Death by Fracking
By Chris HedgesOctober 19, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Truthdig"
- DENVER—The maniacal drive by the human species to extinguish
itself includes a variety of lethal pursuits. One of the most
efficient is fracking. One day, courtesy of corporations such as
Halliburton, BP and ExxonMobil, a gallon of water will cost more
than a gallon of gasoline.
Fracking, which involves putting chemicals into potable water
and then injecting millions of gallons of the solution into the
earth at high pressure to extract oil and gas, has become one of the
primary engines, along with the animal agriculture industry, for
accelerating global warming and climate change.
The Wall Street bankers and hedge fund managers
who are profiting from this cycle of destruction will—once clean
water is scarce and crop yields decline, once temperatures soar and
cities disappear under the sea, once droughts and famines ripple
across the globe, once mass migrations begin—surely profit from the
next round of destruction. Collective suicide is a good business, at
least until it is complete. It is a pity most of us will not be
around to see the power elite go down.
I met recently in Denver with three of the
country’s leading anti-fracking activists:
Gustavo Aguirre Jr. of KEEN (Kern Environmental Enforcement
Network) in California;
Kandi Mossett with the
Indigenous
Environmental Network and from the
Mandan, Hidatsa
and Arikara Nation in North Dakota, the second-largest
oil-producing state because of hydraulic fracturing; and
Shane Davis, a longtime campaigner against fracking and the
founder of
fractivist.org, a data mining organization that exposes what
fracking corporations are doing in communities around the country.
The activists are waging a war against a corporate
state that is deaf and blind to the rights of its citizens and the
imperative to protect the ecosystem. The corporate state, largely to
pacify citizens being frog-marched to their own execution, passes
environmental laws and regulations that, at best, slow the ongoing
environmental destruction. Corporations, which routinely ignore even
these tepid restrictions, largely write the laws and legislation
designed to regulate their activity. They rewrite them or overturn
them as the focus of their exploitation changes. They turn public
hearings on local environmental issues into choreographed charades
or shut them down if activists succeed in muscling their way into
the room to demand a voice. They dominate the national message
through a pliable and bankrupt corporate media and slick public
relations. Elected officials are little more than corporate
employees, dependent on industry money to stay in office and, when
they retire from “public service,” salivating for jobs in the
industry. Environmental reform has become a joke on the public. And
the
Big Green environmental groups are complicit because they rely
on donors, at times from the fossil fuel and animal agriculture
industries; they are silent about the reality of corporate power,
largely ineffectual, and part of the fiction of the democratic
process.
Resistance will be local. It will be militant. It
will defy the rules imposed by the corporate state. It will turn its
back on state and NGO environmental organizations. And it will not
stop until corporate power is destroyed or we are destroyed.
“Forty years after the major environmental laws
were adopted in the U.S., and 40 years after trying to regulate the
damage caused by corporations to the natural environment and our
communities, by almost every major environmental statistic things
are worse now than they were before,” Thomas Linzey, the executive
director of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, told me
recently.
The fracking industry is omnivorous, biologist
Davis noted. It “is so intoxicated and bloated by greed that it has
moved into our backyards, near our school playgrounds, our
hospitals, universities, our day cares, our state parks, our
national grasslands, and has its sights on the rest of our public
lands across America unless we stop them,” he said.
In writing
“Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt,” the cartoonist Joe Sacco
and I visited devastated “sacrifice zones” where corporate power
manipulates judicial and political power, and has free rein to
impoverish families, destroy or abandon infrastructure, plunder and
pollute the environment and shape the message disseminated by mass
communications. Those who organize and resist are met with
intimidation and violence from the state and private security firms
in the pay of corporations.
Sacco and I wrote the book from the poorest
pockets of the United States, including Camden, N.J., the nation’s
poorest city, per capita, among those with more than 65,000
residents; the Lakota reservation at Pine Ridge, S.D., where the
average life expectancy for a male is only 48 and where at any one
time 60 percent of residents have neither running water or
electricity; devastated coal fields of southern West Virginia where
the tops of Appalachian mountains have been blown off to extract
coal seams and the landscape has become a wasteland; and produce
fields in Florida where undocumented workers are not only sickened
by pesticides but at times are held in bondage and slavery.
