mykevermin
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[quote name='elprincipe']I don't feel ANWR drilling is going to ruin very much. It's taking place on a very small area of a gigantic reserve. While I understand the need and desire for conservation, I feel this is just common sense due to a need to also take human needs into account (what a novel idea!).[/QUOTE]
The idea of human needs is interesting. Given what occurs in the third world everyday (that $5 billion Bush promised to help fight AIDS in Africa in 2002/3? Not a dime has been given); given what we ignore everyday (why we haven't tried to oust Robert Mugabe in the name of "spreading democracy" is beyond me, not to mention Sudan, Syria, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, et al.); given the human needs denied in this country in the past five years in favor of corporate profits (perhaps you could explain to me how medicaire was improved by the Bush bill, other than providing a .7 billion dollar profit to pharmaceuticals - how have the people on medicaire been helped?); given the human needs ignored (and continuing to be ignored) both in Iraq and Cuba in our prisons; given the human needs ignored consistently by this administration (Bush's 2005 budget eliminated Pell (?) grants for low-income students to attend vocational school - and these are the very students who require educational assistance more than any other student), I fail to see how supplemental oil is a "human need."
Will we eventually need it? Regrettably, you may be on to something there; until we, as a nation, learn to curb our oil consumption on more general levels (demand higher MPG from companies, demand better/cheaper hybrids, *walk more*), satiating a "need" such as this is directly rewarding United States citizens for consuming resources without regard.
myke.
The idea of human needs is interesting. Given what occurs in the third world everyday (that $5 billion Bush promised to help fight AIDS in Africa in 2002/3? Not a dime has been given); given what we ignore everyday (why we haven't tried to oust Robert Mugabe in the name of "spreading democracy" is beyond me, not to mention Sudan, Syria, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, et al.); given the human needs denied in this country in the past five years in favor of corporate profits (perhaps you could explain to me how medicaire was improved by the Bush bill, other than providing a .7 billion dollar profit to pharmaceuticals - how have the people on medicaire been helped?); given the human needs ignored (and continuing to be ignored) both in Iraq and Cuba in our prisons; given the human needs ignored consistently by this administration (Bush's 2005 budget eliminated Pell (?) grants for low-income students to attend vocational school - and these are the very students who require educational assistance more than any other student), I fail to see how supplemental oil is a "human need."
Will we eventually need it? Regrettably, you may be on to something there; until we, as a nation, learn to curb our oil consumption on more general levels (demand higher MPG from companies, demand better/cheaper hybrids, *walk more*), satiating a "need" such as this is directly rewarding United States citizens for consuming resources without regard.
myke.