Use 3 material attached and write 400 words for the three questions 1. After reading the background material for this case, what role do you think the federal government should havein managing alimite

Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise

WISE USE: WHAT DO WE BELIEVE?

HOME ISSUES OPPOSITION PROJECTS DEFENDERS WISE USE BOOKSTORE ARCHIVE

The following essay by Ron Arnold is regarded by many as the seminal expression of the ideas that have

evolved into the richly diverse wise use movement.

Overcoming Ideology

by Ron Arnold

From A Wolf in the Garden : The Land Rights Movement and the New Environmental Debate

Edited by Philip D. Brick and R. McGreggor Cawley, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., Lanham,

Maryland, 1996 ISBN 0847681858

It was 1964, the year of the Wilderness Act. Historian Leo Marx began his classic, The Machine in the Garden, with the

assertion that "The pastoral ideal has been used to define the meaning of America ever since the age of discovery, and

it has not yet lost its hold upon the native imagination."1

A little more than thirty years after, we have the present volume, A Wolf in the Garden, echoing Marx less than tolling a

sea-change in American notions of exactly what is meant by the pastoral ideal.

Marx saw it as a cultivated rural "middle landscape," not urban, not wild, but embodying what Arthur O. Lovejoy calls

"semi-primitivism"; it is located in a middle ground somewhere between the opposing forces of civilization and nature.2

The pastoral ideal is not simply a location, but also a psychic energy condenser: it stores the charge generated between

the polarities of civilization and nature. Ortega y Gasset recognized this as long ago as 1930 in The Revolt of the

Masses: "The world is a civilized one, its inhabitant is not: he does not see the civilization of the world around him, but he

uses it as if it were a natural force. The new man wants his motor-car, and enjoys it, but he believes that it is the

spontaneous fruit of an Edenic tree."3

There was a certain truth to this blind sight: producers in the middle landscape invisibly yielded the raw materials for the

motor-car (and everything else). The labor power of dwellers in America's middle landscape has always been reified as

an Edenic tree to be plucked by distant capital and unappreciative consumers, and the dwellers felt it keenly.

Since 1964, the rise of environmentalist ideology has pushed the pastoral ideal increasingly toward nature, striving to

redefine the meaning of America in fully primitivist terms of the wild. Eco-ideologists have thrust their metaphoric raging

Wolf into every rank and row of our civilized Garden to rogue out both the domesticated and the domesticators. The

Wolf howls Wild Land, Wild Water, Wild Air. Whether Wild People might have a proper place in Wolf World remains a

subject of dispute among eco-ideologists.4

Public policy debate over the environment and the meaning of America has been clamorous these thirty years. Its terms

were succinctly put by Edith Stein:

The environmental movement challenges the dominant Western worldview and its three assumptions:

Unlimited economic growth is possible and beneficial.

Most serious problems can be solved by technology.

Environmental and social problems can be mitigated by a market economy with some state intervention.

Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht m

1 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M Since the 1970s we've heard increasingly about the competing paradigm, wherein:

Growth must be limited.

Science and technology must be restrained.

Nature has finite resources and a delicate balance that humans must observe.

5

That fairly delineates the public debate. However, in order to critique an ideology, one needs an accurate statement of

that ideology. The environmentalist ideology striving to redefine the meaning of America was expounded most realistically

by author Victor B. Scheffer in a Northwest Environmental Journal article, "Environmentalism's Articles of Faith." The five

tenets Scheffer proposed appear to be the core of shared beliefs actually held most widely by environmentalists:

1) All things are connected. "[N]ever will we understand completely the spin-off effects of the environmental changes

that we create, nor will we measure our own, independent influence in their creation." Scheffer adds, "I use the word

nature for the world without humans, a concept which--like the square root of minus one--is unreal, but useful."

2) Earthly goods are limited. "As applied to people, carrying capacity is the number of individuals that the earth can

support before a limit is reached beyond which the quality of life must worsen and Homo, the human animal, becomes

less human. One reason we humans--unlike animals in the wild--are prone to exceed carrying capacity is that our wants

exceed our needs."

3) Nature's way i s best. "Woven into the fabric of environmentalism is the belief that natural methods and materials

should be favored over artificial and synthetic ones, when there's a clear choice. Witness the vast areas of the globe

poisoned or degraded by the technological economy of our century."

