Rolling Stone: Manchin's Coal Corruption Is So Much Worse Than You Knew

The senator from West Virginia is bought and paid for by Big Coal. With his help the dying industry is pulling one final heist — and the entire planet may pay the price

One of the hardest things to grasp about the climate crisis is the connectedness of all things. One recent drizzly afternoon, I drove from Charleston, West Virginia, to the John Amos coal-fired power plant on the banks of the Kanawha River, near the town of Nitro. In the rain, the plant looked like one of the dark satanic mills that poet William Blake wrote about, with three enormous cooling towers that steamed like giant witches’ cauldrons. Across the river from the plant, mobile homes cluttered the bank of the Kanawha, streaked black with pollution that rained down on them 24/7.

I had visited the plant 20 years ago, on my first reporting trip to West Virginia. Back then, the plant seemed like an indomitable monument to the power of Big Coal. The facility, owned by Ohio-based utility giant American Electric Power, is capable of generating 3,000 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 2 million homes. It is also one of the biggest carbon polluters on the planet, emitting 13 million tons of CO2 each year, which is equal to the annual emissions of about 3 million cars.

When I look at John Amos today, I see fire and rising seas, disease and hunger. I see a rusting industrial contraption that takes CO2 captured by trees 300 million years ago and rereleases it into the sky, bringing the heat of the past to our future. Coal plants are one of the primary reasons why shopping malls were burning in Colorado this winter and reservoirs in the West are dry. They are why Antarctica is cracking up, threatening the future of virtually every low-lying city in the world, from Boston to Bangkok. They are why infectious-disease patterns are changing in Nepal and crops are failing in Kenya and roads are washing out in Appalachia.

At this point in human evolution, burning coal for power is one of the stupidest things humans do. Coal plants are engines of destruction, not progress. Thanks to the rapid evolution of clean energy, there are many better, cheaper, cleaner ways to power our lives. The only reason anyone still burns coal today is because of the enormous political power and inertia that the industry has acquired since the 19th century. In America, that power and inertia is embodied in the cruel and cartoonish character of West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who, paradoxically, may have more control over the trajectory of the climate crisis than any other person on the planet right now. Kidus Girma, a 26-year-old Sunrise Movement activist who helped organize protests against Manchin this past fall, calls him “the final villain.”


https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/joe-manchin-big-coal-west-virginia-1280922/

the DNC needs to kick this greedy fuck out of the party, get him an uber to RNC HQ

what would they have to lose, he votes straight GOP on ALL critical legislation and purposely sabotages Biden at every opportunity

it's no wonder W.Va is poverty stricken backwater - he's either been governor or a US senator for decades (it seems anyway)
 
Those power plants are poisoning the people in the areas. They fight to the death to avoid using the existing technology that would slash their pollution profile. Money matters more than people's lives. They use their money power to get politicians to protect them from cleaning up.As the founding fathers did, we should charter corporations and if they act against the welfare of the people, they should be punished and if they do not stop, be closed. The charter to operate should be revoked.
 
Those power plants are poisoning the people in the areas. They fight to the death to avoid using the existing technology that would slash their pollution profile. Money matters more than people's lives. They use their money power to get politicians to protect them from cleaning up.As the founding fathers did, we should charter corporations and if they act against the welfare of the people, they should be punished and if they do not stop, be closed. The charter to operate should be revoked.

It's odd how you never seemed to care about them before, especially with Kleagle Byrd running West Virginia.
 
The senator from West Virginia is bought and paid for by Big Coal. With his help the dying industry is pulling one final heist — and the entire planet may pay the price

One of the hardest things to grasp about the climate crisis is the connectedness of all things. One recent drizzly afternoon, I drove from Charleston, West Virginia, to the John Amos coal-fired power plant on the banks of the Kanawha River, near the town of Nitro. In the rain, the plant looked like one of the dark satanic mills that poet William Blake wrote about, with three enormous cooling towers that steamed like giant witches’ cauldrons. Across the river from the plant, mobile homes cluttered the bank of the Kanawha, streaked black with pollution that rained down on them 24/7.

I had visited the plant 20 years ago, on my first reporting trip to West Virginia. Back then, the plant seemed like an indomitable monument to the power of Big Coal. The facility, owned by Ohio-based utility giant American Electric Power, is capable of generating 3,000 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 2 million homes. It is also one of the biggest carbon polluters on the planet, emitting 13 million tons of CO2 each year, which is equal to the annual emissions of about 3 million cars.

When I look at John Amos today, I see fire and rising seas, disease and hunger. I see a rusting industrial contraption that takes CO2 captured by trees 300 million years ago and rereleases it into the sky, bringing the heat of the past to our future. Coal plants are one of the primary reasons why shopping malls were burning in Colorado this winter and reservoirs in the West are dry. They are why Antarctica is cracking up, threatening the future of virtually every low-lying city in the world, from Boston to Bangkok. They are why infectious-disease patterns are changing in Nepal and crops are failing in Kenya and roads are washing out in Appalachia.

At this point in human evolution, burning coal for power is one of the stupidest things humans do. Coal plants are engines of destruction, not progress. Thanks to the rapid evolution of clean energy, there are many better, cheaper, cleaner ways to power our lives. The only reason anyone still burns coal today is because of the enormous political power and inertia that the industry has acquired since the 19th century. In America, that power and inertia is embodied in the cruel and cartoonish character of West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who, paradoxically, may have more control over the trajectory of the climate crisis than any other person on the planet right now. Kidus Girma, a 26-year-old Sunrise Movement activist who helped organize protests against Manchin this past fall, calls him “the final villain.”


https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/joe-manchin-big-coal-west-virginia-1280922/

the DNC needs to kick this greedy fuck out of the party, get him an uber to RNC HQ

what would they have to lose, he votes straight GOP on ALL critical legislation and purposely sabotages Biden at every opportunity

it's no wonder W.Va is poverty stricken backwater - he's either been governor or a US senator for decades (it seems anyway)

Cry harder Calicunt, what a total load of emotional bed wetting.
 
