by Michelle Malkin
Here in my adopted home state of Colorado, orange is the new Animas
River thanks to the blithering idiots working under President Obama's
Environmental Protection Agency.
It's just the latest
man-caused disaster from an out-of-control bureaucracy whose primary
mission is not the Earth's preservation, but self-preservation.
As
always, the government cover-up compounds the crime -- which is why the
agency's promise this week to investigate itself has residents across
the Rocky Mountains in stitches. Or tears.
Are you wondering why Michelle doesn't trust the EPA? Here's some of the reasons on her list:
--BP oil spill data doctoring. Former White House Director of the
Office of Energy and Climate Change Policy Carol Browner and the EPA
suffered no consequences after they repeatedly lied and cooked the books
in the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon spill in 2010. Browner, who
pulled the puppet strings of then-EPA head Lisa Jackson, misled the
public about the scope of the disaster by falsely claiming that 75
percent of the spill was "completely gone from the system." Then she
falsely claimed that the administration's initial report on the disaster
was "peer-reviewed."
The Interior Department inspector general
also singled out Browner for misrepresenting the White House's
blue-ribbon science panel, which opposed a six-month drilling
moratorium, and exposed how she butchered their conclusions to justify
the administration's preordained policy agenda.
Browner, an inveterate left-wing crony lobbyist/activist, left office
without so much as a wrist slap. Brazen data doctoring and destruction
are her fortes. As EPA head during the Clinton administration in the
1990s, she was held in contempt by a federal judge after ordering a
staffer to purge and delete her computer files. Browner had sought to
evade a public disclosure lawsuit by conservative lawyer and author Mark
Levin's Landmark Legal Foundation.
--Email evasion and
transparency trouncing. While Browner was doing her dirty work as
Obama's unaccountable eco-czar, Jackson busied herself creating
sock-puppet email personalities to circumvent public disclosure rules as
the agency crafted radical climate-change policies in secret. She
learned the tricks of the trade from Browner. Jackson admitted to using
the pseudonym "Richard Windsor" on one of at least two separate secret
government accounts. Competitive Enterprise Institute fellow Christopher
Horner discovered the elaborate ruses in 2012. The agency had
stonewalled Horner's FOIA requests on the use of alias accounts at the
agency; CEI sued to force the administration to comply.
In
December 2012, Jackson resigned amid multiple investigations. Not a
wrist slap. Not a scratch. In March of this year, a federal judge
blasted the agency for avoiding a separate FOIA request by Levin's Landmark Legal Foundation
related to sock-puppet email accounts created by Jackson and others "who
may have delayed the release dates for hot-button environmental
regulations until after the Nov. 6, 2012, presidential election."
--Enabling sex predators and porn addicts. Last month, the EPA
inspector general finally testified on Capitol Hill about the agency's
chronic mismanagement of alleged sexual perverts on the payroll. One
employee "engaged in offensive and inappropriate behavior toward at
least 16 women, most of whom were EPA co-workers," the IG reported.
Supervisors "were made aware of many of these actions and yet did
nothing."
Well, not exactly "nothing." The employee was actually
promoted to assistant administrator for the EPA's Office of Homeland
Security -- a position he used to harass six more women.
Two other
EPA workers were caught binging on porn during work hours; one was
observed getting his X-rated fix by a minor who was at the office during
Bring Your Child To Work Day. EPA allowed one perv to retire with full
benefits; the other is still on leave collecting a $120,000 yearly
salary.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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