
Judy Keeler's Series on the Wildlife Project
Parts 1 through 13
The
Wildlands Project Comes to
Hidalgo
County
–
Part 1
Submitted
by JUDY
KEELER/Animas
Anticipating
an unusually festive 4th of July, my family and I decided to make the
annual trek across, or rather around, the Peloncillo Mountains in
Southwest New Mexico to our favorite independence celebration in Rodeo,
New Mexico.
Rodeo
was established in 1902 when the EP&SW railroad extended its line from
Douglas
,
Arizona
to
Antelope
Pass
in
the
Peloncillo
Mountains
.
Its location soon became an important shipping point for livestock, as
indicated by the Spanish translation of its name, which means
“roundup”. Located on US 80 about 33 miles south of I-10, just
east of the beautiful Chiricahua Mountains and Portal, Arizona, a post
office was established in 1903.
Like
many rural communities today, Rodeo consists of a cluster of
homes in the town site with a store, several art galleries, a real estate
office, garages, post office and local pub.
Dotting the surrounding landscape are several subdivisions, ranches
and farms.
A
typical rural community, Rodeo embraces its visitors with both, respect
and suspicion. Having grown
up in a small town, I understand their culture and concerns.
It
was a surprise, therefore, when I viewed some participants carrying a
Sky
Island
banner
in Rodeo’s Fourth of July parade. Other
Sky Islanders carried signs depicting the Sierra Madres, Peloncillos,
Chiricahua and
Rocky
Mountain
ranges.
Still others marched under a replication of the mountain chains
that was reminiscent of the paper dragons seen in Mardi Gras parades.
A few others marched in the black attire usually associated with
Earth Firsters.
As
I watched the
Sky
Island
participants,
I wondered how many of the marchers, much less the local residents, were
familiar with the
Sky
Island
concept,
who birthed the movement and its agenda.
I
have not always been a private property activist.
In fact it was not out of choice, but of necessity, I started my
trek. It began when The
Nature Conservancy bought the Gray Ranch.
My
first face to face encounter with TNC activities occurred when they
arranged for about 100 federal, state and non government employees from
around the
U.S.
to
visit the Bootheel of New Mexico for an on-the-ground workshop.
Their intent was to field test, by inventorying our area, color
coded satellite maps. They
believed in this way they could verify the actual vegetation type found on
a particular site by associating it with a particular color on the map.
The
only problem, they forgot to contact the adjoining landowners and inform
them their forces would be accessing their properties.
Our
personal encounter began when we saw vehicle tracks traveling around a
locked gate on our private property.
Not knowing what we would find, we followed the tracks to their
destination. There we came
across a BLM pickup with magnetic Nature Conservancy stickers covering the
BLM name and logo. Additionally,
two BLM employees were enjoying their lunch in a shaded area of our ranch.
Obviously
startled by our approach, my husband lost no time informing them they were
enjoying their lunch on private property.
If their intent was to access the BLM lands, he continued, they
would need a horse because the existing roads were not passable in a
vehicle. The employees
explained their instructions were to do an on the ground inventory of the
vegetation and wildlife found in our area, and referred us to their leader
at the Howe Camp on the Gray Ranch.
During
the course of the conversation, they reluctantly showed us an inventory
sheet they were filling out for The Nature Conservancy.
The sheet listed a number of plants and wildlife they were to check
if observed.
What
did it all mean? Unfamiliar
with TNC, we had no hint what was transpiring in our area.
Editor’s
Note:
Judy Keeler, a private land activist, will be writing a series of articles
for the Hidalgo County Herald. Watch for more articles in coming weeks.
Judy
Keeler Writes About the Wildlands Project – Part 2
By
Judy
Keeler/Animas
I
became acquainted with the Sky Islands Alliance about six years ago.
A newspaper editor gave me a copy of the organization’s brochure.
Having been faxed several times, it was a bad copy.
The best I could discern, the group was in favor of protecting
biodiversity and working with the Wildlands Project.
Familiar with the Wildlands Project, I wondered what connectivity
lay between the two organizations.
Not
until an article appeared in the Albuquerque Journal,
June
15, 1997
,
by Mike Taugher, did I realize the full extent of their collaboration.
Entitled “Trying to
Preserve
Wild
Land
”,
the article contended conservation biologists agreed steps should be taken
to preserve biodiversity in our state.
It also claimed, “islands of national parks, wildlife refuges and
wilderness areas” had to be expanded for the sake of numerous plants and
animals.
Also,
according to the article, conservationists and biologists were all working
together to design “vast nature reserves”.
The Wildlands Project being the most ambitious, “if not (most)
radical”, of the groups involved in the effort.
One
of the Wildlands Projects’ and
Sky
Island
’s
first proposals was to be in “southwestern
New
Mexico
,
southeastern
Arizona
and
northern
Mexico
”.
It would be called the “Greater Gila Sky Island reserve” and
“encompass 40,000 acres”. Within
that acreage would be wilderness core areas, corridors connecting the core
areas, with buffer zones surrounding, both, the core and corridor areas.
The
core areas would be “designed to protect ‘umbrella species’ such as,
bears, wolves, bison and jaguars”.
In an attempt to lessen any alarm over their proposal, the group
claimed land-use restrictions would not be as restrictive in the buffer
zones as the core areas.
The
two leaders of the agenda were Dave Foreman and Jack Humphrey.
Foreman, according to the article, was an
Albuquerque
resident
who “co-founded the radical environmental group Earth First!” during
the ‘70s. He had, however,
disassociated himself from the group when ‘they turned into a bunch
of left-wing, counter-culture radicals’.
Jack Humphrey was program director for the Sky Island Alliance.
The
article stated that “during the ‘60s and ‘70’s wilderness
advocates concentrated their efforts on the high mountain areas found in
forest reserves. These areas
were typically pretty, and attractive to users of the outdoors”.
As a result, “wilderness areas were designated in scenic,
high-altitude areas that were beautiful but not necessarily rich in trees,
minerals or grazing land”.
Over
the years these same wilderness advocates shifted their “emphasis on
wilderness as a place for scenery and recreation to wilderness as a place
for preservation of plants and animals”.
By
1997, Foreman was heading up the Wildlands Project.
It’s intent, to “remap (large) chunks of North American from a
conservation biologist’s point of view”.
Although it had a budget of $500,000, it came “mostly from grants
and some individual donations”. The
organization was, at the time, and remains today, based in
Tucson
,
Arizona
.
Jack
Humphrey had affiliated with the Wildlands Project so his organization,
the Sky Island Alliance, “could design the biological reserves”.
Humphreys considered it “one of the most ambitious agendas the
conservation movement had ever undertaken”.
Although
the duo conceded conservation biology’s claim that “umbrella species
would cause other species to be protected”, and “flourish”, the
theory “was largely untested”. They
indicated, however, the groups involved in this project had all the time
in the world to test their theory. “If
it takes 200 years, it takes 200 years.
This land isn’t going anywhere”, the article quoted Humphrey.
Once
the maps were completed, the intent was to start “purchasing land, using
conservation easements on private land, lobbying agencies in an effort to
influence the planning process for public lands, and using congressional
action to advance their agenda”.
Foreman
felt, in some cases, it would take “just a tweaking of a management
plan” to accomplish their purposes.
As
proof the Wildlands Project was a serious effort; they gave
Florida
as
an example of how “half of the state’s land could be used to protect
wildlife”. They also
claimed they had an advantage in western states that didn’t exist in
Florida
,
“there’s a lot more public land out here”, they gleefully
conjectured.
|
Judy
Keeler Writes About the Wildlands Project – Part 3
The
Sky
Island
Alliance
www.skyislandalliance.org
At
first glance the Sky Island Alliance’s most recent brochure is a colorful
portrayal of images. A beautiful
Mexican Parrot fills the front page.
Picturesque
Chihuahuan
Desert
landscapes
leap from the inner pages. A
portrait of the allusive jaguar dominates its own corner.
Although
the
Alliance
now
claims to have originated in 1992, in response to the Forest Service’s
development oriented recreational plan, their initial press coverage stated they
were established to “design biological reserves”.
Claiming
to be a grassroots coalition in favor of restoring native biological diversity,
and a publicly supported non-profit, 501(c) 3, organization, the Alliance’s
tax return for the year 2000, shows the organization received the majority of
its funding from a handful of contributors.
Contributions for the year totaled $108,901.
However, $105,000 came from five donors.
Only a small amount of income came from their “grassroots”
supporters.
For
the year 1999, their 990 tax return reveals the organization grew exponentially
from 1995 to 2000. Receiving
contributions of only $3,100 in 1995, their largest leaps in income occurred
between 1996 and 1998 when they grew from $25,371, to $60,686, to $103,853.
Today,
the original “Greater Gila Sky Island Reserve” has also grown by leaps and
bounds, from a 40,000 square mile plan to one of 70,000 square miles.
The name has also been changed. It
is now called the “Sky Islands Wildlands Network (SWIN)”.
Based
on a concept called “rewilding”, the
Alliance
now
hopes “to stabilize prey and smaller predator populations” by “restoring
large carnivores”. Working with
“its partners the Wildlands Project and Naturalia, of Mexico”, the
organization claims to have spent 7 years writing a 220 page Sky Island
Wildlands Network Conservation Plan to achieve its goals.
According
to the Plan, the greatest threats to the “sky island” area are subdivisions,
poor livestock grazing practices, fire suppression and recreation and resource
based management by the federal agencies.
Just
as the Wildlands Project calls for core areas, corridors and buffer zones to
protect biodiversity, the
Alliance
calls
for core areas to be designated for “wilderness, roadless areas, and national
parks” where “extractive uses would be prohibited”.
Based
on rewilding, the “linkage”, or corridor, areas would allow the “genetic
exchange” necessary for wide-ranging “focal species such as Mexican wolves,
jaguars, mountain lions, black bears, elk, and northern goshawks”.
Their
claim that the 70,000 acre area is “globally important” because it is
“rich in diverse species and habitats”, is supported solely on Aldo
Leopold’s conviction that “this area is the last of
North
America
’s
strongholds for magnificent predators”.
Both
the Wildlands Project and Sky Island Alliance participate in inventorying
Forest
and
BLM lands for “roadless” areas. Making
these events overnight camping trips, filled with fun and adventure, their
trips have drawn avid followers. During
the summer of 2000, several representatives from cooperating groups took part
in “inventorying” the
Coronado
Forest
in
southern
Hidalgo
County
.