4) The survival of humankind depends on natural diversity. "Although species by the billions have vanished through

natural extinction or transformation, the present rate of extinction is thought to be at least 400 times faster than at the

beginning of the Industrial Age. Humankind's destruction of habitats is overwhelmingly to blame."

Scheffer adds, "No one has the moral right, and should not have the legal right, to overtax carrying capacity either by

reducing the productivity of the land or by bringing into the world more than his or her 'share' of new lives. Who is to

decide that share will perhaps be the most difficult social question for future generations."

5) Environmentalism is radical "in the sense of demanding fundamental change. It calls for changes in present political

systems, in the reach of the law, in the methods of agriculture and industry, in the structure of capitalism (the profit

system), in international dealings, and in education."6

One can see the Wolf skulking in each of Scheffer's five tenets of eco-ideology.

Actual organizations and individuals comprising the environmental movement stress different clusters of these tenets.

Although the environmental movement's structure is complex and amply textured, three distinctive axes of influence

dominate environmental politics in America:

1. Establishment Interventionists - acting to hamper property rights and markets sufficiently to centralize control of many

transactions for the benefit of environmentalists and their funders in the foundation community, while leaving the market

economy itself operational. They tend to emphasize the need for natural diversity and in some cases to own and manage

wildlife preserves. Notable organizations in this sector are the Nature Conservancy, National Wildlife Federation, National

Audubon Society.

2. Eco-Socialists - acting to dislodge the market system with public ownership of all resources and production,

commanded by environmentalists in an ecological welfare state. They tend to emphasize the limits of earthly goods.

Greenpeace, Native Forest Council, Maine Audubon Society are representative groups.

3. Deep Ecologists - acting to reduce or eliminate industrial civilization and human population in varying degrees. They

tend to emphasize that nature's way is best and environmentalism is radical. Earth First!, Sea Shepherd Conservation Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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2 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M Society, Native Forest Network are in this category.7

The Wolf in these varieties of sheep's clothing is rapacious, not simply protecting nature, but also annihilating the

livelihoods of dwellers in the middle landscape.

Today the Wolf is firmly entrenched in Washington, D. C., where important environmental groups have established

headquarters or major operating bases. Eco-ideologists have written many laws, tested them in the courts and

pressured many administrative agencies into compliance with their ideology. They have, in brief, become the

Establishment. The apparatus of environmentalism is no longer represented merely by non-profit organizations, but has

grown to encompass American government at all levels.

Since the inception of the Environmental Grantmakers Association (EGA) in 1985, the foundation community has usurped

substantial control of the environmental movement. The standard philanthropic model, "non-profit organization submits its

proposal to foundation for funding," has given way to "a combine of foundations selects and dictates grant-driven

programs to non-profit organization." In the instance of the Ancient Forest campaign in the Pacific Northwest, a cluster of

six EGA foundations even went so far as to create their own projects because of dissatisfaction with the capabilities of

the Washington, D.C. environmental community. The foundations derive their income from managed investment portfolios

representing the power elite of corporate America.8

As the environmental debate developed during the late 1980s, the "dominant Western worldview" gained an organized

constituency and advocacy leadership: the wise use movement. Incipient and gestating more than a decade in the

bosom of those who had been most wounded by environmental ideology, the new movement congealed at a conference

in Reno, Nevada in 1988. It was centered around a hodgepodge of property rights groups, anti-regulation legal

foundations, trade groups of large industries, motorized recreation vehicle clubs, federal land users, farmers, ranchers,

fishermen, trappers, small forest holders, mineral prospectors and others who live and work in the middle landscape.9

It came as a shock to environmentalists. The "competing paradigm" unhappily found itself confronted with a competing

paradigm. The free ride was over. A substantial cluster of non-profit grass roots organizations now advocated unlimited

economic growth, technological progress and a market economy. They opposed the eco-ideologists' proposals using the

tactics of social change movements, such as mobilizing grass roots constituencies, staging media events including

protest demonstrations and orchestrating letter-writing campaigns to pressure Congress.

It was a pivotal shift in the debate. No longer were eco-ideologists able to face off against business and industry, pitting

greedy for-profit corporations against environmentalism's non-profit moral high ground. Now it was urban

environmentalists defending their vision of the pastoral ideal against those who actually lived the pastoral ideal in the

middle landscape.

