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Shumlin lifestyle has big carbon footprint
Credit: Justin Lindholm | Burlington Free Press | November 2, 2014 | www.burlingtonfreepress.com ~~
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It has been predicted that when the year 2050 arrives, Vermonters will be using 90 percent renewable energy and the world will be well on its way to controlling climate change. I doubt that, and here’s why.
Picture Gov. Peter Shumlin, who has repeatedly expounded on the horrors of climate change, flying again this winter to a far-away place aboard a jet that burns thousands of gallons of fuel per flight. Picture him dining at nice restaurants in this distant land, consuming the finest food and drink flown in from who knows where.
Now, picture the poor Therrien family of Sheffield whose total carbon footprint is no doubt a mere fraction of Peter Shumlin’s personal carbon footprint. Picture the sleepless Therriens in their small house, huddled against the maddening noise of nearby industrial wind turbines while Peter Shumlin is wining and dining in some far-away place, living a lifestyle that pollutes the atmosphere with more carbon than the average human does.
Throughout human history, whenever the moneyed and politically powerful have forced those people with little power to sacrifice, while they themselves refuse to, no endeavor or program has ever succeeded for long. As an example, the system of communism fell apart when the average worker noticed that those with more power than themselves were living the good life instead of doing their equal share.
Internationally, China and other countries have fallen for the same chapter on selfish gluttony in the book of human nature as Peter Shumlin has here in Vermont. Like Shumlin, China has figured that they do not have to do their fair share to stop climate change.
This type of greed leads to what is called “game over.” I haven’t even touched on what Russia, India and the African and South American countries will be doing to add to carbon pollution because they think, like Gov. Shumlin, that others should conserve, not themselves.
Back here in the U.S. and in Vermont, we have what is called a renewables industrial complex, where politicians in power feed government money and subsidies (your money) to renewable energy building contractors who make large amounts of money and who then feed a lot of this money to lobbyists and political campaigns so that they can get even more projects and more subsidies for themselves. These contractors and politicians are so busy chasing this whirlwind of money and political power that they will spare no time to stop and compensate people like the poor Therriens for the loss of their family’s good life.
Peter Shumlin doesn’t care about getting his own personal carbon footprint down to that of the average person of the world. Peter Shumlin doesn’t even care about the turbine developers permanently destroying super-rare and fragile Alpine ecology. But what really bothers me is that Peter Shumlin doesn’t even begin to care about the suffering Therriens.
Justin Lindholm lives in Rutland.
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