Date: Mon, 10 May 2010 16:48:45 -0500
From: defenders@mail.defenders.org
To: perez61@windstream.net
Subject: Thank you for speaking out on offshore drilling...
Dear Daniel, Thank you for speaking out for a clean climate bill and against against expanded dirty drilling off our coasts. With your help, we're protecting America's imperiled sea turtles, polar bears and other wildlife and advancing cleaner, more responsible solutions to climate change and America's energy needs. If you would like to do more to help, please forward the message below to at least 3 friends. Thanks for all you do... Rodger and the rest of the Defenders team -- Please Forward the Message Below --
Offshore oil drilling in the Gulf threatens the survival of endangered sea turtles, while in Alaska it further imperils threatened polar bears. In both places climate change is robbing these imperiled animals of the vital habitat they need to survive. As soon as Wednesday, Senators John Kerry and Joe Lieberman are expected to announce legislation to address the impacts of climate change and move America toward a new energy future. Unfortunately, Big Oil’s high-paid lobbyists are swarming Capitol Hill, enlisting allies in the Senate to sink this important legislation by attaching dangerous offshore drilling provisions to the bill. The ongoing offshore oil crisis in the Gulf – and its potentially devastating effects on nesting sea turtles, endangered sperm whales and other wildlife – makes two points abundantly clear:
Unless we address climate change and reduce fossil fuel emissions, sea levels will continue to rise, submerging vital nesting grounds for imperiled turtles. Sea ice in the Arctic will continue to disappear, causing more polar bears to starve and drown.
For the Wild Ones,
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© Copyright 2010 Defenders of Wildlife. This message was sent to perez61@windstream.net.Please do not respond to this message. Defenders of Wildlife is a national, nonprofit membership organization dedicated to the protection of all native wild animals and plants in their natural communities. Defenders of Wildlife can be contacted at: |
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