Surveying
for roadless areas has created one of those “strange bed fellow”
relationships between environmental groups and ranchers.
Ranchers, desiring to protect their private property and inholdings on
federal lands, i.e. windmills, water storage tanks, etc., from trespass and
criminal damage, have unwittingly allowed the
Alliance
to
recommend closing certain roads.
Once
recommendations are made to, and approved by, the federal agencies they become
binding on all parties. Roads are
obliterated from maps, and blocked by boulders on the ground.
This serves to increase the amount of acreage in “roadless areas” and
causes it to be reclassified by the agencies.
It also provides a stronger case for environmental groups that lobby
Congress to convert wilderness study areas into wilderness, and to enlarge
existing wilderness areas.
October
19th the Sky Island Alliance, Wildlands Project, New Mexico Wilderness Alliance,
Wilderness Society and Arizona Wilderness Coalition will host a “Sky Island
2002: Restoring Connections” workshop in Tucson, Arizona.
Proclaiming the event will showcase “the network of people and
organizations working to preserve the biological diversity of the unique Sky
Islands borderland ecoregion” attendees will have an opportunity to hear
“from Sky Islands Wildlands Network member groups, private citizens,
scientists, government agencies, and other land protection organizations about
the latest efforts to restore and connect wildlands”.
http://www.wild-earth.org/inside_wp/index_upcoming.html
Keynote
speaker will be Dave Foreman. Other
presenters, besides the hosts, include: the Arizona State Museum; U.S. Forest
Service; Malpai Borderlands Group; Nature Conservancy; National Park Service;
Sonoran Institute; Gray Ranch; World Wildlife Fund; Center for Biological
Diversity; Southeastern Arizona Bird Observatory; Coalition for Sonoran Desert
Protection; Pima County’s Sonoran Desert Protection Plan; University of
Arizona; Defenders of Wildlife; Arizona Open Land Trust; National Resource
Conservation Service; a conservation biologist, a jaguar researcher, and a
Coronado Forest rancher.
Judy Keeler Writes
About the Wildlands Project - Part 4
By
Judy Keeler/Animas
The
Wildlands Project’s Mission - www.wildlandsproject.org
The
Wildlands Project becomes a little confusing until one realizes there is an
organization called the Wildlands Project, with headquarters in Tucson, Arizona,
and an actual document, also referred to as the Wildlands Project.
Just
as the Sky Island Alliance has a 220-page plan for a 70,000 square mile preserve
in New Mexico, Arizona, and Mexico, so the Wildlands Project has an 87 page
Master Plan. This
Plan, however, is not limited to a specific geographic area, only to ones’
imagination.
A
copy of the Wildlands Project’s Plan lay on my desk for over a year before I
finally read it. Published
in a special issue of “Wild Earth”, a quarterly publication of the Cenozoic
Society - 1992, 75,000 copies were distributed to activists, the majority mailed
to federal and state agencies with oversight responsibilities for wildlife and
land-use planning.
The
subtitle for the Plan is appropriately entitled, “Plotting a North American
Wilderness Recovery Strategy”.
After reading the Plan, I concluded it was such a far-fetched concept
that no on could take it seriously.
Unfortunately, over the years, I’ve been proven wrong, as more and more
federal and state agencies appear to be adopting the conservation principles
presented in the Plan.
The
actual Master Plan is divided into 18 chapters, including, the Project’s
Mission Statement, prepared by Dave Foreman, David Johns, Michael Soule, Reed
Noss and John Davis. I
quote, “[t]he mission of The Wildlands Project is to help protect and restore
the ecological richness and native biodiversity of North America through the
establishment of a connected system of reserves.”
The mission continues, “[t]he land has given much to us; now it is time
to give something back – to begin to allow nature to come out of hiding and to
restore the links that will sustain both wilderness and the spirit of future
human generations.”
“The
idea is simple. To
stem the disappearance of wildlife and wilderness we must allow the recovery of
whole ecosystems and landscapes in every region of North America.
Allowing these systems to recover requires a long-term master plan.”
Their
vision is also simple, it involves “living for the day when Grizzlies in
Chihuahua have an unbroken connection to Grizzlies in Alaska” and Gray Wolves
“are continuous from New Mexico to Greenland”.
Vast areas must be set aside so wildlife and plants can “once again
thrive and support pre-Columbian species”.
Based
on the conviction that wildlife and plant species are in extreme peril, the
Master Plan claims “existing Wilderness, Parks and Wildlife Refuges are not
adequately protecting life in North America.”
True to Chicken Little, the sky is falling: “Large predators are
imperiled in much of their habitat; songbirds, waterfowl and shorebirds are
reaching new lows; native forests have been extensively cleared; and tall and
short grass prairies have been almost entirely destroyed or domesticated”.
In
addition to visioning reserves for wildlife and plants, the Wildlands Project
calls for wilderness areas to be home “for unfettered life, free from
industrial human intervention”.
“Vast landscapes without roads, dams, motorized vehicles, power lines,
overflights, or other artifacts of civilization”, must be designed to save
biodiversity.
Michael
Soule, conservation biologist, speaks in the Chapter entitled, “A Vision For
The Meantime”. Soule,
according to his biography, was the founder and first president of the Society
for Conservation Biology, is chair of Environmental Studies at the University of
California at Santa Cruz, and has acted as a consultant on matters related to
biological diversity for many agencies and organizations.
In
this chapter, Soule advises Wildlands Project supporters to take their time
implementing the Plan.
Why adopt a politics of patience?
“The answer is fear, fear on the part of those folks who believe they
will lose their jobs as loggers or miners, have to abandon their way of life as
ranchers, professional guides or commercial fishermen, and be forced to move
from the region where their families have been living for generations.”
Soule
believes the conservationists’ task is to “remove the fear from people who
see themselves threatened by attacks on their occupations, their livelihoods,
their world view, and their property”.
John
Davis, editor of the “Wild Earth” newsletter, in his chapter, “WE Role in
the Wildlands: The Role of Wild Earth in the Wildlands Project”, expresses his
calling more candidly.
Davis claims the “Wild Earth” is an independent publication serving
biocentric wildland groups, including The Wildlands Project and the groups
involved in the Project.”
Via the “Wild Earth”, Davis intends to publish articles “on
successful wilderness protection strategies, natural history essays,
conservation biology teachings, musings on deep ecology, ideas for reversing the
human population explosion, and warnings and threats to wild areas”.
Exposing
his disdain for humanity, Davis writes, “’Wild Earth’ exists in part to
remind conservationists that in the long run all lands and waters should be left
to the whims of Nature, not to the selfish desires of one species which chose
for itself the misnomer ‘Homo sapiens’, humanizing of landscapes must stop
now and be reversed.”
Summarizing
his thoughts on the Plan, Davis concludes, “[d]oes all the foregoing mean that
Wild Earth and The Wildlands Project advocate the end of industrial
civilization? Most
assuredly.”
Judy
Keeler Writes About the Wildlands Project – Part 5
By
JUDY
KEELER/Animas
The
Wildlands Project’s Master Plan consists of an 87 page document, originally
published in the “Wild Earth” - 1992. Within
these pages are found the essential elements with which to build a “biological
preserve”. The chapter discussing
this reserve design is entitled “The Wildlands Project: Land Conservation
Strategy”, by Reed F. Noss.
Dave
Foreman, Howie Wolke, and Bart Koehler actually laid the foundation for this
concept in the early 1980’s. Published
in the June 1983 issue of Earth First!, and again in Foreman’s 1991 book,
“Confessions of an Eco-Warrior”, the concept continues to be honed over
time.
Normal
scientific findings usually begin with a theory, or hypothesis.
The scientist’s job is to prove the hypothesis using acceptable
standards to reach an unbiased conclusion.
These standards include gathering facts, analyzing data, comparing
information with a control group, testing the hypothesis, and then reaching a
conclusion.
On
the other hand, conservation biology does not operate using standard scientific
guidelines. In the author’s own
words, the Plan is “largely untested”, a theory yet proven.
It
has, however, been embraced by both academia and the media from Seattle,
Washington and Stanford, California to Orona, Maine and Orlando, Florida.
Incorporated in 1986, the Society of Conservation Biology claims
membership of 10,000 people and institutions.
Reed
Noss openly acknowledges that “the ideas and words presented”, in the
Wildlands Project’s Master Plan, “are part of a continually evolving text.
According to Noss’ biography, he is a consultant in ecology and
conservation biology, half time research scientist at the
University
of
Idaho
’s
College
of
Forestry
,
and a research associate at
Stanford
University
’s
Center for Conservation Biology. He
holds a Ph.D. in wildlife ecology from the
University
of
Florida
.
His most recent stint has been to serve as a paid consultant to the
Department of Interior, hired during Secretary of Interior Bruce Babbitt’s
term.
It
is interesting to note here, the Bureau of Land Management’s Rangeland Reform
’94, birthed through a great deal of controversy during Secretary Babbitt’s
administration, adopts, almost word for word, Noss’ recommendations for
maintaining biological diversity. As
expressed in the Master Plan, in order to maintain biological diversity one must
maintain ecological and evolutionary processes such as; “disturbance regime,
hydrological process, nutrient cycle and biotic interaction”.
Conservation
biologists also believe large carnivores and ungulates require large expanses of
land in order to breed and expand. For
a minimum viable population of 1000 [large predators], an area of 242 million
acres would be required for grizzly bears, 200 million acres for wolverines, and
100 million acres for wolves.
The
reserve design would consist of core reserves, connecting corridors, and two
buffer zones. Core reserves would
be managed as roadless areas, within which all roads would be closed, “free
from industrial use”. The
“inner buffer zone would be strictly protected”, while the “outer zones
would allow a wider range of compatible human uses”.
Outside
the outer buffer area would be an area Noss refers to as the “matrix”.
Initially this matrix would consist of the land surrounding the reserve.
However, according to Noss, the matrix would exist only “in the first
stages of a wilderness recovery project”.
Eventually, the wilderness network would be expanded to “dominate a
region and thus would itself constitute the matrix, with human habitations being
the islands”.
As
noted in an issue of “Science” – June 25, 1993 - the long-term goal of the
Wildlands Project “is nothing less than a transformation of America from a
place where 4.7 percent of the land is wilderness to an archipelago of
human-inhabited islands surrounded” by wilderness.
