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J.D. LLOYD Angeles Chapter members Joan and Don Holtz added to the Sierra Club presence at WTO protests in Seattle. The Sierra Club repeated its message of fair trade at the April WTO meeting in Quebec. |
By Gordon LaBedz
Chapter Chair
Free trade has always been an apple-pie-and-motherhood issue. Tariffs are taxes
on imported goods that favor politically connected industries against foreign
competition. Most people agree that tariffs give unfair advantages to certain
companies. Tariffs also hurt foreign companies and can spark retaliatory tariffs
that hurt American industries. Trade wars rarely benefit consumers.
Free trade is about getting rid of unfair tariffs. Free trade is not about getting
rid of health and safety laws. Free trade is not about getting rid of labor
laws. Free trade is not about getting rid of environmental laws. The global
corporations have, once again, banded togetherthis time in Quebecto
foist upon us the notion that free trade requires all governments to abolish
their labor, health and safety and environmental laws.
The environmental community has come together to oppose this phony free
trade. We are calling for Fair Trade. We say that environmental
protections should not be given up so that some corporations can increase profits.
In many countries, private entities and individuals are not allowed to dump
their waste into the public domain (air, water, land). Just because some governments
permit such pollution does not mean it is mandatory that all governments ought
to allow it. There is no right to pollute.
For example, Governor Gray Davis outlawed MBTE in California. The chemical in
gasoline was found in our drinking water. This was first noted in Santa Monica
when the water started tasting chemically. A Canadian chemical company
that makes methanol (the M in MBTE) sued the United States under NAFTA (North
American Free Trade Agreement) rules, demanding almost $1 billion in damages
because they cant export MBTE to Californians. This is the type of stupidity
that these supra-governmental agreements engender.
Former president Bill Clinton tried to ram through Congress a new presidential
empowerment program allowing him to fast track trade agreements
without congressional scrutiny. Congress shot him down twice. Now Bush is trying
it again. The Sierra Club is waging an all-out campaign against this fast
track power. Our hard-won environmental protections will not be given
up because some corporate giant wants to make bigger profits. The power to fast
track trade agreements may mean that Bush will fast-track our environmental
laws into the landfill.