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Showing Original Post only (View all)MS NOW-Here's why Pete Hegseth's war on the Endangered Species Act is so misguided [View all]
The administration argues that it needs exemptions to the Endangered Species Act to extract more oil form the Gulf of Mexico when its already extracting record amounts.
Link to tweet
https://www.ms.now/opinion/hegseth-endangered-species-gulf-whale
Nicknamed the God Squad for its power to rule whether economic or national security interests outweigh the possibility of wiping out an animal species, the Endangered Species Committee has granted two exemptions to the Endangered Species Act since it was created by Congress in 1978. It is composed of the secretaries of the Interior, Agriculture and the Army, and the heads of the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Council of Economic Advisers.....
Never mind that one of those species is the Rices whale, which NOAA itself acknowledges is one of the rarest in the world. The whale exists only in the Gulf, with perhaps 50 or so left.
That obviously means nothing to Trump and Hegseth, who are both so maddened that they have become modern Ahabs chasing a Moby Dick. In his right-wing Christian crusade, Hegseth openly prays for every bullet and missile to find its mark in war. In the war for oil, he obviously is not interested in hearing about collateral damage, saying: Disruptions to Gulf oil production doesnt hurt just us, it benefits our adversaries. We cannot allow our own rules to weaken our standing and strengthen those who wish to harm us. When development in the Gulf is chilled, we are prevented from producing the energy we need as a country and as a department.
Rices whale is hardly the only creature that could be decimated with ramped-up oil production. According to NOAA, the gulf is also a habitat for the endangered sperm whale; the endangered hawksbill, leatherback and Kemps ridley sea turtles; and the endangered pillar coral. There is also a host of other animals listed as threatened, such as loggerhead and green sea turtles, Nassau grouper, the giant manta ray and queen conch......
There is reason to be optimistic that, like the ultimate withdrawal of the 1992 spotted owl exemption, that this one for the Gulf of Mexico will eventually be blocked by litigation and public protest. The day before Burgum convened the Endangered Species Committee, a federal judge in California invalidated several Endangered Species Act rollbacks concocted during the first Trump administration that allowed agencies to increasingly ignore the harm of projects to wildlife.
The judge, Jon Tigar, said the administration made serious errors in an arbitrary and capricious effort to gut the Endangered Species Act. Let us hope that the courts continue to find yet more errors with the exemption for the Gulf of Mexico. Fifty whales by themselves dont stand a chance against the rhetoric of keeping gas under $5 a gallon. The Trump administration is todays Ahab lunging over its ship with a harpoon. This time, the whale really could be killed in the hunt for oil.
Never mind that one of those species is the Rices whale, which NOAA itself acknowledges is one of the rarest in the world. The whale exists only in the Gulf, with perhaps 50 or so left.
After 15 whole minutes of discussion, the Endangered Species Committee (100% Trump appointees) decided that oil & gas companies in the Gulf of Mexico don't need to exert any caution anymore to protect endangered whales, turtles, or other wildlife.
— Liz Neeley (@lizneeley.bsky.social) 2026-04-04T03:18:37.088Z
www.washingtonpost.com/climate-envi...
That obviously means nothing to Trump and Hegseth, who are both so maddened that they have become modern Ahabs chasing a Moby Dick. In his right-wing Christian crusade, Hegseth openly prays for every bullet and missile to find its mark in war. In the war for oil, he obviously is not interested in hearing about collateral damage, saying: Disruptions to Gulf oil production doesnt hurt just us, it benefits our adversaries. We cannot allow our own rules to weaken our standing and strengthen those who wish to harm us. When development in the Gulf is chilled, we are prevented from producing the energy we need as a country and as a department.
Rices whale is hardly the only creature that could be decimated with ramped-up oil production. According to NOAA, the gulf is also a habitat for the endangered sperm whale; the endangered hawksbill, leatherback and Kemps ridley sea turtles; and the endangered pillar coral. There is also a host of other animals listed as threatened, such as loggerhead and green sea turtles, Nassau grouper, the giant manta ray and queen conch......
There is reason to be optimistic that, like the ultimate withdrawal of the 1992 spotted owl exemption, that this one for the Gulf of Mexico will eventually be blocked by litigation and public protest. The day before Burgum convened the Endangered Species Committee, a federal judge in California invalidated several Endangered Species Act rollbacks concocted during the first Trump administration that allowed agencies to increasingly ignore the harm of projects to wildlife.
The judge, Jon Tigar, said the administration made serious errors in an arbitrary and capricious effort to gut the Endangered Species Act. Let us hope that the courts continue to find yet more errors with the exemption for the Gulf of Mexico. Fifty whales by themselves dont stand a chance against the rhetoric of keeping gas under $5 a gallon. The Trump administration is todays Ahab lunging over its ship with a harpoon. This time, the whale really could be killed in the hunt for oil.
There are only 50 Rice Whales in existence. I hope that these various lawsuits succeed in blocking Hegseth
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MS NOW-Here's why Pete Hegseth's war on the Endangered Species Act is so misguided [View all]
LetMyPeopleVote
Monday
OP
I am trying to follow the litigation on the attempts of Hegseth to exterminate this species
LetMyPeopleVote
Monday
#1
And I'm reviewing whether or not this god forsaken administration belongs in prison.
Initech
Monday
#5
U.S. panel votes to exempt Gulf of Mexico drilling from Endangered Species Act
LetMyPeopleVote
23 hrs ago
#7