
A
Fish Is Just a Fish
By Terence Jeffrey
July
11, 2007
One can see through the
environmentalist movement as clearly as if it were a mountain stream by
reading the opinion U.S. District Judge John Coughenour issued last
month in the Endangered Species Act (ESA) suit brought by Trout
Unlimited and other groups against the National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS).
The judge sided with the
environmentalists, arguing that the human race is endangering the
steelhead species of salmon by breeding too many of them.
The problem, as the
environmentalists see it, is not that man, through ill-considered and
wanton acts, is driving a poor fish from the face of the Earth. The
problem is that man, through imagination, careful planning and industry,
is on his way to making this fish so abundant and readily reproducible
that it more resembles a domesticated animal than a "wild"
creature.
The key term in the
judge's decision is "human interference."
"If the statute did
not aspire to naturally self-sustaining populations of endangered or
threatened species," he says, for example, "it would be
permissible under the ESA to capture and permanently raise such species
in zoos or other environments where they are dependent on human
interference for survival."
Now,
non-environmentalists understand that "human interference" in
the environment can be either good or bad. When a farmer clears a
forest, plants a crop and brings it to harvest, most of us would
consider that a good thing. We recognize that the farmer's interaction
with the environment is quite different from the interaction of an arson
who sets a forest ablaze simply to see it burn.
In environmentalist
ideology, however, human acts are never good. All are ultimately
destructive acts of "interference."
This ideology runs
throughout Coughenour's decision on the steelhead, which orders NMFS to
stop its practice of counting steelhead bred in fish hatcheries as part
of the steelhead population for purposes of determining whether
steelhead ought to be listed as endangered. To the judge, it does not
matter if a river-born and a hatchery-born steelhead are genetically
identical, born along the same river, migrate to the same ocean, and
return to breed with one another in the same gravel bed and share the
same offspring. The river-born steelhead, the judge says, counts. Its
hatchery-born mate, the product of "human interference," does
not.
In fact, in this judge's
view, anything man does to the salmon is wrong. He dramatizes this by
presenting a salmon-centric capsule history of
North America
in which man is the constant villain. First, man-the-villain
depletes the salmon. "Despite their ability to survive the
catastrophic events of millions of years of evolution," the judge
writes, "salmon populations have experienced substantial declines
since the commencement of European settlement of the
Pacific Northwest
, due to overharvest and
severe habitat degradation resulting from logging, mining, irrigation
and construction of dams for hydropower, among other factors."
Then man-the-villain
increases the salmon, building artificial -- even capitalistic -- fish
hatcheries "to compensate for the declines in salmon populations
and meet the demands of the burgeoning canning industry."
These hatcheries are soon
"releasing far more fish fry than result from natural
spawning."
But, wait! These teeming
schools are not real salmon, they are man-tainted ones.
"These floods of
hatchery fish," the judge observes, "can result in the
appearance of a well-stocked fishery, though in actuality it would not
be so without human interference."
Finally, the man-bred
salmon threaten the survival of the real salmon. "Hatchery fish and
wild salmon also have ecological interactions that are detrimental to
the wild population," says the judge. "Hatchery fish, which
tend to be larger than wild fish, compete for habitat and food and prey
upon smaller wild fish."
You have no doubt
discerned by now that the movement to preserve the salmon through the
ESA is not really about preserving salmon. So, what is it about?
It is about shackling
man. "The legislative history of the ESA reinforces this view that
species are to be protected in the context of their habitats, until they
are self-sustaining without the interference of man," the judge
concludes. "(T)he ESA is designed to protect not just a species'
genetic material, but its place in the natural world."
For those who see man as
an interloper "in the natural world," few acts of government
can match those that would seek to remove the effects of man from the
habitat of the salmon -- which covers all the major rivers of our
Pacific
Coast
and the ocean into which
those rivers drain.
Saving
the salmon from man may be the next best thing to global warming, which
depicts the most productive activities of our race as a mortal threat to
all of Earth.
Terence P. Jeffrey is
the editor of Human
Events.
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Source: http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/TerenceJeffrey/2007/07/11/a_fish_is_just_a_fish
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