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Sunset on the
West?
By William Norman Grigg
During the recent budget
impasse, a national park official told the New York Times that a
vacant and deserted Yellowstone national park should be "the poster
child of the shutdown." The Times invoked the closing of
Yellowstone as it offered a front-page scolding to Americans who were
"inclined to see the deadlock over the federal budget as only a
paper problem in far-away Washington." But for many Western
ranchers, miners, loggers, and landowners - people who looked upon the
federal shutdown as a reprieve rather than a crisis - Yellowstone park
had come to symbolize the determination of the environmental bureaucracy
to bring Western economic development to a halt.
In his syndicated column for
January 3rd, environmental author (and Montana resident) Alston Chase
observed, "In September [1995], the Clinton Administration, fearing
U.S. law would not prevent a planned gold mine near Yellowstone National
Park, invited a UN committee to declare Yellowstone a World Heritage
Site 'in danger.'" On December 5th, the World Heritage Committee of
the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) complied with the Administration's request.
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt issued a
statement on the same day, insisting that UNESCO "recognized that
these are domestic issues" and that "today's action does not
supersede any U.S. law." However, as the October 6, 1992 issue of Environment
magazine explained, the designation of World Heritage sites
"constitutes a unique precedent," as it "implies what
might be called a voluntary limitation of sovereignty" and a
recognition that "other countries have, through the [World
Heritage] convention, an obligation - and therefore a right - toward
these sites."
UNESCO's decision to declare Yellowstone
National Park a World Heritage site is the result of connivance - some
dare call it conspiracy - between the UN subsidiary and Babbitt's
Interior Department. Last summer, Interior Secretary Babbitt wrote to
the Paris office of UNESCO and asked the organization to send a
delegation to the U.S. for the purpose of placing Yellowstone National
Park on its list of "endangered" World Heritage sites. The
visit of these foreign officials was paid for with American tax dollars:
UNESCO's reply to Babbitt noted, "Due to lack of available funds at
the World Heritage Fund, the United States will assume the costs of the
mission." Furthermore, George Frampton, Babbitt's Assistant
Secretary of the Interior for Parks, Wildlife, and Fisheries, provided
assurances that "the United States [will] assume full
responsibility for assuring the integrity of World Heritage values is
not compromised by … actions taken either internal or external to
World Heritage Site boundaries."
One might wonder: With an
abundance of federal regulatory mechanisms at its disposal - including
federal "wetlands" guidelines and the fearsome Endangered
Species Act - why would Babbitt's Interior Department enlist help from
UNESCO? One answer was provided in a New York Times house
editorial applauding Babbitt's decision. The Times complained:
"Unfortunately, the lead federal agency in the E.I.S.
[Environmental Impact Statement] process [regarding the gold mine near
Yellowstone] is not Secretary Bruce Babbitt's Interior Department, but
the Agriculture Department's Forest Service, which controls most of the
land near the mine." Why is this troublesome? According to the Times,
it is because the Forest Service "has an unfortunate history of
favoring commercial values over environmental values...."
In other words, the Forest Service is regarded
by eco-extremists as insufficiently callous regarding the economic
impact of regulatory decisions. However, Interior Secretary Babbitt has
fewer compunctions about driving landowners and resource developers into
penury. In 1991, while acting as head of the League of Conservation
Voters, an environmental extremist lobby, Babbitt stated in a
fund-raising letter: "We must identify our enemies and drive them
into oblivion." As Interior Secretary, Babbitt has diligently
sought to enhance the arsenal of the federal land-grabbers; the
Yellowstone gold mine issue offered an opportunity to enlist UNESCO in
the assault.
The additional pressure provided by UNESCO, the
Times opined, offers "a cleaner, quicker way to end the
controversy" than the tortuous process of filing state and federal
Environmental Impact Statements. The corporate officials in charge of
the mine, known as the New World Mine, could simply "cede the site
to the Federal Government and win large tax credits or ask for a Federal
buyout equal to its investment costs." UNESCO's involvement could
help broker this "act of global environmental statesmanship."
