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Sen. Inhofe's EPW staff has gathered a variety of scientific
sources indicating that polar bears, the majestic icon of the CoGW, are
not declining -- in fact, they are now near record high levels (at
least double their population of half a century ago). Many of these
extinction scenarios are floated using a raft of scientifically unsound
assumptions.
And yet, yesterday we read this in the Los Angeles Times:
The
Bush administration is nearing a decision that would officially
acknowledge the environmental damage of global warming, and name its
first potential victim: the polar bear.
The Interior Department
may act as soon as this week on its year-old proposal to make the polar
bear the first species to be listed as threatened with extinction
because of melting ice due to a warming planet.
The environmental left candidly admits the importance of the polar bear as a cute, cuddly symbol of their cause:
Both
sides agree that conservationists finally have the poster species they
have sought to use the Endangered Species Act as a lever to force
federal limits on the greenhouse gases linked to global warming, and
possibly to battle smokestack industry projects far from the Arctic.
"All
animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others," said
Kassie Siegel, an attorney with the nonprofit Center for Biological
Diversity. "And then there is the polar bear."
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