| Caught In An Oil Slick: 5 Years of War |
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| Written by Samantha Hulkower | |
| Friday, 21 March 2008 | |
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As most of you (hopefully) know, yesterday marked the 5-year anniversary of the war in Iraq. Hundreds of people fanned out across Washington, D.C., among other cities nationwide, to let us know how they feel. We can't shake the feeling that the protests lacked any real bite, and we aren't the only ones questioning the overall impact. We're still not sure about the point of people standing frozen for 10 minutes outside of Washington's Union Station. Sure, it was rush hour, and just a few blocks from the Senate office buildings, but we don't think most Senators hop on the subway to get home, let alone pay attention to conceptual performance art. Most of the craziness and arrests went down at the IRS building, where protesters expressed their displeasure over the allocation of their tax dollars. Even the BBC questioned the Administration's intentions for engaging Saddam Hussein and Iraq in our war against Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda. Heck, Philip Carroll, the former CEO of Shell Oil's US division was chosen by the Bush Administration to develop "contingency plans" regarding oil if the US was to engage in war with Iraq in the fall of 2002, and then was installed as the head of the committee dealing with oil reconstruction after we had shocked and awed. So where were Al Gore, Bill McKibben, Leonardo DiCaprio and all the other climate change advocates yesterday? If oil consumption is contributing to global warming, and we invaded |
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Yeah, OK, we can be the change that we want to see in the world. But unless powerful people in powerful positions want to be that change as well, nothing's going to change.
So now, finally, there's a place where you can go for news and analysis of politics from an environmental perspective.