This cozy little land grab would be financially lucrative for corporate
interests and would serve to hand over another plot to the already
engorged federal land management bureaucracy. However, it would do
little to benefit the people of the region.
William Perry Pendley, an environmental
attorney with the Mountain States Legal Foundation, explained to THE
NEW AMERICAN that the UNESCO listing
"will give Babbitt's Interior Department one more avenue to stop
economic development in Montana and, by way of precedent, throughout the
West." Pendley points out that the New World Mine could create 150
jobs at $35,000 per year, with a multiplier effect which would generate
about $15 million for the local economy. He noted that "the average
annual per-capita income in that region is about $17,000 a year. You
bring in a bunch of miners who make double that, and it's a real shot in
the arm."
Furthermore, argues Pendley, Yellowstone park
was never threatened by the New World Mine. "One of the
misconceptions promoted by the mine's opponents is that it is right next
to the park, and that it would leave tailings [mining residue] nearby
which would defile the park," Pendley commented to THE
NEW AMERICAN. "But it's separated
from Yellowstone by three mountain ridges. It's in an area which has
been mined since white men first went West, and people have been
smelting ore there since about 1870."
But the chief preoccupation of the Clinton
Administration is not protecting Yellowstone; it is expanding the power
of the eco-leviathan over Western lands. Last summer, President Clinton
- who is about as familiar with the Western United States as he is with
the concept of marital fidelity - took a sudden personal interest in the
New World Mine. During his weekly radio address for August 26, 1995 -
which was delivered from the Rockefeller residence in Jackson Hole,
Wyoming, an heirloom of one of the original "robber barons" -
Mr. Clinton expressed concern about "activities on land that
belongs to the American people which are being used for profit in ways
that could damage our national parks. For example," he continued,
his voice swelling with theatrical indignation, "just two and a
half miles from Yellowstone Park there's a proposal to build a big gold
mine." He proudly reported that he had "declared a two-year
moratorium on any new mining claims in the area near the northeast
corner of Yellowstone Park." After all, declared Mr. Clinton,
"We have to do everything we can to protect parks like Yellowstone.
They're more priceless than gold."
Noranda Corporation, the
Canadian entity which would operate the contested mine, was in the
process of completing an Environmental Impact Statement when Mr. Clinton
issued his decree banning the issuance of new mining permits near
Yellowstone. The proscription originally applied to 4,500 acres of
federal land near Yellowstone; however, by the time the presidential
edict appeared in the Federal Register, the affected acreage had
more than quadrupled - to 19,000 acres.
According to Pendley, this is to be expected:
"This issue is not about the mine itself. It's about something
called the 'Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem,' which includes not just the
two million acres of the park itself, but also the 18 million acres
which surround it - 25 percent of which is privately owned. Furthermore,
the UNESCO people are seeking to review all policies involving mining,
timber, wildlife, and tourism in that region - which takes in about 75
percent of the economy."
"If the UN is given the power to set
policy in Yellowstone and the region," Pendley warns,
"property rights will be in peril throughout the Western United
States - and the rest of the country." The UNESCO listing might
prove a potent precedent for anyone who owns property near any of the 17
other "World Heritage" sites in the continental United States
- each of which could suddenly be defined as the epicenter of an
infinitely expanding chain of "ecosystems."
The New World Mine controversy is one of the
most recent escalations in what Pendley calls the War on the West.
In his important new book by that title, Pendley points out that the
West is uniquely susceptible to abuses of federal power because in many
states the federal government is the largest landowner: "The
federal government owns more that 80 percent of Nevada; nearly
two-thirds of Idaho and Utah; as much as half of Oregon, Wyoming,
Arizona, and California; more than a third of Colorado and New Mexico;
and more than a quarter of Washington and Montana."
