| First of all I am not a left
wing whako, I am a conservative
Republican activist and publisher. I started an organization
called Citizens For
A Freer America. That said, I am also an
urban escapee who moved to the Yellowstone
area, for the beautiful
scenery, wilderness areas, national parks, and all the great
hunting, fishing and photography these wild lands provide.
For most of us, wilderness is an abstract intangible entity
that most of us have never experienced, therefor cannot understand.
It is difficult to form opinions on abstract subjects we are
unfamiliar with especially when the information we do receive
comes from biased consumptive benefactors or left wing wacko
environmentalist Earth Firster's. The later we all agree, are
a pleasure to hate.
Why are we conservatives so against conserving?
Could it be because of our pre-disposition towards business
blinds us by
the urge to fill our wallet. We must ask ourselves, does something
only have value if you can consume it or make a profit from
it? Or do we "FEEL" it is a waste to just let something
exist because we "FEEL "it has a higher value as
profit? Profit is a transient value I might add.
There is a growing belief in this country that our wilderness
areas are off limits to human use and this just isn't true.
In wilderness areas you can ride a horse, hike, fish, raft,
kayak, canoe, hunt and graze cattle. How do I know? I was a
camp cook in for a hunting outfit in the Gros Venture Wilderness.
The outfit I worked for specialized in catering to older folks.
We would put them on a horse then take them to where the elk
lived in the Gros Venture Wilderness. We also did summer horse
back day trips into the wilderness as well as overnight pack
trips. Yes it is hard to get into the wilderness but it can
be done, and the wilderness can be used by the less than fit,
and when they get there they enjoy it more than I do.
There is a lot of misinformation going on about the impeached
Bill Clinton's proposed 40 million acres of wilderness, about
62,500 square miles (equal to about 18 Yellowstone
National Parks ) nationwide. Some are saying that you won't be able
to even step inside them to hike, fish or anything. Well this
just isn't true. Below is some text I pulled from the impeached
Bill Clinton's preservation announcement, however I would like
to preface this with this question. How can you tell when Bill
Clinton is lying?
- His lips are moving -.
Bill Clinton,
"Today, we launch one of the largest land preservation efforts in America's
history to protect these priceless, back-country lands. The Forest Service will
prepare a detailed analysis of how best to preserve our forests' large roadless
areas, and then present a formal proposal to do just that."
"We will ensure that our grandchildren
will be able to hike up to this peak, that others like it
across the country
will also offer the same opportunities. We will assure that
when they get to the top they'll be able to look out on valleys
like this, just as beautiful then as they are now."
I pulled these 2 quotes from a lengthy
speech I didn't want to torture you with. The point being "the detailed analyses" will
involve public input, something he didn't do in the Escalante
executive order, and our grandchildren will be able to enter
said wilderness areas to hike, fish and hunt.
Granted, Clinton thumbed his nose at the system with his irresponsible
executive order imposing the Antiquities act on the Escalante
debacle in Utah, no surprise out of that unethical ass. That
land grab should have gone through the proper channels before
it got protected, like it deserves to. This sort of thing takes
years to study and implement correctly. The folks in southern
Utah are starting to warm to the idea though. Tourism is up
from, 520,000 in 1996 to 850,000 in 1998. The local saying
is we will make lemonade out of the lemons. (National Geographic
July 1999).
During proper review and impact studies and public hearings
amazing things can happen. in 1978 in Alaska, hunting outfitters
retained the right to maintain their hunting business's in
a number of Alaska's new national parks, among many other concessions
the government made to traditional users of the land.
Grand
Teton Park wasn't a very popular idea with the locals
of Jackson Hole Wyoming 50 years ago but now I know many former
opponents of Grand Teton National Park that are now millionaires
from the tourist business's they started with their lemons.
How do I know, I worked for a number of them as fishing
guide,
snowmobile guide, national park tour
guide, white
water rafting guide, and dog sled guide. As a freelance photographer and
graphic artist I have done advertising for them. Yes it's true,
jobs aren't very good at holding me.
As a snowmobile guide in Yellowstone Park,
I was asked on a daily basis why we didn't salvage the burnt
but salvageable
logs in Yellowstone National Park. I would explain. "When
considering the big picture, we must keep microcosms of the
world in a totally natural state so we can study them now and
in the future. 1000 years from now after America has been using
a large percentage of our national forest as tree farms as
we should, these untouched microcosms will be a valuable laboratory
and window to the biology of an unadulterated forest floor.
As the centuries roll by and trees are not allowed to fall
to the ground in our national tree farms the soil they grow
out of will be altered, diminished due to the removal of wood
rotting into the earth creating new soil. By retaining a percentage
of our natural forest in the most restrictive category of preservation
(wilderness areas) we will have maintained a window to the
past, a living laboratory we can revisit to analyze how we
might at sometime in the future be able to restore our 1000
year old tree farm soil to it's previous productivity."
I have good friends that are loggers that are angry about
how the local forests have been mismanaged by the Department
of Agriculture. The largest timber sale in United States history
was here (Island Park, Idaho) and required Louisiana Pacific
to be brought into the area because the sale was bigger than
the local logging companies could handle. About seven years
ago Louisiana Pacific closed up shop because the logging industry
was dead here due to over harvesting. A lot of the local companies
moved to Montana or went out of business. Thank God for Yellowstone
and the local wilderness areas because had they not been protected,
Louisiana Pacific would have had 10 more good years of cutting
and the world would be a poorer place because of lack of diversity.
You can see the Yellowstone Park boundary from the space shuttle
due to the over logging. If Louisiana Pacific hadn't been brought
in to over log the area, there would still be standing marketable
timber for our former local loggers. Sustainable yield harvests
must become an acceptable policy.
There are places on this earth that deserve the most restrictive
protections, microcosms of untouched wonder, beauty, unbelievable
hunting and fishing. As much as I would like to be able to
buy a quarter section of land on my favorite mountain, log
it to pay it off and have my own little heaven on earth I'm
glad that I can't because hopefully my great grandson may be
able to go up there and shoot his first Elk where I shot mine,
as well as be able to see the land the way it was 500 years
ago. That does have a value of it's own.
Us as conservatives should be in fact "conservative"!
We should study all aspects of conservative existence, not
just the ones that suit us. We should promote sustainable yield
on our national forests circumventing the temptation to remove
natures remaining wilderness from America's dwindling treasures.
A forest managed for sustainable yield provides steady employment
for eternity, verses boom then bust economy of a forest that
isn't.
Our egocentric, consumptive national mentality that fails
to factor for posterity must be reconsidered. Sustainable yield
is as impossible a concept for our government to grasp as is
spending within it's means, and paying off the National
Debt.
As we conservatives thump our bible and profess our superiority
of values, maybe we ought to factor Gods creation into the
equation when we have a grove of easy money old growth timber
in our cross hairs. |