Top of mind issues that aren’t

Issues that need to be top of mind aren’t being discussed because we would rather talk about more exaggerated and contrived issues.

The global water crisis lives here, especially in drought prone areas like the Southwest United States, which is running dangerously low on water. Climate change only makes matters worse. And, this is even before we speak of the lead water pipe structures which have their own set of toxic issues as in Flint, Michigan.

Miami is the most at risk city in the world for encroaching sea levels due to climate change, but the governor calls more dramatic solutions liberal based ideas. Miami has built right to the coast and the limestone guarding the largest aquifer is porous. The fact the number of sunny days flooding has increased with sea water coming up through the street drains in Miami Beach should give people pause. Call me crazy, but when you are surrounded on three sides by sea water as Florida is, climate change should be a huge issue.

Toxins in our environment due to manufacturing run off of chemicals or middle of the night storage elsewhere are causing bell weather cancers years later. The water at Camp Lejeune in NC has been killing and making Marines, their spouses and their children sick for decades and yet we are still screwing around with a decision. Thank you for your service, just don’t drink the water. Recent stories on environmental cancers from Teflon and Round-up chemicals also continue to get press.

Dr. Sandra Steingraber, an ecologist, biologist, author and speaker (who has testified to Congress and the EU Parliament), spoke at an event I attended. She noted our tests are designed for a 50 year-old man, but we really should be testing for children. Our children have lungs and brains that are not fully developed, they have lesser body weight and are closer to the ground, they mouth breath more and they touch things more and put their hands in their mouths. They are easy targets for toxins to poison them.

I want people to remember her words. She added some hope, though. When we act in a serious manner we can fix things. She used the example of the Rabies vaccine, as she and her son were exposed. Rabies is a horrible way to die and it only takes a bite. But, we long ago created a series of vaccines that prevent Rabies, even if exposed. We learned and acted. She said that is a lesson that we should follow on dealing with other environmental issues – learn and act whether it’s getting rid of arsenic on playground equipment, removing asbestos out of building materials or knowing how to handle PVC pipes in a closed environment.

People matter. Children matter. Short term profits matter less than human life. I would argue companies that aggressively act to fix things will do better with long term profits due to goodwill.* Let’s act like parents and grandparents in governing what is needed. Let’s shine a spotlight on legislators and business leaders who do not.

*Years ago, Dow Chemical had a huge chemical spill in India. Because of their reputation as a good community citizen and by acting quickly to fix things, the long-term profits of the company did not suffer. The same held true with Johnson and Johnson, the makers of Tylenol after product tampering incidents killed some people. They acted quickly to fix things and we now have tamper identifying bottles.

28 thoughts on “Top of mind issues that aren’t

    • DeSantis is a pig! How he gets people to vote for him I cannot understand. They have to be suffering from MAGAt Syndrome, or some such similar disease. Or maybe he fixed the Jonestown Kool Aid, to brainwash but not kill.

      • Rawgod, I am not a fan of DeSantis. Florida deserves better governance than they are getting. Not unlike the Mar-o-lago resident, smugness is not a good attribute for a leader. Keith

      • But it is a Republican trait. They think they know everything. And everything they know is bad for the rest of us!

      • Rawgod, modifying an old saying for attorneys – when the facts are in your favor, argue the facts. When the law is in your favor, argue the law. When neither are, be smug and cry foul. Keith

  1. Reblogged this on Filosofa's Word and commented:
    Our friend Keith reminds us that amidst all the political bickering and the corporate game-playing focused only on profits, there is one issue that has far more relevance in the long-term. If we fail to take care of and to repair our environment, it won’t matter who wins elections or how much money corporate CEOs have, for the human species won’t survive. All the money and power in the world are irrelevant as compared to potable water, breathable air, and safe food. Thank you, Keith, for reminding us of the most important issue facing us today … we sometimes get so wrapped up in other things that we forget or push it aside, rather like Scarlett O’Hara in ‘Gone with the Wind’ saying, “Oh, I won’t think about it today … I’ll think about it tomorrow.”

    • Thanks Jill. You are a peach. We have too many companies and organizations who cover up problems or mask the facts. The tobacco industry knew nicotine was addictive, added more and lied about it. DuPont knew Teflon’s chemicals were harmful and hid it from their employees, neighbors and customers. Monsanto knew the stuff in Roundup was bad for people and fudged the tests. Each of these claims are now public knowledge.

      • My pleasure, Keith! Yes, we have corporations galore who are far more concerned with their bottom line than the air we breath. And it confuses me, for these corporate CEOs surely have grandchildren … do they really care not one whit whether their grandchildren and great grandchildren can even survive? All that money they’ll be leaving to them won’t do them a damn bit of good if they don’t have water to drink or food to eat! Sigh.

      • It may be public knowledge, but too many are still asleep. People are being hoodwinked and need to be made aware of reality… but that’s doubly difficult when even the term ‘woke’ has been hijacked by those who mislead.

        The thing is, the same people who were behind the pushback against tobacco are exactly the same ones who are behind all the other pro-business anti-environment propaganda, especially climate change. Merchants of Doubt by Oreskes and Conway ought to be required reading for everyone, and should be a standard text in every school’s curriculum.