For this reason, writes Pendley,
"the enormous might of the federal government has always meant that
the life of the West was in the hands of strangers living thousands of
miles away. Like the weather that can sweep down upon Westerners and
change their lives in an instant, the federal government has always
loomed as a distant threat." As the federal government has become a
servant of environmental extremists, the latent possibility of federal
tyranny has become a terrifying reality:
[T]he environmental
extremists' vision of the West is of a land nearly devoid of people
and economic activity, a land devoted almost entirely to the
preservation of scenery and wildlife habitat. In their vision,
everything from the 100th meridian to the Cascade Range becomes a vast
park through which they might drive, drinking their Perrier and
munching their organic chips, staying occasionally in the
bed-and-breakfast operations into which the homes of Westerners have
been turned, with those Westerners who remain fluffing duvets and
pouring cappuccino.
The War on the West continues
on several fronts, and the casualty count continues to rise. In order to
protect the alleged habitat of the supposedly endangered northern
spotted owl, millions of acres of timberland have been placed off-limits
to loggers at a cost of more than 100,000 jobs in the Pacific Northwest
timber industry. A similar effort to "protect" the Mexican
spotted owl (MSO) in the Southwest has cost thousands of logging jobs in
Arizona and New Mexico.
The effort to protect the MSO has made this
winter an especially challenging one for many of the poorest residents
of northern New Mexico. As the Los Angeles Times reported last
December, "For the past 300 winters, the inhabitants of isolated
mountain villages in northern New Mexico have heated their homes and
cooked their meals with firewood collected from the surrounding forests.
Wood was abundant and, until this year, free for the taking. But now a
lawsuit to protect the Mexican spotted owl, a bird that residents say
they've never seen, has prompted the U.S. Forest Service to put much of
the woods off limits."
On August 24, 1995, U.S. District Court Judge
Carl Muecke - in defiance of a recently enacted measure limiting the
application of the Endangered Species Act - issued an injunction which
"temporarily" stopped all timber harvesting in the Southwest's
11 national forests. Judge Muecke ordered the Forest Service to huddle
with representatives of eco-extremist lobbies in order to create "a
list of the activities or categories of activities that may continue as
they have 'no effect' on the Mexican spotted owl."
As a result of Judge Muecke's decision, the
Forest Service imposed severe restrictions on the practice of
"free-roaming" firewood harvesting in the Carson National
Forest. Accordingly, while the "status conference"
deliberated, families in Truchas, Cordova, and other villages in
northern New Mexico were left with firewood supplies which would be
exhausted by Christmas. In the face of public indignation,
eco-extremists sought to deflect responsibility to their quondam allies
in the federal government.
Sam Hitt of the Forest Guardians, one of the
plaintiffs in the MSO lawsuit, bleated that the Forest Service had
"manipulated" the situation to "scapegoat"
environmental activists. However, Roberto Mondragon, a longtime
environmental activist from New Mexico, admitted that "the
environmentalists went ahead with their legal strategy without ever
asking for input from the people who would be most affected."
Those affected by Muecke's ruling also included
thousands of families who depend on timber harvesting for their
livelihood. Reacting to the ruling, Arizona Governor Fife Symington
declared: "I don't think any of us ever imagined in the freest
country in the world that we could conjure up some circumstances where
one individual would have the power, with the stroke of a pen, to shut
down national forests and destroy a way of life and [at least] 4,000
jobs." Mark Killian, who serves as Speaker of the House for the
Arizona legislature, had this message for Muecke: "You're wiping
out whole families. You're wiping out whole communities. You're wiping
out the culture and custom of a group of people."