This simple structural rearrangement of the debate went virtually unnoticed, but was crucial: Now it was non-profit

against non-profit, one side promoting economic growth, technological progress and a market economy, the other

opposing.

The emergent wise use movement held up a mirror to the embarrassing questions posed by the "competing paradigm":

Just who will limit our economic growth? Who will restrain America's science and technology? Who will decide what

"delicate balance humans must observe"? The answer was clear: only environmental ideologists, and not those who

create economic growth, science, technology or the market economy.

Asserting such onerous control over others was not attractive and clarified the environmental movement as just another

special interest protecting its selfish economic status. Economics is not about money, it is about the allocation of scarce

resources. The wise use movement bared the environmental movement's ambition to be resource allocator for the

world.10

Environmentalism's efforts to turn America's pastoral ideal wild stood out in sharp contrast to the wise use movement's

actual stewardship of the land, the water and the air. Wise users were not perfect, to be sure, but they were down to

earth, real, and necessary. They created economic growth, employed science and technology, and drove the market

economy. Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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3 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M Environmentalism, by contrast, appeared in the same light as pastoral literature in critic William Empson's Some

Versions of Pastoral: "about the people but not by or for them."11

Environmentalism, like pastoral literature, was about those pastoral rural dwellers who produced dinner, dress and

domicile for everyone, but was generated by the educated elite, not by those who lived the pastoral ideal.

Environmentalism's ideology was promulgated for the ruling elite, not for the farmer or rancher or family forest owner or

mineral prospector.

When the wise use movement arose to demystify eco-fetishism, the environmental movement lost its grip on the debate.

It was as if history had played a huge joke on environmental ideology.

The environmental movement was not amused.

The first environmentalist reaction to the emergence of the wise use movement was passive denial--ignore it and it will

go away. That lasted from 1988 to early 1992. The present phase of active denial began with a study of the wise use

movement by the W. Alton Jones Foundation dated February, 1992, portraying the rising social force as a mere front for

industry, created by industry, paid for by industry, controlled by industry. The fact that foundation analysts sincerely

believed this assessment points up how unprepared the environmental movement was to lose its favored "non-profit

versus for-profit" moral high ground in the debate. Industry had to be the opponent. The wise use movement had to be a

mere front. So that's what they saw.12

This humbuggery lasted only half a year. Further research, sponsored by The Wilderness Society and conducted by the

Boston-area media strategy firm MacWilliams Cosgrove Snider, disclosed a disturbing truth: "What we're finding is that

wise use is really a local movement driven by primarily local concerns and not national issues.... And, in fact, the more

we dig into it, having put together over a number of months a fifty state fairly comprehensive survey of what's going on,

we have come to the conclusion that this is pretty much generally a grass roots movement, which is a problem, because

it means there's no silver bullet."

The words are those of Debra Callahan, then director of W. Alton Jones Foundation's Environmental Grass Roots

Program, at the 1992 Environmental Grantmakers Association annual fall retreat. Her session, titled "The Wise Use

Movement: Threats and Opportunities," capped off the three day convocation of foundation executives.13

Callahan's source, the MacWilliams Cosgrove Snider report, titled "The Wise Use Movement: Strategic Analysis and

Fifty State Review," affirmed that the wise use movement was the greatest threat the environmental movement had ever

faced.14

"What people fundamentally want, what people fundamentally believe about environmental protection," Callahan said

polls revealed, "is that no, it's not just jobs. And no, it's not just environment. Why can't we have both?

"The high ground is capturing that message, okay? The wise use movement is trying to capture that message. What

they're saying out there is that 'We are the real environmentalists. We are the stewards of the land. We're the farmers

who have tilled that land and we know how to manage this land because we've done it here for generations. We're the

miners and we're the ones who depend for our livelihood on this land. These environmentalists, they're elitists. They live

in glass towers in New York City. They're not environmentalists. They're part of the problem. And they're aligned with big

government. And they're out of touch. So we're the real environmentalists.'

"And if that's the message that the wise use movement is able to capture, we are suddenly really unpopular. The minute

the wise use people capture that high ground, we almost have not got a winning message left in our quiver."

