Robert Redford: Mr. President Respect Our Choice

Americans Rejected ‘Drill, Baby, Drill.’ Bush Should Respect Our Choice.
By Robert Redford

Part of the change Americans just voted for in overwhelming numbers was to move away from the failed energy philosophy of “drill, baby, drill” to a more farsighted strategy, emphasized by Barack Obama, based on clean, renewable energy and efficiency. Yet on the very day that we raised our voices for change, the Bush administration dragged us in the opposite direction.

The Bureau of Land Management cynically chose November 4 to announce a last-minute plan to lease huge swaths of majestic wilderness in eastern Utah for oil and gas extraction one month before President-elect Obama takes office.

As its clock runs out, the Bush administration also is trying to open-up drilling all over the Rockies and Alaska, to green-light oil shale leasing, and to weaken the Endangered Species Act. Though sad, it’s no surprise, coming as it does from the same crowd that designed a misguided national energy policy in secret meetings with the oil, gas and coal industries.

The BLM didn’t just try to slip the audacious Utah lease maneuver past the American people on an historic election day, it actually hid the ball from its sister agency, the National Park Service, and then rejected the Service’s request for more time to review the scheme.

Among the 360,000 acres to be auctioned for industrial development is pristine land near Canyonlands National Park, adjacent to Arches National Park and Dinosaur National Monument. This Christmas gift to the dirty fuel industry includes parts of Desolation Canyon, named in 1869 by the explorer John Wesley Powell, which has been proposed for national park status. In fact, the BLM itself described Desolation Canyon nine years ago as “a place where a visitor can experience true solitude -- where the forces of nature continue to shape the colorful, rugged landscape.”

Words alone cannot do justice to the beauty of these places, but they do capture the absurdity of the Bush plan. Oil and gas drilling in Desolation Canyon? Industrial development along the meandering Green River? The thought makes one wince.

The Obama transition team already has signaled its opposition to the leases, and said that once in office the Obama administration will try to reverse them. Let’s hope that’s possible. Utah’s eastern expanse is one of America’s few remaining wilderness treasures. It’s our land, it’s our legacy, but will it still be here for our children and grandchildren? We made our wishes about that known loudly and clearly on election day.

We voted to take control of our own destiny by breaking our addiction to dirty fuels. We voted to re-power America with clean energy from wind, solar and geothermal power. We voted to use of our greatest resource, American ingenuity, to build economic, energy and climate security, and to preserve our natural heritage. Yes we did. And yes we can.

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Robert Redford, an actor, director and environmental activist, is a Trustee of the Natural Resources Defense Council and is the founder of Sundance, in Utah.
nollart
December 14, 2008 10:21AM
When People in power push for legislation that is obviously biased toward providing benefit for a select few and that benefit is solely monetary, I ask myself - "Do they have another pristine world somewhere that they are going to move to when this one no longer functions, one that the rest of us don't know about?" Obviously not, so how do you explain their actions? The fact seems to be that they are blinded by their ambitions to the consequences of those ambitions. The best explanation that I have found for the apparently idiotic action of these otherwise reasonably intelligent people can be found in a book by David Weiner called "Battling the Inner Dummy - The Craziness of Apparently Normal People". In brief, Mr. Weiner identifies several "drives" that operate below the level of consciousness, that do not respond to logic and have no sense of time or consequence. All of us operate, in varying degrees, under the influence of those drives. The need for power, to dominate, to propagate, for security, for sustenance, and to nurture are examples of those drives. In some people certain drives are very strong, dominate the personality and force the individual to perform unreasonable acts. The otherwise reasonably intelligent person seems to function as though blind to the consequences of their actions, which in fact, they are. The drives operate outside the consciousness of the person and do not respond to logic.. An unfortunate, but excellent example of such a “driven” man is the, hopefully, soon to be ex-governor of Illinois. The question arises, “what was he thinking? The answer – he wasn’t - he had been consumed by a primary drive to the point of extreme unreasonableness. There is no appeal to reasonableness. The only way to influence the decisions of such “driven” men is to threaten the expression of that or some other powerful drive working in them. With that knowledge in mind I have found it much easier to understand the political process and the decisions of the Bush administration. If we view those making such obviously bad decisions, as somewhat helpless victims of a powerful drive or delusion, it can instruct us how to influence them and keep them from destroying their own and our world. Congratulation, Mr. Redford, on such wise use of your influence. Daniel Noll
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