Posted on 10/21/2001 6:36:50 PM PDT by Ragtime Cowgirl
Ten Second Response
Fast Facts on the Environment
In Movie Theater Ads, Actor Martin Sheen Attacks Proposed ANWR Drilling
DATE: October 19, 2001
BACKGROUND: Actor Martin Sheen, who plays the president on the TV show "West Wing," is starring in an ad attacking proposed oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). In the ad, Sheen says, "The Arctic Refuge is it worth destroying forever, for six months of oil? This is Martin Sheen. Please act now Together, we can save what's left." His words run as pictures of caribou and bears appear on screen. The ad is sponsored by the Alaska Wilderness League and is running in 12 states. 300 movie theatres have agreed to run the ad for free, according to the Anchorage Daily News.
TEN SECOND RESPONSE: Americans know that independence from imported oil is essential to our national security. Oil exploration can be done in an environmentally-friendly way and help enable us to become energy independent.
THIRTY SECOND RESPONSE: Why must Hollywood try to scare us with inaccurate information? Only a small portion of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge would be available for exploration and even then only in the winter, when the animals are not on the plain. This field could replace all the oil we now get from Saudi Arabia for the next 30 years.
DISCUSSION: The Energy Information Administration estimates that between 5.7 billion barrels and 16 billion barrels of oil are available for exploration in the Arctic coastal plain. We currently import 1.5 million barrels of oil a day from Saudi Arabia. ANWR oil could replace what we now import from the Saudis for almost 30 years. Or, it could replace half of what we import from all of the Persian Gulf for 36 years.
As we've often reported, if exploration occurs the coastal plain caribou herds are not at risk. In nearby Prudhoe Bay, where drilling is occurring, the caribou herd has actually tripled in size to over 19,700 animals since 1978. The coastal plain is the "occasional calving ground" for the Porcupine Caribou Herd, but, according to the U.S. House Resources Committee, no members of this herd calved in the coastal plain over the last two summers.
In addition, drilling seems to have little impact on polar bears. Of Alaska's 2,000 polar bears, only 15 have been found to den in the coastal plain in the last 11 years. Most denning occurs on pack ice, so on-shore development would seem to have little impact on the bears.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: See the web page of U.S. Senator Frank Murkowski (R-AK) at http://murkowski.senate.gov/oil/anwr.html
by Gretchen Randall, Director
John P. McGovern, MD Center for Environmental and Regulatory Affairs
The National Center for Public Policy Research
Contact the author at: 773-857-5086 or GRandall@nationalcenter.org
The National Center for Public Policy Research
Chicago office
3712 North Broadway - PMB 279 Chicago, IL 60613
Please call your local theaters.
Considering that ANWR is a frozen wasteland, the answer to that purely hypothetical question might be "yes". Of course it will not be destroyed, and will provide much more than a six month supply, facts of which these liars are fully aware.
Who & where are the 300 theaters running this Hollywood flatulence for free??
Good plan! (^:
I'm afraid so. He's rather famous for his public views. We don't like him.(^:
Hollywood/Dems./press have trouble with reality.
Sorry they didn't list the theaters, or state locations, but we should call our local theaters anyhow, just in case they're considering this truly bad idea. (^:
re: www.eco.freedom.org/el/20011002/lee.shtml
This is what drugs do for you. John Belushi was so coked out at the end of his life that he actually thought that he was a legitimate musician.
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