Why I Remain Irritated at the Sierra Club
By lambert strether. A version of this post appeared at Corrente. This post has with new material added that applies in part to fracking.
So
here’s the deal, and linky goodness will be lacking today (and a lot of
this is what activists have put together in discussion, so links are
lacking anyhow. And as the great Peggy Noonan once said: “It would be
irresponsible not to speculate!”)
One of Maine’s issues as a state
is that we have an extractive economy that’s doesn’t support us as well
as it used to, what with producing more with less in pulp and paper, and with the forest product industry tending to move
where costs and regulations are lower, and/or closer to the equator,
where trees grow faster and bigger. We continue to extract from
fisheries and summer people, naturally, but those resources, although
renewable with careful management, are seasonal and mostly support the
coast. And Nestlé extracts our water at Poland Springs. But the sort of
people who play golf together and fly over the state in
executive jets seem to see two main “opportunities”: One is our oodles
of empty space,* hence landfills and importing of out-of-state trash.**
The other is our geographical position between Quebec and New Brunswick.
Location, location, location!
Monday, October 1, 2012
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