THE WILDLANDS PROJECT - Wild-Eyed in the
Wilderness
By John Elvin
Sure, life is wild in this country now, but you
ain't seen nothin' yet. With the support of major corporations, wealthy
foundations, environmentalist groups and friends in government, convicted
eco-terrorist Dave Foreman, a founder of the radical Earth First
"Monkey Wrench" gang of professed saboteurs, is mapping a new
"re-wilded" America that would be 50 percent
"off-limits" to human occupation. This huge portion of the re-wilded
U.S. mainland would be home to large carnivorous predators such as grizzly
bears, jaguars, panthers, pumas and packs of wolves.
Ridiculous? Most Americans would have said the same thing only a few decades
ago if told that every driver and passenger in a motor vehicle would have to
be harnessed in or that cigarettes would be $3.50 a pack and harassed
smokers would be huddled on sidewalks like derelicts.
Foreman's self-proclaimed "baby," the Wildlands Project, is more
than a vision. It's more than a plan. It's an in-the-mill, happening thing.
The Wildlands Project (TWP) is "the most ambitious and far-reaching
attempt yet to reinvent the North American" continent according to
ecologically correct guidelines, says Matt Bennett of the Citizens With
Common Sense monitoring group. "Wildlands will be core reserves of
millions of acres connected by vast corridors following rivers and other
migratory paths from west to east, from Central America and Mexico through
the U.S. and Canada, using national forests and other government
lands."
Where government lands or trust lands owned by environmental groups are
unavailable, private property will be acquired by regulatory decree or
eminent domain. When you see a river, tract of land or whole region
designated as a U.S. Heritage site, U.N. Biosphere Reserve, greenway, trail,
path or some other special name conferred by environmentalists and their
legislative and bureaucratic allies, "think Wildlands in the
making," warns Bennett.
Designating these areas as environmentally unique provides a foot in the
door, "creating the impression that the area has some sort of holiness,
some sort of mystical significance and really should be protected in a
special way," says Carol LaGrasse, president of the Property Rights
Foundation of America. LaGrasse should know: She lives in Stony Creek, N.Y.,
a rural hamlet in the heart of the Adirondack Mountains ordained a U.N.
Biosphere Reserve without so much as local consultation. The spiritual aura
that she sees implied in these designations discourages normal human uses of
the land such as "modern home life, farming, forestry, mining, industry
and commerce," she tells Insight.
"Re-wilding" means that huge core areas in each region will be
returned to prehuman conditions, connected by large roadless and unoccupied
corridors maintained for migratory purposes. Extensive buffer zones will
separate the completely wild areas from enclaves where humans may work and
live. And that's just the beginning. The wild cores would be expanded as the
buffers become depopulated and re-wilded.
Feeling a little claustrophobic? Well, you won't get any sympathy from the
Wildlanders. Telegraphing the united environmental front he represents,
project founder Foreman says: "All of us are warriors on one side or
another in this war; there are no sidelines, there are no civilians."
Can this really be? You betcha! Activists involved in Wildlands planning in
Nevada, for instance, see all but Reno, Las Vegas, the gold mines and the
I-80 corridor as returned to nature. "I like the idea of taking it all
and making `people corridors,'" Marge Sill, federal-lands coordinator
for the Sierra Club, told High Country News. "Move out the people and
cars," says Foreman.
"No compromise" is another favored phrase, though Foreman and
others in his group have expressed the belief that their overall re-wilding
plans may not be fully realized for hundreds of years.
One reason to take the project seriously is the big money behind it. Major
foundations fund TWP and its affiliates. Ted Turner's foundation has been a
source of heavy funding, according to Ron Arnold's book Undue Influence.
Other major funding comes from large donors, including the Pew Charitable
Trusts and Patagonia outdoor gear. Because Wildlands is the nerve center for
so many connected, cooperating regional groups, observers consider
foundations providing those groups with funds, such as the Rockefeller
Brothers Foundation, to be Wildlands supporters.
Turner is of special interest because, when it comes to property rights, he
has reason to be the country's most outspoken advocate. The billionaire
environmental crusader owns close to 2 million acres, more than any other
individual. Yet he not only funds TWP but appears engaged personally in
initiating it.
