Coyote Gulch's 2008 Presidential Election

 












































































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  Thursday, April 13, 2006


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Field and Stream: "Rod and gun in hand, and backing the Second Amendment right to own firearms, President George W. Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney have won the hearts of America's sportsmen. Yet the two men have failed to protect outdoor sports on the nation's public lands. With deep ties to the oil and gas industry, Bush and Cheney have unleashed a national energy plan that has begun to destroy hunting and fishing on millions of federal acres throughout the West, setting back effective wildlife management for decades to come.

"In his second week in office, President Bush convened a National Energy Policy Development Group, chaired by Vice President Cheney. Meeting with representatives of the energy industry behind closed doors, it eventually released a National Energy Policy, the goal of which was to 'expedite permits and coordinate federal, state, and local actions necessary for energy-related project approvals on a national basis.'

"Put into practice through a series of executive orders, the policy has prioritized drilling over other uses on federal lands, while relegating long-standing conservation mandates from the 1960s and '70s to the back burner. For example, in Wyoming, Montana, Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico, the Bureau of Land Management has approved over 75 percent of the energy industry's applications for exemptions to work in critical winter range, heretofore closed to protect wildlife - sage grouse, mule deer, and pronghorns, in particular (the Federal Land Policy Management Act of 1976 gave agencies the means to close critical habitat). The BLM has also continued to issue drilling leases while in the process of writing new resource management plans that still await public comment. In addition, the Bush administration is working hard to eliminate Wilderness Study areas - set aside for their scenic value as well as their importance to wildlife. Most disturbingly, Congress is now debating a national energy bill that would codify the policy, making it the law of the land rather than an executive order. Subsequent administrations - be they Republican or Democratic - would be unable to institute a more balanced management plan for our western lands without resorting to new congressional legislation...

"Despite our dismay at seeing western landscapes transformed in this way, none of us - hunter, angler, wildlife watcher - can discount the need for energy. We use it in our vehicles; we use it to heat our homes and cook our meals. Clearly, something must be done to secure supplies. But only 3 percent of the world's oil and natural gas lies under domestic soils, while we used 25 percent of the global total in 2002. In other words, our energy security can never result from more drilling in our public wildernesses. Of course, the worldwide quest for fuel damages the environment wherever it is unleashed. As Doug Grann, the president and CEO of Wildlife Forever, the conservation arm of the North American Hunting and Fishing Club, points out, we cannot sacrifice the wildlife and wild country of this planet while doing nothing to develop alternative fuels and improving the fuel efficiency of our cars, factories, and homes."

Thanks to Political Wire for the link.

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


9:19:09 AM    

Political Wire: "'While the fight over illegal immigration roils Washington, the issue is spilling out into local, state and federal races across the country,' the Wall Street Journal reports. 'But the response isn't monolithic. Even as a number of House Republicans are expected to face a backlash from Hispanic and other voters for their tough approach, some candidates are adopting hard-line positions in a bid to portray incumbents as weak on illegal immigration. For now, the issue is percolating largely in Republican primaries but is expected to affect campaigns across the board as the November midterm elections approach. In past campaigns, immigration has been an issue in border states like Arizona and places with a high percentage of Hispanics. But political observers say recent mass demonstrations by immigrants, an influx of foreign-born workers into the heartland and the political divide in Washington have caused voters to focus more on it than in the past.'"

Los Angeles Times: "Most Americans say the United States should confront the challenge of illegal immigration by both toughening border enforcement and creating a new guest-worker program rather than stiffening enforcement alone, a Los Angeles Times/Bloomberg poll has found. By a solid 2-1 margin, those surveyed said they would prefer such a comprehensive approach, which a bipartisan group of senators has proposed, to an enforcement-only strategy, which the House of Representatives approved in December. Support for a comprehensive approach was about the same among Democrats, independents and Republicans, the poll found." Thanks to The Moderate Voice for the link.

New West: "Former Colorado Gov. Richard Lamm is a rarity in the immigration debate. He's a staunch Democrat who is also a staunch opponent of immigration. Not just illegal immigration. Pretty much any immigration. Lamm's message: cut out the illegal immigration, clamp down on the legal immigration or the nation's population will soar out of control. Lamm has been talking this tough talk for years. He even campaigned unsuccessfully for the top seat at the Sierra Club two years ago on a similar anti-immigration-population-crunch platform. On Tuesday, he took the message to Grand Junction[base ']s Mesa State College, as the immigration debate reaches a fever pitch across the country. Lamm is used to the fever pitch, though, and Grand Junction is used to immigrants. They have a long history here, first coming to work the orchards and fields and more recently to fill service jobs."

Category: 2008 Presidential Election


9:02:41 AM    


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