To Save America: Stopping Obama's Secular-Socialist Machine (28 page)

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Authors: Newt Gingrich

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Green conservatives are politically active in Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom among other nations, and the label is
increasingly claimed by an emerging center-right coalition in the United States. When we first applied the term in U.S. politics, we defined green conservatism as: “an optimistic, positive, science and technology-based, entrepreneurial, market-oriented, incentive-led, conservative environmentalism that creates more solutions faster and that will result in more biodiversity with less pollution and a safer planet.”
More simply, green conservatism describes conservatives who incorporate green concerns into their ideology.
From the business side, entrepreneurial environmentalists are the new agents of change on the frontlines of a creative environmental movement. Government’s role, rather than to dictate, is to incentivize. In homes throughout America, energy efficiency has been facilitated by government rebates and matching funds to encourage investment in efficient appliances, insulation, and technology.
Green conservatives worldwide are broadening their political platforms by including environmental initiatives. In the UK, conservative leader David Cameron has proposed a “smart power grid,” incentives for small-scale renewables, sustainable public transit, and technological innovation to cut carbon emissions. In France, a conservative president presides over a nation whose investment in nuclear energy is a model for other European countries.
And in Canada, Preston Manning, founder of the Canadian Reform Party, insists Western Canadian conservatism, with its rural and populist origins, must reconcile its support for strong growth with the necessity of environmental protection.
As documented in our book
A Contract with the Earth,
many U.S. businesses and industries have already adopted sustainable practices for their employees and their facilities. Deploying fleets of electric, hybrid, natural gas, or hydrogen-powered cars and trucks, they are also building new plants that comply with green building practices such as LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)
guidelines. Combining innovation with LEED-type guidelines is an inspiring public platform for our new movement.
A COMMITMENT TO ENVIRONMENTAL LEADERSHIP
We believe unwavering political and citizen leadership is the key to effective environmental policies. Quality of life and environmental sustainability with continued economic growth in jobs and incomes must become national priorities. In the 2008 paperback edition of
A Contract with the Earth,
we proposed that green conservatives could provide leadership for a polarized and stalemated environmental movement:
The fact that green conservatism is attracting converts from every political faction renders the movement mainstream. Breaking out from the current stalemate means we must find a way to get things done. An inclusive, bipartisan movement can be built on green conservative principles.
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In contrast, a global, left-wing environmental movement organized around a doomsday theory of climate change is pushing for a massive wealth transfer from the West to developing nations, and an enormous increase in bureaucratic control by governments. Meanwhile, UN-designated experts and an alliance of global bureaucrats are lobbying for treaties to enforce international climate change regulations within a system of global taxation. This entire “solution” is a kind of class warfare applied to nation states.
With our historical emphasis on free enterprise and national sovereignty, Americans have resisted these extreme measures. But we believe genuine environmental problems, many of them ignored due to the global warming obsession, cannot be resolved
without U.S. leadership. Therefore, green conservatives must offer rational alternatives to the extremist positions now dominating the discussion. Pursuing affordable programs of worldwide reforestation, for example, could help capture carbon dioxide while protecting biodiversity—the ultimate win/win conservation strategy.
To lead on this issue, conservatives must determine how a healthy environment is compatible with key conservative political ideas. We can begin by advocating sustainability. Defined as “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs,” this concept is consistent with a conservative political philosophy. “Conservative,” after all, comes from the same root as “conservation.” Adherence to this fundamental principle will conserve future opportunity for optimal quality of life, economic stability, and human happiness. Ronald Reagan campaigned on these kinds of universal human aspirations.
For the sake of our children and grandchildren, we must act cooperatively to ensure a sustainable world. However, green conservatives are uniquely committed to empowering people rather than government.
The government can play a modest role setting the general direction. An example is the 1969 U.S. National Environmental Policy Act, which aimed to “create and maintain conditions under which man and nature can exist in productive harmony, and fulfill the social, economic and other requirements of present and future generations of Americans.” The key connection is the need to achieve and sustain environmental and economic harmony.
Green conservatives must do more than simply say no to the big-government, environmental Left; we need to provide a clear and robust political alternative for local and global environmental stewardship. We must articulate this vision in party platforms, newspaper op-ed columns, community and national blogs, and other electronic media in order to generate a menu of green conservative ideas in the
environmental marketplace.
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Affiliating with the tea party movement is also a good opportunity to spread green conservatism, since many tea party activists strongly favor a healthy environment but oppose using socialist policies to achieve it.
Big government is not necessary or even conducive to sustainability. As we argued in
A Contract with the Earth
, business and industry are already greener than government, and they are innovating at a faster pace as well. So we should work with business and industry, local governments, and nonprofit groups to develop stewardship that is fast, focused, and flexible. We should also favor public-private partnerships and grassroots solutions by local people who understand the issues on the ground. An example is the NEXT network of volunteer organizations and groups that monitor sea turtle nests during their breeding seasons on the Florida coastline.
The sincere commitment of green conservatives to better environmental standards and practices is one of the media’s best kept secrets. Green conservatives have to insist on a place at the environmental table. Above all, we should advance rational, responsible, and innovative solutions to help protect the natural resources that support all life on this planet. Effective environmental problem-solving requires the elbow grease and acumen of every political party in America. There are conservatives in both the Democratic and Republican parties; likewise, both Republicans and Democrats can be green.
