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Perspective Shift

You read this story from where you sit.
Want to read it from somewhere else?

We'll re-present the same story as a thoughtful proponent of the environmental catastrophe frame would. Not to convince you. To let you actually meet the argument.

Choose a vantage
Retold from the other vantage
Steelman · slot A
The environmental nuclear bomb case
A Western water scientist would argue —
What's exposed on the bed of the Great Salt Lake isn't just dry dirt — it's decades of accumulated arsenic, mercury, and lead that becomes airborne dust the moment the wind picks up over Syracuse or Salt Lake City. That's why we use the phrase environmental nuclear bomb: a metro area of 2.5 million people is downwind of a slow-motion toxic plume, and the brine shrimp and migratory bird ecosystems that depend on that hypersaline water are collapsing in real time. Bison walking across the lakebed in April is not a postcard, it's a warning. There is no state-level fix at this scale; the diversions, the snowpack trends, and the public-health stakes all cross jurisdictions. Federal money, deployed now, is cheaper than the respiratory disease and ecological loss we're otherwise locking in.

If this read like a fair rendering of the argument — even when you disagree — it's doing its job. Steelmen aren't aimed at persuading you; they're aimed at what the other side actually believes when they're thinking clearly.