William Pendley observes that the
environmentalist's jihad has also targeted "the most enduring
symbol of the American West - the cowboy - seeking to price and regulate
the rancher off federal grazing lands and out of business, destroying
the economy of rural areas." One of the first initiatives
undertaken by Secretary Babbitt in pursuit of his vision of a "New
West" was to seek a 230 percent increase in grazing fees charged to
ranchers on federally administered lands. Although the proposed fee
increase was thwarted by a Senate filibuster, the effort to destroy the
ranching industry continues.
After the fee increase was
proposed, an Interior Department memo surfaced which revealed that
Babbitt wanted "to use price increases as a straw man to draw
attention from management issues." While ranchers fought the
grazing fee increase, Babbitt and company created "Range Reform
'94," a cluster of proposed federal land use and environmental
regulations which Pendley describes as "A Thousand and One Ways to
Get Ranchers Off Federal Land." These regulations, particularly as
applied to water rights and right-of-way considerations for ranchers,
are of particular concern to "inholders" - ranchers and others
who own property surrounded by federally administered lands.
Nevada rancher Wayne Hage, who operates the
700,000-acre Pine Creek Ranch in Nye County, has come to symbolize the
plight of the contemporary Western rancher. Although Hage's ranch is
administered by the Forest Service, he owns the deed to it outright. As
the January 3rd Christian Science Monitor recalls, "In the
late 1980s, the Forest Service ordered [the Hages] to reduce the number
of cows on a portion of their Forest Service allotment, which Forest
Service officials contend had been overgrazed. When the Hages refused,
armed federal agents hauled 104 head of cattle to an auctioneer."
The feds also revoked Hage's grazing permit and forbade him to cut down
or remove trees which had obstructed his right-of-way. When Hage cut
down the trees in question - which the feds themselves had previously
identified as a nuisance - he was charged with the destruction of
government property.
Pendley observes that Hage's "outspoken
advocacy on behalf of Western ranchers and their legal rights sometimes
put him crosswise with high-ranking federal officials and environmental
extremists"; furthermore, the charge of "destruction of
government property" was filed against Hage just four months after
the rancher had filed suit claiming that the feds had made an
unconstitutional "taking" of his property by revoking his
grazing permit and water rights. Even more significantly, the armed raid
on Hage's ranch had been timed to coincide with a congressional vote on
grazing fees, and key members of Congress - including then-Senator Mike
Synar (D-OK) but none from Nevada - had been briefed prior to the
action.
All of this suggests that Hage's activism
activated the federal government's "Waco gene," resulting in
an armed raid intended to intimidate Hage and other ranchers into
submission. (The raid, it should be noted, took place during the Bush
Administration.)
The criminal charges against Hage have been
dismissed and his "takings" lawsuit continues, although
federal attorneys are seeking a summary judgment.
Predators are among the weapons
being deployed against human populations in the Western United States.
In harmony with a worldview which denies that humans have a special
status in nature, efforts have been made to re-introduce grizzly bears
and other large predators into human-occupied areas. Last winter, in the
teeth of vigorous opposition from thousands of rural Westerners, Babbitt
and his eco-comrades released more than two dozen wolves into
Yellowstone National Park and northern Idaho, and plans are in
development to re-introduce the grizzly bear in rural Idaho.
One environmental writer
applauded the re-introduction of the wolf into Yellowstone in these
unabashedly misanthropic terms: "[This policy] will bring back
another ingredient that has been vanishing from the Western back
country. The ingredient is fear. Wolves are killers.... People will
think twice before traipsing into the back country." Indeed, humans
who find themselves under assault by predators may have no right to
protect themselves, as Montana rancher John Shuler discovered.
After Shuler shot and killed a grizzly which
had threatened first his sheep and then his life, the Fish and Wildlife
Service (FWS) accused him of an unauthorized "taking" and
fined him $7,000. When Shuler challenged the FWS ruling, a federal
Administrative Law Judge essentially ruled that when Shuler sought to
protect his sheep he had "purposefully place[d] himself in the zone
of imminent danger of a bear attack" - and slapped him with a
$4,000 fine.