Noss
suggests in the Master Plan that “at least half of the land area of the 48
conterminous states should be encompassed in core reserves and inner corridors
zones within the next few decades”. That
is assuming, of course, that “most of the other 50% is managed intelligently
as buffer zone”.
Although
this appears to be a very ambitious plan, it does not go far enough for a few
Wildland proponents. Some have
called for as much as 89% of our nation’s landmass to be set aside in these
reserves – set apart from human activities.
For
supporters and affiliates of the Wildlands Project, Noss also discusses how to
select a reserve site and draw boundaries; how large a core reserve should be;
how a core reserve should be managed; the primary functions of a “multiple-use
zone”; the primary functions of corridors; and design and management criteria.
Under
“restorative management” techniques, he suggests; replanting with native
species; thinning of fire-suppressed stands of forest types; reintroduction of
fire; road closures; control or (where possible) elimination of exotic species
(including livestock); and reintroduction of large carnivores.
The
Wildlands Projects’ Master Plan also calls for reserves to be managed by
non-governmental organizations like the Nature Conservancy.
Dave Foreman even suggests “Nature Conservancy staff should be plugged
in so that gaps in reserve networks can become priorities for acquisition”.
Noss
continues, “[s]ympathetic agency personnel should be recruited” to bring
together “professional ecologists and other scientists who understand the
local ecosystem and wildlife as well as the principles of conservation
biology”, and “grass-roots conservation activists who understand the
mechanics of public land management” to help design the preserves.
A
few years ago, I heard the president of a local ranching organization state that
“conservation biology was the only pure science”.
He contended the science used by land grant universities to improve
rangeland, “had been compromised because it was funded by the ranching
community”.
I
felt the rancher was very naïve to believe organizations like The Nature
Conservancy, Audubon Society and Sierra Club are truly altruistic, unbiased and
their science uncompromised.
I’m
not alone in questioning conservation biology’s unbiased science.
Biologists around the continent question whether there is really any
science to support the Wildlands Project.
Richard
Hobbs, author of “The Role of Corridors in Conservation: Solution or
Bandwagon?” strongly implies the theory that ‘natural corridors’ enhances
the free movement of species between reserves is on shaky ground.
This concept, “along with other principles of reserve design, have been
quoted in policy documents and textbooks, despite being supported by few
empirical data at the time, and being subject to considerable debate since.”
Other
scientists have been even more challenging, preferring to call it
pseudo-science.
Next
week The Wildlands Project – Dave Foreman
Related
articles – The Wildlands Project:
www.thewildlandsprojectrevealed.org
Diplomatic
Immunity for the Sierra Club:
www.citizenreviewonline.org/august_2002/diplomatic.htm
A
Country Girl’s Musin’
By
Judy Keeler
The
Wildlands Project Comes to
Hidalgo
County
-
Part 6
The
Wildlands Project – Dave Foreman
The most charismatic, yet the most controversial, player in
the Wildlands Project is no doubt Dave Foreman. Known for his wolf howls that
tend to drive his audience into a frenzy of responding howls, he has the innate
ability to draw his followers into the melodrama. Likely perfected during his
days as the “unspoken” leader of Earth First!, his howls have become a part
of his persona.
Much in demand as a speaker, he has entertained crowds from
California
to
Colorado
to
Maryland
. Along the way he has authored several books, including “Ecodefense: A Field
Guide to Monkeywrenching”. In this book Foreman details how his followers can
“monkeywrench”, or sabotage, dams, power plants, industrial equipment,
windmills, and water storage tanks, as well as other artifacts of civilization.
Publicized as a great “how-to book on destroying everything”, the book is
designed to equip eco-saboteurs with the knowledge necessary to make much needed
“social changes”.
Foreman also authored, “Confessions of an Eco Warrior”, “The Big
Outside”, in collaboration with Howie Wolke, and his most recent book, “Lobo
Outback Funeral Home”.
Not many agree which came first Earth First!, or “The Monkey
Wrench Gang” written by Edward Abbey, but everyone agrees they both embrace
the concepts endorsed by Foreman in his book “Ecodefense: A Field Guide to
Monkeywrenching”, in which he lays out the plans for the Wildlands Project.
During the early ‘70s Foreman worked for the Wilderness
Society as their Southwest Regional Representative in
New Mexico
. From there he moved up to become Director of Wilderness Affairs in
Washington
,
D.C.
According to an individual who had worked closely with him during his
New Mexico
days, it was during his trek to lobby at the national capitol that Foreman
became disillusioned with the “system”.
Returning to
Arizona
and
New Mexico
, Foreman was a changed man. No longer satisfied to count species along the
Gila River
, apparently he decided more radical measures had to be taken to ensure
wilderness became the focus of public and congressional activities.
It was also during this time he founded Earth First! With this
group he found a voice to vent his frustration with the system. Whether it was
at clandestine meetings, or as editor of the “Earth First! Journal”, Foreman
also found a following for his radical views of mankind and the perceived
destruction humanity brings upon the Earth.
After being arrested on charges of plotting to sabotage
several nuclear facilities by downing power lines serving the plants, Foreman
spun away from Earth First! in the late ‘80’s to become co-founder, and
chairman of the Wildlands Project by 1991. Less controversial than Earth First!
this organization provided the vehicle he needed to gain mainstream support for
enlarging wilderness areas. It also provided a more open public platform than
the Earth Firster’s clandestine forest rendezvouses. In addition, it gave
Foreman a podium, via academia, by which to propel the Wildlands Project’s
Master Plan into the arena of public opinion.
Often compared to a zealous “hellfire and brimstone”
preacher, Foreman is most known for his claims that humanity is a scourge on the
planet. Based upon Paul Ehrlich’s past prediction that the earth would no
longer be able to sustain its population by 1990, and refueled with current
predictions by the World Wildlife Fund that the human race will plunder “the
planet at a pace that outstrips its capacity to support life” by 2050, Foreman
has this to say: "Right now, we are in the middle of the sixth great
extinction episode in earth's history, and we can't blame this one on an
asteroid."
In order to save the world, all human impacts on the planet
must be eliminated or at the very least, severely prohibited. Population must be
reduced, immigration into the
U.S.
, severely restricted. It was the Sierra Club’s refusal to adopt Foreman’s
policy on immigration that caused him to leave as a board of director for the
organization in 1997.
By 1999, firmly seated as the guru of wilderness, Foreman
joined with others to establish the New Mexico Wilderness Alliance. Joining
Foreman were: Todd Schulke, founder and staff member of Southwest Center for
Biological Diversity; Dave Parson, wildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and program leader for the reintroduction of Mexican wolves
into the Southwest; Jim Baca, former mayor of Albuquerque and past national
director of the Bureau of Land Management; C. Wesley Leonard, director of the
Energy Center at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) and chairman of the
Management Committee of the Southwest Center for Environmental Research and
Policy - UTEP; and Jim Scarantino, Albuquerque attorney, chairman of the
Coalition for New Mexico Wilderness Alliance, and NM REP Foundation (Republicans
for Environmental Protection).
Just as Charles Manson’s followers believed he held mystical
power, as discussed in Vincent Bugliosi’s book, “Helter Skelter”, so the
followers of Dave Foreman believe he receives his revelations from a higher
power.
According to one account, Foreman, caught up in the revelry of
the moment and filled to overflowing with tequila, threw an empty bottle in the
air during a rendezvous with other wilderness proponents in the
Chisos
Mountains
of the
Big Bend
National Park
in 1984. To everyone’s amazement, as a dozen eyes watched the bottle spin into
the heavenlies, it mysteriously disappeared. No one heard the bottle falling
back to earth, or shattering into a thousand pieces.
Foreman still mesmerizes his followers today with his
charisma, charm, and dogma. Not much has changed over the years, but his
constituency is growing within the arenas of academia, congress, and federal and
state agencies.
Much could be written about Dave Foreman, more than this
newspaper can hold. For those with inquiring minds, I’ve included some related
articles that are a must read for those who want to know more about the
Wildlands Project and its many faceted leader.
Next week – The Nature Conservancy
Related Articles:
Earth First! co-founder, Dave Foreman to discuss latest
movement in the history of conservation -
http://www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu/archive/1999-2000/pr/foreman.htm
Dave Foreman Speaks -
http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC20/ForemnPP.htm
Dave Foreman's and MV's ideas get a run in
Tasmania
-
http://csf.colorado.edu/mail/deep-ecology/jun99/msg00038.html
Dave Foreman to be Keynote Speaker at the Appalachian
Wildlands Conference in
Bethesda
,
MD
, on April 7th -
http://www.prweb.com/releases/2001/3/prweb23800.php
Wildlaw -
http://www.wildlaw.org/about.html
Board of Directors –
New Mexico
Wilderness
Alliance
-
http://www.nmwild.org/about/board.htm
Visionaries or dreamers? -
http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.URLRemapper/1999/apr26/dir/Feature_Visionarie.html
Dave Foreman sparks wilderness drive -
http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=917
Y2Y: A vast concept gets a hearing -
http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Article?article_id=3759
A bare-knuckled trio goes after the Forest Service -
http://www.hcn.org/servlets/hcn.Issue?issue_id=127
Earth First! forefather, CU group work for wilds -
http://bcn.boulder.co.us/campuspress/1995/nov161995/earth111695.html
The Wolf’s at the Door -
http://www.tucsonweekly.com/tw/2001-03-22/book2.html
Quotes from Ecodefence -
http://www.off-road.com/vw/enviro/exc.html
Dave Foreman – a Dialogue with Derrick Jensen -
http://www.ecofuture.org/pk/pkar9510.html
The world's ticking timebomb -
http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,750783,00.html
The Sky Island Alliance, Nature Conservancy, New Mexico
Wilderness Alliance and Wildlands Project affiliation is similar to an intricate
puzzle. With your permission,
I’ll try to explain the organizations and individuals involved in this
collaborative effort - one piece at a time.
A Country Girl’s Musin’
By Judy Keeler
The
Wildlands Project Comes to
Hidalgo
County
-
Part 7
The Wildlands Project
– The Nature Conservancy
This week I intended to
discuss The Nature Conservancy (TNC), the 10 largest nonprofit in our nation.
However, in order to understand how some of the players interact within
the environmental movement, I’d like to point out some opinions I’ve
developed during years of research.
According to my
observations, a line has been drawn in the sand.
On one side of the line stand those who believe in people and the good in
humanity. These individuals tend to
believe in their fellow man and enjoy helping their neighbors.
