintop removal takes place.
There is plenty of public money being spent promoting the coal industry, including the practice of blowing up mountains. Each year the state gives about $400,000 (£200,000) to groups controlled by the coal industry.
A website describes mountaintop mining as "simply the right thing to do - both for the environment and the local economy - a true win win".
"The environmentalists throw out a lot of negative stuff, like kids are suffering from asthma because they breathe particulate matter from living near coal-fired power plants, or deaths caused on the roads by big coal trucks," says Bill Caylor of the Kentucky Coal Association. "We're trying to counteract that."
The message he gives out is that mountaintop removal is actually good for the environment because "what's left is flatter, more useful land on top of the mountain". Teri Blanton laughs off the audacity of the propaganda effort and takes me to see Damon Morgan, at least 80 years old, in yet another part of the mountains.
A veteran of Second World War (he survived Iowa Jima,) Mr Morgan returned to the mountains after a career on the railways. A couple of years ago, he claims, two mining companies, Horizon Resources and International Coal Group, trespassed along one of his property lines. "They have done damage to the land and to my personal property - trees, rock and dirt debris have been pushed on to my property and down the side of the mountain."
But worse was to come and now land he calls his own is threatened with being mined because an estranged relative is challenging his title. "We made the biggest part of our living on that land." he said. "We planted vegetables, and we had apple orchards, and there was a lot of wild huckleberry back up on that mountain ... we picked them. And I've hunted in there, I've dug herbs. And now, that is all gone. It's completely moved away.
"The coal industry is an outlaw industry that does not consider the rights of its neighbours or the rights of the land and environment. The industry is out to make a profit and has no regard for the damages done to the citizens of this country," Mr Morgan said.
He has now been gagged by the courts and but for Teri Blanton his story would remain untold. She takes me to another part of the mountains. Mary Jane and Raleigh Adams, also in their seventies, are fighting Whymore Coal Company. When the Adams family declared that the mining company had violated its lease to cross their land the fight went to court. The ruling went against the Adamses and the court ruling now bars them from walking on their own land.
"We believe we were just run over by the Circuit Judge House and by the coal company lawyers who lied and said that we had said that the lease was valid," said a traumatised Mary Jane Adams. When Raleigh Adams took a picture of the mining taking place on his land and sent it to the local paper he was found to be in contempt.
"We now can't get on our own land, and the mining is going forward without our permission. We are even blocked from stepping on our property even when they aren't working," Mr Adams said. "Who knows what will be left of it when they are finished."
© 2008 The Indepedent



59 Comments so far
Show AllMay HELL be fired by coal and burn all involved for eternity. This is a blasphemy of MOTHER EARTH beyond all reason. And may the Bush be in the center of the firestorm and burn in eternal pain.
Gives whole new meaning to the expression "use the earth".
Maybe these guys know that asteroid 2004 MN4 will actually hit earth in 2029 or 2035 and are trying to reap as much profits as possible before the end. No, on second thought, they're just greedy bastards and this is what you get when you elect presidents and VPs in this business.
Coal companies and their employees are not invaders from another planet, they are American citizens. Evidently we are talking about quite a number of American citizens who don't care about the environment, the welfare of their neighbors, about the rule of law or justice, or their children's futures, as long as they can make a quick buck right now. That has been the story in the United States since the get go--invade, trample, grab, pollute, massacre, do whatcha gotta do to get that money now, fast, at everyone else's expense, and then go shopping. At Walmart.
The earth is already rebelling from the ravages of mankind. We've already killed off so many species; no doubt breaking important chains we chose to ignore even exists, and we'll continue to do so. And now, with our "great" technology, we're tearing down the mountains, cutting off the breath and life of the earth itself with our disposable plastics and never-ending concrete, and fouling the air with chemicals. We'll be long gone before the earth though, and eventually, the earth will heal itself. Hopefully the next inhabitants will be a kinder and gentler species.
When I was a kid I always wanted to dig a hole like this to China.
