The Dilution of America: The Traps of a Bloated Bureaucracy - the Love of Free Money - Where America Went Wrong - How Washington Misguided the Nation for Four Decades - and the “Greatest Generation” Neglected to Rein in Abuse
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The Dilution of America
America, American society and American industry have all become diluted. What this means is that the countrys political-social-economic situation no longer reflects the design and purpose our founding fathers intended. Many factors play into this problem; and Lou Gilde and Larry Gambone have successfully teamed up in an attempt to cite most of them:
The failure of the Greatest Generation to prevent the insidious creep of socialism;
The paradigm change from business/government cooperation to anti-business sentiment;
The failure of our inner-city programs, to include industry incentives and schools;
The curtailing of religious expression and moral behavior;
The eroding of true representative governance by a bloated, unwieldy, and unaccountable bureaucracy;
The demise of a true free enterprise system resulting from over regulation; and
The movement from capitalism to socialism by ever-increasing entitlement (socialistic) programs.
We have reached an important turning point with the economy, the environment, and with the many socio-political issues facing our great nation. Unless the average voter realizes that government is handcuffing our economy, we will suffer economic malaise and worse. Our present approach to governance must be reversed if we are to remain an economic powerhouse in the 21st century.
To do this, we need an educated electorate who will vote wisely in the coming elections in order to resolve the many Governmental problems that have occurred in the past. Until the American voters recognize the fact that Government is its own worst enemy -- and is unintentionally becoming an enemy of the people, the environment, and the economy -- we will continue down the path to ruin. Walt Kelly, in the comic strip, Pogo, said it best: We have met the enemy and he is us.
Louis C. Gilde
Mr. Gilde’s life experiences provide an interesting perspective challenging the concept of America's "Greatest Generation." He volunteered for World War II service in November of 1942 and spent twenty months overseas in the European Theater. His entire professional career was spent as an industrial environmentalist with unique involvement in cooperative efforts with federal researchers prior to the creation of USEPA. This activity based on innovative waste water treatment resulted in over twenty presentations in the U.S. and overseas. Because of the early research work, he collaborated with USEPA as an advisor in the preparation of its field manual on "Overland Flow Treatment of Waste Waters" and was awarded in 1979 by Region II EPA Certificate of Appreciation. During the 1970's he testified before Congress concerning rule makings in the environmental area that created unnecessary costs for business resulting in increased costs for citizens. Mr. Gilde also obtained two patents in the environmental field. During retirement Mr. Gilde did volunteer work for the World Environment Center, a non-profit spinoff from the United Nations assisting U.S. Aide from the State Department on environmental projects incorporate in U.S. Aide programs. He consulted in over a half dozen projects for different countries and was sent to Egypt and Romania to conduct studies. Mr. Gilde witnessed environmental matters from an unusual perspective in relation to business, government and the economy including the location of numerous new plant sites vs. older plants in distressed areas. He sets forth recommendations for a less confrontational future to foster a more dynamic economy where most of the federal bureaucracy is eliminated and the states are free to soar even higher than Texas and other pro-economy states. A section of the book is devoted to the revitalization of the City of Camden, NJ as a national demonstration for urban America.
