This article is reprinted from the May 11th issue of Bloomberg Businessweek.
Leaving aside the position of this blog that capitalism nor any of its political parties can resolve the humanitarian and environmental catastrophe that it has created, if the information in this article is accurate, and there is no reason to assume it isn't; Donald Trump is responsible for the deaths of thousands of people in the US. People are in jail in this country for decades for an accidental killing or a botched up robbery. And here Trump has knowingly and consciously allowed people to die using his power of office. Is he like I was told about the Pope, incapable of sin, cannot commit an evil act? Is he infallable? He has admitted this publicly. Regrettably, having no political opposition and with the heads of the workers' organizations dead to the world, Trump will get off scot free and the struggle to save humanity and our existence on this planet becomes harder and unnecessarily violent. The working class internationally has the power to change this, but we do not at this time have the leadership internationally to set this process in motion. RM
How Trump’s EPA Is Making Covid-19
More Deadly
A respiratory pandemic is no time to roll back
air-pollution rules.
May 4, 2020, 2:30 AM PDT
President
Donald Trump has failed in multiple ways to lead an effectivefight against the coronavirus.
Among the most troubling is his push to increase air
pollution in the midst of an unprecedented respiratory pandemic — jeopardizing
people’s ability to survive it — while the nation’s attention is focused on the
emergency at hand.
Scientists are warning us that air pollution makes
Covid-19, which strikes at the lungs, more deadly. Nonetheless, in the space of
about a month, the president has repeatedly undermined rules limiting air
pollution. Tens of thousands of Americans will die as a result.
A recent Harvard study shows that even a tiny
increase in fine particulate matter air pollution — commonly known as “soot” —
increases death rates from Covid-19. Hit the hardest are low-income communities
and people of color, who are disproportionately exposed to pollution sources,
such as highways and refineries.
Despite this danger, the Trump administration has
launched a series of attempts to make our air dirtier and harder to breathe.
First, the Environmental Protection Agency told coal,
oil and gas, and power producers they were free to ignore pollution monitoring
and reporting obligations – as long as they use the coronavirus pandemic as an
excuse. But there’s little reason these companies can’t comply with these rules
because of the virus. In fact, releasing them from pollution monitoring
requirements will only make the health crisis — and thus the economic crisis —
worse. Soot pollution has already risen considerably under the Trump
administration, and this move will surely exacerbate the problem.
Second, the Trump administration rolled back the
higher fuel efficiency and tailpipe emission standards that would drastically
cut health-harming and climate-changing air pollution from the nation’s cars
and trucks. Since these standards were put in place in 2010, the industry has
thrived, achieving record sales, and drivers saved $89 billion in fuel costs.
But Trump’s rollback means the average fuel economy will reach only 40 mpg in
2025 compared with 46.5 mpg under the Obama-era rules. That’s a standard the
industry is likely to hit even without the requirement. Based on EPA estimates,
abandoning the higher standard will result in nearly 1,000 more people dying
prematurely from air pollution.
Third, the EPA turned down an opportunity to save more
than 12,000 lives a year by issuing a more protective federal limit on harmful
soot, even though EPA scientists identified a number of recent studies pointing
out major health benefits associated with stronger federal limits. This happened
right as we are facing a historic health crisis that is attacking people with
lung and heart ailments associated with breathing dirty soot-filled air.
As if that weren’t enough, the Trump administration
followed all of this up by undermining Obama-era rules on mercury and toxic
chemicals emitted by power plants — rules that were saving more than 10,000
lives, avoiding 130,000 asthma attacks and nearly 5,000 heart attacks a year.
Even though utilities have already installed mercury controls and are complying
with the rules, and even though mercury emissions are now plummeting and
therefore saving lives, the administration once again cherry-picked health
studies to undermine a significant step forward in reducing air pollution.
With a highly contagious lung disease raging,
President Trump found four ways to make air pollution worse. This quartet of
decisions is especially toxic. And the Trump administration itself has warned
more regulatory rollbacks are coming. In his inaugural address, Trump spoke of “American
carnage.” He is delivering just that.
It doesn’t have to be like this. And we must not
accept it.
As we look to rebuild from this crisis, we must
recognize that a healthy global economy cannot exist without healthy people.
And as Congress prepares the next coronavirus stimulus package, rather than
propping up the industries that have been degrading our health for too long, we
should be investing in industries like clean energy that will not only put
people back to work but also won’t endanger us into the future.
We must demand that our elected leaders put people,
not polluters, first.
No comments:
Post a Comment