You may think that this is all about natural resources but this is just another plot to invade another sovereign nation, by burrowing a hole through the centre of the earth, rather than by sea or air. Its the new warfare brought to you by Halliburton Inc. As they dig they´ll use coal to pay for the war in China. Once you have conquered the Chinese you´ll have a nice tunnel to drive your SUV´s for some real chinese food.
Think of the trade routes that will open up and you´ll be able to build a pipeline from China to the US too. Think of how much oil you´ll all be able to consume! What fun!
it's ugly. We tell Brasil and Gabon not to chop down their forests but we do it every day.
We burn it as fast as they can dig it out, then it's gone forever. The pollution and dead zone remains.
Energy is the new gold standard, welcome to the gold rush of the 21st century.
Unbelievable. For decades now, metal miners in North America and Europe have had to adopt standards and practices minimizing environmental impact during operations, with extensive rehabilitation/remediation afterwards, and they're usually operating in areas of far less environmental diversity or ecosystem productivity than the Appalachians.
For some reason, oil, gas and coal producers in the US seem to have carte blanche to do whatever they like, regardless of consequences.
So where are all those hard-bitten mountain men and their varmint rifles?
It's a fucking abomination.
I feel that we all have a share of blame in this. I use too much electricity---using it now of course to comment. Computers, cell phones, TV, appliances, lights, radios, fans, microwave,etc... I'll use all of these things in the next 24 hours. I'm going to cut back. Change my lifestyle---walk the walk, and not just talk the talk. Trading mountains for cell phone minutes is the worst deal you can make.
I can't wait until we're all driving plugin hybrid cars, running on electricity mostly produced by coal powered plants of course.
JohnR-you hit the nail on the head. How many of us could cut back our electricity usage? How many could start buying renewable power if we cannot generate it ourselves with solar and wind?
My grandfather and several uncles made their very meager living in the coal mines of WV. He died from complications of Black Lung in '92.
A nice flattened mountain top would be a great place to erect the scaffold for Bush & Co
Earth first in all things and thoughts, deeds and decisions!
When will Homo sapiens, the so-called intelligent one, grow up, mature and realize that money must become irrelevant?
The moment of our extinction grows closer each day.
Earth, the ultimate wilderness before humans, will again be the ultimate wilderness after we are finally gone!
Earth Aches! And we are the cause of its pain and suffering!
http://www.darkskyinitiative.org
Stargeezer.
Start the Stop
Start the Stop is the beginning of the end of corporate rule on Earth, and the beginning of a more appropriate partnership and dialogue between vendors and consumers on this planet. For too long we have trusted the Congress, Executive and Judiciary to protect us. Mountaintop Coal Removal's "legal" status in America proves them incapable of protecting the public commonwealth and the peace. Until we get the money out of politics, we must speak the language of money directly to the corporations that govern us.
WE MUST SPEAK THE LANGUAGE OF MONEY, AND
BOYCOTT DIRTY ENERGY!
These corporate freaks can buy the politicians, bribe or kill them. They can change laws as Bush's buddies changed - reworded/gutted - the Clean Water Act for Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining to be allowable, or they simply ignore the laws, and pay the fines when they are caught breaking them, often a cost-effective solution for a corporation. Or they get caught and negotiate a settlement instead of doing time. It's just amazing!
So we the people can work for 30 years, as we have to build the Environmental Protection Agency, and then see it manned with corporate goons and as dumb as doorknobs, or worse, manned with personnel from the very industries they are regulating.
BOYCOTT DIRTY ENERGY
There is, however, one language these guys speak that we the people speak, and it's called money. The tools we can and must use to end mountaintop removal coal mining include boycotts and workstrikes. Since we all can't get off the grid right away, we can still send them a message today, this week, even before the Congress begins to pretend to change the law:
Step One: We Use the Language of Money to Achieve a Simple Goal: we end mountaintop removal coal mining. WE START BY BOYCOTTING ENERGY FRIDAY NIGHTS THROUGH SATURDAY NIGHTS AND WEDNESDAY NIGHTS THROUGH THURSDAY MORNINGS, ENOUGH FOR THEM TO SEE A DIP IN THEIR PROFITS.
