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Point of View with Barb
Sumner Burstyn - December 15 2003
State where man's dominion ruins the natural
beauty
Now I know I can be a little neurotic. We've been in Salt Lake
City for six weeks and after the first week the shortness of breath
did not go away.
Finally I sought medical advice. We quickly ruled out all the usual
reasons, before the helpful medic suggested I might be imagining
it.
I gave him a scornful look and went for a drive. Less than a mile
from the city centre I drove past an oil refinery, then another
and another.
In total there are five oil refineries close to Salt Lake City,
each one pumping virginal white plumes that turn tobacco-coloured
as they smother the mountains that ring this city. Then it occurred
to me. It was the pollution that was taking my breath away.
It turns out that Salt Lake City, set against some of the most
spectacular mountains you'll ever see, is one of the most polluted
places in America.
It's home to 97 per cent of the country's radioactive waste; half
the nation's stockpile of chemical weapons is slowly being destroyed
in two huge incinerators nearby; there's another hazardous waste
incinerator; hazardous and radioactive waste landfills; a bombing
range; and, on the shores of the Great Salt Lake, a magnesium plant
that was, until recently, the largest toxic air-polluter in the
country.
Utah ranks fourth nationally in the release of chemicals that affect
child development, and the state has tied for last in enforcing
the Clean Water Act.
So how did it happen that a place renowned for natural beauty has
been turned into an industrial waste dumping ground?
Many blame the previous Governor, Mike Leavitt. Under Leavitt's
governorship, environmental enforcement plunged, and his toxic legacy
runs to pages of failure, from ignoring science that does not support
his policy positions to firing dissenters and dismantling protections
in favour of industry.
Leavitt's environmental track record is so convincing that President
George W. Bush has appointed him to head the Environmental Protection
Agency, the organisation charged with protecting the environment
and public health of the nation.
And with the failure of Leavitt to protect Utah so glaringly obvious,
environmentalists predict the state's environment is a blueprint
for the rest of the country.
Gazing out at the tops (all that's visible) of the mountains, you
ask yourself why and how such a callous disregard for the environment
could become so rampant?
For once the usual answer - the complicity of Government and industry
to reduce or even end legal impediments to pollution in favour of
corporate profit - is not enough.
Perhaps it has something to do with God.
Utah is Mormon country. It would be an understatement to say that
here the business, political and social environment is controlled
by the church. Very little happens in Utah without church approval.
(Leavitt is one of the church's most visible faces.)
From the modest clothing to the wide streets, careful drivers and
obsequiously polite people, this is one straight town. It's a place
with a decidedly old-testament view of the world, one where man's
dominion over nature is paramount and the focus is on the afterlife.
Is the conquest of nature seen as a sign that the Mormons are God's
chosen people? It certainly fits with church history that extols
their triumph over environmental adversity. It also fits with a
religion that prizes conservatism.
Conservatism is the new reality in America.
And it's no secret that the leaders of this country are almost
all members of ultra-conservative, evangelical churches, many of
them with end-time philosophies.
Is this belief, that we're heading into an apocalyptic time, a
time when only the righteous will survive, part of the pathology
of disrespect and destruction of the environment?
Ann Coulter, the right-wing apologist, said in a recent talkback
show: "God says, 'Earth is yours. Take it. Rape it. It's yours."'
Certainly that attitude of ownership over stewardship seems to run
like a vein through the Christian right.
But do they really believe they have a mandate to subdue the Earth?
And if so, is this the philosophical foundation for the environmentally
destructive industrial development in the Christian West?
The tragic thing is that with more than 70 per cent of Americans
professing belief in a Judeo-Christian faith, those religions, because
of their great sway over hearts and minds, are in the perfect position
to take a stand for the environment, to return their people to an
understanding of the awe-inspiring power of nature.
At the headquarters of the Mormon Church that sprawl over most
of downtown Salt Lake City, the environment is a subject outside
the narrowly programmed answers which self-effacing visitor guides
have memorised.
So we take a tour of the public areas mostly in silence. In the
atrium of the reception centre there stands a 4m high, pure white,
talking Jesus. Sitting at his feet, I longed for a miracle. A rebuke
or perhaps even a tear for the degradation of this once remarkable
valley, for the Earth as a whole, at the hands of the upstanding,
conservative, Christian right captains of industry.
But the tape recording came to an end without a hint of emotional
response from the man himself. And I still couldn't breathe.
ENDS
© Barbara Sumner Burstyn, 2003
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Barbara Sumner
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