Alston Chase refers to the effort to
re-introduce predators into the inhabited West as "a
preservationist version of the Bosnia mission, with the government
attempting to micromanage peace between stockmen and wolves under the
guise of restoring 'natural conditions.'" This leads to some
bizarre and quixotic initiatives by the eco-bureaucracy. For example, in
June of last year federal officials took a litter of wolf pups into
"protective custody," fearing that they might fall to the
depredations of eagles. However, the slaughter of a hiker's dog by
federally protected wolves last December was dismissed as a
"natural" occurrence, although, as Chase points out, "it
wasn't clear how the killing of a domestic pet by federally reared
wolves was 'natural.'"
In some Western states, laws banning the
hunting of mountain lions have resulted in an unmanageable population of
the large, hungry carnivores - and humans are suffering the
consequences. The January 8th issue of Newsweek described the
recent mauling death of 56-year-old high school counselor Iris Kenna by
a 140-pound mountain lion in Cuyamaca Rancho State Park near San Diego.
Kenna was merely the latest victim of a series of attacks as cougars,
their food supplies dwindling, encroach on human populations. Even more
alarming than the prospect of cougar attacks, however, is the anti-human
ideology which animates the predator's human advocates.
After California resident Barbara Schoener was
attacked and killed by a cougar in April 1994, the animal was hunted
down and killed by state officials. Donors raised $9,000 for Schoener's
two children - but eco-extremists raised more than $21,000 to care for
the murderous cougar's cub. Michael Manfredo, who has conducted opinion
surveys for Colorado State University, told Newsweek:
"There's a value shift about how people view wildlife, a high
willingness to accept mountain lions on the urban fringe - even if they
kill people."
One exemplar of those new values is Wayne
Pacelle, a vice president of the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS),
who urged Californians not to "over-react" to the Schoener
slaying:
The HSUS accepts that
individual animals judged to be a threat to people should be removed.
But the injurious act of one animal should not provide a license to
wreak vengeance on other members of an animal population. We are
encroaching on their habitat, and we must respect that they should
have a place to live as well.
Such sentiments are probably
shared by the urban yuppie refugees who are migrating to the West, whose
occupations do not involve direct contact with the wilderness. For
ranchers and other landowners in the rural West, however, predators are
a genuine threat to both life and livelihood.
Manfredo's and Pacelle's comments offer an
example of the "biocentric" worldview, in which humans are
seen as merely another species inhabiting a democratic
"ecosystem." And the War on the West is an ideological
struggle between traditional American concepts of property rights and
the collectivist biocentric perspective.
Steven C. Rockefeller of
Middlebury College, a theology professor and environmentalist, explains:
"In a biocentric approach, the rights of nature are defended first
and foremost on the grounds of the intrinsic value of animals, plants,
rivers, mountains, and ecosystems rather than simply on the basis of
their utilitarian value or benefit to humans." Rockefeller contends
that humans must recognize that "other life forms have a right to
life, freedom from human oppression, and a habitat that offers them
opportunity for well-being."
Biocentrism is close kindred to the so-called
"Gaia Hypothesis," which maintains that the earth is a
self-regulating organism of which humanity is an insignificant part.
Norman Myers, an ecologist who has been an adviser to the World Bank and
the United Nations, explains that from the Gaian perspective,
"there is no longer any 'we' and 'they' … there is only 'us' -
all of us humans, together with all our fellow species and other members
of the Gaian community."
Predictably, some disciples of Gaia have little
patience with those who do not subscribe to their doctrine, and consider
"unenlightened" humans to be an infestation to be eradicated.
Such sentiments were expressed by David Garber, a research biologist
with the National Park Service:
Human happiness, and
certainly human fecundity, are not as important as a wild and healthy
planet. I know social scientists who remind me that people are part of
nature, but that isn't true. Somewhere along the line - at about a
million years ago, maybe half that - we quit the contract and became a
cancer. We have become a plague upon ourselves and upon the Earth....
