You
are visiting
www.rawfoodinfo.com
Time Magazine
April 16, 2001/Vol. 157 No. 15
Arsenic
and Bad Beef
Where's the compassion that was supposed to go with Bush's conservatism?
By MARGARET CARLSON
What
is it with Republicans and school lunches? In 1981 Ronald Reagan looked both
callous and politically ham-handed when he tried to save a few pennies on school
lunches by classifying catsup as a vegetable. Last week the Bush Administration
went beyond condiments, proposing to ax a Clinton Administration regulation
that forces the meat industry to perform salmonella tests on hamburger served
in school cafeterias. Given the heightened interest in the health of cattle
right now, the move wasn't exactly well timed. The uproar forced Agriculture
Secretary Ann Veneman to drop the proposal the same day it hit the papers. She
said a "low level" official had announced the change without consulting
his superiors.
That explanation would be easier to swallow if it weren't for the many decisions
pouring out of the Bush Administration that favor American business at the expense
of American people. In his first 76 days, Bush declared that CO2 should not
be regulated as a pollutant, and followed that up by abandoning the Kyoto global
environmental accord, on the grounds that it lets developing nations off the
hook. Bush substituted nothing for a framework that, however imperfect, took
years to construct. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Christine
Todd Whitman has no legs left to be cut out from under her. Then he shelved
a Clinton regulation that tightened standards for arsenic in drinking water,
arguing that more research is needed. While some people might be fuzzy about
greenhouse gases, everyone gets the danger from arsenic--especially those who
don't serve Evian at home. The symbolism of the move was breathtaking--especially
after Bush and the Republican Congress had denied workplace relief for millions
(mostly women) who perform repetitive tasks. Employers thought it would cost
too much.
Even the slightly scaled-down tax cut that passed the Senate last week delivers
outsize benefits to people at the top of the economic heap to the detriment
of those at the bottom, who may see their safety net fray as a consequence.
No one quite knew how bad the spending cuts would be because Bush withheld the
nasty details until he got his vote on taxes.
What happened to the compassion that was supposed to go with Bush's conservatism?
The campaign prepared us for some of this--candidate Bush made plain his intention
to drill in the Arctic wildlife refuge, not a bad political calculus given America's
preference for suvs over caribou. But no one thought his team would choose slaughterhouses
over schoolchildren, even if only for a day. What connects these decisions is
a preference for folks he knows: his oil-field buddies (mirrors of himself),
corporate executives and captains of industry, from the Halliburton honcho to
the Terminix franchisee. Some of them contributed mightily to his campaign;
all are "dynamic entrepreneurs," as he likes to say, who have made
America great--despite laboring under a raft of pesky government regulations.
They have his gratitude and his ear.
Bush's narrow focus didn't come through in the campaign. Last year he convinced
people that compassion from a Republican was cleaner and better than the sloppy
kind offered by Democrats. His genial nature made his vow to be a uniter, not
a divider, credible despite flashes of poor sportsmanship (his tactics toward
John McCain in South Carolina) and stubbornness (refusing to call McCain to
concede Michigan). Since winning, he has reached socially across the aisle (Ted
Kennedy for movies and popcorn, John Breaux to the ranch) and made fun of himself
("I hope one day I can clone another Dick Cheney. Then I won't have to
do anything"). But the self-deprecation didn't quite mask his pleasure
in making the presidency seem--for a while there--almost as easy as governing
Texas. You can run the country 9 to 5, change policy off the cuff, turn the
gritty work over to aides. But now, as it gets harder--with the Senate whittling
his tax cut, the Chinese holding his spy plane--you can see him struggling to
stick to a script written by others.
Salmonella showed that Bush knows there is a limit. You might get away with
endangering the caribou, some fish going belly up, holes in the ozone layer
and the safety net, even the prospect of no mail on Saturdays. But dangerous
school lunches? In the end, Dubya knew better than to go there. He may also
have second thoughts on arsenic. So many people are trying to climb aboard a
bill to restore the arsenic restrictions that Representative Henry Waxman says
he collected 165 co-sponsors in two days. Meanwhile, other industries are submitting
their wish lists to Republicans. Lobbyists are asking for a relaxation of lead-contamination
standards. You'd think we had put that issue to rest long ago. But Bush's Interior
Secretary, Gale Norton, used to lobby Congress on behalf of lead-paint manufacturers.
Back to Articles/Government & Politics
Home |
New to Raw?
|
Hotline |
Action Forum |
|
Multi/Media |
Events |
Press/Media
|