CLEAN AMERICAN ENERGY
All nations unarguably require reliable, affordable energy for economic growth. This growth, in turn is an essential requirement for
a healthy environment. A broad and green energy menu needs entrepreneurs rather than bureaucrats, incentives rather than regulation, markets rather than command and control, tax relief rather than litigation, and scientists rather than trial lawyers.
Other nations energetically locate and diversify their energy sources, while America shows inefficiency and timidity. Innovative and sustainable, a green conservative energy plan will allow us to lead the world in producing a wide array of sustainable energy technology and clean, renewable products.
Some industries are already moving in this direction. Our automobile industry has strongly committed to hybrid, hydrogen, and electric vehicles. Taking no federal stimulus money, Ford successfully developed a line of fuel-efficient cars that are highly competitive with Honda and Toyota. Fuel efficiency and cleaner emissions have become a winning green business strategy for Detroit.
But industry can’t act alone; the federal government must help—not by getting bigger, but by getting smaller. Namely, the government must remove its restrictions on access to our key energy sources. Perhaps the most inexplicable such restriction is the maze of regulations that effectively prevents the spread of nuclear power—a clean, cheap, zero-emission source of electricity.
Currently, only one nuclear plant is under construction in the United States, while forty-four are being built in other countries.
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Our leadership as a nuclear innovator is fading fast, as other countries pursue ways to overcome historical obstacles such as the waste problem. For example, Norway’s state-owned energy company Statkraft is investigating the use of thorium to fuel nuclear reactors. Thorium is considered a greener alternative to uranium and plutonium, as it produces only a tiny fraction of the hazardous waste created by uranium-fuelled reactors.
Aside from being cheap and carbon-free, nuclear power offers other benefits as well. For example, once a plant is operational,
nuclear energy is a relatively inexpensive power source for producing hydrogen, which could hasten the development of hydrogen-fueled cars and, ultimately, a low-carbon economy based on hydrogen. Nuclear power stations could also power desalination plants at lower cost to mitigate future droughts.
With all this promise just from nuclear power, imagine the possibilities if we develop environmentally responsible ways to tap America’s full energy potential: natural gas, cleaner coal, domestic sources of offshore oil, and a wide array of renewable energy sources such as geothermal, biofuels, solar, and wind power. Other nations are pursuing these technologies, including China, so American innovation must be encouraged by tax incentives and public-private partnerships.
Much of this can be accomplished by eliminating red tape and facilitating active investments in new technology. This could bring about new, clean energy sources most people aren’t even aware of today. For example, a new high-temperature technology known as plasma gasification promises to provide a way to burn off landfill waste and provide energy for nearby industries and towns. New to the United States, this technology is already operating successfully in Japan. Gasification technology can also be utilized in the clean coal process by capturing carbon dioxide. Public-private partnerships in research and development will ultimately lead to other effective methods to turn environmental liabilities into community assets.
Local governments are already developing green conservative programs. An example is Grand Rapids, Michigan, which has rooftop gardens, rainwater cisterns, solar panels, and the highest per capita number of buildings that comply with the standards set by the U.S. Green Building Council. The city plans to draw 100 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, mostly wind power, by 2020. Its residents are predominantly conservative and religious, deriving their environmental values from a Biblically inspired sense of stewardship.
THE BLAME GAME
The extremist environmental movement asserts that we will soon face global warming-induced environmental catastrophes that can only be avoided by forcing Western capitalist nations, especially America, to adopt devastating energy taxes, ruinous new environmental regulations, and a massive wealth transfer to developing countries. This mantra has become so popular, both among the American Left and abroad, that even Osama bin Laden in a recent recording thought he could win support by blaming the West for global warming.
This narrative fails to recognize that capitalist democracies are among the most environmentally conscious nations in the world. As a rule, the more socialist a nation becomes, the more the environment suffers—just look at the environmental degradation that characterized nearly every Cold War-era Communist nation. As we noted in
A Contract with the Earth
, wealth and freedom generally lead to better environmental practices; forests are declining in poor nations but expanding in wealthy ones.
The international Left relentlessly condemn our alleged overconsumption of energy and services. Sometimes they invoke the spurious statistic of “per-capita use of energy,” comparing us unfavorably with China and India. This is absurd. China and India are major industrial polluters and carbon emitters. But simply because their populations are so large, their per capita output is relatively small.
So, in formulating a comprehensive environmental policy, the first thing we should do is to ignore the unfair, anti-American critique of the Left. We must develop our own policy based on conservative principles. Under such a policy, America should be a leader in environmental philanthropy and foreign aid to countries facing environmental challenges. This aid would be given on a case-by-case basis to nations with pressing environmental problems and accountable plans for fixing them. Operating like a sound business,
our international environmental aid will depend on prudent management and our national financial situation at any given time.
This system would be an alternative to the current demands for coercive international mandates. Our Constitution requires the people’s consent in matters of war and finance; no foreign or world government has the mandate to tax U.S. citizens to combat global climate change or any other environmental danger. In particular, a proposed global carbon tax, calculated and regulated by the United Nations, would violate our sovereignty and must be resisted.
History has repeatedly demonstrated the incredible generosity of the American people, American private enterprise, and American institutions. The United States is already a global leader in environmental philanthropy, whether it be responding to the Asian tsunami or the Haitian earthquake. We should prioritize environmental sustainability, both in America and across the globe, but we must not allow the Left to exploit the global warming panic in order to degrade our liberties and entwine us in a new, corrupt, international climate change bureaucracy that would undoubtedly be dominated by dictatorships and kleptocratic governments.

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