The point of the book, whose last chapter takes
place in Zuccotti Park in Manhattan during the Occupy movement, is
this: These sacrifice zones went first and we are next. We have all
become part of a sacrifice zone. It behooves us to understand what
unfettered, unregulated corporate power looks like, how it operates
and what levels of wholesale destruction it inflicts in the lust for
profit on human beings and the environment. If we do not know how
corporate power works, and the lengths it will travel to exploit us
and the ecosystem, we will not be able to fight it. Both in
theological terms and literally, these corporate forces are forces
of death.
There is a low-level insurgency, in many of the
sacrifice zones and elsewhere, against the corporations that carry
out destruction and plunder, including fracking. This is an
insurgency worth joining. It is a battle far more important than the
charade of presidential elections. Real change will come only
from below. It will come from those participating in efforts such as
the Black Lives Matter movement, the anti-fracking movement and the
movement to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour. It will come from
radical organizations that organize outside the system and
physically impede corporate destruction. It will come through open
revolt. Our fate as a species will be determined on these lonely and
difficult battlegrounds.
The fracking industry, bolstered by the security
and surveillance state, has devoted tremendous resources to
monitoring, demonizing and criminalizing anti-fracking activists.
Activists are followed, harassed, arrested and defamed in
corporate-funded propaganda campaigns even as their communities see
their drinking water poisoned, air polluted,
greater earthquake activity, the dumping of radioactive waste on
their land, and farm animals sickened, born with birth defects and
killed by drinking contaminated water.
The oil and gas industry, often backed by state
governments, routinely sues communities that have asserted their
democratic rights to ban fracking. The corporations know that
communities in most cases do not have the resources to challenge
high-priced corporate legal teams and lobbyists. This means that for
citizens seeking redress, the courts are largely useless. High-court
decisions in Ohio, Colorado and New Mexico, along with a ruling by
the state Senate in Texas and a law passed in Oklahoma, deny the
right of communities to impose fracking bans. So, in effect, when
you raise consciousness about the dangers of fracking, when you
organize to protect yourselves and your children, when you pass a
ban in a democratic vote, your action is nullified by the courts or
the state. The consent of the governed becomes a farce.
“We are being sued by our own governor,” Davis
said of John Hickenlooper, whose Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation
Commission has joined a lawsuit against the city of Longmont to
challenge a vote by Longmont residents to ban fracking. “Communities
cannot protect themselves. There are homes in Colorado where
basements have filled up with explosive levels of gases from
previous fracking industry operations, sending people to burn
centers. There are homes where people can light their tap on fire
because of high levels of thermogenic methane in the water. But the
victims of fracking are prohibited by law from safeguarding
themselves.”
There are more than 15 million Americans, many of
them children, who live within a mile of a fracking site. Most are
being exposed daily to a deadly brew of toxins. Because the oil and
gas industry is not required under law to disclose the chemicals
used in fracking, communities are not told what is being injected
into their groundwater. The array of carcinogens is known to the
public only through analysis of samples taken at sites. These
samples include endocrine disruptors and chemicals such as benzene,
toluene, ethylbenzene and xylene. Infrared cameras set up by
activists show plumes of methane and other hydrocarbon gases,
invisible to the naked eye, spiraling upward from underground
fracking sites.
Methane is a greenhouse gas whose potential for trapping heat
and therefore for global warming has been estimated at 86 times
greater than that of carbon dioxide.
Those who live around fracking sites often suffer
skin rashes, nosebleeds, headaches, respiratory problems, premature
births and cancers. Yet the corporations, along with our
governments, doggedly refuse to link the diseases to fracking. This
is a pattern familiar to all who live in sacrifice zones.
Corporations have no intention of being held accountable for what
they do. That would cost money.
“A lot of people around me have cancer,” said
Mossett. “I’m a cancer survivor. It has become something that is
normal for us. It comes in all forms—bone cancer, lung cancer,
uterine cancer and prostate cancer, amongst others. Even before the
fracking began we had seven coal-fired power plants in North Dakota.
Every inch of our over 11,000 miles of rivers, lakes and streams are
already contaminated with mercury. Then fracking started to take off
around 2006. People, at first, had no clue what was coming.
Infrastructure started to be built. We got water towers through the
rural water department. Many saw this as positive. A brand new
bridge was built over Lake Sakakawea.”
But once the infrastructure was in place it became
apparent that it had been built to facilitate the extraction of oil
by fracking, not improve the lives of those on North Dakota’s
reservations.
