<HTML><FONT SIZE=3 FAMILY="FIXED" FACE="Courier New" LANG="0">A response by Carl Pope, Sierra Club director, to Ralph Nader's letter of <BR>complaint that he is being bashed by the environmental movement.
<BR>
<BR>Ralph Nader
<BR>Nader 2000
<BR>PO Box 18002
<BR>Washington, DC 20036
<BR>
<BR>October 26, 2000
<BR>
<BR>Dear Ralph:
<BR>
<BR>Yesterday you sent me (and many other environmentalists) a long letter <BR>defending your candidacy and attacking "the servile mentality" of those of us <BR>in the environmental community who are supporting Vice-President Gore.
<BR>
<BR>I've worked alongside you as a colleague for thirty years. Neither the letter <BR>nor the tactics you are increasingly adopting in your candidacy are worthy of <BR>the Ralph Nader I knew.
<BR>
<BR>The heart of your letter is the argument that "the threat to our planet <BR>articulated by Bush and his ilk" can now be dismissed. But you
<BR>offer no evidence for this crucial assertion. Based on the polls today Bush <BR>is an even bet to become the next President, with both a
<BR>Republican Senate and a Republican House to accompany him.
<BR>
<BR>You have referred to the likely results of a Bush election as being a "cold <BR>shower" for the Democratic party. You have made clear that you
<BR>will consider it a victory if the net result of your campaign is a Bush <BR>presidency.
<BR>
<BR>But what will your "cold shower" mean for real people and real places? What <BR>will it mean for tens of millions of asthmatic children when Bush
<BR>applies to the nation the "voluntary" approach he's using in Texas to clean <BR>up the air. And what about his stated opposition to enforcing
<BR>environmental standards against corporations?
<BR>
<BR>What will it mean for Americans vulnerable to water pollution when Bush <BR>allows water quality standards to be degraded to meet the needs
<BR>of paper mills and refineries as he has consistently done in Texas, most <BR>recently at Lake Sam Rayburn? And what if he eliminates federal financial <BR>support for both drinking water and water pollution, as his budget calls for <BR>and his record in Texas (46th in spending on drinking water) suggests?
<BR>
<BR>What will it mean for communities of color and poverty located near toxic <BR>waste sites, when Bush applies his Texas approach of lower
<BR>standards and lower polluter liability to toxic waste clean-up?
<BR>
<BR>What will a Bush election mean to the Gwich'in people of the Arctic, when the <BR>Arctic National Wildlife Refuge is turned over the oil companies and the <BR>calving grounds of the Porcupine Caribou herd on which they depend are <BR>destroyed and despoiled?
<BR>
<BR>What will it mean for the fishing families of the Pacific Northwest when Bush <BR>amends the Endangered Species Act to make extinction for the endangered <BR>salmon a legally acceptable option? If he refuses to remove the dams on the <BR>Snake River or reduce timber cutting levels to
<BR>preserve salmon?
<BR>
<BR>What will it mean for millions of rural Americans whose livelihood, health <BR>and communities are being destroyed by unregulated factory feeding <BR>operations, if Bush weakens the Clean Water Act? When he appoints Supreme <BR>Court justices who complete the task of shutting down
<BR>access to federal courts for citizens trying to enforce environmental laws?
<BR>
<BR>What will it mean for the wildlife that depend upon our National Forests when <BR>Bush undoes the Clinton-Gore Administration reforms, reverses their roadless <BR>area protection policy, and restores the timber industry to the mastery of <BR>the forests and the Forest Service that it enjoyed under his father? If he <BR>doubles, or triples, the cut on those Forests?
<BR>
<BR>What will it mean for millions of people in Bangladesh and other low-lying <BR>countries when an American refusal to confront the problem
<BR>of global warming unleashes the floods and typhoons of a rising ocean upon <BR>them?
<BR>
<BR>Your letter addresses none of these real consequences of a Bush victory. Nor <BR>has your campaign. Instead, you indulge yourself in the
<BR>language of academic discourse when you claim:
<BR>"Bush's 'old school' allegiance to plunder and extermination as humanity's <BR>appropriate relationship to our world speaks a language
<BR>effectively discounted by the great tradition of naturalists from John Muir <BR>to David Brower. Bush's blatant anti-environmentalism will lose
<BR>corporate favor as it loses popular support. It is a language of politics <BR>fading rapidly, and without a future."
