Alaska Governor Sarah Palin Wins Rubber Dodo Award; Protected Oil Industry, Not Polar Bears
Center for Biological Diversity The Center for Biological Diversity today awarded Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin the 2008 Rubber Dodo Award. Last year’s award, which inaugurated the prize, went to Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne for setting a new record in refusing to add imperiled plants and animals to the endangered species list. This year’s award goes to Palin for fighting Kempthorne’s designation of the polar bear as a threatened species.
“Governor Palin has waged a deceptive, dangerous, and costly battle against the polar bear,” said Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biologic al Diversity. “Her position on global warming is so extreme, she makes Dick Cheney look like an Al Gore devotee.”
Palin has waged a deceptive public relations campaign, asserting that the number of polar bears is increasing. But many populations, including those around the southern Beaufort Sea, are in decline. The U.S. Geological Survey projects that by 2050, two-thirds of the bears — and all of Alaska’s polar bears — will disappear.
Palin repeatedly has asserted that Alaska Department of Fish and Game scientists found fatal flaws in the sea ice models used by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to determine the polar bear is threatened. When challenged, Palin refused to release the alleged state review. Independent scientists eventually obtained a summary through the federal Freedom of Information Act, revealing that Palin had lied: The state mammalogists concurred with the Fish and Wildlife Service determination that Arctic sea ice is melting at an extraordinary rate and threatens the polar bear with extinction.
“All global warming deniers are eventually forced to suppress scientific studies, and Palin is no different,” Suckling said. “To maintain her ludicrous opposition to protecting the polar bear in the face of massive scientific consensus, Palin stepped over the line to lie about and suppress government science.”
Palin has since filed a frivolous lawsuit against the Bush administration to have the threatened listing overturned. Meanwhile, the U.S. Geological Survey announced Tuesday that the 2008 summertime Arctic sea-ice melt was the second greatest on record, nearly matching the extraordinary melt of 2007.
“Palin’s insistence that Arctic melting is ”uncertain’ is like someone debating the theory of gravity as they plunge off a cliff,” Suckling said. “It’s hopeless, reckless, and extremely cynical.”
Background on the dodo
In 1598, Dutch sailors landing on the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius discovered a flightless, 3-foot-tall, extraordinarily friendly bird. Its original scientific name was Didus ineptus. though contemporary scientists use the less defamatory Raphus cucullatus. To the rest of the world, it’s the dodo — the most famous extinct species on Earth. It evolved over millions of years with no natural predators and eventually lost the ability to fly, becoming a land-based consumer of fruits, nuts, and berries. Having never known predators, it showed no fear of humans or the menagerie of animals accompanying them to Mauritius.
It trusting nature led to its rapid extinction. By 1681, the dodo was extinct, having been hunted and out-competed by humans, dogs, cats, rats, macaques, and pigs. Humans logged its forest cover and pigs uprooted and ate much of the understory vegetation.
The origin of the name dodo is unclear. It likely came from the Dutch word dodoor, meaning “sluggard,” the Portuguese word doudo, meaning “fool” or “crazy,” or the Dutch word dodaars meaning “plump-arse.
The dodo’s reputation as a foolish, ungainly bird derives in part from its friendly naiveté and the very plump captive specimens — fattened by overfeeding — that were taken on tour across Europe. The animal’s reputation was cemented with the 1865 publication of Lewis Carroll’s “Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.”
(For a high-resolution image of the Rubber Dodo Award, click here.)
The Center for Biological Diversity is a nonprofit conservation organization with more than 35,000 members dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.
Contact Info: Suckling,
Center for Biological Diversity,
(520) 275-5960
Website : Center for Biological Diversity
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