In yesterday evening’s GOP response to what may have been the most impressive first major speech by a president I’ve had the pleasure to witness, Louisiana’s Governor, uh, blew it. In Alaska, we were perturbed by his suggestion that volcano monitoring is a wasteful activity. We have hundreds of them. 31 are active right now. They sometimes kill people.
Although the unpredictable eruptor, Rep. Don Young, Alaska’s most volcanic national legislator, wasn’t at President Obama’s speech, both GOP Sen. Lisa Murkowski and Democratic Party Sen. Mark Begich (a firedoglake Blue America participant), were in the audience. Young’s office claims he was "busy," but some suspect he was still down in Puerto Rico, a destination he shares a fondness for with convicted, imprisoned lobbyist, Jack Abramoff.
Sen. Murkowski hasn’t yet criticized Gov. Jindal. Nor, apparently, has Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, who somehow was passed over for the job of GOP first responder.
Here’s the section of Jindal’s address that includes the volcano monitoring section:
But Democratic leaders in Congress — they rejected this approach. Instead of trusting us to make wise decisions with our own money, they passed the largest government spending bill in history, with a price tag of more than $1 trillion with interest. While some of the projects in the bill make sense, their legislation is larded with wasteful spending. It includes $300 million to buy new cars for the government, $8 billion for high-speed rail projects, such as a "magnetic levitation" line from Las Vegas to Disneyland, and $140 million for something called "volcano monitoring." Instead of monitoring volcanoes, what Congress should be monitoring is the eruption of spending in Washington, D.C.
Here is Sen. Begich’s reply (not yet publicly distributed):
The Honorable Bobby Jindal
Governor of Louisiana
Baton Rouge, LA 70804
Via fax: (225) 342-7099
Dear Governor Jindal:I write to take issue with your comments on national television last night following
President Obama’s speech regarding federal spending on volcano monitoring.
Specifically, you listed "volcano monitoring" in a series of projects you consider
”’wasteful spending."Volcano monitoring is a matter of life and death in Alaska. The science of volcano
monitoring and the money needed to fund it is incredibly important in our state and could
affect the economic well-being of other states and countries because of Alaska’s key role
in international commerce.In December 1989, Alaska’s Mount Redoubt had a serious eruption that caused a Boeing
747 to lose power in all four engines with hundreds of passengers on board. Fortunately,
the aircraft was able to restart and land safely, but damage to the airliner exceeded $80
million. Obviously, had the aircraft not been able to restart its engines, the result would
have been catastrophic.Alaska’s largest international airport in Anchorage is one ofthe world’s busiest cargo
airports, with more than 600 wide-body cargo jets delivering millions of dollars of goods
between Asia, North America and Europe each week. Any interruption of that traffic by a
volcanic eruption could be felt in Tokyo, New York or even Baton Rouge.Currently, the Alaska Volcano Observatory monitors 31 active Alaskan volcanoes and
works closely with other federal, state and municipal agencies to ensure public safety and
minimize disruptions. Eruptions often spew curtains of ash miles into the air that impact
communities hundreds of miles downwind, causing severe health consequences for our
citizens. When there is a significant eruption, those with respiratory challenges must stay
indoors.For Alaska and our country, monitoring volcanoes is important business. The more we
know about what might happen, the better our citizens and industries can plan for the
potential hazard. Feel free to contact my office so we can provide you with further
information regarding this important subject.Sincerely,
Mark Begich
U.S. Senator
I should note here that Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin’s press office was active today. The three soldiers killed in Iraq on Monday were stationed at Alaska’s Ft. Wainright. They are not from the same unit in which her older son is currently serving, but it is understandable why she might not be ready to criticize one of her chief rivals today, even in the scarce oxygen at the top of GOP politics.



17 Comments







Very good.
Cheap shots at science are a habit for GOPers. You would think they could devote an intern to fact checking things like fruit fly research and volcano monitoring before going National with their scorn. Thanks ET! and Yay Senator Begich.
