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DAVE FOREMAN: IT'S STILL ABOUT POPULATION, STUPID
The Birth Dearth Folly And The 300 Millionth
American
By Dave Foreman (with introduction by Todd
Wilkinson), 1-06-07
Dave Foreman is nothing, if not a real deal enigma.
Today, there are many preconceived portrayals of the man floating
around, often perpetuated by people who have never met him but who
base their own authority of opinion on the ether of myths and legends,
of which the American West is chock full.
Some of these characterizations of Foreman—as a renegade, Leftist,
anarchist, neo-Luddite, wimpy-minded,
let's-revert-society-back-to-the-Stone Age madman—are inaccurate.
But it's true that Foreman is radically progressive. As one of the
original founders of EarthFirst!, Foreman once espoused
monkeywrenching—including activities such as tree spiking—and he
once faced criminal charges relating to an alleged conspiracy to
topple a power line, causing some to label him an eco-terrorist.
But it's also true that Foreman was an Eagle Scout raised as a
fiscally conservative Republican hunter and angler—in the Barry
Goldwater mold—who felt a kindredness with rural Westerners (yes,
the extractionist class) growing up. Later, he went to work for the
mainstream environmental movement, with groups like The Wilderness
Society and The Nature Conservancy, having been inspired by the
ecological awakening that blossomed between 1964 when the Wilderness
Act was passed and the arrival of the first Earth Day in 1970.
It was out of this firmament, Foreman notes, that other landmark laws
such as the Endangered Species Act, Clean Air and Clean Water Acts,
and the National Environmental Policy Act were put on the books; all
laws which were produced by Congresses lead by Democrats but signed
into life by Republican President Richard M. Nixon.
Foreman, in the years since the 1970s when he and Doug Peacock and Ken
Sleight served as the fodder for fictional characters in Ed Abbey's
novel, The Monkeywrench Gang, has undergone a continuous metamorphosis
in his thinking about politics, activism, citizenship, and Democracy.
One could argue that as Foreman has loomed larger at the forefront of
the rewilding movement, he has wisened, not wizened, in his approach
to conservation biology. He is, after all, a senior citizen who
qualifies for his AARP card and there's still a lot of Goldwater
ideals inside of him.
"To be effective, conservation must be guided by a vision that is
bold, scientifically credible, practically achievable, and
hopeful," Foreman writes as a current mantra. Does that sound
like it was composed by a curmudgeonous misanthrope?
On New Year's Day, 2007, Foreman published his second "Around the
Campfire" column that is distributed through his organization
called The
Rewilding Institute. New West readers at the
bottom of his essay can request a free subscription to TRI's regular
newsletter.
The piece, below, titled "Birth Dearth Folly and the 300
Millionth American" is inspired by writings in his book in
progress, "The Myth(s) of the Environmental Movement: Why Nature
Lovers Must Take Back Conservation". When will it be published?
Well, we suggest that you drop Dave a note and continue to hassle him
about it. Perhaps it will speed up the book's release!
The issue of human population, which Foreman writes about here, is one
that has caused a schizophrenic reaction within the environmental
movement because it involves not only American-style consumption and
depletion but the delicate matters of immigration, the real effects of
globalization in populous nations like China and India, and the
inability of greens sometimes to have meaningful conversations with
people whose skin color is not white. —Todd Wilkinson
Birth Dearth Folly and
the 300 Millionth American
By Dave Foreman
I was something of a smart aleck—even a rascal—as a kid. My
grandma would tease me that if I weren’t careful, I might end up
with just a bundle of switches for a birthday present. Believe me, I
knew what switches were and what they were for. Grandma was gentler
with me than she had been with her own brood, but when I was a
“little devil,” I was ordered to go find a switch and cut it. If
it was a wimpy switch, I had to find a stouter one and then catch a
sterner thrashing.
