(C) Georgia Recorder
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Environmental ‘ignorance’ isn’t bliss [1]

['More From Author', 'December', 'Dink Nesmith']

Date: 2022-12-11

True or false: “Ignorance is bliss”?

If that was true, I was blissfully ignorant—nestled in my Strand Theater seat—watching

cowboy-and-Indian movies during my boyhood Saturdays. And how many times, in backyard

play, did you choose to be a cowboy rather than an Indian?

Hollywood’s filmmakers influenced us to make that decision. Years later, I realized that I

had been duped into believing cowboys were the heroes and the Indians the enemies. Who

among us wouldn’t go on the warpath if our homeland was being invaded and our way of life

destroyed?

In this modern era of communications, magnified by social media, misinformation is

spewed 24/7. As I am bombarded by political and corporate propaganda, I remember an often-

repeated phrase from those 1950s matinees. After a Native American chief realized that he had

been duped, he would bemoan, “White man speak with forked tongue.”

In no way do I want to disrespect Native Americans. They were here before us, and their

heritage should be honored. But if the forked-tongue line was created in Hollywood, Native

Americans should claim it. Indeed, too many of our ancestral leaders fed tribes of Native

Americans saddlebags full of lies.

Fast-forward to today.

Pick a topic.

I choose the environment.

Our natural resources are gifts from God. He expects us to be responsible stewards.

That requires unpolluted soil to grow what we eat. And what parent wants their child to drink

tainted water? Don’t families of Republicans, Democrats, Libertarians and others deserve to

breathe healthy air, too?

If so, why make the environment a political issue? Too often the politicians who balk at

stringent laws that protect our natural resources bark, “Government overreach!” Are these

examples overreach?

Speed limits on roads

Warning labels on tobacco products

Seat belts and air bags

Age limits on alcohol purchase/consumption

Safety standards for food and medicines

The goal is to protect us and save lives. Common sense suggests that regulating the safe

stewardship of our natural resources is a necessary government function, as well. But that’s not

always the case when arrogant entitlement is fueled by ungodly amounts of money available to

lobby for more corporate profits. I am a staunch believer in profitability. Healthy profits create

and support jobs, but sheer greed is shameful.

State and federal lawmakers, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the

Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) and the Georgia Public Service Commission

(PSC) are under constant pressure. High-powered influencers want to soften, bend or ignore

rules that would negatively impact bottom lines.

After decades of burning coal to create electricity, consider how Georgia Power intends

to manage its toxic waste. For too long, we were blissfully ignorant of the environmental dangers of coal ash.

Georgia Power earns high praise for abandoning coal in favor of safer alternatives. But that’s just one step in the right direction.

Only 21 of Georgia Power’s 29 leaking-into-groundwater coal-ash ponds are being

drained and put in lined-dry storage. The “A-Citizen-Wherever-We-Serve” corporate giant plans

to cap and leave in place eight of its leaking impoundments. The strategy is to wait and see what

happens. Here’s the “bottom line” on that: One pile of toxic coal ash in drinking water is

unacceptable.

The EPA has just instructed Ohio to clean up 100 percent of its leaky coal-ash messes.

Georgia Power is balking, thinking that directive doesn’t affect its risky ponds. I have an opinion

about that selfish attitude.

Beware of the propaganda spin-masters—compromised lawmakers, greedy

industrialists or their hired-gun lobbyists—if they tell you that time will heal a toxic coal-ash

sore. Take it from Hollywood’s Native American chiefs. Those people speak with “forked

tongue.”

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[1] Url: https://georgiarecorder.com/2022/12/11/environmental-ignorance-isnt-bliss/

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