On the other side are those
who believe humanity is a curse on the earth.
These individuals tend to suppress and inhibit other human beings and any
human activities they consider detrimental.
Here are some values they
perpetuate:
* Environmentalism pits man
against nature, i.e., man is killing all wildlife; hacking up their habitats and
destroying the species’ ability to survive.
Mankind is the villain. His
activities are fouling the land, water and air.
* Humans are on a level
with all other species. Animals and
plants deserve the same rights as mankind.
Although they concede mankind may have the ability to choose right from
wrong, it is assumed they always choose wrongly.
Humanity is inherently bad. Nature
is good.
* Everything is a crisis.
Extinction of species will occur tomorrow, or at the least, in the very
near future. Although their belief
system is based on evolution, this same evolutionary process can not be allowed
to continue. They must “save”
the Earth!
* They are very elitist.
The organizations, and individuals heading them, believe they’re the
only ones who know what is good for the planet, including its, animals, land,
water and air. It is their job to
“educate” others because they possess superior knowledge.
Mankind must stop all activities they perceive to be destructive.
* They are extremists.
The word compromise does not exist in their vocabulary.
Whether it is the size of trees that can be logged, developing oil and
gas, or the right of individuals to manage their own property, they will not
compromise unless it’s one of their own doing the cutting, drilling or
subdividing.
* Most of the organizations
involved in this agenda, and the Wildlands Project specifically, are
interconnected, either through their agenda of “saving” species, open space
and wilderness, or through their funding sources – usually money granted by
large foundations.
Those who scorn humanity
have found some very useful tools to control and ultimately eliminate those who
do not agree with them. Once they
have created a perceived crisis in an area, they use the laws they have helped
generate to force compliance.
One of their favorite and
most effective tools is the Endangered Species.
However, they’ve been known to use the Clean Air and Water Acts to suit
their purposes as well.
What began in the 1960’s
as a social agenda to clean up industrial pollution and save species in peril
has today become a nightmare. The
environmental movement had, at one time, a legitimate reason to exist.
Several industrial corporations were polluting our lands, air and waters.
Some species were actually declining to the point of extinction.
But through the years, as these conflicts were resolved, the
environmental community changed its focus from industrial pollution to any
activity they considered a pollutant, i.e. harvesting timber, mining minerals,
irrigating desert lands, grazing rangelands and some forms of recreation.
With time they were also
able to change the public’s perception from cleaning up to “saving” every
little bug and crawling critter. It
has gone so far now that some organizations are even trying to save lichen
(algae. Are these organizations
becoming even more extreme in their causes, and why?
David Brower, Sierra
Club’s first executive director, and supporter of the Wildlands Project,
explained how environmental organizations have built their system to make their
agenda appear main stream in E magazine: “The Sierra Club made the Nature
Conservancy look reasonable. Then I
founded Friends of the Earth to make the Sierra Club look reasonable.
Then I founded Earth Island Institute to make Friends of the Earth look
reasonable. Earth First! now makes
us look reasonable. We’re still
looking for a group to come along and make Earth First! look reasonable.”
This statement was made in
1990. Today, we have the Wildlands
Project, Center for Biological Diversity, Forest Guardians, Range Net, and the
Earth Liberation Front (ELF!) among approximately 1400 other “environmental”
organizations that are massaging the public into believing their claims.
Some of these organizations tend to make other environmental
organizations appear moderate in comparison to their extremist positions.
Many are supported by large foundation and government grants.
How does TNC fit into this
agenda? In my opinion, when the
extremist groups attack miners, loggers, ranchers and recreationalists, TNC is
then free to ride in wearing their white hats.
Appearing to be the good guys, they can now save the day for everyone,
and make off with the goods in the process.
More on The Nature
Conservancy next week.
The Wildlands Project -
http://www.twp.org/inside_wp/mission.html
Environment People and Predation -
http://www.thenewamerican.com/tna/2001/01-29-2001/vo17no03_predation.htm
The World's Ticking Timebomb
http://www.observer.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,750783,00.html
A
Country Girl's Musin'
By Judy Keeler
The
Wildlands Project Comes to Hidalgo County - Part 8
The Wildlands Project - The Nature Conservancy's land acquisition
program
When
I began researching the environmental movement, one of the first books I
read was a thick, 640 page treatise, entitled, Trashing
the Economy: How Runaway environmentalism is Wrecking America. Written
by Ron Arnold and Alan Gottlieb, published in 1994, it is a virtual
encyclopedia on the various environmental organizations operating in the
U.S.
*
I consider it invaluable when researching how, why and who is involved in
rewilding
America
.
Incorporated in 1951, The Nature Conservancy (TNC), began small. Funded by
its members, consisting mainly of botanists and zoologists, TNC used their
donations to purchase small tracts of land for preservation and collecting
scientific specimens. From its inception in 1951 until the 1970s TNC was
as American as motherhood and apple pie .
As with all small, well-intentioned beginnings, the group began to expand
its horizons when Patrick Noonan began serving as director of operations
in 1970. During this time, TNC used a foundational grant to buy up three
barrier islands off the
Virginia
coast.
Soon Noonan began a secretive, whirlwind acquisition campaign to buy up
the remaining islands "with the intent to develop them into upscale
vacation homes". Using a bogus front group , TNC managed to purchase
14 of the 18 barrier islands. With its purchase TNC destroyed hundreds of
millions of dollars worth of economic growth and thousands of jobs not
just with those three but with what followed.
The land acquisition campaign cost TNC dissention among its ranks and
several of its long-standing members. Under pressure Noonan resigned his
position as both executive director and director of operations in 1980.
Assuming the presidency of the Conservation Fund , he remained, however, a
consultant to TNC.
Even without Noonan at the helm, the
Virginia
island
land acquisition campaign continued into the 1980 s. TNC spent most of
their capital, about 25 million dollars, acquiring 14 of the 18 barrier
islands. These acquisitions effectively stopped all economic development
except for the Conservancy’s .
A new mission had begun, as a result, a new perception of the organization
emerged. The people of the
Virginia
Shore
generally
hated The Nature Conservancy. They felt the organization was tying up
lands which could have otherwise been developed for the Shore’s economic
benefit. They were also irritated by the intrusion of outsiders
come-here's in local parlance and the Nature Conservancy were consistently
outsiders of the worst sort, arrogant,
we-know-better-than-you-how-to-care-for-this-land, secretive, rich and
openly hostile. The county commissioners deeply resented the tax-exempt
status of TNC s land, something the poor counties could ill afford.
Everyone was annoyed when the Conservancy curbed the locals from hunting,
fishing, camping, and joy riding on the islands .
A pattern soon emerged with the acquisition of the Virginia barrier
islands: Create an exclusive private nature preserve as a magnet for
profitable upscale adjacent residential and commercial development then
use the profits to finance still more nature acquisition. Learning from
past experience, in the future TNC would do it quietly.
The new pattern would also include:
* Striking deals with developers whereby the builders would donated as
charitable gifts parcels of the land in the planned development to TNC. In
exchange, the builder made promises of compatible development . As the
result of one such exchange , TNC got the Fish and Wildlife Foundation to
accept title to the tidal wetlands (donated by the developer) which were
then turned over to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for a refuge. The
builder was then able to advertise the rest of the holdings as being
adjacent to a federal wildlife refuge .
* Reselling parcels of land to federal agencies. On
June
30, 1990
TNC
showed it held $53.5 million in land for resale to the government. By 1992
TNC ledgers showed the organization had received $90,693,000 for sale of
land to government agencies .
Patrick Noonan hiding behind TNC’s early reputation; not only shifted
the Conservancy from small-is-beautiful to huge lands deals, from local
control to rule from the top, but most significantly, he also shifted the
Conservancy from its original keep-it-and-mange-it policy to getting the
federal government to buy TNC land and pay them a tidy profit ~ never
asking whether public ownership of land was in the best interest of either
the
public or the environment. It was ecologist Garrett Hardin, recall, who
said, “The tragedy of the commons is averted by private property.”
William Weeks, who came on staff in 1982, was quoted by the late columnist
Warren Brookes as saying, “We buy these (lands) when they need to be
bought, so that at some point we can become the willing seller (to the
government).” Although Weeks strongly denied he said it, the document
still stands today.
Another time, it was reported Mr. Weeks announced TNC had become an arm of
the federal government, participants in the scheme of buying up private
property for resale to the federal government.
Today, the Nature Conservancy has moved beyond buying and selling land.
During the tenure of John Sawhill, former TNC executive director, and
under Steve McCormick’s directorship today, the organization is moving
forward with a new agenda at a remarkable speed.
Next Week: The Nature Conservancy 's - Strategy for 1990’s
* All quotes from Ron Arnold s book Trashing the Economy
Related
Articles & Books:
Trashing the Economy: How Runaway Environmentalism is Wrecking America
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/093957117X/qid=1036862857/sr=1-6/ref=sr_1_6/102-2234121-6176161?v=glance&s=books
Green is for Money
http://www.fresnobee.com/localnews/story/0,1724,259981,00html
Conservationists urge rewilding of 10.5 million acres
http://udallcenter.arizona.edu/publications/spncnov25.htm
Conservation at a larger scale: The Arizona/New Mexico Mountains Ecoregion
-
http://www.tnc.org/infield/State/NewMex/newmexico.htm
The
Green Land Grabbers: It s Not Just the Feds Who Are After Your Land
http://www.eco.freedom.org/el/20011201/bonner.shtml
Taxpayer dollars help fund many environmental groups
http://www.capitolalert.com/news/capalert02_20011021.html
The
Wildlands Project - The Nature Conservancy - Strategy for the 1990s
- Part 9
By Judy Keeler
My
research on The Nature Conservancy (TNC) began in 1989 when TNC
bought the Gray Ranch with the intent of selling it to the federal
government for a wildlife refuge. At that time, Larry Woodard was
the New Mexico State Director of the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM). He also served on the Board of Directors for the New Mexico
State Chapter of The Nature Conservancy. Mr. Woodward would later
resign this position due to a conflict of interest, but only after a
great deal of controversy had been created.
During this time, a very questionable land exchange took place
between TNC and the BLM in Las Cruces, New Mexico. It was also
during this time the BLM contracted with TNC to do a biological
inventory of the federal lands in the southern portion of New Mexico
under a "challenge cost-share agreement". Their
"inventory" would serve as a basis for a new Resource
Management Plan for the Mimbres Resource Area, now called the Las
Cruces Resource Area. Thus began a very contentious process that had
everyone frustrated and defensive, by the time the plan was
finalized in October of 1992.