OT:
I’m doing research this afternoon on what newspaper or media outlet first printed this word string, back on or before September 9th, 2008:
It appears it was most likely an Associated Press reporter in the DC office. The Anchorage office hasn’t been able to help.
The reason is that a retired lineman in Alaska filed an ethics complaint against Sarah Palin based on the news story, and the complaint was answered yesterday – Palin has to repay over $7,000.00 in very questionable travel expenses for family members. Alaskans for Truth want to present an award to the writer of the story and to Frank Gwartney, the outraged Alaska (union) lineman.
Washington Post article of 8/9 September by James V. Grimaldi and Karl Vick with contributions from Alice Crites seems relevant.
I suppose Gov. Jindal’s next act of “leadership” and “fiscal responsibility” will be to call upon the federal government to stop spending money on “hurricane monitoring”…/s
Oh, and listening to Countdown with Keith Olbermann, it is heartening to hear Republicans and Right Wing Media panning Jindal’s debut on the national stage…
…and as Countdown winds on down, it turns out that Keith calls out Jindal on volcano monitoring in a serious way…
Thanks ET
howza about we stop monitoring hurricanes instead
not all together
just when they get close to Louisiana
if Louisana don’t like it, they should get a new governor
FAST
Both the Sierra ski Resorts at Mammoth and the city of Bishop sit in thehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Valley_Caldera">Long Valley Caldera. Seattle and Tacoma would be directly impacted by an eruption of Mount Ranier. Yellowstone still sits in an active caldera. The probability of one of more of these active volcanos erupting in the next century is about 50%.
In addition, the mney isn’t just going to volcano monitoring. It also applies to the whole Seismic monitoring section of the US Geological Survey.Thus the money will also benefit earthquake prediction in Alaska, along the West Coast, and, as we are increasingly discovering, still active faults in the Mississippi and Ohio Valleys.
Don’t forget that Yellowstone National Park is a super volcano. http://www.usnews.com/blogs/ca…..pdate.html
Good on ya ET.
Krestia DeGeorge at the Anchorage Press wraps Jindal’s self-serving ignorance into a nice essay he appears to have already been writing, about the 1912 eruption of Novarupta in Alaska.
” Former Gov. Mitt Romney showed his support yesterday for like-minded Republican House members who voted against the president’s stimulus bill by mailing each one of them $1,000 checks. “
http://forum.thedailyshow.com/…..ad.id=4771
Once again we see that the RepoTaliban have fired all of their science experts and put the airheads in charge of research. And or they assume that Americans are as stupid as they are and are willing to swallow any propaganda lie they toss out.
Many Americans did just that for Reagan and Bush but have now seen that they were duped.
But really, for a Rhodes Scholar to make such dufus statements is pretty disturbing. Look at what happened to McCain/Palin. Did Jindal learn nothing from that debacle?
Maybe as a Rhodes Scholar and Repocon he has bought into the arrogance of belonging to the superior race ie. Republican Party.
If Jindal wants to run as a serious candidate, he needs to do his homework and double check the propaganda sheets the Taliban give him and make sure they are factually accurate.
Next time hopefully he will write his own speech and not stand there like a third grader trying to recite a poem he really doesn’t know that well or understand.
Jindal’s statement about $140 million for volcano monitoring caused jitters and tremors in Alaska. Overnight, most Alaska political bloggers have erupted on this, and one of the Anchorage Daily News’ best research reporters, George Bryson, has noted:
So Jindal is upset about what is probably long overdue renovation and upgrade to the USGS infrastructure. I’d read that monitoring in the Cascades, near Yosemite and on Hawaii has been less well-funded these past ten years than they should have been.
Maybe this it a little OT, but with Jindal, Stanford, and Palin, et al, making noises about refusing part of the stimulus funds destined for their states, how about the federal government offering them a really good deal. If federal income tax (though not FICA and Medicare payroll taxes) is no long levied on citizens of those respective states, then the feds will not provide any funds at all to those states’ governments. The citizens still get the direct federal dollars they deserve individually, but the states will be freed from having to humiliate themselves. That should be popular among the red state governors (though perhaps less among the voters). Just a suggestion…