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- <text id=93TT2397>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: Will the System Defeat Al Gore?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 74
- Will the System Defeat Al Gore?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> One of the first world leaders to seek an audience with
- Vice President Albert Gore is, naturally enough, Norway's Prime
- Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, who headed the World Commission
- on Environment and Development. Brundtland's mission, however,
- could not be more environmentally incorrect. She wants her buddy
- from the Earth Summit in Rio to promise that the U.S. won't take
- punitive economic measures against Norway, which plans to defy
- an international moratorium on whaling.
- </p>
- <p> Brundtland's humiliating mission is like an environmental
- version of the ghost of Christmas future: four years from now
- the Vice President may find himself in a similarly uncomfortable
- position, explaining to his environmental supporters why he
- failed to deliver on commitments made during the campaign. Just
- as ideologues during 12 years of Republican Administrations were
- thwarted by the courts and Congress from unilaterally rolling
- back environmental protection, Brundtland's situation
- illustrates how the workings of a modern democracy can also
- dampen the ambitions of true believers occupying the highest
- positions of power.
- </p>
- <p> Brundtland got into her fix because she needed the
- political support of fishermen in northern communities. Faced
- with declining catches, the fishermen look hungrily at Minke
- whales. To keep this group in her fragile coalition, Brundtland
- has blithely forgotten many of her strongly held convictions.
- </p>
- <p> To be fair, Norway has an admirable environmental record
- in other respects. The U.S., for instance, might follow its
- example and implement a carbon tax, which encourages efficiency
- and the use of cleaner fuels. But the whaling issue has real
- significance. By undermining the International Whaling
- Commission, Norway's unilateral action will open the door to
- cheating by other nations, imperiling anew some whale species.
- Many Norwegians recognize this, but it is the politically potent
- fishermen who are driving policy.
- </p>
- <p> This is the nub of it. Just as Norway has its politically
- potent fishermen, the U.S. has politically potent loggers, not
- to mention developers, ranchers, auto manufacturers and an
- endless assortment of highly focused interests that can make
- life uncomfortable for environmentally minded politicians, even
- when they have broad support in the community. This leads to
- what might be called the first law of environmental decline: the
- long-term health of an ecosystem recedes in importance when
- people are fighting over access to specific resources for their
- short-term economic interests. This is hardly surprising in a
- country that cannot come to grips with the long-term problems
- of its budget deficit and whose major corporations are dominated
- by managers who will not look past the next fiscal quarter. The
- difference is that while people adjust to shortsightedness and
- compromise, nature only reacts. The results can be irreversible
- and belie any rhetorical airbrushing.
- </p>
- <p> Take the case of America's Western forests. During his
- confirmation hearings, Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt, the
- former Arizona Governor, had to run a gauntlet of Western
- Senators who left the impression that the government has
- unreasonably locked up vast tracts of forest. All it takes,
- however, is a flight over the tattered quilt of
- arbitrary-looking patches that remain of the Pacific Northwest's
- forests to refute bland assurances of responsible stewardship.
- </p>
- <p> Similarly, the Montreal Protocol to protect the ozone
- layer is often trotted out as an example of how the
- international community successfully came to grips with a dire
- threat. Unfortunately, the protocol is not a success for the
- ozone layer, which will continue to deteriorate as CFCs
- manufactured during years of international temporizing wander
- upward to the stratosphere like leisurely assassins. Bush
- ridiculed this threat during the '92 campaign, calling Gore
- "Ozone Man," but in fact the loss of the world's upper
- atmospheric shield is one environmental threat that has people
- genuinely scared.
- </p>
- <p> This presents the new Administration with a golden
- opportunity to change the tenor of the environmental debate.
- Clinton and Gore should take a page from Ross Perot's scare
- tactics on the deficit and use this fear. Sad to say, it is only
- when people become truly frightened (or angry) that the
- government has some hope of breaking the cycle of enacting
- feel-good laws that do little to halt environmental decline.
- </p>
- <p> Before mobilizing the public, however, the new
- Administration must undertake a thorough review of the sorry,
- zigzag path of past environmental legislation. If there is
- anything positive in this pastiche of cumbersome, expensive and
- irrelevant initiatives, it is the trend championed by the
- Republican predecessors to move away from regulations and toward
- market incentives (hint: a gas tax!) to achieve environmental
- goals. The new team also has the opportunity to rethink the
- various environmental risks that determine priorities.
- </p>
- <p> Internationally, the Administration can reassert American
- efforts to put some substance into the neutered agreements that
- came out of last June's Earth Summit. Gore has the opportunity
- to signal determination if he meets with Brundtland. If he were
- feeling sadistic he might quote from her Harvard commencement
- address last June, in which she spoke of the vital importance of
- international agreements, or recite the words of her report, Our
- Common Future, which cites American economic sanctions as a
- means of policing agreements on marine conservation. And he
- might pray that four years later, a successor will not appear to
- read back to him his own words on how the world can halt
- environmental decline.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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