Judy Donald of the Washington, D.C.-based Beldon Fund, and Callahan's co-presenter, took the conclusion another

step. "There are, as Deb has made clear, ordinary people, grass roots organizations, who obviously feel their needs are

being addressed by this movement,; said Donald. "We have to have a strategy that also is addressing those concerns.

And that cannot come simply from environmentalists. It can't come just from us. That's the dilemma here. It's not simply

that people don't get it, it's that they do get it. They're losing their jobs." Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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4 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M Barbara Dudley, then executive of the Veatch Fund, now head of Greenpeace, stated: "This is a class issue. There is no

question about it. It is true that the environmental movement is, has been, traditionally ... an upper class conservation,

white movement. We have to face that fact. It's true. They're not wrong that we are rich and they are up against us. We

are the enemy as long as we behave in that fashion."

These commanders of environmentalism had acknowledged they were destroying jobs and hurting those who produce

our material goods. They admitted themselves the enemy. This moment of self-comprehension was a tremendous

opportunity to repent and reach out to wise users, dwellers in the middle landscape who felt betrayed by big government

and big business.

Instead, the foundations and their environmental cohort deliberately fell back on their stereotype, portraying wise use as

a front for corporations, and risking a frontal assault against wise use with new tactics: "Attack Wise Use.... Find

divisions between Wise Use and Wise Use and exploit them.... We need to ... talk about the Wise Use agenda. We need

to expose the links between Wise Use and other extremists...."

In other words, a smear campaign would be mounted to tie wise users to unpopular extremists such as the John Birch

Society, the Unification Church, Lyndon LaRouche, and to violent factions such as the militias. They knew they couldn't

shoot the message, so they settled for shooting the messenger.

To implement the smear campaign, W. Alton Jones Foundation helped found the Clearinghouse on Environmental

Advocacy and Research (CLEAR) in 1993 with two grants totaling $145,000. In the same year Jones gave numerous

grants in the $20,000 to $30,000 range to small local organizations that agreed to conduct smears against wise use.15

The Sierra Club engaged private investigator David Helvarg to write an anti-wise use tirade titled The War Against the

Greens claiming a conspiracy of violence by wise users against environmentalists. Helvarg's sponsors also funded a

road show for him to tie wise use to an alleged far-right terrorist network.16

The EGA foundations and their grant-driven environmentalist dependents spent millions on related media saturation

projects designed to identify the words "wise use" with "violence" in the public mind. Reliance on The Big Lie revealed

grant-driven environmentalists as intellectually and morally bankrupt, and the technique backfired, just as EGA members

Donald and Dudley foresaw.

Grass roots environmentalists saw that big-money foundations controlled the "mainstream" environmental movement,

which they felt had sold out true reform for pallid incrementalism. They deserted by the hundred thousand, preferring to

form scattered local and regional groups of their own. The Wilderness Society and Sierra Club were hit particularly hard,

losing 125,000 members and 130,000 members, respectively, in 1994.17

Most devastating for the foundations, an icon of the Left, author and syndicated columnist Alexander Cockburn, aired

their dirty laundry in the progressive flagship, The Nation. "For years now," wrote Cockburn in August 1995, "David

Helvarg has been backed by environmental groups such as the Sierra Club to investigate and smear the Wise Use

movement by any means necessary. This goes back to the early 1990s when the Environmental Grantmakers

Association offered a de facto bounty for material discrediting Wise Users as (a) a front for corporations or (b) part of a

far-right terrorist network."

Cockburn--an equal opportunity critic who routinely berates the wise use movement for its failings--deplored the smear

tactic. He wrote, "And so we have the unlovely sight of Helvarg behaving like an F.B.I. agent. He prowls across literature

tables at Wise Use meetings and ties all the names on the pamphlets, letterheads and books into his 'terror network.'

The trouble is, he never makes his case. Helvarg never comes up with the terrorist conspiracy he proclaims, because

there hasn't been one."18

Indeed. What there has been, and what environmentalists cannot confront, is a potent movement subversive of

environmentalism's articles of faith. That is why they resort to a hoax rather than lively debate on the issues.

Although it would be rash to propose wise use's articles of faith--it is a diverse movement--some of the following

principles would probably find wide agreement among those who provide the material goods to all of humanity: Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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5 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M 1) Humans, like all organisms, must use natural resources to survive. This fundamental verity is never addressed by

environmental ideology. The simple fact that humans must get their food, clothing and shelter from the environment is

either ignored or obliquely deplored in quasi-suicidal plaints such as, "I would rather see a blank space where I am--at

least I wouldn't be harming anything."

