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Big Coal Tea Party Extremists Circle Wagons
Coalfields Left Behind in Ruins
Now it's Big Coal's turn to pick up the tab for the Tea Party.
Under the guise of "celebrating the American coal miner," an infamous K-Street Big Coal front lobby group has bankrolled the buses, hotels and meals to bring Appalachian coal mining supporters to Washington, DC today. According to their press releases, they will be greeted in the halls of Congress by sycophantic Big Coal-bankrolled politicians, from "million-dollar Big Coal-lobby-money- man" Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) to Sen. Jim Webb (D-VA) from the Appalachian states.
Today's rally continues the Big Coal Gone Wild episodes of the now debunked Faces of Coal.
In truth, the extremists trolling through the halls of Congress are not concerned about the "American miners." You won't hear anyone defending coal miners in 25 other states today. With a classic divide and conquer strategy, Big Coal lobbyists are fomenting fear and exaggerating potential jobs loss from halting human rights-violating mountaintop removal operations, as outside corporate coal interests in Appalachia circle their wagons in front of our nation's Capitol.
More importantly, Big Coal lobbyists are desperate to keep the media and the general American public from learning that heavily mechanized strip-mining operations, which account for most of our coal today, have wiped out more than 60 percent of the Appalachian coal jobs in the last 25 years--at least 10-15 times more job loss than any potential environmental regulations. By placing a stranglehold on any economic diversity in the coalfields, strip-mining operations have also led to the highest unemployment and poverty rates; a West Virginia University study last year pointed out that "coal mining costs Appalachians five times more in early deaths as the industry provides to the region in jobs."
In an affront to the massive strip-mining coal operations in Wyoming, which dwarf the Appalachia region now, and the flight of Appalachian coal barons to the Illinois basin, the Tea Party-inspired rally today is about the politics of geography, not the politics of jobs. As West Virginia lobbyist Chris Hamilton foretold in 2007: "The real issue is - where will it come from? West, the Illinois basis, or from some foreign destination..."
As I wrote this summer:
The end of mountaintop removal would affect less than 10 percent of national coal production, and only that in West Virginia, Tennessee, southwestern Virginia, and Kentucky. Most coal comes from stripmining (of which mountaintop removal is an extreme subset). Stripmining takes place in 24 states and on several Native American reservations. The largest strip mine in the eastern states will open later this year in Indiana, with another planned for the pristine Otter Creek Valley in eastern Montana. A day after the EPA announced its mountaintop guidelines, the Bureau of Land Management OK'd the expansion of one of the largest strip mines in the nation, Cloud Peak Energy's Antelope Mine, in Wyoming's Powder River Basin. The company expects the mine to yield a total of 430 million tons of coal--nearly three times West Virginia's annual production.
It gets worse for Hamilton and his Appalachian coal industry--Peabody Energy recently announced it will open a strip-mine in Mongolia that will dwarf even Wyoming.
Why aren't Appalachian coal miners and their Big Coal front groups protesting Peabody Coal for outsourcing their jobs?
Like Tea Partiers, the Big Coal Party today has only one thing on their minds: "To call on lawmakers and administration officials to discontinue efforts to regulate the coal industry," says West Virginia Coal Association Senior Vice President and Mountaintop Mining Coalition Co-Chair Chris Hamilton.
Discontinue regulation?
On the heels of the violation-ridden Upper Big Branch mine disaster
in West Virginia, which needlessly took the lives of 29 coal miners, and
a black lung disease crisis that needlessly takes the lives of 1,000
coal miners a year, and a health care crisis of poisoned waterways from
coal slurry and coal waste, Hamilton wants to end all regulations--for
Appalachia.
As Roger Horton, who founded his own group called Citizens for Coal wildly told
an NPR-affiliate last year about EPA regulations last year: "In our
minds, this is nothing short of state-sponsored terrorism. And we're
going to let those folks in Washington hear from us soon."
For Big Coal extremists, "state-sponsored terrorism" is now when the EPA attempts to regulate the environmental (and health care crisis) from the daily detonation of millions of pounds of ammonium nitrate fuel oil explosives in historic Appalachian communities and mountain ranges, which have led to massive forced removals of historic communities, deadly fly rock, poisoned waterways and wiped out 500 Appalachian mountains and over one million acres of hardwood forests?