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Book preview
The Dilution of America - Louis C. Gilde
The Dilution
of America
THE TRAPS OF A BLOATED BUREAUCRACY
- THE LOVE OF FREE MONEY - WHERE
AMERICA WENT WRONG - HOW WASHINGTON
MISGUIDED THE NATION FOR FOUR DECADES
- AND THE GREATEST GENERATION
NEGLECTED TO REIN IN ABUSE
LOUIS C. GILDE &
LAWRENCE C. GAMBONE
45997.pngAuthorHouse™
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.authorhouse.com
Phone: 1-800-839-8640
© 2012 Louis C. Gilde & Lawrence C. Gambone. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 04/29/2016
ISBN: 978-1-4772-7717-1 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4772-7718-8 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4772-7883-3 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012918658
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Cover picture by Edvins Imants Reiss
www.turner-ed.jalbum.net
Table of Contents
Book Inserts
Prologue
Part 1. Introduction
Chapter 1. Formative Life Synopsis
Chapter 2. Setting the Stage
Part 2. Industry Environmentalist. Government As Partner – Government As Controller
Chapter 3. Environmental Career
Chapter 4. Cooperative Waste Water Research Between Industry and Government
Chapter 5. Salt in the Delaware River
Chapter 6. Establishing New Plant Sites
Chapter 7. Testimony Before U.S. Congressional Committee
Chapter 8. The Sumter Story
Chapter 9. Back to the Soup Works
Chapter 10. The 1970’S – A Decade to Improve the Environment
Chapter 11. Public Law 92-500. 1972 Federal Water Pollution Control Amendments to the Clean Water Act
Chapter 12. Industrial Cost Recovery (ICR), A Provision of Public Law 92-500 and Industry Cost Exclusion (ICE)
Chapter 13. Technological Resources, Inc.
Chapter 14. Final Chapter at the Soup Works
Part 3. Retirement Years
Chapter 15. Consulting and Volunteer Work With World Environment Center
Chapter 16. Haddon Township Environmental Commission
Chapter 17. Political Turmoil
Part 4. America’s Cancers – America’s Needs
Chapter 18. America’s Cancers from the 20th Century
Chapter 19. The Needs of America Going Forward in the 21st Century
Chapter 20. The Free World’s Greatest Concern in the 21st Century
Chapter 21. Need of Religious Freedom and Moral Fortitude
Chapter 22. Need for Education Choice with Reform of Teacher Union Power
Chapter 23. Need for True Representative Governance with Regulatory Reform
Chapter 24. Need for a Positive Business Environment to Grow the Economy and Help Urban Communities
Chapter 25. Revitalizing Urban Communities –. A Case for Camden, New Jersey
Chapter 26. Politics and the Economic Agenda
Chapter 27. Need for Choice Between a Continued Road. to Socialism or Revisions to True Capitalism
Chapter 28. America’s and the World’s Greatest Concern in the 21st Century
Part 5. Final Considerations
Chapter 29. What Should We Do?
Chapter 30. In Summation
Part 6. Afterthoughts 2016 And Beyond
About the author
BOOK INSERTS
A. Chapter 1 – Letter February 4, 1988, USEPA to United Nations
B. Chapter 3 – Napoleon Air Photo – Experimental Spray System
C. Chapter 4 – Paris Spray Fields
D. Chapter 8 – Sumter Spray Fields and Lagoon
E. Chapter 11 – EPA Literature on Overland Flow
F. Chapter 11 – University of California at Davis Research on Overland Flow
G. Chapter 11 – Corps of Engineers Research on Overland Flow
H. Chapter 12 – American Frozen Food Institute Newsletters
I. Chapter 12 – EPA Certificate of Appreciation
J. Chapter 12 – EPA letter October 8, 1981 re: Design Manual
K. Chapter 14 – County of Sacramento letter June 28, 1988
L. Chapter 14 – Water Resources Association Award
M. Chapter 15 – National Environmental Development Association Commentary on Environmental Risk
N. Chapter 16 – Haddon Township News Article on Fish Kills
PROLOGUE
W HEN WRITING YOUR first book, it is difficult to determine how much information you should provide to document past happenings that shaped the need for change that could improve and insure a better, more practical, more trustworthy governance of America. A Federal Government based primarily on mistrust places costly shackles on its businesses and people. In this respect, the states are in a better position to judge practical reality and the need for results-oriented, minimal regulatory control where absolutely necessary.
The year 1964 introduced America to President Johnson’s Great Society. In 1970 President Nixon authorized the Environmental Protection Agency. By 1976, America’s 200th anniversary, it was obvious that no matter how well intentioned both programs were, they created a financial burden that was not relative to their accomplishments. America’s Greatest Generation
was aware of this dichotomy and did little to correct it. As a result, the dilution of America’s wealth by unnecessary rules, regulations, and taxes presented a handicap to future generations.
