
Order your copy today!
Now is the time for boldness! Instead, we're getting Baucusness. Sen. Max Baucus, that is--Montana Democrat, chair of the Senate Finance Committee, and frequent spear-carrier for the corporate agenda. He has now been tapped to handle Obama's promised rewrite of America's warped, ineffective, and exorbitantly expensive health-care system.
Sign up for email alerts, from breaking news to weekly commentary:
| www.flickr.com |
All Flickr photos of Jim Hightower
To add your photos, upload them Flickr and tag them with jimhightower!

The New York Times bestselling author and America's funniest activist gives the lowdown on...
[More info]

It's time to make politics fun again! With uncommon insight, political fearlessness and laugh-out...
[More info]

With his aw-shucks charisma and no-nonsense attitude, he dishes out what's wrong with the eroding...
[More info]
Have a gander at the whole store here...
Home | Contact | MDC | RSS | Privacy Policy | Copyright Saddle-Burr Productions, Jim Hightower, All Rights Reserved 1996-2006
A MOUNTAINTOP REVELATION
There is environmental degradation – and then there is environmental degradation that punches you right in the stomach.
Mountaintop removal is in this last category. Actually, "removal" is way too nice of a phrase for this abhorrent, totally-destructive assault on mother nature by coal corporations. Rather than tunneling down to extract coal, corporate giants are simply blasting away the top thirds of Appalachia's mountains to allow them to scoop out the deposits.
This process is literally destroying some of the most gorgeous, ancient, and ecologically-unique mountains in the whole world – as well as destroying the life of people, plants, and animals that inhabit these serene forests. The rubble that once was the mountaintop is labeled "spoil" by the corporations, which crudely bulldoze it down into the streams and valleys below, where it is then called "fill."
For years, local residents and environmental groups have fought often lonely battles against these powerful corporate exploiters, but lately they are being joined by some allies who are new to environmental causes – and who come to the fight with a strong moral force: "Christians for the Mountains." They are a part of a national awakening among people of faith to what evangelicals call "creation care," and this Appalachian group is urging religious people to take up mountaintop destruction "as a spiritual issue" – which, after all, it is.
Of course, the coal industry insists that it is doing God's work by blowing up mountains. As an industry spokesman explained: "Human welfare depends on the rational exploitation of nature." But the corporation's aren't winning this religious argument – as a retired coal miner put it as he viewed the blasted and flattened peaks where he lives: "God ain't ever run no bulldozer."
This is Jim Hightower saying... To learn about a DVD explaining the issue, contact Christians for the Mountains:www.christiansforthemountains.org or call (304) 799-4137.
Sources:
"Taking On a Coal Mining Practice as a Matter of Faith," The New York Times, October 28, 2006.