White people are not the only problem. The
fracking corporations, Mossett said, easily bought off local tribal
leaders. “Our tribal council [of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara
Nation] sold us out. The council gave away sovereignty rights to
allow the oil industry to operate on tribal lands. The council
signed contracts to give away parcels of land. It set up front
companies, since you have to be native if you frack on native land.”
[The events that Mossett criticized occurred before the election of
a new chairman last year.]
Cancer rages like a plague across the
reservations.
“The Centers for Disease Control do not show
clusters of cancers in our communities,” Mossett said. “This is
because illness and sickness are coded out of the place where
referrals are made. Since we don’t have a hospital to treat these
illnesses, patients are referred to a clinic like the Mayo Clinic in
Minneapolis. So the huge clusters of cancers on the reservation are
not properly documented.”
The fracking industry in much of North Dakota,
rather than extract the subterranean gas, burns it off in jets of
flame known as flares. It trucks out the more valuable oil.
“The flares burn all day and all night,” Mossett
said. “There are hundreds of them. They are loud. There is enough
gas produced from these flares, some have estimated, to heat half a
million homes every day. And all this is going into the atmosphere.
Then came the
waste injection sites. The trucks began to dump what they called
‘produced water’ [toxics and water injected underground and later
brought to the surface as wastewater] onto the roads. It covered our
roads. It filled our ditches with toxic chemicals. I drove past a
ditch near Mandaree on the Fort Berthold Reservation and it was on
fire. The fields and pastures along the roads are being poisoned.”
The dilemma facing activists is that the enemy is
not only the corporations but also the federal and state
governments. Federal and state authority is a tool used by
corporations to make legal what should be illegal. Nonviolent,
democratic dissent is criminalized. This creates a terrifying
dilemma. If, as it does, the law slavishly serves the interests of
the corporate criminals, how is justice to be obtained? If the law,
as it does, outlaws legitimate democratic and nonviolent dissent,
how is dissent to be expressed? If we cannot receive, as we cannot,
justice from the courts or state and federal legislators, where will
justice come from? If we cannot legally impede the destruction of
our communities, what are the physical methods we will have to
employ to save ourselves?
“The corporations fight us with the government,”
said Aguirre. “The DOGGR [California’s Division of Oil, Gas &
Geothermal Resources] makes the claim that activists want to take
jobs from neighbors and families. It claims we are killing the
economy. ... The acute health impacts that occur in the communities,
the disproportionate toxic fumes that these communities breathe, are
never factored in. Our community members are already marginalized.
They live in low-income communities. They can’t afford or don’t have
health care coverage. And they don’t have a voice.
“I have been followed by numerous diesel engine
trucks [as I made] toxic tours with my constituents, taking them to
fracking projects and refineries to percolation ponds, evaporation
ponds,” Aguirre said. “I’ve been threatened at public hearings. I’ve
been called a communist and a socialist. I’ve been called a mouth
runner, someone who has been paid by some group to stir up the
community. The board supervisors of my community have told me to
stop doing what I am doing. These are the same elected officials who
are cashing in on the industry.”
Justice will come by defying the institutions that
claim to maintain justice. Truth will be heard by defying the
institutions that claim to speak truth. The law will be upheld by
breaking the law. Power will be obtained by overthrowing the power
of the corporation state. We will save ourselves by facing the grim
and unpleasant truth that all of the established mechanisms designed
to carry out reform, including what we still call American
democracy, is in corporate hands. We must unleash the power of the
powerless. We must use our bodies to obstruct these forces of death
to protect life. We must refuse to cooperate in our own destruction.
Fracking is one assault. There are many, many others. But they all
will lead to the same fatal conclusion if we do not rise up and
resist.
I admire these activists, men and women who
soldier forward. They understand the imperative of a new radicalism.
They speak in the language of revolution. They know if we are to
have a future it will entail mass acts of sustained civil
disobedience and jail time. This resistance will mean that we court
violence, maybe even our deaths. Corporations will use every weapon
in their vast arsenals to bend us to their will. But if we do not
begin to openly rebel, if we do not reverse the corporate coup
d’état that has taken place, the world bequeathed to our children
will be a holocaust.
Chris Hedges previously spent nearly two
decades as a foreign correspondent in Central America, the Middle
East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more than 50
countries and has worked for The Christian Science Monitor, National
Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New York Times, for
which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.