Bureaucratic rule-making has expanded exponentially since the advent of President Johnson’s Great Society.
There is a false sense of security in EPA rule makings. For example, in drinking water, the presence of contaminants does not necessarily indicate that tap water or bottled water poses a health risk. EPA regulated contaminate levels are based upon a person drinking two liters of water every day for a lifetime in order to have a one-in-a-million chance of experiencing an adverse health effect such as cancer. How do you rate that risk in your life as compared to inhaling second-hand smoke or other factors of everyday living like texting while driving?
Life is not risk free. This is why zero pollution of contaminates is not reality oriented. And it gives us an indication of the problems involved in obtaining a fair and balanced permit for treated waters discharged to a receiving stream. Obviously, there is a need for rational consideration in regulatory decision making.
Throughout my career, I tried to adhere to a basic behavior that would achieve God-pleasing stewardship of environmental questions. Dr. Ruth Patrick’s concept of use without abuse
encapsulates my value system and is expressed relative to many considerations throughout the book. Dr. Patrick, a world renowned scientist, was the guiding force in the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Science research center for over a half century.
The focus of this book is primarily the environment. We need an educated electorate on all federal programs, not just the environment, to resolve our past failures. The Dilution of America’s founding principles must be reversed if we are to be a free nation and an economic powerhouse in the 21st century.
From Genesis 1:27-28 we are admonished to …fill the earth and subdue it; and have dominion over…every living thing that moves upon the earth.
Worship the creator not the creation.
PART ONE
Introduction
CHAPTER 1
Formative Life Synopsis
T HE FOLLOWING PARAGRAPHS provide a brief insight into my life experiences before the start of my environmental career in 1950.
I was born in 1924. My parents were devout Missouri Synod Lutherans, which meant traveling to Philadelphia every Sunday for almost a decade via trolley, ferry, and lots of walking. In fact, I was almost born on the ferry because there was no vehicle bridge (now the Benjamin Franklin Bridge) from New Jersey to Philadelphia until two years after my birth.
My parents along with five other couples helped start Martin Luther Chapel in Pennsauken, New Jersey in 1932. This church experience was a vital part of my youth, especially confirmation classes which provided the basis for much of my view point on the environment. We are stewards of God’s creation.
The Collingswood, New Jersey school system was a significant part of my youth, providing a sound education and helping to support my belief in God and patriotism for our country. I graduated from high school in June 1942 with Pearl Harbor on my mind and, in October 1942, I volunteered to enter the military service as a navy pilot. Unfortunately, I washed out
because of hay fever conditions. But, much to my surprise, I was called up for infantry duty - my first experience of surprise with the federal government.
On the last day of basic infantry training, I experienced a march fracture, which was a splitting of the metatarsal bone in my left foot caused by too much walking with heavy equipment. Many would consider that lucky because I was scheduled to go to North Africa.
After my hospital stay I was sent to London where I experienced a number of night time bombings. Most of my twenty-three months’ service overseas was as a lowly PFC on detached liaison service from General Bradley’s Field Headquarters; thus from May 1944 to the end of the war, I served with General Montgomery’s Field Headquarters.
There were times in harm’s way; but mostly I served in relative safety with British troops who had experienced years of combat throughout the world prior to D-day. This afforded an unusual war experience: From prior to D-day to the end of the war, I was involved in five campaigns.
My environmental career started after the war between my junior and senior years of college. With Washington out of control economically, it seemed prudent to focus the subject of this book on my unusual experiences as an industry environmentalist from 1950 to President Nixon’s authorization of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1970. The EPA was fostered in part by the misconception of a Dying Lake Erie.