For one thing, his huge holdings - located in the Northwest, Southwest,
Midwest and South - are described as "a swath," indicating that he
is building his empire in cooperation with the corridor concept.
Conservation easements already are in place on several of his largest
properties. While Turner dismisses concern that his lands will be given to
the government as parks to be re-wilded, he told Progressive Farmer magazine
that he can't guarantee what will happen in a hundred years. For now, the
plan is for the Turner lands to go to foundations and trusts.
TWP's broader strategy calls for using existing parks and land trusts and
acquiring the rest through methods some critics consider stealthy. Foreman
explained the concept to Derrick Jensen, author of Listening to the Land,
published by Sierra Club Books. "If we identify, say, a private ranch
in Montana that's between two wilderness reserves, and we feel that 50 years
from now it will be necessary as a corridor for wolves to go from one area
to another, we can say to the rancher, `We don't want you to give up your
ranch now. But let us put a conservation easement on it. Let's work out the
tax details so you can donate it in your will to this reserve system.' When
it's needed for a corridor, it will be there."
Conservation easements can take various forms, the key being that they
essentially prohibit any kind of development. In some instances, such as
Foreman's example, the land may be used agriculturally for the lifetime of
the farmer or rancher, then become a conservation area. Other arrangements
simply prohibit future human use other than farming or ranching, eliminating
development value but keeping the property private until some advocacy group
or government agency sees it as vital to the cause. Usually, the owner at
least has to agree to develop wildlife habitat on the private land, setting
the stage to call for further "preservation." All such easement
arrangements are subject to legal challenges by interested parties trying to
upset the agreement one way or another, be they heirs or conservation
organizations.
Bennett tells Insight that conservation easements are a major part of the
Wildlands plan. As he sees the process, it's almost diabolical. Government,
acting on behalf of environmental zealots, puts economic pressure on rural
communities through restrictions on logging, ranching, mining and farming.
"As the economic opportunities decline to the point that it is
impossible to make a living, a conservation easement or even donation of
land for some kind of tax credit may make sense to a landowner," he
says.
LaGrasse agrees. Speaking of those who convey title to land trusts, she says
landowners often believe - or often are led to believe - that land will
remain in agricultural use and will not fall into government hands.
"But land trusts acquire land mainly with the specific purpose of
reselling it to the government rather than holding the title themselves to
keep the land as a private preserve," she maintains. "And they
often make fabulous profits when the land is rolled over to the
government."
Transactions monitored by her group included markups of 22 percent to 155
percent in sales of trust lands to government, with profits of as much as $5
million. Critics say acquisitions of easements or properties in their
entireties promise to become a more common practice with passage last year
of a modified version of the Conservation and Reinvestment Act (CARA). It
created a huge federal slush fund for park purchases and maintenance. With
bipartisan support in Congress and the backing of major environmental
groups, a full-fledged, fully funded CARA stands a good chance of getting
through this year.
Foreman has his own spin on property rights, which he is trying to abrogate,
attacking "so-called conservatives today who prattle on about property
rights without any sense of responsibility. With rights come
responsibilities and accountability." His is an umbrella organization
for more than 30 regional environmental groups that have adopted his terms,
polemics and goals as their own.
Because its headquarters is in Tucson, Ariz., many who are aware of the
Wildlands effort mistakenly believe it is limited to the West. Instead,
there are active groups and plans from Maine to Florida.
Allied covert operations with similar agendas shy away from direct
identification and talk in more vague and general terms of wilderness
preservation, forest-land protections or stewardship programs. "There
is a significant amount of synergy among various environmental groups and
the Wildlands Project," according to monitor Bennett. "Different,
and often independent, groups work on their own projects and in an indirect
way make TWP more likely."
Bennett, whose group maintains a Website at www.wildlandsproject.org, calls
TWP a "rethinking of science, politics, land use, industrialization and
civilization. It requires a new philosophical and spiritual foundation for
Western civilization." Bennett calls it nature worship "on a
mission from God or Gaia," the term used by New Age eco-spiritualists
for the living Earth or pagan Universal Mother of the ancients.
