Don Lemon Walks Free While Someone Else Takes the Fall in Church Protest...
Iran's Struggle for Freedom: An Expert's Inside Look
Trump Names the Republicans He Trusts With His Legacy in Interview With Katie...
America's Murder Rate Plummeted in 2025 and No One Can Fully Explain It
Watch This Democrat Lawmaker Make a Fool of Himself Defending Jack Smith
Nick Shirley Gave Opening Remarks at the House Judiciary Committee Hearing on Fraud....
DHS: Palestinian Activist Mahmoud Khalil Will Be Rearrested and Deported to Algeria
Jacob Frey Doesn't Seem to Care That He's Under DOJ Investigation for Impeding...
On the Anniversary of Roe, Democrats Promise to Keep Harming Women
Sunny Hostin Wants Criminal Illegal Immigrants to Sue President Trump for Defamation
Alleged Minneapolis Church Mob Ringleader Went on CNN Last Night. Here's What She...
The Trump Administration Is Actively Seeking Regime Change in Cuba by the End...
President Trump Formally Charters the Board of Peace in Davos As His Gaza...
Gavin Newsom Poses With His Sugar Daddy Alex Soros
Chris Cuomo Goes on Unhinged Rant Against Scott Jennings for Using the Term...
OPINION

Two States of Mind

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- What a difference a border can make. Sometimes it marks a difference not just in altitude but attitude. When our neighbors in Oklahoma find the ground shaking beneath their feet, they know well enough what's causing it. Or they should know by now. As quake follows quake in the center of that state, the cause becomes undeniable: the injection of wastewater into deep wells as part of the process called fracking.

Advertisement

The number of good-sized tremors in our neighboring state has multiplied tenfold within just the past three years. The revolution in oil-and-gas production that's making this country self-sufficient in energy and a world petro-power is good news; that it's also shaking up a whole state isn't. Even as Oklahomans go blithely about their oil-producing business. As if nature weren't trying to tell them something.

It didn't take long for our geologists here in Arkansas to figure out the cause when similar temblors began to rattle windows, shake bedsteads and generally unsteady the landscape in Faulkner County, notably around Greenbrier, Ark., and it didn't take this state's Oil and Gas Commission much longer to do something about it, thank goodness. The commission imposed a moratorium on such drilling within a 1,150-square-mile section of the state where tremors had been detected.


Some sound science, new and strict regulation, a sense of social responsibility and a natural respect for the environment and people's peace of mind ... that was all it took here in Arkansas and the quakes stopped. Yes, an occasional aftershock may still be reported. But now it's an oddity, not an everyday occurrence. As it is across the border in Oklahoma.
Advertisement


You'd think our neighbors would know better than to just ignore the problem, but you'd think wrong. And you'd be underestimating the unbreakable grip that the wildcatter mentality has on Oklahoma's economy, psyche and whole culture. Arkies and Okies have a lot in common, but not in this case, and for that those of us on this side of the border can be grateful. For we're still standing on solid ground, not just politically but literally.

It's a mystery to many of us on this side of the border why a whole state should decide that its very foundations are expendable. But what's a mystery to Arkansans seems to be a tradition among Oklahomans.

You'd have thought that not just science but a simple respect for nature, a reverence for God's creation, would have been enough to cure Oklahoma's shakes some time ago. Just as you might think the folks in West Virginia and elsewhere in Appalachia would know better than to go around shearing off the tops of mountains to mine coal. No payroll can be worth committing that kind of sacrilege.

Whatever the economic advantages and disadvantages of so mistreating a beautiful natural heritage, just a basic aesthetic instinct should have shouted: Stop! This is wrong, wrong, wrong. No cost-and-benefit ratio can justify such a sin against nature.
Advertisement


Yes, there is much to be said for the workings of the free market and the persistence of wildcatters like George Mitchell years ago; he never gave up on his search for a better way to produce petroleum. But there's a difference between ingenuity and hubris, just as there is a difference between a free market and an anarchic free-for-all unbound by rules, regulations and the rule of law in general.

Without self-restraint, a whole state can start to shake. Here in Arkansas, we'd prefer to stay in one piece, thank you.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement