Pentagon's Climate Report Proves Need for Greens
GREEN PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES
http://www.gp.org
For Immediate
Release
Wednesday, February 25, 2004
PENTAGON REPORT ON GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE PROVES NEED FOR GREEN CANDIDATES AND GREEN AGENDA
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Green Party leaders said today that a Pentagon report on security threats posed by global climate change demonstrates the need for drastic political action to bring the crisis and possible solutions to the attention of American voters.
"There's no better proof that we need a Green Party, with Green candidates running at every level from President to town council member," said Ben Manski, Wisconsin Green and co-chair of the Green Party of the United States. "The Bush Administration denies the human factor involved in global climate change and tried to hush up the report. Most of the Democrats, including Sen. Kerry (D.-Mass.) will allow only minimal measures that barely step on the toes of industry."
The report, revealed by The Observer (U.K.) in a February
22 article
( Commissioned by Pentagon
defense adviser Andrew Marshall and written by Peter
Schwartz, C.I.A. consultant and former head of planning at
Royal Dutch/Shell Group, and Doug Randall of the Global
Business Network, the report asserts that global climate
change "should be elevated beyond a scientific debate to a
U.S. national security concern."
The Green Party and its
candidates have called for: -- Conversion from fossil fuel
use to safe, clean, renewable energy (solar, wind, fuel
cell), through legislation, regulation, and taxation --
Reduction in emissions of carbon and other greenhouse
emissions -- Assistance for other nations, especially in
poor and developing parts of the world, with similar
conversion -- An end to privatization and reckless
exploitation of resources (especially fresh water, forests
and biodiversity, energy sources); dismantling of
international trade authorities and policies like
privatization that benefited corporate investors instead of
human populations and the environment -- An end to public
subsidies for fossil fuel and nuclear industries -- Energy
conservation, carbon taxes to discourage oil consumption,
and improved energy-efficient public transportation --
Renegotiation of the Kyoto Agreement to address the
seriousness of the crisis Greens recall that the
Clinton-Gore Administration, under pressure from fossil fuel
lobbies, obstructed enactment of the Kyoto protocols in
November 2000, during the international Hague conference on
global climate change. In March 2001, President Bush
withdrew the U.S. from the agreement. A report just
released by the Union of Concerned Scientists found a
_well-established pattern of suppression and distortion of
scientific findings by high-ranking Bush administration
political appointees across numerous federal agencies_
including climate change research, with _consequences for
human health, public safety, and community well-being."
MORE INFORMATION Green Party Presidential Nomination
Convention (titled 'Forward 2004!', in Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
June 23-28) and Candidates
http://www.gp.org/convention/process.html Media
credentialing for the convention
http://www.gp.org/forms/media/ The Green Party of the
United States http://www.gp.org 1700 Connecticut Avenue NW,
Suite 404 Washington, DC 20009. 202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193 Union of Concerned Scientists
http://www2.ucsusa.org - END -