YOUR AIM IS A 50% REDUCTION IN ELECTRICITY USE
and ALSO WRITE YOUR ENERGY COMPANIES SAYING YOU DO NOT NEED ENERGY FROM MOUNTAINTOP COAl REMOVAL AND YOUR BOYCOTT WILL CONTINUE UNTIL THEY STOP IT AND IT WILL INCREASE IF THEY DO NOT STOP IT.
Inform the energy monopolies/government that, unless mountaintop removal coal mining is recused as a provider for your region's energy, your boycott will increase in 2 months to three nights a week without using electricity. If that doesn't work, we will have to add a work strike days each month. Then two. Then three. Then two weeks at a time...
When we all do it together, it's a lovely, easy, elegant, non-violent, irrefutable revolution!
WE can use oil lamps, biodiesal generators, solar and wind (see the Real Goods catalogue,) compressed oxygen (see Geoffrey Lawton's research at the Permaculture Education Institute of Australia, and Journey to Forever's websites or great how-to's) and everything else you
can think of and find, including candles and including mellowing out without doing that much! I have been doing this the last few weeks, since I saw Mincaeh O'connell's amazing film Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining and got involved with ILOVEMOUNTAINS.ORG.
Christ but we do deserve a little time to just sit back and think after all the crap these clowns have put us through and what they have done to us and stolen from us and our children. We need to do some serious soul-searching here, all the American people, and figure out how to arrest the goons who made this whole crap show possible. The great thing is that they are centralized so there's not really that many of them. Arrest the Fortune 500 I say!!! In due time...
First we start with our little boycott and our demands
regarding mountaintop removal coal mining.Later on we can add work strikes if and when we need to. We can't all
march hither and yon, but we can all stop!!!
Unity of the workers and consumers is the key to this language of discussion and negotiation with the corporations. Meanwhile, we all get off the grid as quickly as possible through micro-hydro, wind power, horses, etc., andd work to make corporations illegal in our communities one by one.
If mountaintop removal hasn't been made illegal then the American legal system has proven itself irrational, broken, and WORSE THAN USELESS.
You couldn't make this stuff up. We ARE in the Twilight Zone. But life is a wondrous thing and the Earth is way too fine a planet to waste. There is no better home a'waitin in the sky, or of there is one, no one can prove it, so why don't we honor this very one while we're here?
After we get them to stop removing mountaintops, we need to stop the war and stop the forced vaccinations and stop genetic engineering and stop monsanto and stop pollution and stop the corporate control of television and the film
industry. I just can't stand to see another picture of Britney Spears! Please, give me some Rudolf Steiner before I bust!
STARTTHESTOP.ORG WILL START IN JUNE AS A WEBSITE WHERE WE CAN SHARE OUR IDEAS FOR SAVING ENERGY AND SAVING THE EARTH,
COORDINATE OUR STRIKES, AND BEGIN TO START THE STOP!
When will people learn that to save the planet we are doing it for ourselves. 3 mass extinctions since the formation of earth and Mother earth simply starts over really not caring one way or another.
read this article and the one about British surveillance databases...the only way to win is to abandon electricity...we can live without it...we did for thousands and thousands and thousands of years...
It's good to see this article in the foreign press.
As a native of West Virginia it is heartbreaking to know what's going on in the region.
I recommend the movie Matewan to get an idea of the repressive history in the area.
Anything but a moribund EPA would never have permitted these practices.The entire country and the world is rapidly losing some of most beautiful lands in the world.
Sickening.
A good place to push bush and cheney out of the plane over, to watch them free fall a thousand feet to a skull crushing death.
^ ...and I'd be the first in line to start the cheering...
With apologies to John Denver (who must be rolling over in his grave)
Almost Hell now, West Virginia
Blown-up mountains
Tailings in the rivers...
