The
National Geographic, Vol. 138 No. 6 December 1970 - “We are
astronauts, all of us. We ride a spaceship called Earth in its
endless journey around the Sun. This ship of ours is blessed with
life-support systems so ingenious that they are self-renewing, so
massive that they can supply the needs of billions.”
But
for centuries we have taken them for granted, considered their
capacities limitless. At last we have begun to monitor the systems
and the findings are deeply disturbing.”
Scientists
and government officials of the United States and other countries
agree that we are in trouble. Unless we stop abusing our vital
life-support systems they will fail. We must maintain them or pay
the penalty. The penalty is death.”
A successful take over of the then
nascent environmental movement by big oil began during the months
from late 1966 until the end of 1967. At that point in time the
issues of clean water and accountability for those who pollute were
non-partisan, the present partisan divisions did not exist. Clean air
and water were things that everyone agreed were necessary; liability
for polluting must be exacted. “If you pollute, you pay,” was the
first point on the agenda intended for consideration at the 1972
Stockholm Conference for the Environment according to Helen Garland,
an early activist. That agenda changed in the back halls of the
United Nations before the conference was gaveled into order.
It was a change that alarmed and
bewildered people like Garland, representative to the Environmental
Movement at the UN in 1971. John McConnell, originator of the real
Earth Day said, “the agenda of Peace, Justice and the care of
Earth, were sidelined for something very different.” Howard Baker,
Jr., a Republican Senator from Tennessee, headed the first
Environmental Protection Agency. Clean air and water seemed as
imminent as social justice.
The forces that changed our direction
are one in the same, Big Oil.
The bottom line for oil companies was
to ensure that their profits from the only thing they had to sell
continued. In the last 30 years, that has come to trillions from
those continued sales by Big Oil, today amounting to one quarter of
the entire GNP for the entire globe. Additionally, oil companies
have received from “US
federal government energy subsidies and incentives over the past 50
years " $644 billion. It shows that the federal government has
subsidized the energy industries " nuclear, coal, oil, natural gas,
renewables " using different budget and off-budget funding
techniques.” This is according to The
International Journal of Global Energy Issues.
Money talks and motivates. The losses
to Big Oil if the original agenda for the environment had been
enacted would be literally incalculable. Ensuring that did not happen
was not a conspiracy, it was simple corporate policy.
According to Helen Garland, one of the
original surviving founders of both the Earth Society and its present
CEO, the wording for the first reference to the conference on the
subject in the records from the United National Library on the
environment changes over the three year period from 1967 " 1969.
In 1967 the subject is clearly, “Pollution.” The point is
obviously the impact of human action on the earth in specific
locations. The next year the wording has changed to, “Environment.”
This term redirects the focus from both the liability and
accountability for specific human action to a broad category with no
specific focus. A year later it has changed again, the text becoming
"Human Environment." This term bifurcates what
is actually a closed system, dividing humanity from the Earth. To win
you must divide your enemy. “The enemy” the oil companies
confronted was very direction of humanity for a clean environment and
social justice.
By 1972 the Environmental Movement,
now firmly under the control of Big Oil, first by the careful
reworking of the agenda and resulting laws and the hijacking of what
had been intended to be the yearly focus of that movement, Earth Day,
was complete.
The hijacking of Earth Day had been
accomplished through an overt show of public relations muscle,
powered with 4 million dollars fed into the hands of Dennis Hayes, a
sallow undergraduate who got the name, “Earth Day” from John
McConnell and the older generation of environmentalists that included
Helen Garland and Margaret Mead.
The conception of one day to highlight
the agenda of, “Peace, Justice, and care of the Earth,” had been
carefully thought out to encapsulate the whole agenda for that
movement. The moment chosen, the second of the Spring Equinox,
marked the moment of time when the Earth shifted between summer and
winter in its Southern and Northern Hemispheres. The term was first
used when the idea was presented by McConnell to a few
members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and other community
leaders early October 1969 at a UN meeting.
Today, if you visit the site for the
April 22nd Earth Day you will find much rhetoric but
nothing that enables you to easily or inexpensively accomplish what
those aware of the issues in the early 70s expected; the ability to
get off the grid of energy dependence. The original idea of
accountability is nowhere in sight.
Big Oil had found a useful tool with
Richard Nixon. Nixon's tenure in office, January 1969 to August 9,
1974 overlays many of the events that so impacted the cited changes
in the Environmental Movement. According to Garland Nixon assured
environmentalists that clean air and water were priorities. Jimmy
Carter, with a strong background in engineering and economics, was
elected in 1976, and represented a problem for Big Oil. Big Oil
removed him from office through the simple expedient of sharply
increasing oil prices during the critical period of the election.
The original wording for the Clean
Water Act, passed in 1967, is today unavailable as is the poll of
Americans done by Senator Baker that was published but never
distributed around 1968. According again to Helen Garland these laid
down standards and expectations that were then rewritten by Maurice
Strong, an ambitious oilman from Canada who moved into the United
Nations through a series of introductions, first serving, from
November 1970 until December 1972 as Secretary-General of the United
Nations Conference on the Human Environment. After a long and
lucrative career at the United Nations Strong went on to involvement
in the Food for Oil debacle and from there to Peace University in
Puerto Rico, where he used that institution to train paramilitary.
He is now reported to be working in China.
After the initial take over the work of
vilifying the United Nations and environmentalism guaranteed that the
chasms of distrust would reinforce the divides first forged among
Americans in the early 70s. Those who did the work profited
mightily, many finding careers in politics and nonprofits funded by
Big Oil.
Today a new generation of
environmentalists and innovators are taking stock and coming together
to provide the means for Americans to get off the grids of
dependence. John Sturbine, a businessman and investor, and others
from that earlier movement, including Helen Garland, are founding
what they call The Earth Project, intended to make off grid
alternatives cheaply available. Included among those involved are a
non-oil engine for automobiles, a technology for reducing the cost of
energy in homes by one half and a boat design that also eliminates
the use of petroleum.
Sturbine said for this article, “there
is no limitation to human innovation; Americans could be off the
grids entirely in three years.”