Not surprisingly, Bennett's Website is, in turn, under attack by TWP. A note
at its site, www.twp.org, accuses Bennett of using "scare tactics in an
attempt to create unwarranted public fear about TWP's proposals"
through display of "altered maps, quotes taken out of context and false
information." Foreman's group says it is "exploring legal options
as a remedy for the confusion and fear being spread" by Citizens With
Common Sense.
Lucky for Bennett and his group that Foreman has mellowed since his arrest
on charges of plotting to sabotage several nuclear facilities in the West by
downing power lines serving the plants. He pleaded guilty to federal
conspiracy charges and received a suspended sentence. Involved since 1971 in
radical efforts to reduce population and restructure the approach of Western
civilization to technology, ideology and economics, Foreman was for many
years the chief Washington lobbyist for the Wilderness Society.
After six years with Earth First, he says, he became disenchanted with its
"hippie, countercultural" image. The real nature of the split
seems to have been between left-wing activists who include "social
justice" in their ecological agenda and those such as Foreman who just
want to "re-wild" the planet. Not only is the Foreman contingent
little concerned about humanity's woes, but its attitude is the less humans
the better. Foreman says he sees "eating, manufacturing, traveling,
warring and breeding" by humans as causes of "the greatest crisis
in 4 billion years of life on Earth."
Today, Foreman calls those who practice the eco-terror tactics he once
espoused "idiots." He says he's "never been a liberal or a
leftist, which makes a lot of my friends in the conservation movement
unhappy." He describes himself as a registered Republican and
"redneck," a great-great-grandson of New Mexico homesteaders. His
opposition to immigration - an outgrowth of his desire to limit population
growth - also is a cause of friction with those on the left.
But this man is a member of the board of directors of the Sierra Club, the
most influential left-wing environmental group in the country. It was
Foreman who led it to endorse replacing the 50 states with 21
"bio-regions." But the actual "how-to" for that
particular scheme is presented as the work of TWP cofounder Reed Noss, a
conservation biologist.
The plan is complex, requiring a hefty 50-page document to present, but it
stems from belief that the current "parks" system to protect
nature for scenic and recreational purposes doesn't work. Because the parks
are "islands" remote from each other and are used by humans, many
types of wildlife are doomed to extinction, Noss explains. What is needed is
"connectivity." To have the connectivity vital to migrating
species, particularly large carnivores, many other types of land "from
the highest to the lowest elevations, the driest to the wettest sites, and
across all types of soils, substrates and topoclimates" will have to be
linked to the parks.
The way to do this is through creation of bio-regions or eco-regions for
planning purposes. The regions also have psychological value in selling the
idea to locals because they "often inspire feelings of belonging and
protectiveness in their more enlightened human inhabitants." Each of
the regions would have large reserve areas restored to a primitive state,
providing "connectivity" to other regions for the benefit of
migrating wildlife.
The fact that many of these regions now lack huge swaths of primitive land
suitable for wildlife migration gets to re-wilding - the core mission of the
project. Noss advises activists to get busy now mapping local areas, with
cornfields and parking lots of less interest than "roaded landscapes
that are relatively undeveloped and restorable, especially when adjacent to
or near roadless areas." It's that kind of thinking that makes
rural-property holders more than a little nervous.
Having identified where corridors will exist in their areas, activists
following Noss' plan identify obstacles ahead. These include private
property to be acquired, "land and mineral-rights acquisitions, road
closures, road modifications, cancellations of grazing leases and timber
sales, tree planting, dam removals, stream dechannelization and other
restoration projects."
One question that comes to mind is how these grizzlies, panthers and wolves
will know to stay within their reserves and corridors. But that's really no
big problem, TWP statements assure us: "People can coexist with wolves,
bears and other wildlife, just as they have for thousands of years in many
parts of the world, including North America. In most cases, humans can
easily learn to safely coexist with wildlife by making minimal lifestyle
changes."
Source:
http://www.insightmag.com/news/2001/04/23/Nation/
The-Wildlands.Project.WildEyed.In.The.Wilderness-210931.shtml