Many
of the public comments on the plan appeared to center around TNC's
bias against the multiple use of the land, with grazing and
recreational uses viewed very negatively in the report. Discussion
of private stewardship, also appearing in several places, was
considered to negatively impact the lands.
However,
TNC's own reports would conclude that more endangered and special
status species were found on private lands than on federal lands.
They would also later conclude grazing could be a compatible use of
the land. How and why, did they change their course?
Upon
closely examining TNC, I've concluded the organization is very
astute. They tend to learn from past mistakes. They are also
extremely resilient. Surrounding themselves with highly educated
professionals, they incorporate their philosophies into their
agenda, making the organization appear well-balanced and providing a
great deal of flexibility.
Because
TNC has tremendous financial resources, the can well afford to hire
some of the outstanding biologists, conservationalists,
environmental lawyers and social ecologists of our day. This gives
them access to some of the newest and most current information. They
also have a close working relationship with our elected officials
and federal land management agencies at a national level.
So
closely do they work with our federal agencies that they have become
synonymous with land use planning. On the cutting edge of technology
and conservation biology they promote their concepts with great
dexterity.
By
the early '90s TNC had a new executive director, John Sawhill, who
promised an even cozier relationship with big government. Sawhill
took the helm preceeded by a whole host of successes. Former
Secretary of Energy under the Carter administration, Sawhill also
sat on the Board of Directors for several prestigious companies,
including RCA, Pacific Gas and Electric, Consolidated Edison, Philip
Morris, Crane Corporation and General American Investors. He also
served as trustee at Princeton University, Chairman of the Whitehead
Institute of Biomedical Research in Massachusetts' Institute of
Technology and the Manville Personal Injury Settlement Trust.
In
TNC's "Conservation Strategy for the 1990s", John Sawhill
stated that the Conservancy was going to change the way it was doing
business. They would continue their nonconfrontational approach to
government, and at the same time "increase resources"
devoted to promoting government actions. Additionally, it was their
intent to "increase the level of government funding" for
conservation, "step up activities to influence the management
of public lands," and "empower government agencies".
Mr.
Sawhill soon found himself appointed, during the Clinton
Administration, to the President's Council on Sustainable
Development, as well as the President's Council on Environmental
Quality.
According
to TNC's new strategy, it was also their intent to establish more
bio-reserves and assemble regional and national Heritage data bases
designed to strengthen the Endangered Species Act.
According
to an article, published in the Albuquerque Journal, September 18th,
1995, "John Sawhill, president of The Nature Conservancy, had
an idea, five years and $300 million ago, on how better to protect
some of the nation's most precious ecosystems -`the last great
places', he called them."
"His
vision has turned to reality as the conservation group marks the
success today of its most ambitious environmental rescue mission
ever, the preservation of 75 unique prairies, watersheds, streams,
islands and forests..."
Long
before federal agencies considered managing for ecosystems,
wildfires and watersheds, TNC had already established itself as the
"expert" on these subjects. Today, as our nation moves
toward managing our lands, both private and public, for their
intrinsic value to benefit endangered species, we find ourselves
being guided by the principles and standards developed by The Nature
Conservancy. Their plan is being implemented at an incredible pace.
The
Wildlands Project - The Heritage Data Base -
The
Rush for Technology
-
Part 10
By
Judy Keeler
During
the '80s there was a rush within the environmental movement to
see which computerized database would become the model. The
Nature Conservancy won, with its Natural Heritage Program. The
money to develop the database came from various sources,
including state and federal grants, as well as foundational
and private funding.
The database listed endangered and special status species and
the type of habitat where they were usually found. Once
established as the best program, TNC sent a team consisting of
a botanist, zoologist, ecologist and data-processing
specialist into each state to record historical sightings.
Using existing books, theses and museum collections, the teams
meticulously recorded animal and plant sightings, some dating
back to over a hundred years before. They would then examine
real estate records to locate where the species had been
sighted, and enter this information into the database. TNC
would then prioritize land acquisitions based upon the
information.
According to Ron Arnold's, Trashing
the Economy, this database was "so fine-grained that
in some states it records the precise location of individual
eagle nests and clumps of globally endangered plants."
Once the database was established and fine-tuned, it was
transferred to the individual states, along with employees who
were trained by TNC to run the program. TNC documents state:
"The Conservancy hires and trains at its national office
a program coordinator and other professionals who then become
the staff of the program in the capital of the state or nation
where the program will be housed. The Conservancy supervises
the staff under contract. The goal is for this staff to
transfer to government employment (or otherwise permanently
establish themselves) after the initial phase, which is
generally two years. This transfer ensures that expertise is
not lost and is a pivotal part of the way in which the network
functions."
The information contained in the database if often used in
land-use "planning and regulatory functions."
Available to state and federal land management agencies, these
databases have become a source of information for determining
endangered and special status species, their habitat
requirements, and their distribution during the development of
an Environmental Assessments (EA), or Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS), as required of the federal agencies during
the NEPA process.
Also available to the environmental community, this
information is often used when deciding if adequate federal
protection has been provided for an endangered or special
species.
Married to the National Biological Survey (NBS) in the early
1990s, during Bruce Babbitt's term as Secretary of the
Interior, the National Heritage Program has grown by leaps and
bounds during the last decade. Although the NBS was never
authorized by Congress, it became a cabinet bureau by 1994.
Witnesses, testifying on behalf of establishing the NBS,
included John Sawhill from TNC and Mark Shaffer of the
Wilderness Society. During the process, witnesses were asked
to report back to Congress on how the NBS and Natural Heritage
Network Program could mesh together. The House passed an
Interior appropriations bill in July of 1993 that included 30
million dollars worth of "new" money for the NBS.
Although initially touted by Secretary Babbitt as a system
that would provide more and better data, and an
"understanding of a properly functioning ecosystem"
that would enable federal "land managers to recognize
ecosystems in trouble before the eleventh-hour crisis",
the NBS has done little to halt the lawsuits and
"ecological train wrecks" this information was
supposed to prevent.
Also growing exponentially has been the use of Geographic
Information System (GIS) surveys for endangered and special
status species. TNC, using the 5 S's of conservation, has
become the lead in contributing information to the Heritage
database program and determining threats to the various
species. Their five S's include: Systems, Stresses, Sources,
Strategies and Success Measures.
"Systems - GIS allows planning teams to view the
locations of conservation targets occurring at a site, as well
as features representing the natural process that maintain
them (i.e. hydrology, geology, topography, vegetation,
microclimates, etc.
Stresses - Using GIS stresses can be analyzed to the extent of
habitat destruction, degradation, or impairment afflicting the
systems at a site, including fragmentation, pollution,
hydrologic alteration, and invasive species. Most importantly,
however, the viability of each occurrence can be determined
with GIS by measuring the site according to its size,
condition and landscape.
Sources - GIS also helps the planning team to pinpoint the
agents generating the stresses, such as incompatible land and
water use. Historic and current land use, mining, timber
harvesting, roads, and pollution sources can be mapped, as
well as the ownership, zoning and administrative boundaries
that affect the location of the stressors. Stresses, sources,
and systems can be linked based on their relationships and
proximity and flow direction.
Strategies - Once the systems, stresses, and sources operating
at a site are mapped, GIS becomes the primary tool to map out
conservation activities that will be implemented to abate
stresses and to maintain, enhance, or restore the systems. The
site is zoned to delineate specific areas to receive various
types of protection and management, regulatory controls, or
compatible economic development. Estimates of the costs and
benefits of these activities can be made based on a real
measurement and predictive model.
Success Measures - Conservation actions are expensive and are
often planned and implemented in a context of change and
uncertainty. Thus, it is important to periodically measure our
progress in maintaining and improving biodiversity health and
abating threats at a site. Based on this information, the
staff can modify conservation strategies to achieve greater
success. GIS is used to measure and compare indicators of
biodiversity health and threat abatement, such as vegetation
change, pollution, and land protection."
Using the 5 S's, The Nature Conservancy established a plan to
manage much of the United States through designated BioRegions,
as presented on their website: http://gis.tnc.org/gisattnc.php
The Forest Service has been using the GIS mapping to determine
the condition of allotments in the Coronado National Forest
for several years.
The accuracy of interpreting GIS mapping information is not
always perfect. I had the opportunity to go out on a
"ground truthing" expedition in 1999. The allotment
we were checking was on a neighboring ranch. According to the
Forest Service's findings, using GIS mapping, the allotment's
condition was 15% satisfactory, 80% unsatisfactory, and had 5%
unsuitable soil. However, by the time we finished the field
check, we found the reverse to be true - 82% of the allotment
was actually found to be in satisfactory condition, 7%
unsatisfactory and 11% had unsuitable soil conditions.
The Forest Service employee shared that he was finding, in
most of his ground truthing, this same trend. He assumed the
color-coded maps had been interpreted by the map-readers
incorrectly. The particular color code for grasslands did not
necessarily indicate "unsatisfactory" conditions,
while the trees and brushy areas, color coded green and
assumed by the readers to indicate "satisfactory"
condition, did not necessarily indicate
"satisfactory" conditions either.
Indicating the Forest Service did not have the time or
personnel to ground truth all the allotments, he believed this
new interpretive mapping would be used more often to determine
"suitability" of the lands.
Related Links:
Facts
on the National Biological Survey
Executive
Summary - National Biological Survey
The New Mexico
Natural Heritage Program (NMNHP)
New Mexico Heritage Base
The Nature
Conservancy's Use of GIS
The Wild
Northern Rockies' website for GIS information
The
Nature Conservancy and USDA Forest Service Join Forces
Remembering
an Establishment Revolutionary
Our New Name: Nature
Serve
Natural Resource
Inventory Service
Natural
Resource Conservation Service's NRI Program
Memorandum of Understand
- TNC/ESA and US Geological Survey
Losing
Our Heritage, Our Land
The Wildlands Project - National
Wildlife Refuges - Part 11
By Judy Keeler
When
The Nature Conservancy (TNC) bought the Gray Ranch,
media coverage stated it was their intent to establish a
wildlife refuge. Although TNC does not like to be
reminded of this fact, the documents speak clearly.