After accepting over $1,100,000 in campaign contributions from dirty energy companies, will Sen. Mitch McConnell discuss the black lung disease crisis today?
And why is Sen. Jim Webb appearing with such an extremist crowd? He wrote in his bestselling book, Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America:
The ever hungry industrialists had discovered that West Virginia, eastern Kentucky and southwest Virginia sat atop one huge vein of coal. And so the rape began. The people from the outside showed up with complicated contracts that the small-scale cattle raisers and tobacco farmers could not fully understand, asking for "rights" to mineral deposits they could not see, and soon they were treated to a sundering of their own earth as the mining companies ripped apart their way of life, so that after a time the only option was to go down into the hole and bring the Man his coal, or starve. The Man got his coal, and the profits it brought when he shipped it out. They got their wages, black lung, and the desecration of their land.
And will US Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV), fighting in a tough re-election, remind the coal miners, as he did last year, that Appalachia only has 20 years left of feasible coal reserves, and or will he campaign for a GI Bill for coal miners, calling for more clean energy investment in manufacturing, training, education, reforestations and long-term and diversified employment for the impoverish coalfield communities?
Back home in the devastated coalfields, we will continue to stand up for coal miners, like my grandfather, and for all coalfield residents--not Big Coal lobbyists.
- Posted in


10 Comments so far
Show All"And why is Sen. Webb appearing with such an extremist crowd?"
Because he is a democrat and the most important thing to the democrats is to be on the "winning" side with an index finger in the air on one hand and the other hand clutching a deposit slip. They will speak out in pretended support for what they know is an underdog position because of vanity and, generally, if they know it has no chance of success.
Their words (like their counterpart's) are just part of the profit game.
Look at what the democrats did to Copenhagen.
Watch what they will do to Cancun.
Same difference.
" Why is Senator Web appearing with such an extremist crowd "? Because like I have said before, when push comes to shove, the dems are nothing but a fake opposition party who fool a lot of people. You might say, they are for the most part, Republican wolves in Democratic sheeps clothing!
Of course they want to end all workplace safety and health and environemtnal regulaiton, becasue it isn't in the US constitution.
Where in the US constitution is the EPA, OSHA or MSHA or the Marxist-sounding "Department of Labor" ever mentioned?
One actually hears this argument.
So I guess all the Bridge Clubs better disband too, becasue Roberts Rules of Order NEVER mentions anything about Bridge, or any other card game for that matter.
If it's any consolation, Webb will lose in 2012. As it was, he was lucky to win in 2006 only because of Senator Allen's "mecacca" comment that made the election a close one. Webb pretended to be sort of progressive populist but never made big on the issues. Once in, the only thing he or Warner for that matter were liberal about was war on drugs and prison cases. Both of them stood with Creigh Deeds and Obama on mountaintop removal. Believe it or not, a lot of voters in the western part of the state who were against mountaintop removal were angry at Deeds for supporting Big Coal and either stayed home or voting Republican out of simple disgust. That in itself would have gone a long ways to increasing the winning margin between the Democrat and Republican. If the Democrats really believe that they will be as lucky as Robert Byrd on coal and power, they're about to face a rude awakening come November.
Forget all the Jim Webb crap! Help save the last mountains in WV and other states! Get your butts to Appalachia Rising, a grassroots event happening in DC, 9/24-9/27, with 9/27 prommising to be a HUGE day of action against big coal! Go to www.appalachiarising.org and get active!
"... heavily mechanized strip-mining operations, which account for most of our coal today, have wiped out more than 60 percent of the Appalachian coal jobs in the last 25 years--at least 10-15 times more job loss than any potential environmental regulations."
Yet more proof how mechanization has killed more jobs than offshoring. But, do we really want to save coal mining jobs given the damage coal does? Where will Big Coal go when there's no more coal to make it big?
This is a bit off the topic of coal, but related to the larger energy picture: Why are workers sometimes partners with the planet's worst enemies? I was reading an article elsewhere, (SCMP.com), about the US bringing a complaint to the WTO about China's duties on US steel and came across this remarkable statement, "the United Steelworkers union asked US authorities to investigate mainland subsidies to the green energy sector."
