Posted on 07/14/2006 5:14:33 AM PDT by JSedreporter
Ever wonder how all those animals, plants and bugs get on the Endangered Species List? Its more than an academic question though that is where the answer has its roots.
When a critter gets on the ESL, nothing can be done to its habitat, even if it is just a candidate for the list whose endangerment remains undecided. Proscribed acts include, of course, drilling for oil.
Thus as gas prices soar, no refineries. Oil companies have not built a refinery in the United States in 30 years. Thats almost as long as the ESA has been, effectively, the law of the land.
A good many endangered species, and the candidates that would join them, are in oil-rich states. In fact, there are thousands of species on the ESL.
All it takes to get one on is a senior college or university biology paper. As it happens, one of the few species that came off the list made its exit due to factual errors in the thesis that put the thing on the roster in the first place.
This effort comes on top of a regulatory mountain that is already overwhelming and threatens to increase the federal governments already heavy hand in private land usage. The federal government itself owns at least a third of Americas 750 million acres.
And heaven help you if you are a private citizen fighting what you perceive to be a wrongful determination under the ESA. Environmental lawyers will tell you that it costs at least $500,000 to defend a client against an environmental charge if he or she is innocent.
She is also the author of Dont Know Much About Catholic History. So how does she compare her research on the pivotal British leader with that of her peers? Thus Oliver Cromwell, [is] in my view a monster if ever there was one, though he is much praised in history books, Dr. Moczar concludes.
Catholic Higher Education? The editor of Latin Mass, Father James Lucas, makes some interesting points about the comments we see from church fathers on matters such as birth control and AIDS. The orchestrated collaborative public drumbeat of allied progressive prelates, theologians and journalists has worked almost flawlessly since the revolt of the Rhine alliance of bishops in the opening days of the Second Vatican Council in October 1962, he writes. Even if the progressives fail to effect whatever changes they are pursuing, it softens up the Catholic world for the successful employment of Plan B.
In this stratagem, the hierarchy never enforces the traditional teaching, the professorial class teaches the opposite at seminaries and at Catholic universities and colleges, and the journalists write their pieces on how the Catholic priests and laity have parted ways with a hopelessly intransigent Vatican.
Malcolm A. Kline is the executive director of Accuracy in Academia.
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