Add a few bars yourselves- maybe we can collectively come up with an appropriate anti-coal anthem.
Peace!
You must all go to Google Maps and take a look at the satellite images of eastern Kentucky- beyond belief!!!!
For peace, social and economic justice, and human rights.
www.carolmillercongress.com
This devastation should be considered a national disgrace....but it won't be. The local population (with very few exceptions) are perfect prey for the carpet baggers operating in the region as they aren't a very curious bunch, poor to begin with and in need of every job the region can produce - no matter the cost. Sad really....
This is one result of burning coal.
http://www.energybulletin.net/3647.html
We still have a lttle time left to prevent it. Not much.
If you want to stop them, stop driving your car. Reduce your dependence on our oil fueled energy industry.
It is basic economics... It is now economical to mine for coal because oil prices are at an all time high and increasing demand for coal. You can effect the price of coal simply by not buying, or significantly reducing your consumption of, gasoline, diesel, etc... When oil prices fall because enough people realize the vicious destructive cycle of the oil industry. Coal companies will have to stop mining coal because they can't sell enough to support their mining business. It's not always the evil corporation, it is also the evil naive ravenous consumers that support them.
Remember you can't sell a product if you don't have a buyer. Our consumption provides capital to the corporations. Change your habits and you can change corporate behavior. Remember the superior betamax video tape format? It failed because "consumers" preferred the inferior VHS. Consumption drives corporate behavior.
The bottom line is that it is our fault those mountain tops are being destroyed.
What a waste. And what a waste of govt (taxpayers) money we've seen, when it could've and should've been spent developing real alternative (clean) energy, more economical cars, effective mass transit, etc, so we don't need to keep wrecking more land to find more coal & oil.
The people of West Virginia are allowing this to happen. They work for coal companies and support coal companies. They voted for Bush twice, and will probably vote for McCain, as Barack Obama is too *liberal.* If you ask me, the people of West Virginia are only getting what they deserve.
If you want to see the arctic ice pack melting before your eyes today, in May even, try
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/CT/animate.arctic.0.html
As of May 20 you can already see patches of open water to the north of Alaska and to the north of central Canada. All of the coastline above european Russia is breaking up today, as is the Bering Strait. Summer is a month away. Last year's methane burps may be setting off a somewhat accelerating melt.
King Coal has more carbon than any other fossil fuel.
What have they done to the Earth?
What have they done to our fair sister?
Ravaged and plundered and kicked her and bit her.
Stuck her with knives in the side of the dawn and
tied her with fences and
dragged her down.
I hear a very gentle sound
With your ear down to the ground.
(J. Morrison)
Thanks for the heads-up re startthestop.org
We need action now
Appalachia is the neocons' model of what they want most of the US to look like in the future; 98% of the population so impoverished that they will do anything the 2% tells them to do.
FreeQuark- More than people are being effected by this, if it were only that simple.
TERREMAR
when the music's over, turn out the light..............
"mountaintop removal" sounds like the kind of thing no one in their right mind would ever agree to. say it out loud. it's like some horrible nightmare. it's like a few years ago someone might have said "If they keep on like this the next thing you know they'll be taking the tops off mountains!" unthinkable.
ok here's my plan: just stop this with the mountains. Don't ever do it again. then let's see how much electricity we have left, and divide it up fairly among us. that's the best i can do
Species come and species go,
Homo Sapiens are no exception!
Possibly, in a million years or so, new species will appear
with a greater intellegence. Maybe.............
We just spent a weekend in Big Stone Gap Virginia and saw similar views on the trip home. When asked about the economy in the area, people said there are no jobs. Planted gardens are eaten by the animals and they suspect it will not be long before they are eating the animals to survive.
Welcome to the wonders of America
Not enough armed rebellion these days...
