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The Wrong Message
My name is Kathleen Robbins.
For the last several months President Bush has been
on a campaign to convince the American people that
Social Security is in imminent danger and needs to be
fixed immediately. Is this really what we should be
talking about today? Is Social Security our most
pressing issue?
Worldwide, oil discovery has peaked. We are paying
record amounts at the pump and yet our fuel cost are
inexpensive compared to most of the world. We are
importing ever-increasing amounts of oil and gas as our
domestic supply dwindles. This is not only devastating
our economy but funding some cultures that are less than
supportive to our way of life. At the same time, while
concentrating on fossil fuels we are ignoring the
environmental impact that carbon dioxide emissions are
having on our planetary system.
Our politicians are betting our future and that of
our children on fossil fuels while China and India's
energy requirements skyrocket. America consumes over 27%
of the world's oil production with less than 5% of the
world's people while Asia, with almost 60% consumes only
25% but this is growing rapidly. In 2004 alone, China's
oil consumption increased by 33%.
Meanwhile, environment quality continues to degrade.
The US Department of Energy said in 2002 the US
accounted for 23.5% of the world's carbon dioxide
emissions from fossil fuels while the whole of Asia,
with over 12 times the population, emitted only 33%.
What happens to the American economy and the global
environment as both Asia's energy demand and emissions
increase?
Changes made to Social Security today will make
little difference to our children or our grandchildren
tomorrow unless we begin to take the difficult steps to
conserve fossil fuels while developing multiple sources
of clean, renewable energy today An increase in the
average automobile fuel efficiency to 39mpg would save
three times the amount of oil supposedly in the Artic
National Wildlife Refuge each year.
What is needed today and is sorely missing is a bold
vision. One that envisions a world of plentiful clean
water and air; one in which abundant, clean energy is
available to all who need it. A vision that treasures
our children's world of tomorrow just as we want our
comforts of today.
To develop clean, cost-effective renewable energy
will require nothing less than a national commitment,
equivalent to the Apollo Program of the 60s. Today is
the day; why are we waiting for the next economic or
environmental crisis? Isn't it about time to begin?
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