I had my sixtieth birthday this October. It seems that for a
landmark birthday like the sixtieth, I should have gotten a nice
present. Alas, I got switches. Two days after my birthday, Nancy and
I were sound asleep in bed with our three fierce attack cats. A cat
burglar broke in, quietly made his way downstairs to The Rewilding
Institute office, and swiftly gathered up my MacBook, wallet, cool
watch with altimeter and barometer, and dive watch.
He slipped away into the night.
When I discovered the dirty deed in the morning, I cancelled my
credit cards and ATM card, called the police and my insurance agent.
Then I gave my cats a stern talking-to. Within days I was setting up
a new computer. Then I realized that the backup DVD had been in the
drive of the stolen computer. I lost several months of work, a bunch
of new material for the Rewilding website (including the first parts
of a population and biodiversity page), our fall fund-raising
letter, and the draft for this campfire. I also lost all of my email
messages (about 200 I hadn’t gotten to and never will now) and my
address book.
Well, this was a real black and blue bummer. I doubt I will ever get
caught up.
But the theft wasn’t the real bundle of switches for my sixtieth
birthday present. No, it was small potatoes to the switches I got
the day before my birthday.
Recall the glittering, fireworks day of October 17. This was the day
that those who have the job of estimating such things picked as the
symbolic day for the United States of America to stand proud as a
nation of THREE HUNDRED MILLION LIVING PEOPLE. There were
celebrations hither and yon. Positive spins were tossed out like
beads at Mardi Gras.
The day was ballyhooed as symbolizing the death of Malthus and proof
that Julian Simon had won the bet with Paul Ehrlich. There were
rumors that Julian Simon’s waxy corpse was teased out of his glass
sarcophagus to dance with giddy young ladies and plump, pink-faced
young men at the Club for Growth. Even a spokesperson for the
Environmental Defense Fund explained that population growth wasn’t
a problem, that the problem was just where people chose to live.
Wait.
Did you get that?
Let me repeat.
Even a spokesperson for the Environmental Defense Fund explained
that population growth wasn’t a problem, that the problem was just
where people chose to live.
Terrible and foreboding as our country’s population explosion to
300 million is, more terrible and foreboding is how Americans >
across our beautiful land are reacting.
For almost forty years, I’ve supported slowing and then halting
human population growth. It hasn’t been my main issue, but I have
always woven it in—especially in my Earth First! Journal and Wild
Earth writings. During these four decades I have seen the world’s
thinkers and leaders degenerate from taking population growth
seriously and trying to find practical ways to slow the explosion to
flippant brush-offs: “Oh, don’t you know? Ehrlich was wrong.
Everyone knows that. Population isn’t a problem anymore. Julian
Simon proved that.”
And they say this in growing numbers, even within the environmental
movement; they say this while standing in the knife-edged, roaring
winds of climate change, mass species extinctions, gut-wrenching
poverty and hunger around the world, resource-shortage-driven wars
of unspeakable brutality and inhumanity…
“Wind? What wind? I don’t feel any wind.”
This species-wide mental breakdown finds its gurgling, foolish voice
in those who now warn of....The Birth Dearth.
Phillip Longman writes in Foreign Affairs, “Most people think
overpopulation is one of the worst dangers facing the globe. In
fact, the opposite is true. As countries get richer, their
populations age and their birthrates plummet. And this is not just a
problem of rich countries; the developing world is also getting
older fast.
Falling birthrates might seem beneficial, but the economic and
social price is too steep to pay. The right policies could help turn
the tide, but only if enacted before it's too late.”
So.
Some countries (Japan and many in Europe) have managed to not only
slow their population growth rate but to bring it down to
replacement levels or even to the point where population will slowly
decline. Instead of celebrating this extraordinary achievement with
millions of popping champagne corks raining down as condoms, the
birth-dearthers are prophesizing doom.
Longman's is not a lonely voice. Other shortsighted analysts and
government leaders are also freaking out over the imagined economic
and social problems of declining birth rates. From Italy and Greece
to South Korea and Japan, governments are offering cash payments and
other incentives to women who have more than two children.