Driving the fossil/nuke industry expansion are projections of increased energy demand over the coming decades but these projections are bogus. We know from opinion polls that such projections are taken as gospel by a gullible American public and we know that the establishment is highly prone to exploit such gullibility, and highly motivated by its relentless pursuit of economic growth at all cost, to protect the image of capitalism, and the status and privilege of economic hierarchy.
The hierarchical status quo is advanced by self-fulfilling projections of demand growth, which increase supply which in turn increase demand. We see it too in carnivore cuisine and personal transport. Build more freeway lanes, increase traffic volume. Lower meat prices, meat at every meal. Lower electricity prices, bingo, electric bonfires. The waste manifests not only in consumption but also in production. Production methods are advanced (e.g. more machinery) not to increase value, but to consolidate control.
Does anyone see the ethical problem in profit/control-driven over-consumption? Ignoring greenhouse gases, poisioning and landscape destruction, capitalist meddling and manipulating the markets, addicting the public to energy gluttony, squelching public responsibility and fueling mass dependence warrant an overthrow of the capitalist establishment.
Thank you for that link ~PAUL K~, (6.17 pm.)
There is no other issue of such importance___ NONE.___ The methane in the Arcitc when released wili trigger global warming such as none have ever imagined and once that begins there is no turning back, no do-overs.
Time is rapidly running out and it will require a world wide, massive effort to replace all coal burning with clean energy to prevent it. ___ That can be done.
This link explains how it happened twice previously in Earth's history and when it did almost all life, down to the microbal level was snuffed out within a few short hours.
That is not ~Kem Patrick's~ opinion, the author of the article in the three minute read is well qualified to state it like it is and will be if we don't fight it. Do you have children and love them? ___ Check it out.
http://energybulletin.net/3647.html
Was in Dubai recently - consumerism gone out of control. Yet the papers report that the Bedouin's camels are dying because they eat the plastic shopping bags from the malls, feel full, and die of starvation. Just another nail in the coffin of Earth as we know it...
Wow, the Google Earth views of E. Ky and SW Va are indeed sobering. And to add to the bizarre effect, in some places the raped landscape images are draped over obsolete topographic contours... ghosts...
Time to stop using energy that you don't truly need. That is probably quite a lot if you live in the US.
You think those mountaineers whose property has been taken will see the connection from Big Coal to Big Dick Cheney to Little Georgie Bush and the Republican Party? Or will they vote for McCain because the Democrats will "take away their guns" and encourage abortions and let the Unions in? The criminal corporate system wouldn't work if Americans weren't stupid enough to vote for their own demise.
That google map of eastern kentucky is amazing and disturbing. It is incredible the amount of devastation there.
I vaguely remember something called the environmental movement, which started about 40 odd years ago. We were going to reverse the disastrous direction that "progress" and "civilization" had set for the planet.
This is a story that is all too common these days,and makes me feel depressed and hopeless. Things haven't just gotten worse, they have gotten exponentially worse.
What we need is a radical change in perception and practice, but what we get is simply an escalation of the damage, a last ditch effort to extract every last bit of whatever is needed to keep the whole foul machine running. I am utterly sickened.
I feel hopeless. Maybe I should just read Camus or Kierkegaard and wall ow in my sorrow...my philosophical hero Dewey and his talk of vistas of democracy, a common faith, etc. just don't seem to motivate me like before...time to throw the progressive project to the wayside and cultivate my despair? Please say it aint so...but these sure are dark times
Battle for a Mountains Soul
Blair Mountain in Logan County, West Virginia, might not have gotten as much international media attention as Mount Everest is getting for standing in the way of Buddhist Monks intent on protesting Chinese human rights violations leading up to the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing. But the new battle of Blair Mountain should. As a strategic tactic to influence world opinion, the supporters of the Tibetan independence movement are keenly aware that exposing tyranny and brutality through the news is exactly how pressure from humanitarians around the world brought down the brutal Apartheid government of South Africa. Mt. Everest it seems is caught in between a reasonable way of life and the brutality willing to deny it. In West Virginia, the battle over Blair Mountain is no less a play on public opinion any more than it is also a symbol of the ongoing struggle to maintain certain qualities of life, if not the very soul of a nation.