If environmentalism were to acknowledge our necessary use of the earth, the ideology would lose its meaning. To grant

legitimacy to the human use of the environment would be to accept the unavoidable environmental damage that is the

price of our survival. Once that price is acceptable, the moral framework of environmental ideology becomes irrelevant

and the issues become technical and economic.

2) The earth and its life are tough and resilient, not fragile and delicate. Environmentalists tend to be catastrophists,

seeing any human use of the earth as damage and massive human use of the earth as a catastrophe. An

environmentalist motto is "We all live downstream," the viewpoint of hapless victims.

Wise users, on the other hand, tend to be cornucopians, seeing themselves as stewarding and nurturing the bountiful

earth as it stewards and nurtures them. A wise use motto is "We all live upstream," the viewpoint of responsible

individuals.

The difference in sense of life is striking. Environmentalism by its very nature promotes feelings of guilt for existing, which

naturally degenerate into pessimism, self-loathing and depression.

Wise use by its very nature promotes feelings of competence to live in the world, generating curiosity, learning, and

optimism toward improving the earth for the massive use of future generations.

The glory of the "dominant Western worldview" so scorned by environmental ideologists is its metaphor of progress: the

starburst, an insatiable and interminable outreach after a perpetually flying goal. Environmentalists call humanity a cancer

on the earth; wise users call us a joy.

If there is a single, tight expression of the wise use sense of life, it has to be the final stanza of Shelley's Prometheus

Unbound. I think w ise users w ill recognize themselves in these lines:

To suffer woes which Hope thinks infinite;

To forgive wrongs darker than death or night;

To defy Power, which seem omnipotent;

To love, and bear; to hope till Hope itself creates

From its own wreck the thing it contemplates;

Neither to change, nor falter, nor repent;

This, like thy glory, Titan! is to be

Good, great and joyous, beautiful and free;

This is alone Life, Joy, Empire, and Victory!19

3) We only learn about the world through trial and error. The universe did not come with a set of instructions, nor did our

minds. We cannot see the future. Thus, the only way we humans can learn about our surroundings is through trial and

error. Even the most sophisticated science is systematized trial and error. Environmental ideology fetishizes nature to the

point that we cannot permit ourselves errors with the environment, ending in no trials and no learning.

There will always be abusers who do not learn. People of good will tend to deal with abuse by education, incentive, clear

rules and administering appropriate penalties for incorrigibles.

4) Our limitless imaginations can break through natural limits to make earthly goods and carrying capacity virtually

infinite. Just as settled agriculture increased earthly goods and carrying capacity vastly beyond hunting and gathering, so

our imaginations can find ways to increase total productivity by superseding one level of technology after another. Taught

by the lessons learned from systematic trial and error, we can close the loops in our productive systems and find

innumerable ways to do more with less.

5) Humanity's reworking of the earth is revolutionary, problematic and ultimately benevolent. Of the tenets of wise use,

this is the most oracular. Humanity is itself revolutionary and problematic. Danger is our symbiote. Yet even the timid are Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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6 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M part of the human adventure, which has barely begun.

Humanity may ultimately prove to be a force of nature forwarding some cosmic teleology of which we are yet unaware.

Or not. Humanity may be the universe awakening and becoming conscious of itself. Or not. Our reworking of the earth

may be of the utmost evolutionary benevolence and importance. Or not. We don't know. The only way to see the future

is to be there.

As the environmental debate advances to maturity, the environmental movement must accept and incorporate many of

these wise use precepts if it is to survive as a social and political force.

Establishment Interventionism, as represented by the large foundation and their grant-driven client organizations, must

find practical ways to accommodate private property rights and entrepreneurial economic growth.

Eco-socialism's collectivist program must find practical ways to accommodate individual economic liberties in its

bureaucratic command-and-control approach.

Deep Ecology's biocentrism must find practical ways to accommodate anthropocentrism and technological progress.

To accomplish this necessary reform, environmentalists of all persuasions will have to face their ideological blind spots

and see their own belief systems as wise users see them, i.e., in a critical and practical light.

