Stephen Lendman
Activist Post
Throughout his tenure, he ignored the best, brightest, most honorable
and well qualified. He chose cabinet and other top picks he should have
spurned.
He did again. He addressed
reporters in the White House East Room. He "announc(ed nominations for)
three outstanding individuals to help us tackle some of our most
important challenges."
He chose Sylvia Burwell as new Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
director. She replaces Jeffrey Zients. She's president of the Walmart
Foundation. Previously she was Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Global Development Program president. She prioritized profit making over
goodwill.
In 2001, she joined the Gates Foundation. From 2002 - 2006, she was executive vice president, CEO and executive director.
Earlier she was Clinton's OMB deputy director, assistant to the
president, and deputy chief of staff. She served Treasury Secretary
Robert Rubin in the same capacity.
Prior to entering government, she did financial consulting. She did so for McKinsey & Company.
She's a Trilateralist. She's a Council on Foreign Relations member. She
serves on MetLife's board of directors. She belongs to the Nike
Foundation Advisory Group.
She's an Aspen Institute member. She serves on its Strategy Group. It's
an elitist club. It's international and influential. It's comprised of
businessmen, politicians, bureaucrats, and like-minded figures. They're
up to no good.
Center for Economic Policy & Research economist Dean Baker called her appointment "cause for concern."
Author and filmmaker Kenneth Harvey said it's "unnerving to suddenly find (Obama) in bed with Walmart."
The Nation
magazine said it "wielded (the foundation's) massive budget to expand
the retail giant's influence at all levels of government and to pave the
way for store expansions."
The Nation obtained a previously unreported document. It's titled "Recognizing the Walmart Foundation For Its Good Works."
It tells organizations "we are looking to the grantees that turn to the
Walmart Foundation for funding to help us spread the word."
Expect Burwell to sail through confirmation easily.
Obama chose Ernie Moniz as new Energy Secretary. He replaces Steven Chu.
He was Clinton's Energy Department Under Secretary. He advised on
overseas and DOE research and development, energy and environment
technologies, national security, and various science issues.
He
oversaw the national laboratory system. Doing so included national
security programs, stockpile stewardship, and non-proliferation.
Earlier he was MIT Professor of Physics. He was its Institute of
Technology's Energy Initiative director. It's funded by corporate
heavyweights. They include BP, Chevron and Saudi Aramco.
Moniz directed research on coal's future, nuclear energy and natural
gas. He sought corporate backing to do so. He's in bed with powerful
interests he's beholden to.
Expect them to take full advantage. Expect him to comply willingly.
Environmental groups are concerned. On February 21, Inside Climate News headlined "Moniz: Shale Gas Boom a Low-Carbon Solution - for Now," saying:
He drew lots of fire for being "pro-industry." It made him Obama's top choice.
A Food and Water Watch
statement said "His appointment to the DOE could set renewable energy
development back years." It's circulating a petition against him.
He doesn't return requests for interviews. Perhaps he'll feel otherwise
now. He believes natural gas is "part of our energy solution for some
time."
He calls hydraulic fracking a "game-changer." No politician in his view will "walk away from this," he said.
He calls environmental risks manageable. They "can be mitigated to
acceptable levels through appropriate regulation and oversight." He said
it knowing not to expect it.
Big Oil gets what it wants. He's comfortable working with energy giants.
He believes doing so will influence America's energy future positively.
Earlier Moniz was Clinton's Associate Director for Science in the Office of Science and Technology Policy.
His research interests include theoretical nuclear physics. He was MIT's Bates Linear Accelerator Center director.
He served numerous universities, national laboratories, professional
societies, and government agencies. He did so in advisory roles. Expect
easy confirmation.
Obama chose Gina McCarthy EPA head. She's an air quality expert. She's
EPA's Office of Air and Radiation assistant administrator. She'll
replace Lisa Jackson if confirmed.
She'll be involved in the Keystone XL Pipeline construction project.
It's a controversial 1,661-mile Alberta, Canada to Port Arthur, TX
initiative.
Environmental groups strongly oppose it. They do so for good reason.
If completed, it'll carry toxic tar sands oil from Western Canada to
refineries on America's Gulf coast. It'll pass through environmentally
sensitive areas.
They're in six states. They include waterways and the Ogallala Aquifer.
It's one of the world's largest. In America, it supplies about 30% of
the nation's irrigation ground water.
Friends of the Earth
says Keystone XL "will carry one of the world's dirtiest fuels: tar
sands oil." Its route "could devastate ecosystems and pollute water
sources, and would jeopardize public health."
If completed, it'll double America's dirty tar sands oil supply. It'll increase environmental toxicity.
Big Oil wants it. So do Republicans and conservative Democrats. Expect
Obama to go along. He always does. McCarthy's job is facilitating it. He
chose her for that purpose. She's got other corporate priorities to
serve.
Her rhetoric has no bearing on policy. She's beholden to powerful
interests. Earlier she was Connecticut Department of Environment
Protection commissioner. She served from 2004 - 2009.
From 1999 - 2003, she was Massachusetts Office of Commonwealth
Development deputy secretary of operations. She served five state
governors. Mitt Romney was one.
Environmentalists hope she'll address their concerns more responsibly.
She wasn't chosen to do so. She's beholden to energy giant interests. So
are Burwell and Moniz.
What corporate America wants, it gets. It's in good hand with all three.
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