By Alan Caruba
Sometimes a small incident says volumes about a large government agency. In this case the Environmental Protection Agency.
Around
1.45 PM on May 23, Ashville, North Carolina resident Larry Keller was
in the midst of an international call which he had to cut short in order
to answer his front door. He found two armed agents of the EPA who were
accompanied by an Ashville Police officer.
According to a May 24 news story in the Ashville Tribune, a weekly
newspaper to which I am a contributing columnist, the agents had blocked
his and his neighbor’s driveways with their cars. They had driven all
the way from Raleigh to confront him.
What
had he done? The unannounced visit had been occasioned by news that Dr.
Al Armendariz, a regional EPA administrator whose 2010 lecture had been
videotaped and been released by the office of Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK)
on April 25th. In the lecture, Dr. Amendariz had said that the agency’s
“general philosophy” was to “crucify” oil and gas producers.
He compared the agency’s “philosophy of enforcement” to the way, as a Wall Street Journal editorial
reported, “Romans used to conquer little villages in the Mediterranean.
“They’d go into a little Turkish town somewhere, they’d find the first
five guys they saw and they would crucify them, And then you know that
town was really easy to manage for the next few years. The point is to
‘make examples’ of alleged lawbreakers.”
The case in point had been Range Resources, a driller who had been
exonerated of charges of water pollution as the result of fracking. As
the Wall Street Journal noted, the reference to executions “raise(d)
questions not only about” not only Dr. Arnendariz’s comments “but the
EPA’s larger impartiality and judgment.”
Keller, who describes himself as “a bit of a political activist” had
emailed the EPA Director of External Affairs, Dr. David Gray, saying
“Hello Mr. Gray. Do you have Mr. Armendariz’s contact information so we
can say hello?”
That was enough to dispatch two armed agents to his front door. He
was told by one agent that “…my choice of words in the email could be
interpreted in many ways.” They did not identify themselves, but asked
if he had ever been arrested. He responded swiftly that he had not. When
he asked for a copy of his email, they refused to provide it because
“the case was still under investigation.”
His wife arrived home and the agents did not want a witness so “They left in a big hurry.”
The Ashville Tribune by Catherine Hunter quoted Keller who described
their attitude as “accusatory” reporting that he compared “their tactics
to those of Nazi Germany SS methods.”
Keller contacted the agent’s supervisor, Michael Hill, and was told
that the incident with Dr. Armendariz “had prompted so many emails and
calls that authorities in Washington, DC ordered an investigation.”
Keller’s email inquiry to contact Dr. Armendariz was treated as a
threat when it clearly was not. Since when is trying to contact an EPA
administrator a crime?
“I want the world to know,” said Keller, “the government is reaching
into the privacy of our homes and computers. I’ve never been so offended
by the power of government in my life.”
Do we really want an EPA that uses such tactics against a citizen who
has merely indicated an interest in contacting one of their
administrators to comment on what he had said during a lecture?
Do we really want an EPA whose working “philosophy” regarding the oil
and gas industry is to “crucify” it in order to regulate it and, as we
know, is trying to thwart drilling, as well as to end the coal industry
that provides an energy resource that produces one half of all the
electricity in the nation?
It is, as noted, just one small incident, but it reflects the way the
EPA functions in a presumably free society.
Over the years I have read
of many incidents in which the EPA has asserted powers to impede the
most innocent actions of citizens and it is long past the time when this
agency is reined in by Congress.
The only option at this point is to rid the nation of the Obama
administration, crack down on the EPA, and rid us of the threat it poses
in its efforts to deny entire industries from providing the energy the
nation requires and attacks our agricultural and ranching communities
for practices that reflect its normal operation.
As they used to advertise horror films, “Be afraid. Be very afraid.”
An EPA that operates on the basis of intimidating its chosen enemies and
that seeks to intimidate citizens inquiring about it, is reason enough
to be afraid.
Canada Free Press