- Signatures: 244
- Goal: 5,000
- Deadline: 2-7-2002
In this time of introspection, we search for answers to the question: What could we moral and well meaning Americans possibly be doing that would engender alienation or even hatred? As our president, you certainly appear clueless. Could it be that our national image abroad sometimes suffers because in many parts of the world our “ambassadors” by whom peoples lives are severely impacted are big oil corporations? During your administration, the line between big oil interests and government policy is especially blurred. From Indonesia with Exonmobil, to Myanmar’s (Burma) Yanada gas pipeline with Ultramar Diamond Shamrock, to the Equadorian Amazon with Taxaco, to Nigeria’s Niger Delta with Chevron and Royal Dutch Shell, big oil’s legacy of involvement in human rights violations and environmental crimes is appalling. Right within our own borders, a group of our native Americans are in a desperate struggle for their basic human rights. The Gwich’in people of northeastern Alaska and northwestern Canada simply want to maintain a way of life that has sustained their culture for hundreds of generations.
These northernmost members of the Athabascan Indian Nation proudly call themselves the caribou people. According to Sarah James, their eloquent spokesperson: “Caribou are not just what we eat; they are who we are. They are in our stories and songs and the whole way we see the world. Caribou are our life. Without caribou we wouldn’t exist”.
When most Alaskan native people, opted for cash settlements as a result of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, the Gwich’in people chose instead to retain their land with the caribou that support their traditional life style. Providing sustenance by hunting the migratory caribou sustains their nutrition and their dignity. The assumption was that the 130,000 member herd’s critical birthing place on the arctic coast within the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge would always be protected. Guess where your administration wants to give big oil its way?
Is it any wonder that the industry’s promises that all the roads, pipelines, and industrial complex won’t disturb the caribou while giving birth ring a bit hollow with people who know the caribou better than the industry PR people. Shame on us if we treat these people like they don’t really matter!!! Sadly many Alaskans are willing to sell off OUR national treasures for a form of permanent welfare based on oil revenues.
The ray of hope is that the Arctic Refuge is still protected. Even though the house of Representatives succumbed to pressure from big oil, by passing this corporate welfare - drill, burn, and waste energy bill, the Senate has a chance to reject this mistake and replace it with a less destructive alternative plan (just moderate improvement in auto fuel efficiency can save much more oil than the Arctic Refuge could ever deliver).
We mostly are a caring people. We just need representatives and a president who reflect this caring and this travesty need not happen.
Sign Now and encourage Bush to save people, and their environment. Aren't saved lives protected culture more important than money in Big Oil's pockets????
| Number | Date | Prefix | Name | State | Country | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 245 | 2:30 pm PDT, Aug 3 | greta malkotzoglou | Greece | |||
| 244 | 1:16 pm PDT, Apr 7 | Mrs. | Mels Whe | Vermont | United States | |
| 243 | 3:11 am PDT, Mar 30 | avril kettle | United Kingdom | |||
| 242 | 10:38 pm PDT, Mar 27 | William Harper | Georgia | United States | ||
| 241 | 7:25 am PDT, Mar 23 | Ms. | Sarah Panullo | Pennsylvania | United States | There are too many reasons why no drilling should be allowed. |
| 240 | 8:22 am PDT, Mar 22 | Art Deco | Maine | United States | ||
| 239 | 7:41 am PDT, Mar 22 | Jaylena Greenfield | Ohio | United States | ||
| 238 | 1:14 am PDT, Mar 22 | Ms. | Black Tiger Petersen | Canada | ||
| 237 | 8:39 pm PDT, Mar 21 | Mrs. | JOCELYNE ANNIE | Canada | ||
| 236 | 6:38 am PDT, Mar 21 | maya my | France | Free Tibet ! | ||
| 235 | 10:07 pm PST, Feb 16 | Anton Oscar Iorga | Canada | |||
| 234 | 8:32 am PST, Jan 1 | Anonymous | New York | United States | ||
| 233 | 6:57 am PST, Dec 24 | Laura Rodrigues | Portugal | |||
| 232 | 9:35 am PDT, Oct 25 | Olga Martin | Argentina | |||
| 231 | 9:39 pm PDT, Sep 24 | Ms. | Vanessa Hutcheson | Texas | United States | Burma, Darfur, and Tibet need our support now more than ever! |
| 230 | 8:13 am PDT, Sep 8 | Mr. | David van der Meiden | Netherlands | Stop this short-term thinking and come up with some real solutions for our energy needs. Destroying our earth for the last drops of oil won't do us any good in the long run. Oil will run out anyway so why not think ahead and come up with something that won't involve invading the last real wildernesses and harm people who don't even need the oil they're living on. How can anyone in his right mind think that this desperate, destructive search for oil is a real solution for our inevitable energy crisis? Make the right choices now before we are forced to make them. | |
| 229 | 4:46 pm PDT, Apr 30 | Ms. | Pamela R. Krakowski | Kentucky | United States | Drilling in ANWR makes me ashamed to be a U.S. citizen. |
| 228 | 3:29 pm PST, Feb 7 | Aiz T | Canada | |||
| 227 | 12:39 pm PST, Dec 27 | Thomas Poeschel | Missouri | United States | ||