Those power plants are poisoning the people in the areas. They fight to the death to avoid using the existing technology that would slash their pollution profile. Money matters more than people's lives. They use their money power to get politicians to protect them from cleaning up.As the founding fathers did, we should charter corporations and if they act against the welfare of the people, they should be punished and if they do not stop, be closed. The charter to operate should be revoked.

Here's JPPs number 1 emotional bedwetter, right on cue. How come you never say anything about China or India, shit for brains?

Here are the top 10 largest emitters of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) in the world. The US has reduced CO2 emissions back to pre-1991 levels why can't you ever acknowledge that?

China — 11.68 billion tonnes
United States — 4.54 billion tonnes
India — 2.41 billion tonnes
Russia — 1.67 billion tonnes
Japan — 1.06 billion tonnes
Iran — 690.24 million tonnes
Germany — 636.88 million tonnes
South Korea — 621.47 million tonnes
Saudi Arabia — 588.81 million tonnes
Indonesia — 568.27 million tonnes
 
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Here's JPPs number 1 emotional bedwetter, right on cue. How come you never say anything about China or India, shit for brains?

Here are the top 10 largest emitters of Carbon Dioxide (CO2) in the world. The US has reduced CO2 emissions back to pre-1991 levels why can't you ever acknowledge that?

China — 11.68 billion tonnes
United States — 4.54 billion tonnes
India — 2.41 billion tonnes
Russia — 1.67 billion tonnes
Japan — 1.06 billion tonnes
Iran — 690.24 million tonnes
Germany — 636.88 million tonnes
South Korea — 621.47 million tonnes
Saudi Arabia — 588.81 million tonnes
Indonesia — 568.27 million tonnes

He's run off again, nothing new.
 
Their only decent journo Matt Taibbi left, it's irredeemably just far left bullshit now.
Taibbi left? I didnt know that.. he was a lone voice against the Russian collusion crappola

He's a REAL reporter/writer.. as to coal....somebody better tell china
 
The senator from West Virginia is bought and paid for by Big Coal. With his help the dying industry is pulling one final heist — and the entire planet may pay the price

One of the hardest things to grasp about the climate crisis is the connectedness of all things. One recent drizzly afternoon, I drove from Charleston, West Virginia, to the John Amos coal-fired power plant on the banks of the Kanawha River, near the town of Nitro. In the rain, the plant looked like one of the dark satanic mills that poet William Blake wrote about, with three enormous cooling towers that steamed like giant witches’ cauldrons. Across the river from the plant, mobile homes cluttered the bank of the Kanawha, streaked black with pollution that rained down on them 24/7.

I had visited the plant 20 years ago, on my first reporting trip to West Virginia. Back then, the plant seemed like an indomitable monument to the power of Big Coal. The facility, owned by Ohio-based utility giant American Electric Power, is capable of generating 3,000 megawatts of electricity, enough to power 2 million homes. It is also one of the biggest carbon polluters on the planet, emitting 13 million tons of CO2 each year, which is equal to the annual emissions of about 3 million cars.

When I look at John Amos today, I see fire and rising seas, disease and hunger. I see a rusting industrial contraption that takes CO2 captured by trees 300 million years ago and rereleases it into the sky, bringing the heat of the past to our future. Coal plants are one of the primary reasons why shopping malls were burning in Colorado this winter and reservoirs in the West are dry. They are why Antarctica is cracking up, threatening the future of virtually every low-lying city in the world, from Boston to Bangkok. They are why infectious-disease patterns are changing in Nepal and crops are failing in Kenya and roads are washing out in Appalachia.

At this point in human evolution, burning coal for power is one of the stupidest things humans do. Coal plants are engines of destruction, not progress. Thanks to the rapid evolution of clean energy, there are many better, cheaper, cleaner ways to power our lives. The only reason anyone still burns coal today is because of the enormous political power and inertia that the industry has acquired since the 19th century. In America, that power and inertia is embodied in the cruel and cartoonish character of West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin, who, paradoxically, may have more control over the trajectory of the climate crisis than any other person on the planet right now. Kidus Girma, a 26-year-old Sunrise Movement activist who helped organize protests against Manchin this past fall, calls him “the final villain.”


https://www.rollingstone.com/politics/politics-features/joe-manchin-big-coal-west-virginia-1280922/

the DNC needs to kick this greedy fuck out of the party, get him an uber to RNC HQ

what would they have to lose, he votes straight GOP on ALL critical legislation and purposely sabotages Biden at every opportunity

it's no wonder W.Va is poverty stricken backwater - he's either been governor or a US senator for decades (it seems anyway)

He voted against Build Back Better and that ended monthly tax credit payments for poor WV kids. Let's see how that works for him when he's up for reelection. He's a p.o.s.

"Ninety-three per cent of West Virginia children – about 346,000 in all – qualified for the credit payments. That extra $250 to $300 per child a month lifted about 50,000 of those children above the poverty line, according to the West Virginia Center for Budget and Policy (WVCBP).

Now that the credits have vanished, so will those advancements."

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/12/west-virginians-child-tax-credits-manchin
 

ODI2NTU.gif
 
Taibbi left? I didnt know that.. he was a lone voice against the Russian collusion crappola

He's a REAL reporter/writer.. as to coal....somebody better tell china

I am a huge fan.

Glenn Greenwald as well, too of the last of the journalists.
 
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