The Sufferings
I can’t imagine the president doing a flyover of a mountaintop removal site, or holding a press conference about it. And I’ve certainly never seen a mountain blown up on national television—not even once, much less every morning on the Today show.
Yet I would venture to say that mountaintop removal (MTR) is as devastating as the oil spill in the Gulf.
I don’t mean to compare suffering. What I’m saying is actually the opposite of comparison: they’re equally as bad, yet everyone is outraged about the spill while very few people even know about MTR.
Both the oil spill and MTR are environmental, cultural, economic, and health disasters. Both are devastating an entire way of life.
Every time someone says that more than 100 miles of shoreline has been affected by the oil spill, I want to shout that at least 1, 500 miles of waterways have been lost forever in Appalachia.
Every time I think about the spill I also think of the pollution pumping into our creeks and rivers by way of MTR. I think of all the people in the fishing industry whose jobs are threatened by the spill, and then of all the hard-working Appalachians who can’t find a good-paying job besides the mines because we live in a mono-economy created and fostered by the coal industry. I think of how the spill could affect the Gulf so badly that the region’s fishing industry could be wiped out. Immediately I think of how mountaintop removal is hurting all the industries in Appalachia, particularly timber and tourism. New economy doesn’t want to come into a place that has been turned into a war zone with pollution, constant blasting, and intimidation.
Recently a friend of mine pointed out that “we’re witnessing the death of the Gulf.” It’s a heartbreaking prospect, but one that seems true. As of this writing, we’ve been witnessing that for forty-four days. Our president recently said this about the spill: “Every day that this leak continues is an assault on the people…, their livelihoods, and the natural bounty that belongs to all of us.” Couldn’t he say the same about MTR, which assaults all that we have in common, namely the air and the water, as author and environmentalist Erik Reese has pointed out? We’ve been witnessing the death of the mountains for much, much longer. If you trace it back to when mountaintop removal started, about 30 years ago, that’d be 10, 950 days. A lot more than 44.
Most of the people who live on the Gulf are not wealthy. Those in the fishing industry are much like our underground miners: hard-working, determined, and very proud of their jobs. The big difference is that since the Gulf is not caught up in a mono-economy, we actually have fishermen on the news complaining about the oil companies. Here in Appalachia, miners fear they will lose their jobs and we’ve been taught by the industry that if we say anything at all against coal, we’re downright unpatriotic.
Sadly, the lack of outrage over MTR may boil down to images and quick definitions. It’s easy to turn the spill into a quick sound bite (Oil is pumping into the ocean) and not so easy to do the same with MTR, which is a much more complicated issue; for one thing, it’s hard to convince people that to be against MTR does not mean one is against miners. Most of the MTR opponents count miners as one of the reasons they’re in this fight to begin with.
And there is that dramatic, sickening image that is easily captured (the oil pumping into the ocean) and put on the morning news shows. A camera can’t quite capture the scope of MTR. Even seeing it in person can’t really do it justice. The only way one can truly take in the devastation is to do a fly-over, so the sheer magnitude of it can be realized. Which is another reason why Obama should do a fly-over of Appalachia, the same way he’s done in the Gulf.
The major difference between the spill and MTR is that the spill was a preventable accident, while MTR is not only intentional, but also sanctioned by our government. Those who are trying to stop it are being called things like “greeniacs,” “atheists,” and being compared to Osama Bin Laden by Massey CEO Don Blankenship. T-shirts sold at my local flea market encourage people to “Save a miner’s job: Shoot a tree-hugger.”
I appreciate the attention Obama is paying to the Oil Spill. I especially appreciate that he took time out of his press conference to talk about this being a wake-up call, a time to start thinking about renewable energy. It’s great to hear a president talk about that. I especially appreciate how much better this administration is on the issue than the last one was. We actually have an EPA that is doing something now, such as actually examining permits before rubber-stamping them.
That’s great, but it’s time to do more about it. Obama is doing a lot of great talk but it’s time to start walking the walk.
It’s time to start talking about sustainable jobs for miners who are losing theirs to machines on MTR sites. It’s time to try to salvage these devastated MTR sites into the only thing they’re really usable for now: wind farms. It’s time that legislators started talking to the president about the first renewable energy jobs going to miners.
Most of all, it’s time to see mountaintop removal as being as devastating an environmental disaster as the spill. Because it is.