Much like Tibet, West Virginia is rural and rugged in her natural beauty. The politics of oppression and disinformation have also historically pulled on the heartstrings of the residents of those communities, where the front lines in the current turmoil, it seems, are once again being drawn. Globalization means one people can no longer turn their back on the condition of another similar people. An injustice to one is an injustice to all.
Will Tibetan Monks suffer the same fate on Mt. Everest as the United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) did, gunned down in cold blood on Blair Mountain, during the "Coal Wars" in 1921? There was no cry about blood for oil back then. Instead the cry was for safe working conditions, the dignity of a reliable income for an 8 hour work day and for humane treatment for workers scampering under the whips of King Coal and goons employed the Robber Barons of industry.
We here in Appalachia sympathize with the people of Tibet, because the Robber Barons have long expanded their empires from the West Virginia hills, exporting the modern business practices and policies of exploitation, corruption and greed to the China mainland. West Virginia is no stranger to government collusion with irresponsible industries and the battles that will be fought for freedom and equal rights. We the people of West Virginia know too well the brutality that does occur to repress those with less power and to exploit those who have less money. Tibet and West Virginia are certainly kindred spirits of sorts.
Some Buddhists do firmly believe that mountains actually have a soul. In West Virginia the soul of a mountain is ripped apart by dynamite and bulldozers, excavators and coal trucks. No longer satisfied with John Henry digging with an axe into the heart of a mountain to extract her minerals, the Coal Industry has developed the practice called mountain top removal mining. Once a way of life, coal mining helped forge a nation forward into the industrial and technological ages. Folklore in West Virginia is enriched with the tales of hard working miners, their labor struggles, union organizing battles and workers fighting for their very lives as well as fighting for philosophical freedoms in the coal fields of the Mountain State. But what is happening now in Appalachia is not your father's coal mine. It is every bit as bitter a struggle as the fight to free Tibet.
Blair Mountain is more than just a symbol of the heart of coal country. Geographically, Logan County, West Virginia, is as close to the center of the Appalachian region as one is likely to get. Blair Mountain, however, also represents the very heart of coal country, because the organized labor movement in America matured here during the coal wars that peaked in West Virginia in the 1920's.
Often called King Coal, for its influence and corruption of government, the battle for Blair Mountain once pitted the young UMWA against one of the most tyrannical, brutal and most irresponsible industries then known to man. While the mining of coal in China today is as dangerous as it was under the rule of King Coal in West Virginia over 100 years ago, the new war being waged in the Appalachian coal fields is no less disturbing and equally news worthy.
King Coal has applied for a permit to mine Blair Mountain. Fair enough, that is how it is done. Except that this time King Coal wants Blair Mountain blown apart for several reasons and coal extraction is certainly one of them. Mountain top removal is not, however, a coal mine in the traditional sense of that profession. Mountain top mining is a practice of using excavation bulldozers and explosives to loosen and remove the top of a mountain to expose the coal seams below. What used to be the mountain is simply pushed into the streams nearby, which are rendered virtually lifeless in the process. With the landscape forever altered, the water table frequently damaged or destroyed and the people struggling to survive the aftermath of reckless devastation, area residents are once again fighting back. Exactly how do concerned citizens and Buddhist Monks dissent?
Environmental groups have taken King Coal to the courts and won, regardless of how temporary, the legal protection under the Clean Water Act to slow down the practice of valley fills associated with mountain top removal mining. A possible close second fomenting of a desire to level this piece of land, once and for all, is that unlike any other hill in these United States, Blair Mountain is a symbol of the struggle against corruption and tyranny where the people won. Organized labor was victorious in the world of public opinion because of the battle of Blair Mountain. Those successful battles changed business practices worldwide over the following, now past, century.