Until such time as Homo Sapiens should decide to rejoin nature, some
of us can only hope for the right virus to come along.
When the Clinton Administration
was inaugurated in 1993, the federal bureaucracy was staffed with
numerous adherents of the "biocentric" worldview, beginning
with Vice President Al Gore. Other acolytes of the new faith include
Environmental Protection Agency Director Carol Browner, Interior
Secretary Bruce Babbitt, Assistant Interior Secretary George Frampton,
Fish and Wildlife Service Director Mollie Beattie, and scores of
middle-level bureaucrats. In his new book In a Dark Wood: The Fight
Over Forests and the Rising Tyranny of Ecology, Alston Chase
describes these officials as "apostles of the new order" and
observes that they wasted little time inaugurating the new faith:
"The Administration, under the rubric of 'reinventing government,'
… adopted biocentrism as the guiding philosophy of all federal land
management" immediately on coming to power.
Biocentrism is more than an ideology; it is
quite literally a religion, one which was prefigured 30 years ago in an
address by Berkeley historian Lynn White before the American Association
for the Advancement of Science. During that speech, which environmental
consultant Michael Coffman refers to as "the eco-shot heard 'round
the world," White identified the "victory of Christianity over
paganism" as the source of our environmental "crisis":
"Christianity made it possible to exploit nature in a mood of
detachment to the feelings of natural objects.... Christianity bears a
huge burden of guilt." According to White, "More science and
more technology are not going to get us out of the present ecologic
crisis until we find a new religion...."
Nearly identical sentiments
were expressed by Interior Secretary Babbitt during his November 21,
1995 address before the National Religious Partnership for the
Environment. Babbitt reflected on his childhood experiences with the
Catholic Church and his own "spiritual growth":
[T]he church implicitly
sanctioned the prevailing view of the earth as something to be used and
disposed however we saw fit, without any higher obligation. In all the
years that I attended Sunday mass, hearing hundreds of homilies and
sermons, there was never any reference, any link, to our natural
heritage or to the spiritual meaning of the land surrounding us.
In pursuit of "spiritual
meaning," Babbitt turned to "a very different religion" -
the pantheist traditions of the Hopi Indians, which he finds to be more
consonant with "our ancient religious values." According to
Babbitt, "This [spiritual] lens lets us see not human-drawn
distinctions - as if creation could ever be compartmentalized into a
million discrete parts, each living in relative isolation from the
others - but rather the interwoven wholeness of creation."
According to Babbitt, "when we can see past … manmade divisions,
the work of protecting God's creation grows both easier and
clearer."
Like Vice President Gore, another eco-pagan who
maintains that the preservation of the environment must become the
"central organizing principle" of human society, Babbitt
insists that "the work of preserving God's creation" will
require the consolidation of political power:
[The eco-crusade] unites all
state, county, and federal workers under a common moral goal. It
erases artificial borders so we can see the full range of a natural
habitat, whether wetland, forest, stream, or desert expanse. And it
makes us see all the creatures that are collectively rooted to one
habitat, and how, by keeping that habitat whole and intact, we ensure
the survival of the species.
According to Babbitt, "our
collective moral imperative" has been translated "into one
landmark law: the 1973 Endangered Species Act." The Endangered
Species Act (ESA) is recognized by environmental extremists as "the
pitbull of environmental laws" - and eco-socialists have displayed
canine tenacity in their use of the ESA to attack property rights and
economic development. Although it was originally enacted as a measure to
protect species in danger of extinction, Pendley observes, "The
purpose of the Endangered Species Act has become stopping all activities
of which environmental extremists disapproved."