An Associated
Press article published in the Albuquerque
Journal entitled, "Nature Group to Be Middleman
for Animas Refuge," claimed "an international
nature group will buy the Gray Ranch and hold it for
resale to the federal government for creation of the
Animas Mountains National Wildlife Refuge."
Dated
July
4, 1989
,
the article disclosed that New Mexico Senator Jeff
Bingaman had already requested $9 million from the
Department of Interior's Land and Water Conservation
Fund for the purchase. TNC was expected to purchase the
ranch and "hold it for resale to the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service" for an estimated $18.25 million.
In another Associate
Press article, entitled, "Fancy Deals Help Save
Wildlife", several similar purchases by TNC are
documented. Included is the story of
Shelter
Island
off
the tip of
New
York
's
Long
Island
.
Owned by the Girard family, they wanted a third of the
island to become a wildlife preserve. The family-owned
realty company also held other properties. Although the
family wanted to make a substantial gift of the land,
they "also wanted to realize some cash from the
holdings that included nine brownstones near Rockefeller
Plaza in New York City, warehouse property in Miami, and
oil and gas wells."
"Conservancy experts worked out an elaborate deal.
The family sold the realty company to the conservancy
for less than the market value, reaping a charity tax
deduction. The conservancy then sold off the
brownstones, the gas and oil wells and the warehouses
and raised the rest of the $12 million it owed the
family for the realty company."
According to the same article,
Matagordo
Island
is
another example of how TNC "worked a deal" so
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife could obtain a piece of
property to "enlarge the agency's holdings in
Texas
".
The
Santa
Cruz Islands
off
the coast of
California
,
however, provided a greater challenge for TNC. Home to
sheep for over 150 years, the animals would not
cooperate with the Navajo sheep herders sent to round
them up. Finally the sheep were fenced into a square
mile area and TNC had them killed. According to the
article, all but 10,000 privately held acres are now a
part of the National Park Service's Santa Cruz Island
Preserve.
In an article by John Barbour, "Rescuing the Land:
Environmental Groups Use The System To Help Conserve
Endangered Property", published March 18, 1990, the
editor notes, "from the California deserts to the
coniferous coast of Maine, from the Cascades of
Washington to the Florida Everglades, the ranks of
environmentalists are swelling, and so are their
coffers, and the lands they control. No longer Don
Quixote’s tilting at windmills, they are now
scientists, businessmen and lawyers, playing a
high-stakes game."
According to this article, up until the Gray Ranch was
purchased by TNC, the organization was already taking
out of production an average of "1,000 acres a
day". Today the organization averages one land
purchase per day in the
United
States
and
has acquired more than 12 million acres of land that are
organized into more than 1,400 preserves. A quote from
Michael Dennis, general counsel for TNC, reveals that
"for every scientist we have around here, we
probably have an MBA, a tax lawyer and a real estate
attorney."
Barbour also states that the "environmentalists
have sharpened their `skills' in the private sector,
recycling many of the same dollars to buy new land. They
have discovered revolving funds; a war fund that doesn't
have to stay invested. They can plunk down several
million dollars until, by prior arrangement, a
government agency can repay them. Or they can buy a
piece of property, deprive it of the potential for
commercial development, and resell the land for a lesser
cost, to what they think is an appropriate buyer."
A high-stakes game it appears to be. According to
Barbour, "TNC acted when it discovered the ranch
owners wanted to sell (the Gray Ranch) and there was the
threat the land might be broken up and developed."
In reality, the threat of subdivision was minuscule. The
Gray Ranch happened to be just another piece of property
TNC wanted to transfer to the government. Pablo Brenner
(American Breco Corporation), a well-to-do industrialist
from
Mexico
,
owned the Gray Ranch prior to TNC purchasing the
property in 1990.
Brenner also owned another ranch in southern
Arizona
,
1983-1985, called the Buenos Aires Ranch. It was sold to
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1985 under the
authority of the Endangered Species Act. A combination
of privately owned land (21,258 acres) and state trust
lands (90,199 acres), the state trust lands were
acquired by the federal government in a complex land
exchange between the State of
Arizona
,
the Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management and
the Wildlife Service.
By 1990, the area was known as the Buenos Aires National
Wildlife Refuge. With the purchase of two privately
owned properties from TNC, which they had purchased with
the expectation of selling to the Service, the refuge
grew to approximately 117,000 acres.
Having already negotiated several successful deals, TNC
did not anticipate any problems establishing the Animas
Wildlife Refuge. However, "politics as usual"
was changing. During the Reagan administration, cabinet
officials were reluctant to place more private lands
into federal ownership. This forced the Conservancy to
develop a new strategy. After all, TNC is a quick study,
and does not often repeat its failures.
A quote from Senator Bingaman in the 1990 article
indicated the direction TNC would choose for the new
millennium, "The Nature Conservancy, an
international, private non-profit organization, is
committed to helping the federal government acquire the
ranch and manage the wildlife refuge."
Wildlife refuges, national parks, national monuments and
other federally owned lands are the vehicles of choice
for implementing the Wildlands Project. And the Nature
Conservancy, along with other like-minded organizations,
will be the new land managers. Given their
"expertise" and "collaborative
effort" it makes perfect sense.
As we have seen with the CARA bill, and other federally
endorsed land acquisition schemes, expect to see more
and more land to be systematically taken out of
production, placed in national monuments, refuges and
parks, as we continue to follow TNC's agenda into the
future. Eventually, all the land will be managed for
endangered species, biodiversity and "ecosystem
health". If it takes 50 to 100 years, so be it.
As Michael Dennis was eloquently quoted, "When
you're talking about an ecosystem, you could be talking
about anything from 5,000 acres to 500 square
miles." A more recent observer noted than "an
ecosystem can be as small as your backyard or as large
as the globe". Time is of no consequence.
Next: The Millennium Conservancy
Related Articles:
Can
Science Heal the Land?
Lord
of the Flies
Environmental
activism
The
Green Land-Grabbers: It's Not Just the Feds Who Are
After Your Land
Green
is for Money
The
Nature Conservancy Connection
Environment
People and Predation
The
Wildlands Project Comes to
Hidalgo
County
-
Part 12
Since
my last article I’ve received many compliments, along
with a few criticisms. Usually my best supporter, my
Mother thought the last article was too intense, with
too much information to digest. She suggested I lighten
them up, just a little bit. I wrestled with her
recommendations.
About
the same time Kim Vicariu, Executive Director of the
Wildlands Project, wrote a letter to the editor
suggesting the information in my articles was not
accurate. Although he stated his opinion as fact, I felt
he gave very little evidence that supported his claim.
How could I take his comments lightly? I wrestled some
more.
People
that know me well are aware I get very intense when
discussing the Wildlands Project, along with the
environmental groups and government agencies that are
implementing the plan. However, they also know I’m not
prone to lying.
My
parents used to play a game with my brother and me when
we were children that would have a profound influence on
my ability to lie. Every time my parents suspected
either of us of an "untruth", they would tell
us to “look them in the eye and say cabbage, cabbage,
cabbage three times without smiling”. While we tried
to look at them and repeat the words they would smile
and make faces at us.
When
trying to “enhance” a story, I soon found I could
not control my laughter, much less a smile. They always
knew when we were trying to put something over on them
and would admonish us not to exaggerate, or tell a lie.
Even today, I find I can not tell a lie without a smile
crossing my face.
I’ve
often used this technique on my own children and
grandchildren. It’s always been a very effective
method to get at the truth! However, I’ve also found
some, who were not trained up in this way, are very
effective liars.
I
began my research into the Wildlands Project about 8
years ago. What I’ve uncovered is both unnerving and
nothing to lie about. My intent in writing the articles
was to educate others regarding an agenda I believe to
be both ungodly and extremely hazardous to resource
users and our society as a whole.
Too
often I go wanting in the area of tact. I tend to
“shoot from the hip”, while others are still trying
to make small talk. Right now I’d like to go to the
heart of the Wildlands Project by sharing the following
article. It explains the nature of the beast better than
I could ever hope to do. It certainly “cuts to the
chase”. Written by an environmentalist who happened to
unearth some of the same truths I’ve uncovered in my
research, I think you may find the article very
educational.
http://www.rangemagazine.com/stories/winter03/dont-trust.htm
Don’t
Trust the Trusts
Bumper
stickers around Grand Staircase Escalante warn against
the Grand Canyon Trust.
I
am an activist environmentalist and it just about took a
two-by-four to the head till I believed it.
Story
by Toni Thayer.
I
set out to get a little information; enough to at least
disprove the bumper sticker “Don’t Trust the
Trust!” Instead, I was led into a worldwide web of
names—separate, entangled, and branched. I thought
they were environmentalists, but they weren’t. I was
finally investigating the Grand Canyon Trust’s Board
of Directors.
My
boyfriend, Steve Gessig, badmouthed the Trust during our
first two years together, blaming them for his town’s
demise. He grumbled about the enviros’ connections to
the World Bank and United Nations and plans to eliminate
American sovereignty.
I,
however, am the avid environmental activist and refused
to believe his undocumented accusations. I had firsthand
experience with the Trust in
Flagstaff
,
Ariz.
For
years, I worked with their staff on joint projects and
committees, attended their workshops, and met in their
offices. They were my friends.
Living
in
Escalante
,
Utah
,
Steve’s perspective was different, encircled by the
United
States
’
largest land theft, the
Grand
Staircase
Escalante
National
Monument
.
The Trust spearheaded the designation in 1996 with a
mission to protect and restore the Colorado Plateau
canyon country. The Plateau is, basically, the
Colorado
River
basin
—beginning
in northern
Utah
,
encompassing all of southern
Utah
and
northern
Arizona
,
and extending into western
Colorado
and
New
Mexico
.
The
Colorado
River
is
the giver of life, both water and electricity, to the
southwest and the downstream metropolitan regions of
Phoenix
,
Las
Vegas
,
Los
Angeles
and
San
Diego
.
The
Trust made promises back then: “Other existing uses of
these public lands are not affected by the proclamation
[of the monument], including hunting, fishing, hiking,
camping and livestock grazing.”
They
lied. The 1.9 million acres have been shut down with
access allowed in only a few areas. New federal workers
moving into town freely come and go, beyond the
“restricted” signs that keep locals from their
families’ traditional sites. New resource production
has ceased even though the area is rich in coal, oil,
gas, uranium, and timber. The world’s cleanest-burning
coal is located in only two spots—the Monument and
Indonesia
.