| 226 | 12:27 pm PST, Dec 21 | Lene Harries | Denmark | |||
| 225 | 1:51 am PDT, May 11 | Mr. | Sebastiaan Jansen | Netherlands | Decreasing military efforts would balance the oil market positively, and generate money to spend on more "long term" sollutions for the world-energy dilemma... | |
| 224 | 11:42 am PST, Mar 14 | Matthew Moessner | Pennsylvania | United States | ||
| 223 | 5:00 pm PST, Jan 12 | Shannon Anne Gunning | Pennsylvania | United States | ||
| 222 | 9:33 am PDT, Oct 18 | Anonymous | Oregon | United States | ||
| 221 | 9:04 pm PDT, Oct 16 | Laurel Eckert | Missouri | United States | ||
| 220 | 2:49 pm PDT, Sep 29 | Genevieve Bennett | Australia | |||
| 219 | 5:36 pm PDT, Sep 14 | Brian Baxter | Florida | United States | ||
| 218 | 10:00 am PDT, Sep 13 | Vanessa Sayre | Ohio | United States | ||
| 217 | 3:03 am PDT, Sep 11 | Vicki Lo | Australia | Tsk tsk. Destroying an environment AND a way of life. | ||
| 216 | 7:25 pm PDT, Sep 10 | Steve Dale | Armed Forces Americas | Australia | ||
| 215 | 6:12 pm PDT, Sep 2 | William Maier | Massachusetts | United States | ||
| 214 | 7:46 pm PDT, Aug 16 | Ann Jenkins | Georgia | United States | ||
| 213 | 4:06 pm PDT, Aug 13 | Kelly James | Armed Forces Americas | Canada | ||
| 212 | 11:25 am PDT, Jul 24 | Wendy Horn | California | United States | ||
| 211 | 5:39 am PDT, Jul 24 | Gokhan Buyukkara | Armed Forces Americas | Turkey | ||
| 210 | 3:49 pm PDT, Jul 11 | Mara Bella | California | United States | ||
| 209 | 2:10 pm PDT, Jul 7 | Anonymous | Armed Forces Americas | United Kingdom | ||
| 208 | 3:09 am PDT, Jul 2 | Emily Eidson | Georgia | United States | ||
| 207 | 1:57 am PDT, Jun 27 | Kathryn Hamilton | New Hampshire | United States | ||
| 206 | 5:43 am PDT, Jun 21 | Larinda Medlin | California | United States | ||
| 205 | 3:08 pm PDT, Jun 10 | Kayla Lahti | Michigan | United States | ||
| 204 | 3:14 am PDT, Jun 8 | Anaïs Nedermeijer | Netherlands | Money for people who have enough money already, while hurting other people and their environment? That's hypocrite! | ||
| 203 | 5:34 pm PDT, Jun 4 | Allyson Guerin | Massachusetts | United States | ||
| 202 | 7:36 pm PDT, Jun 2 | Gipsy Descalza | Armed Forces Americas | Australia | ||
| 201 | 4:10 pm PDT, May 17 | abby sanderson | South Dakota | United States |
Stop Cultural Genocide.
moral and well meaning Americans possibly be doing that would engender alienation or
even hatred? As our president, you certainly appear clueless.
Could it be that our national image abroad sometimes suffers because in many parts of
the world our “ambassadors” by whom peoples lives are severely impacted are big oil
corporations? During your administration, the line between big oil interests and
government policy is especially blurred.
From Indonesia with Exonmobil, to
Myanmar’s (Burma) Yanada gas pipeline with Ultramar Diamond Shamrock, to the
Equadorian Amazon with Taxaco, to Nigeria’s Niger Delta with Chevron and Royal
Dutch Shell, big oil’s legacy of involvement in human rights violations and
environmental crimes is appalling.
Right within our own borders, a group of our native Americans are in a desperate
struggle for their basic human rights.
The Gwich’in people of northeastern Alaska and northwestern Canada simply want to
maintain a way of life that has sustained their culture for hundreds of generations.
These northernmost members of the Athabascan Indian Nation proudly call themselves
the caribou people. According to Sarah James, their eloquent spokesperson: “Caribou are
not just what we eat; they are who we are. They are in our stories and songs and the
whole way we see the world. Caribou are our life. Without caribou we wouldn’t exist”.
When most Alaskan native people, opted for cash settlements as a result of the Alaska
Native Claims Settlement Act, the Gwich’in people chose instead to retain their land
with the caribou that support their traditional life style. Providing sustenance by hunting
the migratory caribou sustains their nutrition and their dignity. The assumption was that
the 130,000 member herd’s critical birthing place on the arctic coast within the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge would always be protected.
Guess where your administration wants to give big oil its way? Is it any wonder
that the industry’s promises that all the roads, pipelines, and industrial complex won’t
disturb the caribou while giving birth ring a bit hollow with people who know the caribou
better than the industry PR people.
Shame on us if we treat these people like they don’t really matter!!!
Sadly many Alaskans are willing to sell off OUR national treasures for a form of
permanent welfare based on oil revenues.
The ray of hope is that the Arctic Refuge is still protected. Even though the house of
Representatives succumbed to pressure from big oil, by passing this corporate welfare -
drill, burn, and waste energy bill, the Senate has a chance to reject this mistake and
replace it with a less destructive alternative plan (just moderate improvement in auto fuel
efficiency can save much more oil than the Arctic Refuge could ever deliver).
We mostly are a caring people. We just need representatives and a president who reflect this caring and this travesty need not happen.
Please don't give in to BIG OIL. Save people, and their environment. Aren't saved lives protected culture more important than money in Big Oil's pockets????
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