Bush's Natio


nal Park Clean-up Plan - Satire (funny ha-ha)
(en
http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=53658&group=webcast
glish)

WASHINGTON, DC--Vowing to "restore the pristine splendor of America's natural
treasures," President Bush Monday unveiled "Project: National Parks
Clean-Up," an ambitious program to remove all toxic petrochemical deposits
from national parks by 2004.


"Places like Yellowstone and Yosemite were once pure, unspoiled wilderness,"
Bush said at a White House press conference. "But over the course of the past
10 million years, we have allowed them to become polluted with toxic
fossil-fuel deposits, turning a blind eye to the steady build-up of vast
quantities of dangerous pollutants. It's time to end this terrible neglect."

Continued Bush: "A comprehensive survey of our parks, conducted by a team of
top geologists specially commissioned by me, has discovered giant pockets of
petroleum, coal, and other 'fossil poisons' beneath an alarming 38 percent of
our national parks' surface area. Though a majority of these poisons are
buried under several million tons of rock strata, should they ever seep to
the surface and spread into the surrounding areas, they would spell disaster
for the parks' precious ecosystems."

To underscore the severity of the crisis, Bush produced a chart illustrating
survey results for Yellowstone National Park, where a "staggeringly huge"
toxic-petroleum deposit was discovered.

"This amount represents the equivalent of 40,000 supertankers worth of oil,"
said Bush, gesturing toward a line on the chart. "To put the dangers into
perspective, consider this: If these 'petro-poisons' should ever spill out
into the park itself, the resulting environmental disaster would be 40,000
times worse than the damage caused by the wreck of the Exxon Valdez."

"We cannot allow such a thing to happen," Bush said. "We must remove this oil
now, before it's too late."

Under the Bush plan, 7.2 billion tons of toxic petroleum would be removed by
the target date of January 2004. Unlike other federal environmental clean-up
initiatives, administration officials say the plan would pay for itself,
offsetting costs through the sale of petroleum byproducts produced as a
result of the clean-up process.

.
The clean-up, EPA chief Christine Todd Whitman said, may even prove
profitable, a prospect that has attracted the participation of private
industry. Already, many U.S. companies have expressed interest in lending
assistance, and it is hoped that these companies will carry out much, or
perhaps all, of the clean-up effort.

Though "Project: National Parks Clean-Up" represents Bush's first major
environmental initiative since taking office, supporters are quick to point
that he has been a longtime champion of petroleum removal.

"As governor of Texas, Bush fought tirelessly to protect the state's
subterranean environment through a series of massive petrochemical-deposit
clean-up projects," Secretary of the Interior Gale A. Norton said. "Under his
governorship, more tons of petroleum-based subterranean environmental
contaminants were removed in Texas than in all the national Superfund
clean-up sites combined. The Democrats talk a good game about the importance
of cleaning up the environment, but when it comes to actually eliminating the
threat of enormous oil deposits lurking under the surface of our nation, no
one can hold a candle to George W. Bush."

Thus far, reaction has been mixed. Some have said it is unrealistic for the
president to try to remove so much petroleum so quickly. Others, such as Sen.
Bob Smith (R-NH), have charged that the president is caving in to pressure
from environmentalists, arguing that the government's energies would be
better directed toward improving the military.

But despite such criticism, Bush stressed that the urgency of removing the
oil deposits should take precedence over everything else.

"Nothing is more important than the legacy we leave future generations," Bush
said. "The costs of this project pale in comparison to the importance of
safeguarding our planet's ecosystem. Our primary mission must be to protect
and foster our nation's most precious natural resource: oil. I mean, the
environment."


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