Notes:
1. Even the coal industry’s own website shows that more than 30,000 miners jobs have been lost in Kentucky alone since the advent of MTR in the late 70s. http://www.coaleducation.org/ky_coal_facts/
2. Pulitzer Prize-winning author John McQuaid has written an excellent overview of how the new EPA has become more effective. http://politifi.com/news/Coal-Baron-Blankenship-Calls-Critics-And--402023.html
3. http://politifi.com/news/Coal-Baron-Blankenship-Calls-Critics-And--402023.html
4. For more on intimidation and the complexities of MTR, see this piece in the Washington Post: www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/19/AR2008041900941.html
5. For more on Erik Reese and the assault on the commons (air, water, mountains, etc.), go here: http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/articles/article/4809/
Comments
We are showing the PBS series Unnatural Causes later this month during lunchtime at work. One of the episodes is about how economic conditions in certain communities affect public health. The difference in how the US and Sweden handle unemployment, for example, is like night and day.
Fee free to copy and send "The Sufferings" to anyone you'd like. Thanks for your kind words.
You are being so respectful of the people that live in the Gulf region in this post. But, we know there is one big difference between MTR and this Gulf oil disaster, you allude to it, and that is that MTR is no accident, and is government sanctioned.
Increasingly, the U.S. government is enabling the colonization of its entire territory.
This contempt for nature and traditional communities resulted in the military explosion of around 1,000 nuclear bombs in Native American lands in the Southwest during the post-WWII period, devastating the landscape and people there. Radiation from the blasts floated all over North America.
I heard Jeff Biggers say that the coal industry destruction of landscape and exploitation of people began earlier -- during Thomas Jefferson's tenure. African American slaves were sent into the mines.
Appalachia (my beloved ancestral home is in E. Tenn) has been treated contemptuously as a domestic colony in many ways: to exploit resources and cheap labor. The rich culture has been misrepresented and ridiculed, as a means to justify this inhumane treatment.
The media and U.S. government attention towards the destruction of the Gulf of Mexico is strange. The meta-message is that there's nothing the government or BP can do and if citizens try to take action into their own hands (using time-tested hay to soak up oil), they will be arrested. So I don't know if this kind of attention is helpful. It actually seems to serve to desensitize and demoralize people.
That said, and realizing the federal government and corporatized media is not going to bring attention to the destruction of the Appalachian mountains, we need to work as citizens to create attention ourselves.
There's a new initiative, This is Ecocide (http://www.thisisecocide.com/), which is an international attempt to connect the dots in the big picture of what is happening: how certain forces are destroying our environment and traditional communities to plunder resources. It might be helpful for Applachians to build solidarity with people across the world who are paying the costs, including tremendous emotional sufering of the plunder of their natural worlds.
There are actually people along the Gulf who think that the lack of action in protecting the ocean and coastline (there are many available technologies not being use or way under-utilized), is intentional. I hope the lack of action is the result of incompetence and/or negligence inthe case of the Gulf.
There is no excuse for what the U.S. government is allowing to happen in Appalachian to these beautiful, ancient mountains and traditional American communities.
In solidarity from East Tennessee, Florida, and Kyoto, Japan.
Jean Downey
To me, the only solution to the problem of MTR IS a jobs program. As you say, the fear of losing their jobs pits miners against anyone who speaks out against MTR. Disagreements about mining sets friends and family members against each other. It will continue that way as long as people's health care and survival depend on wages from mining. A government-funded jobs program in this part of the country, with the jobs all being work that would make this a better place, as the CCC work did in the 1930s, is sorely needed. But as long as people are afraid of "big government" and feel that business is their friend (and that profits are essential to democracy and Christianity) that won't happen. More people are seeing what greed is doing to the common legacy of air, water, and land--thanks to you and others like you.
On a different note, to some of us, "atheist" isn't a bad word--though I know to the name-callers you're talking about, it is.
Eddy
Eddy
Great post! This is Sandra w.App Voices. Could we possibly repost this to our blogs?
So I don't think it is the particular geographic location of the spill that has the press in arms (although maybe so with the Florida Coast), but rather the sensationalism of the story. As you said, the real difference is that the spill is an "accident" that we now can't control, while MTR is a steady, purposeful, government-sanctioned offensive. The same contrast can be drawn between the hysteria surrounding the 3 mile mile island nuclear accident and the comparative silence as we sit back and watch the pollution from coal fired power plants kill thousands of people each year.
It will take a long campaign of compassionate education to make folks understand that the gradual, predictable killers deserve as much (or more) attention as the sudden, uncontrollable ones. (I cannot stress the importance of the "compassionate" element enough. We cannot change people's minds if we condescend and feel superior.)
Thanks for doing your part!
I too, like Silas House, encourage the President to take an aerial journey over our destroyed heritage, our mountains. However, I believe some of the reasons the past, present and future of mountaintop removal remains in the hands of (our) West Virginia politicians. When top ranking officials are in favor of mountaintop removal and tell those in D.C. West Virginia cannot survive without this form of the removal of coal - why would a President think differently. Also, the miners are scared to death there will be no other jobs and even though for many it is not their choice of coal mining - they think it is better than welfare. Please understand until our top ranking political officials take a stand to stop mountaintop removal - it is going to be very difficult to get the President to stop this devastation to one of the most beautiful, rugged mountain regions in Appalachia.
