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If Not Now, When?

May 28, 2010 @ 12:27PM

A powerful new ad launched this week by VoteVets connects the dots between the environmental crisis on the Gulf Coast and the national security threat posed by our country’s addiction to oil.

The spot features Louisiana veteran Evan Wolf who was deployed with the National Guard to clean up the oil spill. In the ad, Wolf says: “When I signed on with the National Guard, I did it to help protect America from our enemies… Not to clean up an oil company’s mess here in the Gulf of Mexico.”

The ad points out that our dependence on dirty energy is not only leading to catastrophic climate change and environmental disasters like the Gulf spill, it also sends millions of dollars each day to hostile regimes overseas. The ad ends with Wolf hammering home the message that should be obvious: Some folks in Washington say now is not the time for clean American power. I got to ask – if not now, when?

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A comprehensive climate and energy bill would be a win, win, win for these problems. By putting our country on a path to break our fossil fuel addiction, we can avert the climate crisis, prevent environmental disasters like the BP oil spill, and protect our national security.

During the Memorial Day Congressional recess, your senators will be back home and this is a critical time to reach them and let them know we demand clean energy. You can print out these flyers to bring their offices and ask them: “Senator, if not now, when?”

If Not Now When Flyers

Nation at a crossroads this Veteran’s Day

November 12, 2009 @ 11:11AM

Yesterday, the University of South Dakota published an op-ed from LeighAnn Dunn, a USD grad student who served in Iraq as a member of the South Dakota National Guard. In her letter, Dunn aplies the Bush first-strike doctrine to the need for action against the imminent threat climate change poses to our national security:

This year’s Veterans Day finds our nation at a crossroads clouded by political wrangling. Lobbyists for oil and coal companies want to kill climate change legislation in Congress right now, because their clients get rich keeping things the way they are, even though our military and intelligence leaders know climate change will create a series of wars around the world…

Our nation has a stronger obligation than ever before to avoid wars that can be prevented to preserve our national interests. I can think of no better response than to pass the Clean Energy Jobs & American Power Act in Congress, and put our nation in the leadership position to end this threat now.

Full op-ed from the USD Volante:

LETTER TO THE EDITOR: Nation at a crossroads this Veteran’s Day
By LeighAnn Dunn

Published: Wednesday, November 11, 2009
Updated: Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Before the Iraq War, our nation had a policy of not striking a potential enemy unless our interests were clearly endangered of imminent attack.
The Iraqi invasion changed that policy.

This “first strike” standard also obligates our nation to another standard, which is to take extraordinary steps to prevent wars our leaders can see developing in the future. One threat we clearly see and can prevent is further damage from climate change. The U.S. Department of Defense, the CIA, the State Department and the National Intelligence Council see this threat and are all incorporating man-made climate change as a security threat into their long-term planning. Here are some climate change scenarios our nation’s top military minds are looking at:

Climate change dries up water and creates famine. Nations panic. Wars erupt. American troops get deployed.

Climate change makes sea levels rise, creating tens of millions of refugees. Refugee camps are ripe recruiting grounds for terrorist organizations.

Climate change fuels radical storms to occur more frequently. This stretches military resources from their primary mission: defending America against our enemies.

Top military and intelligence authorities are working on strategies to respond:

In February the Pentagon and State Department will include a climate section in their next respective Quadrennial Review.
Last year, the National Intelligence Council said “global climate change will have wide-ranging implications for U.S. National security interests over the next 20 years.”

This fall, the CIA launches a center on climate change to examine security risks.

This year’s Veterans Day finds our nation at a crossroads clouded by political wrangling. Lobbyists for oil and coal companies want to kill climate change legislation in Congress right now, because their clients get rich keeping things the way they are, even though our military and intelligence leaders know climate change will create a series of wars around the world.

Our nation spends $1 billion per day on crude oil from other countries, some of which are unstable or hostile to America’s security. American consumers are forced to help fund both sides of the war against terrorism. Add to the monetary costs the lives of American soldiers, like those who served with me in Iraq. Since 1973, we’ve known America remains threatened as long as we depend on foreign oil.

Our nation has a stronger obligation than ever before to avoid wars that can be prevented to preserve our national interests. I can think of no better response than to pass the Clean Energy Jobs & American Power Act in Congress, and put our nation in the leadership position to end this threat now.

LeighAnn Dunn
USD Graduate Student and member of the S.D. National Guard