<BR>
<BR>Candidate Bush may well be speaking a fading language. So was candidate <BR>Reagan in 1980 when he ranted that trees caused air pollution. It is power, <BR>however, not language, that determines policy. President Bush would be vested <BR>with the powers of the government of the United States, and he is an even <BR>more devoted servant of
<BR>environmental counter-revolution than Reagan ever was.
<BR>
<BR>Because your letter is couched in this language, so divorced from the real <BR>world consequences of your candidacy, and the real world choices
<BR>that face Americans, it is difficult to respond to all of its selective <BR>misrepresentations and inaccuracies. A few samples, however, may show you why <BR>I am so disappointed in the turn your
<BR>candidacy has taken:
<BR>• You claim that "Earth in the Balance" was "an advertisement for his <BR>calculated strategy and availability as an environmental poseur." Can
<BR>you offer a single piece of evidence to support this quite astonishing <BR>statement?
<BR>• You claim that the Clinton Administration stood up to the oil industry on <BR>the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge only because "focus groups have shown him <BR>he cannot give" it up. In fact, most polls show that the public is somewhat <BR>split on this issue, and there are certainly no focus groups I know of <BR>showing that it is a third-rail which no President can cross at his peril. <BR>Can you cite your evidence?
<BR>• You lament that the Administration has "set aside lands not in National <BR>Parks, but rather in National Monuments...." You are surely aware that a <BR>President cannot legally create national parks, which require an act of <BR>Congress; nor can you be under the misapprehension that this Congress with <BR>Don Young as the head of the House Resources Committee and Frank Murkowski as <BR>his counterpart in the Senate would have designated these areas as parks <BR>however long a battle Clinton and Gore might have fought. No, you simply took <BR>a cheap shot, and ignored the facts.
<BR>
<BR>You have also broken your word to your followers who signed the petitions <BR>that got you on the ballot in many states. You pledged you would not campaign <BR>as a spoiler and would avoid the swing states.
<BR>
<BR>Your recent campaign rhetoric and campaign schedule make it clear that you <BR>have broken this pledge. Your response: you are a political
<BR>candidate, and a political candidate wants to take every vote he can. Very <BR>well - you admit you are a candidate - admit that you are, like your <BR>opponents, a flawed one.
<BR>
<BR>Irresponsible as I find your strategy, I accept that you genuinely believe in <BR>it. Please accept that I, and the overwhelming majority of the environmental <BR>movement in this country, genuinely believe that your strategy is flawed, <BR>dangerous and reckless. Until you can answer how you will protect the people <BR>and places who will be put in harm's way, or destroyed, by a Bush presidency, <BR>you have no right to slander
<BR>those who disagree with you as "servile."
<BR>
<BR>You have called upon us to vote our hopes, not our fears. I find it easy to <BR>do so. My hope is
<BR>that by electing the best environmental President in American history, Al <BR>Gore, we can move forward. My fear is that you, blinded by your anger at <BR>flaws of the Clinton-Gore Administration, may be instrumental in electing the <BR>worst.
<BR>
<BR></FONT> <FONT COLOR="#8000ff" BACK="#ffffff" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ffffff" SIZE=6 PTSIZE=20 FACE="P<BR><BR>22 KellsRound" LANG="0">Leo Casey</FONT><FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=3 FACE="P22 KellsRound" LANG="0">
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<BR></FONT><FONT COLOR="#8000ff" SIZE=5 FACE="P22 KellsRound" LANG="0">Power concedes nothing without a demand.
<BR>It never has, and it never will.
<BR>If there is no struggle, there is no progress.
<BR>Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation are men who <BR>want crops without plowing the ground. They want rain without thunder and <BR>lightening. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its waters.
<BR><P ALIGN=CENTER>-- Frederick Douglass --</FONT><FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=2 FAMILY="SANSSERIF" FACE="Arial" LANG="0">
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