PS. I do believe Sen. Byrd was lending in the direction of finding alternative methods - now, he is gone. We can only pray that Gov. Manchin will appoint who cares more about the people and the environment (the mountains) than the absentee coal barons.
By Betty Dotson-Lewis
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Theo báo cáo của Hội đồng Xổ số kiến thiết khu vực miền Nam, trong 9 tháng đầu năm, 21 doanh nghiệp xổ số kiến thiết thành viên của Hội đồng đã phát hành tổng cộng 633,8 triệu vé, tương đương 68.380 tỷ đồng.
Trong số đó, 506,3 triệu vé số đã được bán tương ứng với tỷ lệ tiêu thụ đạt 79,89%.
Số tiền trả thưởng chiếm 48,45% doanh thu của các công ty. Trong 9 tháng, 21 doanh nghiệp xổ số này đã chi 24.533 tỷ đồng để trả thưởng cho khách hàng, nộp ngân sách Nhà nước 17.283 tỷ đồng.
9 tháng, 21 công ty xổ số kiến thiết miền Nam đã chi bao nhiêu trả thưởng cho khách hàng?
Lợi nhuận sau thuế của Công ty TNHH một thành viên Xổ số kiến thiết TP.HCM trong 9 tháng đạt 622 tỷ tỷ đồng song số tiền trả thưởng là 11,3 tỷ, bằng 1/55.
Công ty TNHH một thành viên xsbl thu 3 của TP.HCM vừa công bố báo cáo tài chính quý III và 9 tháng đầu năm 2016.
Lợi nhuận gộp từ hoạt động kinh doanh đạt 260 tỷ đồng. Sau khi trừ đi chi phí bán hàng 495 triệu đồng, chi phí quản lý doanh nghiệp 24,6 tỷ đồng thì Xổ số kiến thiết TP.HCM đạt 247 tỷ đồng lợi nhuận trước thuế và gần 198 tỷ đồng lợi nhuận sau thuế, tăng gần 29% so với cùng kỳ 2015.
Đáng chú ý, chi phí để trả thưởng là con số rất nhỏ so với lợi nhuận. Trong 3 tháng từ tháng 7 đến tháng 9, công ty này chỉ chi trả thưởng cho người chơi gần 4 tỷ đồng dù lãi gần 200 tỷ. Còn tính chung 9 tháng đầu năm, số tiền trả thưởng là 11,3 tỷ đồng so với lợi nhuận hơn 600 tỷ đồng.
Về doanh thu, trong 3 tháng quý III, đơn vị này đạt 1.559 tỷ đồng, tăng 13% so với 1.338 tỷ đồng của quý III/2015. Trong đó, 1.522 tỷ đến từ hoạt động chính là xổ số. Số còn lại đến từ in, cho thuê văn phòng.
Chi phí phục vụ các hoạt động kinh doanh của Xổ số TP.HCM trong quý III là 1.100 tỷ đồng. Chiếm chủ chủ đạo là nguyên vật liệu trực tiếp 820 tỷ đồng, nhân công 271 tỷ đồng.
Xem thêm: Xổ số úc: Suốt 25 năm kiên trì mua 1 bộ số xổ số y hệt nhau, người đàn ông này cuối cùng đã trúng được 1 triệu USD
Lũy kế 9 tháng đầu năm, doanh nghiệp này đạt 4.745 tỷ đồng doanh thu, tăng 12,6% và lợi nhuận sau thuế đạt 622 tỷ đồng, tăng 15% so với năm 2015.
Báo cáo tài chính cũng cho thấy Xổ số kiến thiết TP.HCM có các tình hình tài chính khá tốt khi không vay nợ. Còn khoản lợi nhuận sau thuế chưa phân phối là 618 tỷ đồng và tổng tài sản là 2.187 tỷ đồng.
Như vậy, có thể thấy mặc dù bị "xổ số kiểu Mỹ" của Công ty Xổ số Điện toán (Vietlott) cạnh tranh quyết liệt kể từ khi ra mắt vào ngày 18/7/2016 nhưng kết quả kinh doanh của công ty xổ số kiến thiết lớn nhất cả nước vẫn chưa bị ảnh hưởng mà ngược lại còn tăng khá mạnh.
Mới đây, trước sự cạnh tranh mạnh mẽ của Vietlott, Xổ số kiến thiết đã nâng giá trị của đặc biệt từ 1,5 tỷ đồng lên 2 tỷ đồng từ năm 2017 tới đây.
Xem thêm các tin tức xổ số hay khác tại: http://ketquaxoso-24h.blogspot.com
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