July 22, 2009

Water & air, the 2 essential fluids on which all life depends, have become global garbage cans.

Jacques Cousteau said our water and air have become global garbage cans.

That's scary. The quote came from the book "What we Leave Behind" by Derrick Jensen and Aric McBay, about how the USA generates the most trash of any country.

I got the book because Jensen wrote an article about how individual action won't alleviate climate change. We need to change our systems because industrialized civilization is killing the planet.

Our systems are flawed. And developing countries aspire to our systems. And why shouldn't they? We relish convenience, speed and status. We live a lavish lifestyle with cheap and abundant: running water, electricity, central heat, our own personal polluting vehicle, and food transported an average of 1500 miles. What's not to love?

It's a flawed system that allows Pan Am Railroad to build over the water supply for 15,000 people. Our legal system supports the company's right of cheap and convenient commerce to take precedence over local control to protect our water resource.

American behavior is flawed because most of us don't take advantage of our system that allows free speech. We are passive and accept that big business with big money and power will triumph.
The 12-acre lot has not yet been paved. We're hopeful a reasonable solution can be worked out -- like a land swap. The Coalition for Aquifer Protection is not against commerce. We just don't want leaky locomotives over our aquifer. We are FOR clean water for the next seven generations. We cannot risk 60 percent of Ayer's water supply to a known polluter.

We -- a small group of people who are committed to protect our livelihood -- refuse to stand by silently while our water supply becomes a garbage can for a railroad that can't be bothered to clean up after itself or create plans to protect the environment.

Here's my daily quote from the Memorandum on Sentencing when Pan Am Railroad was assigned a parole officer to make sure it changes its filthy ways of doing business in March 2009.
"As the EPA regional administrator state at the time (1998), "Maine Central Railroad (Pan Am affiliate) made two big mistakes here. First, it had no plan to prevent or deal with oil spills; second it discharged hundreds of gallons of oil into the Kennebec (River). It's unfortunate a spill had to occur for the company to follow the law."

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