
Standing Rock Visited by Waterkeeper Alliance President Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
These are such strange times. One of the strangest things that I still can’t wrap my head around is RFK, Jr.’s transition from a committed environmentalist fighting for clean water to a MAGA Trumpster. How he went from the person he used to be to the person he is now is incomprehensible to me, addiction problems and brain worm notwithstanding. His cousin Caroline, daughter of President John F. Kennedy, has publicly stated he’s always been a terrible human being. But still it’s hard to fathom.
There was this. Steve King grilling Kennedy disrespectfully at a congressional hearing while RFK, Jr. passionately speaks out against factory farms calling the hog industry a threat to the environment, a threat to democracy. Presenting information that there is corruption in the industry. How does someone this smart steeped in democratic values become a Trumpster?
Politico reported on the exchange at the time.
“A staffer who sat in on the House Judiciary Committee’s hearing this morning on Bush administration’s “Midnight Rule-making,” reports on a nasty, nasty exchange between Iowa Republican Rep. Steve King and New York environmentalist Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
King, still smarting over a 2002 Kennedy statement essentially accusing Midwestern farmers of environmental terrorism, slammed RFK’s son at the end — referencing Junior’s well-chronicled drug problems.”
Now sixteen years and many new CAFOs later, and Iowa’s rivers, lakes and streams full of nitrates, that statement doesn’t seem so far fetched.
I remember going to see RFK, Jr. when he gave a talk at Kirkwood Community College. I can’t remember what year it was, but it must have been around this time. He spoke about CAFOs and how environmentally destructive they are. If I remember right he was trying to warn Iowa not to go the way of North Carolina.
As recently as 2015, RFK, Jr. gave the commencement address to the University of Nebraska graduating law school class.
“We are honored to welcome Mr. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to Lincoln,” said Susan Poser, dean of the law college. “He is a renowned advocate for environmental causes in the legal and political arenas, particularly involving water rights. These issues are relevant to Nebraska today and this is why Mr. Kennedy was the choice of the graduating class to be the commencement speaker.”
And on and on. But what I wanted to post today is the following statement by Waterkeepers paying homage to everything RFK, Jr. did for the environment and clean water around the globe.
I’m not trying to defend him for whatever it is he is up to now. I’m not saying he’s a safe choice to head Health and Human Services. His anti-vax views are well known.
It’s just weird is all I’m saying. And really kind of sad.
If this is new to you, give it a read.
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. Resigns as Waterkeeper Alliance President
By: Waterkeeper Alliance
Press Releases
November 10, 2020
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. announced yesterday that he was stepping down as President of Waterkeeper Alliance, a position he has held for more than 20 years, to devote himself, full-time, to other issues. Under his leadership, the Alliance grew to be the world’s largest nonprofit focused solely on clean water. There are now more than 350 Waterkeeper groups in 48 countries, patrolling and protecting 2.8 million square miles of watersheds.
Bobby’s legacy within the Waterkeeper movement and the impact of his environmental advocacy cannot be overstated. He became chief prosecuting attorney for the Hudson River Fishermen’s Association in 1984, helping merge that group and Riverkeeper into a single organization in 1986. The merged group, dedicated to protecting and restoring the Hudson and its tributaries from the damage done by generations of industrial degradation and civic neglect, proved a potent and successful model for a worldwide movement of place-based environmental defenders patrolling and protecting their waters by boat, by air, in classrooms, in public meetings, and in court.
Among the successes at Riverkeeper during Bobby’s time there were winning closure of one of the state’s most notoriously harmful landfills and helping to protect New York City’s upstate reservoir system, saving the city billions of dollars in unnecessary filtration costs and ensuring that tens of thousands of acres of sensitive reservoir buffer lands would be preserved.
Bobby helped found Waterkeeper Alliance in 1999 in an effort to further the successful Waterkeeper model. As president of Waterkeeper Alliance since 1999, he traveled the globe fighting for clean water, helping defeat dams in Chile and Peru, spending a month in prison in 2001 for protesting against the U.S. Naval bombing exercises on the Puerto Rican island of Vieques, and standing with water protectors at Standing Rock.
Bobby and Waterkeeper Alliance leadership began preparing for his transition in the spring; he officially stepped down on November 9, 2020. In recognition of his service to the Waterkeeper movement, he has been named President Emeritus of Waterkeeper Alliance by the Board of Directors.
Statement from Robert. F. Kennedy, Jr.:
Waterkeeper is my life’s work and will always be my proudest achievement. More importantly, my fellow board members and Waterkeepers are my comrades, my fellow warriors, and my bosom buddies. I’m immensely proud of what we created and I relish my memories of all the trials we endured together. In pursuit of those victories; the relentless anxieties, the laughter, the adventures, the characters, and the tattoos, I think of the legion of malevolent scoundrels we’ve sued. My dreams overflow with the thousands of miles of magnificent waterways that I’ve been privileged to paddle or travel with many of you over 40 years; the mangroves, the muskies, the Spanish moss, the schooling salmon, the shrimp, crayfish, blue crab, and yellow perch, the calving glaciers and all that flowing water from the Himalayas to the Tetons, from the Andes to the Arctic, from Bimini to Homer, from Bhutan to the Jordan, and from Lake Ontario to the Futaleufú. There is so much wisdom and courage in this cohort and so many genuine heroes. In a life filled with incomprehensible wonders, it had been my greatest gift to serve this cause.
Statement from Marc Yaggi, Executive Director of Waterkeeper Alliance:
This movement wouldn’t have existed without Bobby’s moxie, his vision, and his courage. It’s been my pleasure and my privilege to work alongside him for 20 years. I don’t have the words to express my gratitude to him for his selfless devotion to the fight for clean water. Thanks to Bobby’s tireless work, there are clean water defenders around the globe, from the Mekong to Manhattan. His environmental legacy is generations of global environmental champions. As we’ve spoken with many of them in preparation for Bobby’s departure, it’s clear how much they love him, appreciate him, and will miss him.
I appreciate this post. I’ve been wondering the same thing. A short search on Google provided the story below, which is written by someone whose hometown is Fairfield, Iowa. It’s long, but others interested in what is happening to the U.S. environmental movement may also find it interesting. It turns out that Kennedy has some (odd far-right) company.
https://www.vox.com/climate/393538/rfk-jr-maha-trump-environmental-movement-far-right
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