Monday, January 30, 2012
Ronald Reagan Becomes the Environmentalist During the Cold War: How Reagan Saved the Whales
The environmental wackos out there love to attack conservatives and Republicans as being environmentally unfriendly. Unfortunately, this has led some Republicans to do some pretty stupid things like Richard Nixon signing off on the Environmental Protection Tyranists Agency.
Now a movie is coming out from Hollywood that shares with the world how Ronald Reagan helped save some whales trapped under the ice near the Soviet Union.
Yes, Hollywood gives credit to Reagan for making the call to the Soviets asking them to save the whales.
On October 7, 1988, an Eskimo hunter found three California Gray whales imprisoned in the Arctic ice. In the past as was nature's way, trapped whales always died.
But this time incredible things began to happen:
More than 150 journalists from four continents representing at least 26 TV networks converged on the tiny Eskimo outpost of Barrow, Alaska, where on a chilly day the wind- whipped temperature can drop to 150 degrees below zero. Total cost of the media coverage and rescue - more than $5,795,000.
Millions of people watched while the President of the United States and the General Secretary of the Soviet Union joined in the rescue of the three imprisoned whales.
All because the struggle of the three trapped whales could be shown on global television, a democratic government a half a world away nearly collapsed.
The media paid up to $200 to Eskimo entrepreneurs for a one-way 5-mile dog sled ride to the whale site, and if they didn't have enough cash for the return trip, they would have to wait until they were saved by rescue helicopters.
The most remarkable bond produced by the rescue connected a decorated combat Colonel in the Alaska National Guard and a lovely White House aide 7000 miles away. The two met, over the phone, fell in love and married - all because of three hapless whales.
Until recently the Russians operated the largest commercial whaling industry in the world. Then, as the result of just one phone call the Soviet Union sent two huge icebreakers to free the whales. Overnight the Soviets became instant environmentalists. Today, the Russians remain the world's largest killers of Gray whales.
Yet, through the miracle of modern technology, the rescue of three whales caught in the Arctic ice captured the imaginations of hundreds of millions of people who for a brief moment in time felt that the world had become a better place for ourselves and the creatures who share it with us.
It was Ronald Reagan who made that call, and the rest is history as the whales were saved. After the phone call, the Soviets finally send the icebreakers to fee the whales.
Now a movie is coming out from Hollywood that shares with the world how Ronald Reagan helped save some whales trapped under the ice near the Soviet Union.
Yes, Hollywood gives credit to Reagan for making the call to the Soviets asking them to save the whales.
On October 7, 1988, an Eskimo hunter found three California Gray whales imprisoned in the Arctic ice. In the past as was nature's way, trapped whales always died.
But this time incredible things began to happen:
More than 150 journalists from four continents representing at least 26 TV networks converged on the tiny Eskimo outpost of Barrow, Alaska, where on a chilly day the wind- whipped temperature can drop to 150 degrees below zero. Total cost of the media coverage and rescue - more than $5,795,000.
Millions of people watched while the President of the United States and the General Secretary of the Soviet Union joined in the rescue of the three imprisoned whales.
All because the struggle of the three trapped whales could be shown on global television, a democratic government a half a world away nearly collapsed.
The media paid up to $200 to Eskimo entrepreneurs for a one-way 5-mile dog sled ride to the whale site, and if they didn't have enough cash for the return trip, they would have to wait until they were saved by rescue helicopters.
The most remarkable bond produced by the rescue connected a decorated combat Colonel in the Alaska National Guard and a lovely White House aide 7000 miles away. The two met, over the phone, fell in love and married - all because of three hapless whales.
Until recently the Russians operated the largest commercial whaling industry in the world. Then, as the result of just one phone call the Soviet Union sent two huge icebreakers to free the whales. Overnight the Soviets became instant environmentalists. Today, the Russians remain the world's largest killers of Gray whales.
Yet, through the miracle of modern technology, the rescue of three whales caught in the Arctic ice captured the imaginations of hundreds of millions of people who for a brief moment in time felt that the world had become a better place for ourselves and the creatures who share it with us.
It was Ronald Reagan who made that call, and the rest is history as the whales were saved. After the phone call, the Soviets finally send the icebreakers to fee the whales.
Posted by
Bungalow Bill
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