By Alan
Caruba
(02/17/2006)
What could possibly be more arrogant than to think that humans should
determine which specie continues and which goes extinct? Or that humans can,
in fact, keep a specie from going extinct?
A news item in the February 20 edition of U.S. News & World Report
noted, “Citing concerns over climate change, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service last week began reviewing whether polar bears should be declared a
threatened species. If they are, federal regulations would be required to
considered the impact on the animals before ruling on such matters as
industrial emissions or fuel economy standards.”
I submit that is such madness and idiocy that the mere stating of the notion
polar bears are going extinct or threatened by the alleged melting of the
Arctic is too bizarre for rational people to contemplate. That said, the
USFW will dispatch people “to collect data on polar bear population,
distribution, the effects of climate change, and threats from development,
contaminants, and poaching.” Guess who set this nonsense in motion?
If you said the Center for Biological Diversity of Tucson, Arizona, you’d
be right. Not exactly a hotbed of polar bear activity, the Center asserts
that, “Arctic melting could cause polar bears to become extinct by
century’s end.” “Could” is the key word here.
This is a splendid example of the way the environmental movement is forever
cozying up to the federal government to get it to spend your tax dollars on
projects of such dubious merit that a school child would dismiss it out of
hand. Polar bears going extinct? The whole of the Arctic melting?
The last time I checked, the State of Alaska offered the wandering polar
bears some 571,951 square miles, surrounded by 91,316 square miles of water
in which to frolic. Alaska is the largest of all the U.S. States. Room
enough for plenty of polar bears, scads of caribou, all manner of wildlife,
and even the occasional oilrig or two with which to extract millions of
barrels of oil from ANWR.
Could it be all the worrying about polar bears has nothing to do with polar
bears and everything to do with thwarting the effort to reduce our
dependence on the Middle East for the oil we consume? The answer is yes!
Environmentalists whose second greatest sport is playing God and whose first
is getting laws passed to deprive people of the use of all public and
private property in America, have been playing this game for a very long
time. As this is being written, instead of just letting the Endangered
Species Act go extinct, Congress is wrestling with ways to continue what is
arguably the single worst piece of legislation of the past thirty-two years.
How’s this for a record-setting level of incompetence? Since its
enactment, the ESA has listed 1,300 species as endangered. Only 34 of these
species have made it off the list and, of these, 9 are now extinct, 14 are
now judged to have been improperly listed, and 9 have been judged to have
“recovered” to be delisted. That’s less than one percent!
The real story of the ESA is even worse than this appalling waste of tax
dollars and the personnel to run about counting the population of these
species. The ESA has been used to destroy the livelihood of thousands who
worked for the northwestern timber industry, effecting turning some
communities into ghost towns. The U.S. actually imports timber from Canada
despite having an abundance of it here. The ESA was used to bludgeon the
farmers in Klamath Falls, Oregon, when the water they needed for irrigation
was shut off to protect a suckerfish! The examples of how the ESA has been
used to deprive Americans of the value and use of their private property are
endless.
The United States of America has got to rid itself of the folly of
“saving” various species while decimating the lives and livelihood of
Americans in the name of some fish or some owl, some wolf or some bear.
Ninety-five percent of all the species that ever called Earth home are
extinct. Let’s show some care for those that share the Earth, but let’s
not throw millions at their alleged survival because some environmentalists
want to ruin our national economy.
America is not Disneyland where all the animals and fish sing and dance.
America is the home to people who farm, who harvest trees, who graze
livestock, who do all the hard work of providing us the food and other
things we need.
© 2006 Alan Caruba
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those who
have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml