Towards A Better Environmental Legacy

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

The Corporatocratic State of Texas

We all remember the days of the company town, where the single main company employer of a town controlled all aspects of the town and its residents, from their paycheck to their housing to their shopping and everything else. Now it seems that the 26 million residents of the nation's second most populous state are living in a company state. Texas governor Greg Abbott has just signed frighteningly anti-democratic legislation into law. Under the guise of preserving private property rights and simplifying and improving the regulatory process the governor and other legislators of Texas who passed the bill banning cities from banning fracking have swept aside the concerns for health and safety of thousands or perhaps millions of residents worried enough about the guile of this highly polluting industry to pass and support local ordinances regulating its operation in their communities. The new law states that any new local ordinances must pass a test of being "commercially reasonable," aka don't impede gas extraction or hurt profits. This new "commercially reasonable" standard replaces the previous long upheld standard of community reasonableness, in which health, safety, and welfare of citizens was the main consideration. If that doesn't show the apathy and arrogance of the oil industry, and who's really guarding the hen house, I don't know what does.

Apparently other big oil producing states are considering similar legislation. Watch what you say against the oil industry. I'm sure that legislation against disparaging it will be coming soon.


http://www.dentonrc.com/opinion/columns-headlines/20150519-adam-briggle-guest-column.ece

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/05/19/3660369/texas-prohibits-local-fracking-bans/

http://keranews.org/post/fracking-resume-denton-after-state-prohibits-city-fracturing-bans

In a disheartening but not unexpected update governor Mary Fallin of Oklahoma has just signed a similar bill into law in that state. It permits "reasonable" restrictions for noise and traffic issues but apparently health and safety concerns for toxic air and water pollution are unreasonable.

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/06/01/3664586/oklahoma-ban-on-fracking-bans/

Friday, May 01, 2015

The Real Opiate of the Masses

I recall that most every fall weekend from my childhood was characterized by an overwrought anticipation of Sunday's Oakland Raider's game. Some of my earliest memories are comprised of watching a Raider's game from under a table where my father busied his hands constructing a model ship. Later I remember the anxious hours assessing the likelihood of a win or a loss, the occasional begrudged Sunday when game time would coincide with mass time and I would spend the uninformed hour praying or bargaining with God for a good outcome for my team. My zealousness was cemented during the year my father bought us season tickets to the Raiders games and they either won or came close to winning the Superbowl. I recall that through my early high school years the outcome of a Raiders game could have a strong impact on the outlook of a week in the fall.

Then in 1982 the Raiders moved away. I was a bit lost for awhile, not knowing what to do with those fall Sundays. It wasn't the same team once they moved, and, although I could switch my allegiance across the bay to the '49ers, that wasn't quite the same either. For me the spell was broken. All that energy and focus were mine again to use for other pursuits. My fall weekends were free again and I survived, I never looked back at football, except for the Superbowl once a year for fun. Now I find it difficult to recall any of the intense emotion I had for the sport so long ago.

I don't in any way want to deny the true value of sports of all kinds. There is great value in the lessons of teamwork and competition, doing your best to work towards a goal, the importance of physical fitness, and in appreciating the joy of winning and the sting of losing. What I do worry about is the overinflated valuation of sports. Not long ago professional players maybe earned enough to get by, and now many earn millions. Colleges spend untold millions on stadiums and travel and dinners and baubles to woo players to their teams, where the coaches are payed millions, often at schools where certain programs struggle to provide the basics for their students. This is all just a reflection of our media hyped valuation of sports. I see it first-hand living in a college town in the south where you're looked at like a one eyed monster if you dare ask "is there a game this weekend?" Every weekend I witness the traffic jams, the all day pregame parties and game, the endless conversation reflecting on the last game or speculating on the next, and think of it multiplied across the country in all the college and professional and even high school games, and I have to wonder, what if we could free up some of the brainpower, the time, the energy, and the finances and put it towards something that really matters, like solving climate change or other environmental crises.

I'm sure that the popularity and almost universal addictiveness of sports viewership comes from something deeply embedded in our tribal history. Perhaps some would argue that community representative sports diverts aggression that might otherwise be used for warfare or other aggressive acts, although post game rioting in soccer and rugby matches around the world makes me question this. One thing I know is that if we are to tackle real and imminent environmental crises we must be able to move beyond a lot of baggage from our ancestry, tribal and otherwise, and free up our time, energy, and brain power to work on the critical issues.


http://www.deltacostproject.org/sites/default/files/products/DeltaCostAIR_AthleticAcademic_Spending_IssueBrief.pdf

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/09/15/athletics-cost-colleges-students-millions/2814455/

http://sports.usatoday.com/ncaa/salaries/

http://www.nbcbayarea.com/investigations/Berkeley-College-Sports-Spending-190935311.html

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/15/college-sports-budgets_n_4099324.html

http://www.knightcommission.org/collegesports101/chapter-2

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-05-03/rutgers-football-fails-profit-test-as-students-pay-1-000.html

http://www.statista.com/statistics/205941/nfl-football-tv-viewing-time-of-us-adults/

http://www.nielsen.com/content/dam/corporate/us/en/newswire/uploads/2011/04/State-of-the-Media-2011-TV-Upfronts.pdf

http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/columnist/rieder/2015/03/25/ashley-judds-campaign-against-virulent-internet-trolls/70432404/
http://www.forbes.com/sites/bradadgate/2015/01/14/cables-biggest-night/

http://www.sportsbusinessdaily.com/Daily/Issues/2013/12/19/Media/CFB-Ratings.aspx

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/01/17/your-money/rising-costs-of-youth-sports.html?_r=0