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In the Name of God and the Poor

June 7, 2007

For the Catholic community, the environmental concern behind global warming began at Genesis, not Earth Day.

At least that is how John Carr, Secretary of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, framed his testimony to the EPW Committee this morning. He, along with various religious leaders, stressed the moral responsibility to the poor, but the leaders’ reasoning could not have been more different.

On one end were the Catholic, Jewish and Christian Evangelical communities worried about the impact of uncontrolled global warming on the poor. On the other end were the Southern Baptist and historical Evangelican representatives who, along with the witness from the Institute on Religion and Democracy, expressed concern that global warming legislation would do more harm on the poor.

It was a sad game of tug-of-war over the interests of the poor, a disparity in which Inhofe merrily basked once Boxer left her Chair for another engagement.

The highlight of the hearing was listening to Rabbi David Saperstein describe the campaign, “How Many Jews Does it Take to Change a Light Bulb?” The campaign tagged itself to Chanukah, a.k.a. the Festival of Lgihts, and educated people on the importance of replacing their incandescent bulbs with energy efficient, compact fluorescent light bulbs.

Saving people money on their utility bills – that really is in the interest of affordable and environmentally-sound living.

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