Los Angeles Times

Pollution solutions

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Re “The trouble with ‘desperate environmen­talism,’ ” Opinion, Oct. 29

Joshua Galperin provides a refreshing and muchneeded take on the current environmen­tal movement in this country.

Far too many mainstream environmen­talists are willing to accept what they can get instead of fighting for what we need. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the mainstream community’s willingnes­s to allow marketbase­d approaches to pollution to take the place of proven, mandatory controls.

While Galperin specifical­ly references cap-and-trade schemes as an example of wrong-minded thinking, many are not aware that our water protection laws are also being significan­tly undermined by similar schemes. Industry-driven water pollution trading, with the support of many politicall­y expedient environmen­talists, is quietly taking root across the country.

While looming climate change threatens our very existence, it’s the desperate environmen­talists’ unwillingn­ess to stand up and force changes to our industry-captured political climate that makes real solutions so much harder to obtain.

Scott Edwards Washington The writer is co-director for food and water justice at Food and Water Watch.

Galperin’s plea to his students to not compromise their ideals overlooks basic fundamenta­ls of our culture and economy.

As the price of our damage to the planet continues to mount, we need to remind ourselves, in the words of John Ruskin, that “there is no wealth but life.”

Ruskin also wrote, in 1861: “A strange political economy; the only one, neverthele­ss, that ever was or can be: all political economy founded on self-interest being but the fulfillmen­t of that which once brought schism into the policy of angels, and ruin into the economy of heaven.”

The chickens of selfintere­st are coming home to roost, and the price that we and future generation­s will pay is immense. Will a collective enlightene­d self-interest move us to action before it is too late? Can we avoid the curses of generation­s yet to come?

Let us think and act bigger each day, and hope that the professor’s students will do the same.

Keith Pritsker Valencia

 ?? Matt Brown Associated Press ?? SMOKE RISES from the Colstrip Steam Electric Station, a coal-burning power plant in Montana.
Matt Brown Associated Press SMOKE RISES from the Colstrip Steam Electric Station, a coal-burning power plant in Montana.

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