Government subsidies to green energy is apparently a bad thing to the steelworkers, and yet I think many Americans, and most of those posting on CD would be all in favor of having such subsidies. Shouldn't the United Steelworkers, along with all other unions, be pressuring our government to subsidize, or increase subsidies, to renewable energy, not fighting them where such do exist?
Selfishness was always a trait in the US to keep the unions divided and misinformed in the US. Often times, they and environmental interests were at loggerheads with each other up until the recent years. Also note that ever since the oil/coal/gas goons blocked off renewable and environmentally friendly ideas since the 1930s, the United Steelworkers and similar unions have behaved this way.
It seems the working classes have been lied to... stop the presses! I am shocked, shocked!
Oh, also, they have been told by their Masters that they will not be allowed to Eat unless they tow the company line and do what they are told; including going to DC and rooting for the End of Nature where they live! Pathetic Wage Slaves as they are.
And of course, by these and other actions, the companies are 'informing' the politicians that politicians, too, can be got rid of! And a more pliable pol can be installed. So get with the program, or be attacked and destroyed.
This stuff about the 'risk' of losing mountaintop-removal coal minin' "jobs" sounds a lot like the same capitalist-pig right-wing Republican TeaBagger crap about 'free'-market, private-industry "jobs" that the Texas corporation owning the last stands of privately-owned California redwood trees uses in ITS bullshit... that is, to stop razing the living beautiful redwood trees by clearcutting would cost the "jobs" of the tree-cutters!
Oh my, Jeepers, what a shame, to stop this Crime against Nature could actually cost the "jobs" of killers and assassins... even as the corporation is in fact actually strip-mining the trees as fast as it can to pay off the massive debt to the banksters it took on just to buy the said tree lands (with a fat chunk of the borrowed money already gone to the corporate officers in Texass.)
What Circle-Jerk logic!
And this same corporation then sends by ship the dead carcasses of trees that had been living for 2,000 years, from northern California to sawmills in Mexico to make piknik benches and suburbian backyard fencing then sold by WalMart to the suckers back in this country.
So much for the 'concerns' of a corporation for the "jobs" of workers in this US of A! All Bullshit.
Destroy the Living World. All for a few lousy dollars... but I guess you can't argue about value with the professional-bookie accountants and bean-counters. They rule! (Just so long as they send all the profits up to the Capo-de-Tutti Chairmen-Masters and all the Cronies.)
FV HORN: Thank you for the powerful post. I wish Dr. Seuss's book, "The Lorax" was taught in every school because it reveals the dominant (and insidious) mindset that's absolutely bent on total resource decimation in the name of "work" or "business."
Yesterday's CD postings:
One about yet more oil drilling in the U.S.
One with the photo of that starving skeleton of a child (juxtaposed with Wall Street's mega bucks drawn out of thin air quite literally.)
One about Obama allotting $500 billion for NEW nuclear weapons just to get that pesky SALT treaty tied up...
The continued investments in the very things meant to harm when so much needs mending casts a sickness over our world. For persons like you and me, those cathedral forests are full of SACRED BEINGS... to take just one, is an act of ecocide on a grand scale.
I'm still reeling from the knowledge that it was largely the decimation of the forests of Pakistan that left no trees to hold the rainfall... and millions saw their homes and livelihoods wash away.
But still everywhere, the KILLING machine goes on.
I had a fight with my boyfriend about some local logging because he identifies with the blue collar male perspective, this notion that "that's what they know how to do. How else will they (the men) put food on their tables!" He doesn't SEE the big picture and does not want to. He feels like life is challenging enough without taking into account what the net loss of so much global green means to the sustainability of ecosystems.
These nefarious matters are so often cast as work, and the so-called work is so often about killing. In fact, I thought instead of the road sign often seen that says, "Men Working," it could just as easily read, "Men Killing."
Until the standard "use models" refrain from regarding living beings as THINGS for sale, items for the taking, this insane suicide mission disguised as a business model will continue in its rape of the global commons.
I am the Lorax, and I speak for the trees. Thank you for doing so, too, FV Horn.