Western property owners have come to dread the
possibility that an "endangered" variety of flora or fauna -
be it fish, fowl, fly, or flower - will be located on or near their
property. Wherever such a privileged creature is found, it instantly
acquires pre-emptive claim upon the land it occupies as
"habitat" - and the only practical limit to the extent of such
habitat is the inventiveness of environmentalists and bureaucrats. Human
use of "habitat" for economic development is severely
curtailed or proscribed altogether. Although the Endangered Species Act
has wrought plenty of havoc on property rights and economic development
since it was signed into law by President Richard Nixon, it was not
until the Clinton Administration's biocentric politburo came to power
that the measure's full implications became known.
In August 1993, the EPA announced a
"fundamental reorientation" of its mission which embraced the
biocentric gospel. Vice President Gore's National Performance Review
observed: "Historically EPA has primarily focused on the protection
of human health with less consideration of the impacts on ecosystem
issues." Henceforth, however, "EPA must make ecosystem
protection a primary goal of the Agency" - in short, it would
no longer protect public health, but instead protect nature from people.
The Bureau of Land Management was even more forthright about its new
ethic, declaring that "all ecosystem management activities should
consider human beings as a biological resource."
Additionally, the Clinton
Administration has undertaken an effort to harmonize federal
environmental and land-use policies with the imperatives issued by the
United Nations during the 1992 "Earth Summit" in Rio de
Janeiro. Toward this end the Administration created the
"President's Council on Sustainable Development," which wedded
five Cabinet members with the leaders of the Sierra Club, the Natural
Resources Defense Council, the Environmental Defense Fund, and the
Nature Conservancy. This cabal was charged with the mandate to
"develop policy recommendations for a national strategy for
sustainable development that can be implemented by the public and
private sectors." The keystone of the national strategy for
"sustainable development" was to be the UN's International
Convention on Biodiversity (the "Biodiversity Treaty"), which
was signed by Bill Clinton in June 1993.
The Biodiversity Treaty was a masterpiece of
"soft law" - vague and seemingly innocuous environmental
admonitions. However, as treaty opponent Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC)
pointed out, the document is a "preamble falsely described as a
treaty," with binding "protocols" which were to be
written by unaccountable environmental organizations after the treaty
was ratified by the Senate. Furthermore, as Alston Chase reports:
The treaty set off a tidal
wave of planning designed to analyze and control every square inch of
American real estate.... [The treaty] triggered a plan to create a new
agency that would map and computerize biodiversity data throughout the
country.... [T]his new body would compile a national biological
inventory to catalogue all life forms and identify sensitive areas....
As Congressman Gerry Studds put it, the survey would have an
"awesome mission - catalog everything that walks, crawls, swims,
or flies around this country." It would, as Secretary Babbitt's
science adviser Tom Lovejoy reportedly concurred, "map the whole
nation for all biology and determine development for the whole
country and regulate it all because that is our obligation under the
Endangered Species Act." [Emphasis added.]
Not only did the Clintonites
intend to create a central planning regime for all economic development
via the BiodiĐversity Treaty and its offspring the National Biological
Survey (NBS), but it sought to make the Survey immune to the Freedom of
Information Act. Congress attempted to attach amendments to the NBS
enabling legislation denying its secrecy provision and requiring
surveyors to obtain permission from landowners before conducting
inventories on private property. However, Babbitt was not satisfied with
an NBS which could operate as anything other than a biocentric KGB;
accordingly, he withdrew the legislation - and created a similar agency
by secretarial executive order.
Because of opposition catalyzed by Senator
Helms, the Senate also refused to ratify the Convention when it was
submitted on September 30, 1994. However, the Clinton Administration has
never allowed Congress to impede its ambitions. Henry Lamb, founder of
the Environmental Conservation Organization (ECO), explained to THE
NEW AMERICAN that "the Clinton
Administration is moving forward on implementation of the Biodiversity
Treaty as if it had actually been ratified." Furthermore, Lamb
reports, "Although the National Biological Survey has been
officially discontinued, it has been scattered throughout the federal
land-use bureaucracy, and the underlying initiative is proceeding
through various eco-system management programs."
