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[Ooh! I'm just so-o-o mad!! After those great guys
Bill and Tony did so much for the cause of human
rights and all. After all, they bombed the living hell
out of Yugoslavia, just like we told them to. Now
that's responsive leadership!
And they also bombed Iraq, Somalia, Sudan, Colombia,
the Bosnian Serb Republic, Afghanistan - where they're
not nice to women, though I supported the CIA's war
against the earlier government, which gave women full
rights - and even managed to lob a few cruise missiles
into Pakistan, Bulgaria and Albania.
Wow, those guys are awesome!
But now that dirty Bush b*stard has walked away from
his international obligations! 
Though, to his credit, he's stepping up the war
against Colombia and those filthy Slavic Macedonians.
They're all pigs anyhow.
And of course he's 'staying the course' with Iraq and
the Middle East.
But, dammit, George Bush the Second is giving in to
corporate interests on the environment. I'm shocked!!!
Me and my friends have a lot of choice beachfront
property and one thing I DEFINITELY don't want is
stuff like oil spills and pollution and global warming
and bad things like that. 
I'm so bloody mad - I mean it, too - that I'm going to
ring up Vanessa and Bono and Sting, and, like wow, am
I going to raise some hell!]
 

America the unbeautiful 
If President Bush refuses to change himself, we must
do it for him
Bianca Jagger
Sunday July 22, 2001
The Observer
George W Bush has abdicated the leadership role
America once enjoyed. He has walked away from his
international obligations, tearing up international
treaties like the Kyoto Protocol and ABM treaty,
which, however imperfect, have helped bring peace and
environmental protection. The least we can say is that
he has embarked on a dangerous journey. Why? 
The answer is corporate payback. This has been the
defining trait of President Bush's administration. His
election was a straightforward capitalist venture for
the energy corporations. Oil, gas, coal and nuclear
companies are the power behind Bush; together, they
donated more than $50 million dollars to put him in
the White House. As soon as he was elected, it was
payback time and Bush declared the Kyoto Protocol on
reducing carbon-dioxide emissions dead and buried. 
The message was: 'US corporations have the right to
pollute the entire planet. The people and the
environment don't matter.' 
To come into force, the Kyoto Protocol needs to be
ratified by 55 of the 180 or so nations that
negotiated it. In addition, the countries which sign
up must together be responsible for more than 55 per
cent of the world's greenhouse-gas emissions. So, if
Japan, Australia and Canada follow the US and don't
ratify, as they are insinuating, the treaty is dead.
Some argue that the treaty is dead anyway without the
support of the US, by far the largest polluter. 
That is unlikely to come. Bush still questions the
scientific evidence that links fossil-fuel emissions
to climate change. He calls the treaty 'fatally
flawed', 'unworkable' and claims the targets are not
based on science. He proposes more research, even
though 1,000 of the world's top climate scientists
already believe we are heading for disaster. 
Is Bush aware that we face a life-threatening outcome
if Kyoto is not ratified? If we were to follow his
advice, we would become the only species on Earth to
spend our last days monitoring our own extinction. 
The report from the UN Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) is described as the most
comprehensive study on the subject to date and warns
of large-scale and irreversible climate changes, of
devastating droughts, floods, violent storms in
addition to the spread of cholera and malaria. Earth's
temperature could rise by as much as 5.8 degrees C
over the next 100 years. 
All this carries less weight with Bush than his
obligations to giant power conglomerates and
particularly to the corporation that donated more than
any other to help him win the presidency, ExxonMobil
(Esso in the UK), which gave more than a million
dollars. It has been the leading lobbyist, calling for
the US to abandon Kyoto, running major advertising
campaigns condemning the protocol and denying the link
between burning fossil fuels and global warming. 
ExxonMobil's chairman, Lee Raymond, has every reason
to be pleased with Bush's decision to bury the
protocol. I was present at its last shareholders
meeting, where Raymond described the protocol as
'unworkable, unfair, unattractive and damaging to
vital American interests'. 
'Kyoto was too much too soon,' said Raymond. He
forgets that it took five long years for the
industrialised nations to reach agreement in December
1997 and set targets for reductions which different
countries should try to reach by 2012. 
America is the largest polluter in the world with 4
per cent of the world's population; it discharges 25
per cent of the world's carbon dioxide. If Bush is
success ful in sabotaging attempts to stop global
warming, he will condemn us all to catastrophe. We do
not have much time left. 
That is why I have joined forces with Greenpeace and
Friends of the Earth to launch a boycott of ExxonMobil
products. We believe that transnationals have an
obligation to the global community on issues of social
responsibility. ExxonMobil does not adhere to this
philosophy; it believes that human survival may simply
not be economic. 
Its executives need to be made to understand that
human survival must transcend shareholder interest. I
will continue to call on the public not to buy any
Esso products until ExxonMobil stops its opposition to
the Kyoto Protocol and abandons its call to open the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for drilling and
invest in renewable energy. 
We are at a crossroads - leaders of the industrialised
nations must ratify the Kyoto Protocol or face
disaster. The time to act is now or we will lose the
battle. The treaty is hanging by a thread and Mr Bush
is playing Russian roulette with the environment. Our
lives and the lives of our children and their children
are at stake. We must not allow Mr Bush to hold our
future to ransom, condemning future generations to the
ravages of global warming.  
 

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