The Grand Staircase field is so vast it can’t be
accurately valued. It has tentatively been estimated at
$1.3 trillion.
The
Trust doesn’t want any cattle grazing on the Plateau,
an idea that’s backed by federal government
intimidation and harassment of the ranchers. The
ranchers are feeling the pinch of the oppression, the
drought, and their rising debt. They’re selling out
and ending centuries-old family cattle careers. Enviro
groups are scooping up their grazing permits. Rich
second homeowners and large cattle corporations are
buying their lands.
A
million tourists each year have replaced the
resource-based economies and 5,000 cows. They fly by all
of the beauty and zoom through the little towns, not
spending much, mainly wanting water and sewer services.
The 11,000 residents in two affected counties carry the
burden of providing infrastructure and services for the
increased load.
From
tourist-haven
Flagstaff
,
I know tourism does not pay livable wages and that it
causes major disparity between the haves and have-nots.
I couldn’t understand why the Trust wanted tourism
when enviros often cited studies showing its negative
impacts and lost community revenues. It didn’t make
sense to take such a clean, pristine and remote area,
and market it to a million tourists.
I
also knew that all profits stem from resource
production. It was hypocritical and outright wrong for
Americans to consume most of the world’s resources
and, at the same time, shut down our resource
production. Then what? Go to other countries and rape
and pillage their landscapes to fulfill our hungry
resource needs?
Rural,
southern-Utah towns are reeling from the never-ending
limitations and changes put upon them by the
“citified” environmental groups. They have few jobs,
if any. Houses are put on the market as older
generations descended from the Mormon settlers die and
their offspring move to the cities for work.
In
Flagstaff
,
no one knew much about the Trust’s board, but everyone
knew that current president, Geoff Barnard, brought his
extremely rich contacts when he came to town in 1995.
Some said the board changed then, from members who truly
cared about the Colorado Plateau to ones who brought
their big assets to the table. It turned into a “think
tank” with interests other than the environment.
I
decided to get the answers myself and I sat down at my
internet browser and entered board name after board name
looking for key words. Amazingly, there they were with
each and every search—international, global,
worldwide, United Nations, World Bank.
Only
five of the 22 directors resided within their Colorado
Plateau scope of interest. The remaining 17 were from
all corners of the
U.S.
—
New
York City
,
Fort
Worth
,
Aspen
,
Phoenix
,
Tucson
,
Albuquerque
.
Tons
of information surfaced. Business and industrial
achievements popped to the forefront, not environmental
endeavors. There were major news and magazine articles,
partnerships and deals, foundation and nonprofit boards,
published books and papers, committees and meetings.
These
were not your everyday leaders either. Their companies
were the oldest, largest, and first in our nation. They
were worldwide market leaders, global, the West’s
leading authority, the Best in
America
,
and nationally recognized experts and attorneys. The
more I looked, the more I found.
There’s
more, more, more... United Nations’ committees, World
Bank conferences, international seminars, international
inventions, economic development, zoning boards,
intergovernmental panels, international ecotourism
development, and Indian gaming.
I
began noticing that some of the Trust’s officers and
directors also served on the national boards of other
big enviro groups—The Nature Conservancy (TNC), The
Wilderness Society, Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance,
World Wildlife Fund, Defenders of Wildlife. A few of
them swapped positions amongst themselves and from group
to group. My investigation into the national boards of
the largest enviro groups confirmed investigative author
Ron Arnold’s findings of similar global, corporate
interests and their foundation funding to many enviro
groups.
TNC
seemed to be a major player in the Trust with President
Geoff Barnard working for them for 23 years, office
sharing in
Flagstaff
,
and numerous crossover board members and paid staff.
Barnard’s wife represented TNC when they moved to
Flagstaff
.
Rumor has it that Jim Babbitt found Barnard and brought
him to the Trust.
Most
environmentalists are against monster corporate
entities, but here they were, sitting on the board of
our most “trusted” environmental group. Little ol’
Flagstaff
had
some real heavy hitters in its midst. I knew this was no
ordinary board with its highly influential members and
well-thought-out structure. It was a secret hidden in
plain sight. We just never thought to look.
A
few weeks into my research, I learned that the Trust had
rejected a proposal from EcoResults to restore riparian
areas on the Plateau with cows and the cattle stomp.
EcoResults <www.ecoresults.org>,
as previously reported by this magazine, uses “rural
land stewards—ranchers and farmers” and a twist on
holistic management to bring back barren land. Local
ranchers have produced “some of the healthiest
riparian areas in the
U.S.
”
and have a multitude of endangered and threatened
species moving onto their restored lands.
I
thought this was the perfect solution to the grazing
problem. President Barnard thought differently, saying
they couldn’t be expected to change their minds about
cows overnight. This seemed logical enough on the
surface, but the Trust had known about Dan Dagget’s
restoration techniques for seven years since they funded
the printing of his book, “Beyond the Rangeland
Conflict.”
Okay,
I admit it, I was wrong. I thought they were
environmentalists, but they surely aren’t. I thought
they were my buddies, but I’ve been used and betrayed.
Environmentalists need to realize who their partners
are, and land-rights people should know that “worker
bee” enviros are unaware of their leaders’ true
characters.
My
eyes have been opened, but I’ve got to ask, “Have
yours?” My research didn’t stop at industrial wolves
disguised as enviro sheep. It goes much, much deeper,
way down to the bottom of the Rockefeller “think
tanks.” This is only one small piece of a much larger
pie.
Webster’s
defines a legal conspiracy as “an agreement between
two or more persons to commit a crime or accomplish a
legal purpose through illegal action.”
It’s
been coming together for quite some time. It’s right
before our eyes. We need only look. American leaders
have talked about it for decades, authors have exposed
it, and the information is readily available.
Implementation is accelerating, and we are feeling many
of its effects—terrorized citizens stripped of their
constitutional rights, economy tumbling out of control,
seizure of public lands, killer droughts and forest
fires, torrential rains, desperately hungry wildlife,
distressed and dying forests.
The
Trust’s board members led me straight into the
conspiracy. The Rockefeller “think tanks” have
different names, but they all have the same board and
membership structure. Each works towards the ultimate
goal of One World Order, fulfilling their particular
piece of the total pie. It’s a pyramid effect, with
the top groups planning strategies for their assigned
geographical areas and setting timelines for completion.
They implement the strategies through their numerous
tentacles of lower subgroups that take action, track
their progress and report back to the higher groups.
Membership
is by invitation only. They supposedly want “the
highest level unofficial group possible,” but actually
have extensive
U.S.
government-appointed
and elected officials. The U.S. Departments of State,
Defense, Security and Treasury are well entrenched with
multiple, high-ranking secretaries, ambassadors, trade
reps, and chairmen. The remaining membership includes
the world’s richest CEOs and financiers, union
leaders, media, nongovernmental organizations and
educational facilities. Harvard is the predominant
university involved. Just like the Trust, the directors
hop back and forth from group to group, and members are
involved in many groups.
One
of the first established was the Council on Foreign
Relations (CFR). It’s the think tank for
U.S.
strategies.
Marxist Edward Mandell House founded the CFR in 1921,
after eight years as President Woodrow Wilson’s chief
advisor. House’s dream was to socialize
America
from
the inside out, by taking control of both political
parties, using them to implement the socialist
government, and by establishing a central state bank.
During
Wilson
’s
first year in office in 1913, the
U.S.
passed
the Federal Reserve Act, establishing our central bank
as the Federal Reserve Bank (FRB). This took control of
money production and economy away from the U.S. Congress
and gave it to an elite group of private bankers.
William McDonough, FRB president, is a Council on
Foreign Relations and Trilateral member.
The
Trilateral Commission (TC) is a replica of the CFR in
structure and membership interests, but has strategies
for broader geographical areas—the
Americas
(
U.S.
,
Canada
,
Mexico
),
European Union, Pacific Asia. The Trilateral
countries’ “growing interdependence” from the
1970s is today “deepening into globalization” with
“the need for shared thinking and leadership.”
The
Rockefeller Foundation and Carnegie Foundation provided
the critical initial funding for the CFR. David
Rockefeller is listed as the founder, honorary chair and
lifetime trustee of both the CFR and Trilateral
Commission. Former or current elected Trilateral members
are Vice President Dick Cheney; U.S. Senators Dianne
Feinstein, John D. Rockefeller IV, Charles Robb and
William Roth Jr.; U.S. Representatives Jim Leach,
Charles Rangel and former Speaker of the House Thomas
Foley.
For
some interesting reading, check out one of their books,
“The Imperial Temptation: The New World Order and
America
’s
Purpose” (CFR) or “21st Century Strategies of the
Trilateral Countries: in Concert or Conflict?” (TC).
The
world’s government is the United Nations. Just a few
months ago,
Switzerland
finally
joined the last country to do so. The only other member
“country” outstanding is the Catholic Church. After
it joins, all sought-after, prospective members will
have been enlisted.
Here’s
a few of their recent happenings:
China
’s
Accession to the World Trade Organization: The Red Work
Begins; UN and Decolonization; International Conference
on Financing for Development; Millennium Development
Goals, New Agenda for the Development of Africa.
The
world’s central bank is, of course, the World Bank
with the International Monetary Fund (UN groups, both
work together and are really the same entity).
Developing countries borrow from traditional banks due
to deficits. When they can’t meet their repayment
schedule, the WB/IMF steps in and pays off their debt.
In turn, the country must change its government to a
democratic state (countries in transition) and meet
standards that are impossible to reach. As government
and economy collapse, regional chaos ensues. The WB and
UN step in to create peace and take collateral for the
unpaid debt. One theory says our federal lands are held
by the WB for
U.S.
debt,
but as yet this remains undocumented.
It’s
time to wake up and to wake up all of those around you.
We’ve run out of time for complacency. Do you care
about your kids’ and grandkids’ futures? Do you
really approve of the plan lying on the table? It’s
time to stand up, exercise our rights and demand an
America
that
works for Americans!
What
happened to us—the land of the free and the brave?
Free and brave are interlocked. You can’t have one
without the other. It’s time to take it back. This
whole scenario and Americans’ sleepiness reminds me of
the Jews and Hitler. Do you remember what happened to
the Jews who didn’t act?
Toni
Thayer is a researcher, writer, political activist and
consultant. Her website www.spirithelps.com
has information on public lands "and the state of
the Earth." |
The Wildlands Project Comes to
Hidalgo
County - Part 13
By Judy Keeler
Since
I jumped in with both feet in my last article, I thought I’d
follow through with another thoughtful piece this week.
