RachelMadcow
Rookie
- Mar 29, 2011
- 370
- 58
- 0
- Banned
- #41
Democrats talking about jobs?
LOL
LOL
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And what NOW? *DORK*
Times UP deany...
YEPMilitaryNOPE NOPE NOPE See Military Dumbass What? Yes? Yes? Yes? NOPEFood safetyNOPEFacilitate electionsSee First Amendment...Support of the rights of its citizens to praise, criticize and participate in their government
And RadioDORK ATLANTA?
*BITE MY ASS DORK*
Obfucation is the path you chose.Times UP deany...
YEPNOPE NOPE NOPE See Military Dumbass What? Yes? Yes? Yes? NOPE NOPEMilitarySee First Amendment...Support of the rights of its citizens to praise, criticize and participate in their government
And RadioDORK ATLANTA?
*BITE MY ASS DORK*
I guess there's a point there. Besides the one on your tiny head.
And/ This is supposed to mean something?
Democrats talking about jobs?
LOL
And/ This is supposed to mean something?
And THIS is supposed to mean something?
And THIS is supposed to mean something?
hes explained it poorly, and it was nixon, etc. and?
using the progressive yardstick as applied to cons. shes responsible for say, 10 million deaths, easy.
Nixon did create the EPA but Kennedy dreamed it up & used the President's Science Advisory Committee to report recommendations for the use and regulation of pesticides. The ball was already rolling when Nixon was steamrolled by it. President Nixon had set up a Cabinet-level Environmental Quality Council as well as a Citizens' Advisory Committee on Environmental Quality. His critics charged that these were largely ceremonial bodies, with almost no real power.
Stung by these charges, President Nixon appointed a White House committee in December 1969 to consider whether there should be a separate environmental agency. The President had already asked Litton founder, Roy L. Ash, to take a sweeping look at organizational problems throughout the government. It was at just this time that Congress sent to the President a remarkable bill known as the National Environmental Policy Act
"Fooling with Nature"
Carson's eloquence did indeed close many bottles as her book was read by members of Congress and President Kennedy himself. At a press conference on August 29, 1962, a journalist asked the President if he had considered "asking the Department of Agriculture or the Public Health Service to take a closer look at ... the growing concern among scientists" about the possible long-term effects of DDT and other pesticides. Kennedy responded, "Yes, and I know they already are. I think particularly, of course, since Miss Carson's book."
The President quickly appointed his scientific adviser, Dr. Jerome B.Wiesner, to study the pesticide issue to produce a report containing recommendations for the use and regulation of pesticides in the United States. The President's Science Advisory Committee report, "The Use of Pesticides," issued on May 15, 1963, called for decreased use of toxic chemicals to chemical controls that were less persistent in the environment "until the publication of Silent Spring, people were generally unaware of the toxicity of pesticides."
Shortly after "The Use of Pesticides" was released, Rachel Carson appeared before the Senate Committee on Commerce where she suggested that a commission be established to deal with pesticide issues and to make decisions based on the broad public interest, rather than the profit interest of a few. The Commission that Carson envisioned lives on as the Environmental Protection Agency; it is "the extended shadow of Silent Spring," as an EPA journalist wrote on the fifteenth anniversary of the Agency. The purpose of this Agency is to protect, develop, and enhance the environment.
hes explained it poorly, and it was nixon, etc. and?
using the progressive yardstick as applied to cons. shes responsible for say, 10 million deaths, easy.
Nixon did create the EPA but Kennedy dreamed it up & used the President's Science Advisory Committee to report recommendations for the use and regulation of pesticides. The ball was already rolling when Nixon was steamrolled by it. President Nixon had set up a Cabinet-level Environmental Quality Council as well as a Citizens' Advisory Committee on Environmental Quality. His critics charged that these were largely ceremonial bodies, with almost no real power.
Stung by these charges, President Nixon appointed a White House committee in December 1969 to consider whether there should be a separate environmental agency. The President had already asked Litton founder, Roy L. Ash, to take a sweeping look at organizational problems throughout the government. It was at just this time that Congress sent to the President a remarkable bill known as the National Environmental Policy Act
"Fooling with Nature"
Carson's eloquence did indeed close many bottles as her book was read by members of Congress and President Kennedy himself. At a press conference on August 29, 1962, a journalist asked the President if he had considered "asking the Department of Agriculture or the Public Health Service to take a closer look at ... the growing concern among scientists" about the possible long-term effects of DDT and other pesticides. Kennedy responded, "Yes, and I know they already are. I think particularly, of course, since Miss Carson's book."
The President quickly appointed his scientific adviser, Dr. Jerome B.Wiesner, to study the pesticide issue to produce a report containing recommendations for the use and regulation of pesticides in the United States. The President's Science Advisory Committee report, "The Use of Pesticides," issued on May 15, 1963, called for decreased use of toxic chemicals to chemical controls that were less persistent in the environment "until the publication of Silent Spring, people were generally unaware of the toxicity of pesticides."
Shortly after "The Use of Pesticides" was released, Rachel Carson appeared before the Senate Committee on Commerce where she suggested that a commission be established to deal with pesticide issues and to make decisions based on the broad public interest, rather than the profit interest of a few. The Commission that Carson envisioned lives on as the Environmental Protection Agency; it is "the extended shadow of Silent Spring," as an EPA journalist wrote on the fifteenth anniversary of the Agency. The purpose of this Agency is to protect, develop, and enhance the environment.
Just about everything he dreamed up and implemented, has failed.