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See all those nasty gray splotches, like blight? That's mountaintop removal. Those hills and valleys and streams are gone forever. Toxic forever.
Why call it mining?
When folks hear the word mining, they think of mine shafts. They think underground. They think pickaxes and hardhats and miner's lamps, and guys with smudged faces who trudge out of mine shaft elevators at the end of a backbreaking, lung-soiling shift.
They don't, I suspect, think of huge twenty story tall machines with names like "The Captain" scraping away entire mountain ranges, filling sparkling clear streams and creeks with sticky goo. They don't think of suffocated trout washed up on stream banks; poisoned, bloated raccoons; and starving deer searching in vain for vegetation to graze. And they don't think of multi-generational families that go back three hundred years on a stretch of land -- a wooded mountainside, or a verdant holler pasture -- driven out, destitute, landless and depressed. Hope for the future is destroyed -- for families, wildlife, and national posterity. But that's what strip mining is today. And that's what people who run the strip mining business choose to do every day: get up in the morning, and destroy the world.
So, let's not call it strip mining. Let's be straight about it. Let's call it...
landscRAPING
Watch The Jeff Bigger's video if you don't believe me:
SUPPORT APPALACHIA'S STRUGGLE TO SAVE THEIR LAND, THEIR WATER, AND THEIR LIVES...
VISIT: ilovemountains.org
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