In general, the horror scenarios focus on fewer working-age people
to support pension plans for retirees, schools overbuilt for the
Baby Boom closing down, rural villages becoming deserted, and old
tribal fears that lower-breeding groups will be overwhelmed by
heavy-breeding groups (Muslims in Europe, for example). Worry about
slowing growth rates is not confined to the right; a number of
progressives are also overheated. Even National Geographic flips out
on the issue, using words like “dire” and “troubling.” It
calls for increasing birth rates and more immigration in Europe.
Nor are Foreign Affairs and similar journals Longman’s only
soapbox. He just wrote a Birth Dearth article for Conservation in
Practice. Conservation in Practice, for crying out loud.
Conservation in Practice is published by the Society for
Conservation Biology, and sponsored by The Nature Conservancy and
other holdfasts of Nature conservation. How it can publish such
rubbish is beyond me. What’s next? Conservation in Practice
running an article from the public relations office of Exxon-Mobil
proving that global climate change is a hoax?
The first thing to understand about birth-dearth fears is that they
are purely economic and social. They are not ecological. Economic
and social problems related to declining birth rates are much easier
to solve than the ecological problems caused by exploding
populations and overshooting carrying capacity. Those who are
bug-eyed and panicky about dealing with the overblown troubles
brought by population stabilization are men and women of small
creativity and limited problem-solving skills. It is far better to
juggle such relatively easy social and economic challenges now than
when we are faced with the even-more horrendous ecological problems
in the future brought by leapfrogging numbers of humans.
None of the birth-dearth wailers consider ecological consequences;
theirs is a world only of human society. Other species do not exist
for them. The birth-dearth hysteria is so foolish and blind, that I
find it hard to take it seriously enough to dispute it.
Unfortunately, we must because of the shocking way the
too-few-babies drumbeat has been publicized and supported. When we
conservationists take on the birth dearthers, I think we should do
two things: belittle the difficulty of dealing with the social and
economic problems of population stabilization and moderate decline,
and emphasize the ecological problems caused by large existing
populations and growing populations. If conservationists spend too
much time debating the economic and social challenges of declining
birth rates, we appear to accept the worldview and values of those
who ignore Nature. We are fighting in their arena, not ours. We must
constantly stress the ecological impacts of the population
explosion. That is where our expertise lies and that is where we can
show the dire consequences of overpopulation now.
Therefore, some points to make in this debate include:
- Women are choosing to have fewer children for
their personal quality of life and economic security.
- The supposed problems caused by stable or
slightly declining populations are economic, social, and
political, not ecological.
- The birth-dearth economic problems are grossly
overblown.
- At some point in the real—finite—world,
growth must stop. It is easier to deal with the economic
transition now than later when there are more people to feed and
house (or to care for in old > age).
- Worries about an imbalance between retirees and
those paying into pensions can be easily solved now by merely
increasing the retirement age. As Susan Morgan says, “We
geezers can still work.”
- The real problems of population growth are
ecological. Catastrophic climate change, habitat destruction,
and mass extinction are far harder to solve when there are more
people.
- Humans have already overshot ecological
carrying capacity on Earth. The greenhouse effect leading to
catastrophic climate change is only one example. Earth’s
carrying capacity at a European level of living is several
billion fewer people than the current population.
Every day, we are slapped in the face by some
evidence of the > capacity for mass madness our species flaunts.
The birth-dearth > fears are a particularly grotesque and
fantastic example. The campaign for more babies is so out of touch
with reality of any kind that is difficult to take it seriously.
John Davis says, “I almost hate to see us dignify this argument by
responding to it.” The need to respond, however, was underscored
today in The New York Times with an article that read, “Japanese
births rose for the first time in six years in 2006, according to
government statistics announced Monday, offering a glimmer of hope
for a rapidly aging society.”
Does anyone have the keys to get out of this madhouse?
Happy Yule
Dave Foreman
Bosque del Apache, Arizona
EDITOR'S NOTE: To receive Dave Foreman's “Around the Campfire”
columns and to subscribe to the Rewilding Institute's e-newsetter,
drop a note to Susan Morgan: smorgan1964@earthlink.net.
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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:
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