My unusual career involved industry cooperative efforts with the federal government at the Taft Sanitary Engineering Center in the late fifties and sixties along with more extensive cooperation with the U.S. Robert Kerr Regional Laboratory in Ada, Oklahoma in the mid-sixties. Until my retirement in 1988, my work afforded me an unusual perspective of industry’s relationship with government; and I now understand why the EPA has cost the average citizen money.
Thomas Jefferson once commented there is no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but people themselves.
Washington’s uncontrolled growth, power and present mess suggests that we return decision-making to the lowest political grass roots
level possible. There is no need for Congress and its related mass of bureaucracy to make every decision for the welfare of this nation’s citizens. There is too great a disconnect.
Finally, in relating my experiences over the past half century I must make it clear that I am not dead set against EPA or environmentalists. Nevertheless, the overreach of each group, which in their regulatory zeal, wastes valuable resources unnecessarily, increases the cost of living for the average citizen.
A1.jpgCHAPTER 2
Setting the Stage
I T IS APPARENT that spiritually, historically and economically we as a nation have lost our way from the advantages we inherited in 1950. How did we get to today’s muddled state?
Those of us who experienced the Great Depression and served in World War II have been labeled by Tom Brokow as The Greatest Generation;
and most of us took pride in that consideration. But, when assessing how America has arrived at its present predicament, my generation shares responsibility for the erosion of the rich inheritance that made us such a powerful, benevolent nation in the decade or so after the end of the war.
In the late ninety’s when I was 74 years old, I discovered that a high school history teacher was proselytizing his own political agenda rather than telling the truth. I kept silent and did nothing about it. In my eighty’s I recognized the importance of passing on to my grandchildren life’s experiences that could be of value to them in their choices. Thus about 2007 I started to scratch out my thoughts primarily in notes for this book. At this time I realized that, after World War II, we should have given our children the same school choice programs that I received as a GI. This also became a time of developing the concept and importance of the sustainability of profits
if America was to have a truly free capitalistic economy.
During the past several years it has become clear to me that I, like most of the Greatest Generation
who grew up in the depression and were involved in WWII, have not been sufficiently active in politics to stop the erosion of our life’s foundation. As a consequence, we allowed the country to deteriorate into the moral and economic mess that exists today. We were too laid back politically and did not confront the erosion of our heritage. We collectively felt why fight city hall.
America is at a cross roads. We can follow the current progressive agenda and move more and more towards big government with life in general being controlled by elite Washington bureaucrats and politicians. Conversely, we can embrace the potential for achieving spiritual development plus responsible government, bootstrap individual achievement (beginning with the education system), and a gradual return to a free market system.
Today our political and economic choices are perhaps more apparent than they have been since the American Revolution over two centuries ago. Somehow profit
has become a dirty word and is, for too large a segment of the population, a scourge considered evil to the welfare of the nation. My life’s experiences have lead me to understand that the sustainability of profit without abuse, by loosening unnecessary chains on capitalism, should be our national goal to economic recovery and improved welfare of the entire population. This requires a better understanding of economic freedom.
We have unnecessarily chained the free market system. It is time to loosen those chains and enjoy the productivity and prosperity that is available to us. Envy of the rich and class warfare has no place in a republic. Most importantly the fear of God is the beginning of wisdom.
The silent majority of my generation must let their voices be heard before there are too few of us left to make a difference.
Since the 1950’s most of my friends and buddies of the greatest generation
have perpetually groused about entitlements and give-away programs that used our tax dollars, the creeping costs of life’s necessities by union demands, etc. Not wanting to make waves or be considered unappreciative or greedy, we allowed the gradual and insidious deterioration of our liberty and our income by ever increasing taxes and regulations. By 1976 we should have remembered the basis of the 200th year celebration of our Declaration of Independence and said enough is enough. Sadly, we did nothing and followed the slippery slope to today’s Congress (2012), which cannot prepare a fiscally responsible budget and, at the state level, legislatures saddled with duplicity such