I used to avoid discussing the United Nation’s
connection with the Wildlands Project.
I was concerned most people would be overwhelmed by the
magnitude of the agenda and consider me a little "tetched"
in the head. However, since wild land proponents enjoy
challenging the truth, I thought I’d give them more
ammunition with which to shoot at me.
The
Wildlands Project is not being implemented in just
New
Mexico
.
It was the basis for the UN’s Convention on Biological
Diversity, also known as the treaty of
Rio
de Janeiro
since
it was ratified at the United Nation’s 1992 Earth Summit in
Rio
de Janeiro
,
Brazil
.
When
it was presented to Congress in 1994, they never ratified it
due to some outstanding work by a few individuals and
organizations that were concerned with its impacts on our
society and ability to use our land.
However,
the
Clinton
administration
developed its ecosystem management policies to comply with the
treaty. These
policies are currently being implemented through agency rule
changes, as directed by executive order.
According to Henry Lamb, Eco-logic online, “Executive Order
13158 signed by former President Clinton provided the
authority necessary to comply with the treaty, including
Section 7 which states: ‘Federal agencies taking actions
pursuant to this Executive Order must act in accordance with
international law…’The Bush administration reviewed this
Executive Order, and decided to keep it in place.”
The
Clinton
administration
was so intent on stopping all resource production in our
nation they were not above using the United Nations.
Alston Chase, syndicated columnist and environmental
author, noted in one of his articles, “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
Nation's Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) complied with the Administration’s request.
A
strong supporter of biological diversity, heritage sites and
conservation according to the Wildland Project’s design, The
Nature Conservancy has come up with a new campaign to protect
and preserve biodiversity.
Launched
October
31, 2001
,
according to ENS news, “The Heart of the West campaign” is
one of the “largest and most comprehensive conservation
programs in
Colorado
’s
history”.
The
Conservancy’s goal is to generate “$75 million to protect
more than a half million acres of habitat for
Colorado
’s
imperiled species”. More than a million had already been
raised in both cash and donations of land and “easements”
at the time of publication.
The
article continues, the Heart of the West campaign will be
steered by the Nature Conservancy identifying “the state’s
most threatened habitats and species” and by developing a
“comprehensive conservation blueprint for ensuring their
long term protection”. It will also draw upon “scientific
research to identify and conserve the full spectrum of
species, natural communities and ecological systems native to
Colorado
”.
“This approach, known as ‘conservation by design,’
considers nature on nature’s terms”.
According
to Mark Burget, state director for the Nature Conservancy,
“We’re looking beyond county, state and even national
boundaries to set our conservation goals, as
Colorado
’s
ecosystems are co-dependent with other natural environments
around the world”.
Never
known for its modesty or lack of involvement, The Nature
Conservancy in Arizona, was flattered when the United Nations
wanted more information on their efforts to “solve water
issues on the San Pedro River”, according to Holly Richter,
Nature Conservancy’s Upper San Pedro program manager.
Testifying
in
Sweden
during
an international symposium, Richter “briefed representatives
from 34 nations on the
San
Pedro
River
”.
Although
the article goes on to claim that it “is recognized around
the globe” that “local issues have to be solved by local
people”, I have found very little evidence that the United
Nations, our federal agencies or nongovernmental organizations
like the Nature Conservancy will allow that to happen.
It appears to me, they prefer top down decision making
via executive order and agency rulemaking, which serves to
force compliance with the agenda.
Let’s
take a look at how the UN is promoting the Wildlands Project
in
Canada
.
The following article explains the issue very well.
Wildlands and UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere Program
November
1999
By
Doug Hindson
Last
time we discussed the origins of the "conservation"
movement. You will recall conservation was used to close land
to human settlement and restrict access to natural resources
in the western
United
States
.
Associated with the term "conservation" was a
fledgling eugenics movement whose purpose was to engineer the
human population.
In
1968 an International Biosphere Conference urged the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) to establish a program that would manage the world's
natural resources on a biosphere basis. UNESCO's program
became known as Man and the Biosphere (MAB). A biosphere
reserve or "eco-region" is a huge tract of land of
several million hectares set aside for the exclusive
preservation of nature--read natural resources. Over time
human occupation and economic activity are gradually
eliminated. While Canadians might participate in the
management of these areas, policy is determined by UN treaty
while Canadian sovereignty is severely eroded. Eventually
private property is regulated out of existence. The economic
benefactors include the non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
who later participate in running the bio-region, unelected
bureaucrats, academic sycophants and transnational resource
cartels.
The
Niagara Escarpment, Ontario; Long Point, Ontario; Riding
Mountain, Manitoba; Mont. Ste. Hilaire, Quebec; Waterton
Lakes, Alberta and Isabella Bay, Baffin Island, NWT. have been
declared part of UNESCO's World Network of Biosphere Reserves.
Across
Canada
,
more reserves are in the planning stages including one that
covers central
British
Columbia
from
Alaska
to
Wyoming
.
In
a special 1992 edition of Wild Earth, plans were published for
what the authors called "The Wildlands Project."
Among the creators of Wildlands were Board members Dave
Foreman, founder of the environmental terrorist group,
EarthFirst, Reed Noss editor of the journal "Conservation
Biology" and Michael Soulé founder of the Society of
Conservation Biologists. Foreman is also a Director of the
Sierra Club. Harvey Locke, a
Calgary
lawyer
and former president of the
Canadian
Parks
and
Wilderness Society (CPAWS) is also a director of The Wildlands
Project.
Wildlands
will affect everyone in
North
America
.
According to Charles Mann and Mark Plummer writing in the June
1993 edition of "Science" magazine, Wildlands
"calls for nothing less than resettling the entire
continent. It 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." Mike Coffman, Ph.D., President of
Environmental Perspectives and author of Saviors of Earth
says, "Under the plan, one quarter of (
Canada
and)
the
United
States
would
be turned into wilderness where all human activity would
literally cease. Another quarter of the land would be set
aside in buffer zones where human activity would be severely
limited." The migration habits of large mammals--wolves,
bear, lynx or so-called endangered species--are employed as
the reason to cease human activity in these bio-regions.
In
the October/November, 1996 issue of The Ottawa Times, an
article entitled World Eco-Congress Suggests Depopulation
restates the goal of Wildlands, "is to return at least
half of
North
America
to
wilderness. . . " Reporting on Harvey Locke's
presentation to the Eco-Congress, The Times said a map
presented to Locke's audience indicated that "
Calgary
and
Edmonton
fall
within a buffer zone and would, therefore, have to be
significantly depopulated and their industrial and
technological activity severely regulated."
According
to Wild Earth, an environmental magazine published by Foreman
and his partners, "it exists to remind conservationists
that . . all lands and waters should be left to the whims of
Nature, not to the selfish desires of one species who chose
for itself the misnomer, Homo Sapiens. Does The Wildlands
Project advocate the end of industrial civilization? Most
assuredly. everything must go."
Within
the bio-regions, all roads are to be torn up. The land is to
be returned to the state, which existed before the arrival of
Columbus
.
Incredibly, a program called "Road Rip" has been
established with Foreman, Noss and Soulé sitting on the
Advisory Board. Road Rip's goal is to close roads, have them
removed and prevent the construction of new ones.
In
1996, "The Seville Strategy," integrated The
Wildlands Project into UNESCO's international Man and the
Biosphere (MAB) program, linking it to the 1992 Earth Summit's
Agenda 21 and the Convention on Biological Diversity. These
two UN treaties bind the world to global governance as spelled
out in the UN's Report of the Commission on Global Governance.
[
Oxford
University
Press,
(1995)] Currently, Wildlands is now being implemented across
North
America
as
an integral part of MAB.
In
October 1997, Prince Philip presented the North American
Conservation Assessment/
North
America
's
Living Legacy to a
Washington
D.C.
news
conference. After months of digging, a copy of the press
package was obtained and a copy of the report was reviewed at
WWF's
Toronto
office.
The document was prepared by the
United
States
and
Canadian branches of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).
What we found was alarming. The WWF document is a plan that
would carve
North
America
into
116 biosphere reserves or "eco-regions", in effect
Balkanizing Canada and the
United
States
.
Most of the 116 "eco-regions" cut across one or more
political boundaries, international, state or provincial. When
implemented,
Canada
would
cease to exist as a nation.
The
nearly 600 pages of the WWF report describe each
"eco-region", its major habitat type, the size of
the planned area, the non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
responsible for pushing the agenda forward and a number of
other details relating to the biogeography and biodiversity of
the region.
WWF's
"Living Legacy" report refers to
Ontario
's
plan as "eco-region 8". It covers more than
346,700-sq. km. (214,969-sq. mi.) of the resource-bearing
lands of the southern
Canadian
shield
in
Ontario
and
Quebec
and
parts of western
New
York
and
eastern
Vermont
.
Ontario
has
renamed Lands for Life, calling it "
Ontario
's
Living Legacy."
Interestingly,
the WWF report assigns the task of implementing their
"eco-region 8" to The Wildlands League, the WWF, The
Federation of Ontario Field Naturalists, the ultra radical
Earthroots and several other lesser-known environmental NGO's.
Next,
we will discuss what we have learned about how these
"eco-regions" are being used in other countries in
our hemisphere and in
Africa
.
The public has been deceived not only by the Harris
government, they have been used as pawns to help implement a
revolutionary international program. The strategy used is a
classic: the agenda is set by top down international treaty
obligations; then upward pressure is applied by NGOs and a
tiny segment of a well intentioned but dangerously misinformed
public supplying the orchestrated "grassroots"
support.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Doug
Hindson passed away last year.
He was geopolitical researcher and lived in rural
northeast
Toronto
,
Ontario
.
He was a regular contributor to the print media in his area,
and was a panelist on "In Search of Understanding,"
a weekly television show. He was also a member of the Advisory
Board of Sovereignty International, Inc.
Reprinted
with permission from Henry Lamb’s Ecologic Online: http://www.eco.freedom.org/el/
Related Articles:
The
Nature Conservancy's Use of GIS - http://gis.tnc.org/gisattnc.php
Sovereignty
Under Siege -
http://cwfa.org/library/nation/1998-12_pp_un-biosphere.shtml
Why
the Government is grabbing our land -
http://www.eco.freedom.org/el/20020302/biosphere.shtml
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