      • PeNdantry, thanks for your comment. I saw the movie made from “Merchants of Doubt.” It is a must see for those who don’t want the deep dive. Keith

      • Thanks Mary, it is indeed. The fight is won so infrequently, they make movies win the people win against the polluting companies. Keith

  2. In Canada many of our First Nations reserves, already on poor untillable land, have to have potable water trucked into them, at their own expense. Our oh so enlightened government cannot find the money to provide fresh uncontaminated drinking water, but they can afford to give huge bonuses and perqs to their Party members, NO MATTER WHICH PARTY IS IN POWER.
    Richmond, British Columbia, a suburb of Vancouver, is built BELOW SEA LEVEL! It’s only a matter of time before it, and the Vancouver International Airport, are 6′ under water, yet they keep building new structures there.
    Our governments talk about Climate Change, but for everything positive they do, they let 100 buinesses break their guidelines for pollution, overuse of land, and leaving polluted soil unattended, etc.
    Companies care about profits. Governments care about getting re-elected. Nobody really cares about “We the People.” We are brainwashed to vote for the lesser of multiple evils, and somehow every government we get is EVIL! Go figure!

    • Rawgod, it is a sad state of affairs. The modus operandi for most developers and manufacturers is to leave their problems for someone else to clean up. What bothers me most is hiding the facts from people. It matters not if it is the Catholic Church or Boy Scouts, both hid their predatory sexual abuse problems, just like the huge corporations do. People get harmed when they do this. Keith

      • We are examining such a case in Canada right now. 8 junior hockey players or friends from the Gold Medal winning team in the World Championships a few years ago apparently celebrated by gang-raping a girl at a victory party. Investigations behind closed doors resulted in a bunch of non-disclosure agreements. No charges were ever laid, no news was released.
        Until this year. Someone leaked something. A lot of sponsors ended their relationships with Hockey Canada, and that brought attention to the event. Now investigations are going on about the coverup, with no names mentioned yet, I have not heard yet of any RCMP or police investigations, but they better come soon. These were white boys with probable hockey careers ahead of them. If they are not indicted and charged it puts a huge black mark on all amateur sports everywhere. If guilty, these kids belong in jail, not being paid millions of dollars to play hockey!
        Along with those sex scandals in gymnastics and college sports in the States, it begs the question, What else are WE NOT hearing about?
        If these were Black or Indigenous kids they would already be in jail, but White kids are too privileged to suffer the consequences of their actions. Racism is alive and well i Canada as well as in the States, and probably all over the world. And America’s Republican Party is a big reason for it recently. They are racists, and stupidly proud of it! (Probably not every one of them, but a vast majority!}

      • Thanks for sharing this horrible incident. Talented people get breaks. But, White talented people get a hall pass. It is grossly unfair to the victims and empowers future boorish and criminal behavior. Keith

  3. Note to Readers: A key attribute of legislative bodies is to kick the proverbial cans down the road. This is especially true on environmental problems. The old commercial for Fram oil filters comes to mind about fixing problems before they get worse – the tag line uttered by the mechanic is “you can pay me now or pay me later.”

  4. Great reminder about Dow and Johnson & Johnson. It was years before I’d purchase from bulk bins. Now I do all the time. But I always thing how freakin’ easy it would be for some nutcase to unobtrusively walk by and drop a bit of arsenic or some other awful thing into these unattended bins. I’m actually surprised it hasn’t happened yet. We worry about the Russians hacking our water supply, but it wouldn’t even take that much sophistication to hack our food staples.

    • Linda, we have enough problems of our own making with our water supply. The Russians have it easier to just keep influencing Americans online to keep our divisiveness going. It is like shooting fish in a barrel. “Hey Vladimir, you want to wind up some Americans on social media today?” “Sure Dmitri, let’s go have some fun.”

      Keith

      • Good point. But I was actually also thinking of the nutcases who like to plow into crowds with a car or shoot up a school. Maybe being covert would not satisfy that type’s needs.

      • Linda, it is hard to stop the lone wolf extremists. Those folks will wreak havoc unless someone gets tipped off. Keith

  5. Note to Readers: I letter I sent into my newspaper follows:

    “It is disappointing that we are asked to focus on contrived and exaggerated issues, while major issues get less attention in the halls of Congress. We have US debt and deficit issues that don’t seem to matter. We have environmental issues, including climate change, a US and global water crisis and chemical toxic run off (Round-up, Teflon, Camp LeJeune, eg) that has and is harming people. We have a concerted attack on the rights of women, the LGBTQ+ community and people of color that sadly is being encouraged by one political party. We have health care access and cost issues that need attention. Yet, we are focusing on issues that are only top of mind because spin doctors think they are winning wedge issues that promote division.

    Let’s focus on stuff that matters. Picking one, drinking water is kind of important. The availability and distribution is at serious risk in our country, and the problem is actually worsened by climate change. How about focusing at least on a major human need?”

  6. A valuable post, Keith. The Miami story is one that’s been around for years. It’s astonishing to me that voters in Florida—and Texas is another, with their disastrous grid—return their irresponsible leaders to positions of power. We need Florida voters to save us from DeSantis, who some commentators I thought were reasonable seem to think is a legitimate alternative to trump. I think he’s at least as evil—and a lot smarter.

    Meanwhile, House Democratic women just made impassioned speeches in preparation for tomorrow’s vote to protect the right to contraception. Can you imagine? We’ll see how Republicans vote on an issue that has support from 96% of voters!

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