Talking about public opinion, Blair Mountain is a constant reminder that while coal is an important environmental resource, we do not have kings in a free society. Industry like China is not the least bit happy to accept any hint of responsibility. Like China, West Virginia enjoys industry regulators who look the other way while violations of water and air pollution poison whole communities.
Just like the Chinese government does not want people to remember Tiananmen Square, King Coal wants to wipe out all of the history related to Blair Mountain, including leveling the very mountain itself. A request has been made to put Blair Mountain on the national historic register, but there is no similar request for the Chinese students who spoke out in 1989. King Coal was also never known to be humble, let alone concerned with complying with actual laws or permits.
Coal Companies now decry environmentalists as attempting to destroy their way of life, by preventing people from earning a living. Like the baseless attacks by the government of China against the Dali Lama, over concerns of Tibetan independence, coal companies are inciting violence toward environmentalists for suggesting that there are better alternatives to coal. Why? Because, there is no such thing as clean coal and they know it. Mountain top mining destroys one of the most diverse ecosystems in the world and poisons the community while frequently destroying the water quality in the area. Processing coal creates poisonous slurry stored in huge waste dumps. Then burning coal creates another known toxic stew of air pollution. It is also a fact that some governments violate human rights.
While we may accept as a fact coal will be mined for some time to come. Our human lust for energy is an international addiction that requires intervention, but that time is not now. Mining coal responsibly, then, will sustain and likely create many more jobs than are lost by adopting reasonable environmental controls. Industry reports indeed show that mountain top removal compared to underground mines, extract the same amount of coal but employ only a fraction of the number of "miners". Mountain top mines therefore seem to actually cost coal miners their jobs while they cause greater environmental interference, specifically damage to the clean water supply.
Protecting our local, national and our world water supplies from the pollution caused by reckless mining practices is not an eco-terrorist philosophy, it is a logical approach to our national security interest. Because fresh water, even more than coal or even oil, water is truly a liquid gold. Without clean water we cannot survive. Any safeguard for the environment implemented by industry also serves to protect the culture of those working in that industry, preserving their jobs and promotes a quality of life in the community for everyone to enjoy well into the future.
We pray for the Tibetan Monks and we pray for Blair Mountain. Mountains may occasionally stand in the way of progress, but sometimes it is better that we not lose our soul.
Hatred only strengthens those who purposefully seek destruction for profit. The path of hatred is the path of total destruction. The denuded mountains are a visual manifestation of the dark times in which we walk. Even now we must continue to walk in beauty.
Like a delicate spiders web, the web of life is a fragile cloth that is laid gently upon the earth by the loving hand of the creator. He experiences his creation through us.
So who are these who seek to destroy it? Are they so blind, so without wonder, that they'd ride a 40 ton bulldozer through a primeval forest, that has stood for a thousand years, and put it to the torch? 500 year old oaks, poplars, ash, hemlocks, hickory and pine. The organic history of our continent, the trees that sheltered our ancestors from the rains and snow, and nurtured a hundred thousand nesting birds.
What sort of human being does this? What do they hold sacred? Anything? How cut off they must be from their own soul.
I cry for our earth. I cry for her innocence and her unconditional love, that she pours forth her bounty, on land and sea, as if to say, here - I give you this, just, please, love me in return, preserve me, that your children would hear my voice in the birds, and behold my power in the bear, and see my tears descending as rain.
I cry for everything that we, through our own hand, deem not important enough to save.
Mother Nature takes care of forests with forest fires. Man has the right to utilize natures resources. Of course, we need protect the environment as well. Unfortunately, Fascism tends to favour it's corporate citizens over the people and environment.
Crying pollutes with salt, which also needs to be mined to replace what you are wasting. Better cry for the 1 million dead in Iraq, and those we murder by instigating civil wars to effect regime change in countries that have resources and geo-strategic locations. The fact that Obama and Hilary are your 2 options for change should also make you cry. It will also accomplish nothing. A nation that cares not for people, and treats them as a virus, is certainly not going to cry over losing a mountain for profit. I mean, look at Katrina. Nuff said.