Lamb's observations are confirmed by Jim
Streeter, policy director for the National Wilderness Institute.
"The Biological Survey is still an active battleground,"
Streeter informed THE NEW AMERICAN.
"When Babbitt couldn't get the legislation he wanted out of
Congress, he did by executive order what he wanted to do in the first
place. He also got Congress to appropriate about $170 million to fund
the Survey within the Interior Department budget back in 1994." To
conceal the work of the Survey, according to Streeter, Babbitt and his
lieutenants have gone through "a series of comic-opera exercises,
first changing its name several times and then making it a subdivision
of the U.S. Geological Survey."
The arrival of a Republican congressional
majority in January 1995 placed a few impediments in the path of the
Clintonista eco-juggernaut. However, while Administration policy wonks
wrestle over recondite budget details with their counterparts in
Congress, the work of remolding America to meet the demands of the
biocentric worldview continues.
In November 1991, the
"Wildlands Project" was co-created by environmental journalist
Reed F. Noss and Dave Foreman, the erstwhile fźhrer of Earth First! As
described by Charles C. Mann and Mark L. Plummer in Science
magazine, the Wildlands scheme "calls for a network of wilderness
reserves, human buffer zones, and wildlife corridors stretching across
huge tracts of land - hundreds of millions of acres, as much as half the
continent." Designed to help realize the vision of a "wild and
healthy planet," the Wildlands Project, according to Mann and
Plummer, calls for the re-primitivization of at least half of the United
States:
[T]he Wildlands approach
calls for 23.4 percent of the land to be returned to wilderness, and
another 26.2 percent to be severely restricted in terms of human use.
Most roads would be closed; some would be ripped out of the
landscape... [It would mean] nothing less than a transformation of
America from a place where 47 percent of the land is wilderness to an
archipelago of human-inhabited islands surrounded by natural areas.
Chase points out that the
Wildlands Project would involve "the forced relocation of tens of
millions of people.... the removal of human habitation from up to half
the country's land area." This scheme to create an American
Kampuchea in the name of "biodiversity" was endorsed as
recently as 1994 by the World Resources Institute, which is a major
constituent of the President's Council on Sustainable Development and
among the non-governmental organizations which are creating guidelines
for implementing the yet-unratified Biodiversity Treaty.
ECO's Henry Lamb notes that the Wildlands
concept is essentially a brainchild of the United Nations Environmental
Programme (UNEP) and the foundation-funded environmental lobbyist
community which interfaces with both the federal and UN environmental
bureaucracies. The UNEP scheme is to organize the earth into
"bioregions" - which would supposedly be intact ecosystems,
and which would (in Lamb's words) serve as "the basic biological
and geological unit around which society is to be reorganized." The
bioregions would be presided over by "bioregional councils,"
which would be "public-private partnerships" between
government officials and foundation-funded non-governmental
organizations, perhaps modeled after the President's Council on
Sustainable Development.
Writes Lamb, "It is difficult to envision
society organized as it is proposed in the UNEP documents. The vision is
a regression from the progress society has made, to a lifestyle that
society struggled for thousands of years to escape." It is the
drive to realize the Wildlands concept which underlies the "battles
over endangered species, grazing fees, wetlands policy, heritage
corridors, natural landmarks, logging, outdoor billboards, chlorine,
pesticides, wastewater," and other environmental controversies. The
Wildlands vision may take decades to realize, observes Lamb, but
"the process has just begun. The 'War for the West' has almost
nothing to do with spotted owls or salmon; it is a planned method to
force humans off land that is to become core wilderness areas."
Some might protest that Lamb's projections
exaggerate the ambitions of the eco-leviathan. But ten years ago it
would have been thought fanciful to suggest that the federal government
would prosecute a rancher for shooting a grizzly bear in self-defense,
or enlist the UN's help in shutting down a gold mine in Montana. |