This is a most difficult change for ideological environmentalists. Failure to reform environmentalism from within will invite

regulation from without or doom the movement to irrelevancy as the wise use movement lives the pastoral ideal in the

middle landscape, defining the meaning of America.

1. Leo Marx, The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in America, Oxford University Press, New

York, 1964, p. 3.

2. Arthur O. Lovejoy, et al., A Documentary History of Primitivism and Related Ideas, Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore,

1935, p. 369.

3. José Ortega y Gasset, The Revolt of the Masses, trans. anon., (first published in Spanish, 1930), reissued 1993 by

W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York, p. 82.

4. Bill Devall and George Sessions, eds., Deep Ecology: Living as if Nature Mattered, Peregrine Smith Books, Salt Lake

City, 1985, passim.

5. Edith C. Stein, The Environmental Sourcebook, Lyons & Burford, New York, 1992, p. 6. Victor B. Scheffer,

"Environmentalism's Articles of Faith," Northwest Environmental Journal, Vol. 5:1, Spring/Summer 1989, pp. 99-108.

7. Ron Arnold and Alan Gottlieb, Trashing the Economy: How Runaway Environmentalism is Wrecking America, Free

Enterprise Press, Bellevue, Washington, 2nd ed., 1994, pp. 57-67 et passim.

8. Taped sessions of the Environmental Grantmakers Association 1992 Annual Fall Retreat, Conference Recording

Service, Berkeley, California, 1992. Session 2: "North American Forests: Coping With Multiple Use and Abuse;" Session

19: "Environmental Legislation: Opportunity for Impact and Change;" Session 23: "Media Strategies for Environmental

Protection."

9. Alan M. Gottlieb, ed., The Wise Use Agenda, Free Enterprise Press, Bellevue, Washington, 1989. This document

was the result of the 1988 Wise Use Strategy Conference and consists of recommendations for natural resource use

from 125 of the 250 conference participants.

10. Michael Kelley, "The Road to Paranoia," The New Yorker, Vol. LXXI, No. 17, June 19, 1995, p. 60. 11. William

Empson, Some Versions of Pastoral, New Directions, New York, 1974, p. 6 et passim.

12. W. Alton Jones Foundation, The Wise Use Movement, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1992. 13. Taped session of the Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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7 of 84/3/2009 10:35 A M Environmental Grantmakers Association 1992 Annual Fall Retreat, Conference Recording Service, Berkeley, California,

1992. Session 26: "The Wise Use Movement: Threats and Opportunities."

14. The Wilderness Society, The Wise Use Movement: Strategic Analysis and Fifty State Review, prepared by

MacWilliams Cosgrove Snider, Boston, 1992. Distributed by Clearinghouse on Environmental Advocacy and Research,

Washington, D.C.

15. W. Alton Jones Foundation, Form 990 Annual Report to the Internal Revenue Service, 1993, Page 10, Part XV, Line

3a, Grants and Contributions Paid this Year. Anti-wise use grant recipients included Environmental Defense Fund

($75,000); Idaho Conservation League ($30,000); Kentucky Coalition ($30,000); Maine Audubon Society ($26,250);

Missouri Coalition for the Environment Foundation ($20,000); Pennsylvania Environmental Council ($30,000); Piedmont

Environmental Council ($25,000); Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests ($26,250); Southern Utah

Wilderness Alliance ($30,000); Vermont Natural Resources Council ($26,250); Western States Center ($20,000);

16. David Helvarg, The War Against the Greens: The "Wise Use" Movement, the New Right, and Anti-Environmental

Violence, Sierra Club Books, San Francisco, 1994.

17. Keith Schneider, "Big Environment Hits the Recession," New York Times, January 1, 1995, p. F4. See also, Stephen

Greene, "Environmental Groups Advised to Slim Down," Chronicle of Philanthropy, January 12, 1995, p. 29.

1 8. Ale xande r Co c k b ur n, " Exc ha ng e , " The Nation, Vol. 261, No. 5, August 14 / 21, 1995, p. 150.

19. Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Prometheus Unbound" in The Works of Percy Bysshe Shelly (Roslyn, N.Y.: Black's Reader

Service, 1951), 180.

We invite your comments on these ideas.

RET URN T O CENT ER FOR T HE DEFENSE OF FREE ENT ERPRISE HOME PAGE Wi s e Us ehttp://www.eskimo.com/%7Erarnold/wiseuse.ht

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