Private
Land Lockup
(Note:
This is an excellent article, and one that should be shared as widely as
possible. I have taken the liberty of underlining all the Red
Flag words and phrases that should jump off the page whenever
you read a document that contains them, or hear a speech into which they
are incorporated. It's not that they are necessarily bad words; it is the
way in which they are used that makes them dangerous. Bill
Grigg has used them to educate and alert the reader; he does not
use language deception but rather calls your attention to it. I
have also included website URLs and email addresses for key folks
mentioned in this article, so you may contact them directly and learn
more. The depth of the language deception is in the number
of times each word or phrase is used and how professionally couched in
emotion-raising tones they are. Language deception is
something that people make careers from; it is folly to downplay its
importance, when it is the lead Trojan Horse at the gates. This
is a war for our property rights and our freedom; if 'mere' words can
take both, then the other side wins without firing a shot. They
know this well -- so should you. Just use phonetics to
sound out "RMAP": Our Map. If that sounds like a jump to
conclusions, whose land do they intend for your land to become? Theirs.
Thus, OUR MAP. The very title, "United Nations", implies that
we'll all get along in Nirvana. Nothing could be further from the
agenda. Instead of calling them soldiers or troops, heavily armed UN
soldiers are called the deceptive "peacekeepers". Language
deception runs rampant and collaboration cooperating with the
enemy within one's own land -- is touted by Gale Norton at the
Department of the Interior, and many others, chanted as a hypnotic
mantra designed for "capacity building" and "conflict
resolution": the "Four C's". Terms are deliberately
obscure and nebulous -- 'areas' do not have boundaries, nor do 'ecoregions'
or 'watersheds'. "Landscape scale planning" ought to run up a
RAFT of Red Flags when used, but it usually doesn't. Why? Because it is
carefully crafted to stop the brain from recognizing it as a Red Flag
phrase. If the listener or reader is tricked by words, he or she does
not resist or question, and "consensus" simply means that
those that do question are squelched and not counted or listened to.
"Plans" continue and "public input" or "public
comment periods" do little if anything to stop the steamroller,
because the ink has long been dry on the "Plans". Consensus
might as well be spelled "conned senses" and
"conservancy" be "conned servancy", as that is the
intent. This Note is not meant to dishearten you; it is merely to let
you know that you must not be tricked into thinking that the enemy is
your friend -- think again of "conned senses" when you
"collaborate". Gale Norton is just one of a group that has
been thoroughly indoctrinated in the fine art of language
deception. When you finish reading this article, you'll never listen or
read the same way again. Ms. Norton will not like that, but you'll be
far the better -- and freer and more empowered -- for it.)
May
20, 2003
By
William Norman Grigg
wngrigg@thenewamerican.com
The
New American
Federal
and state agencies are, in essence, pulling the land right out from
under the feet of private property owners as part of the United
Nations’ radical Wildlands Project.
One
moment they were responsible, law-abiding owners of forestland in rural
Washington; the next, they were eco-criminals confronting onerous fines
and eviction from land they thought they owned. What had they done?
Nothing -- and that was the problem, according to notification letters
sent by the Washington Department of Natural Resources (DNR).
The DNR notices sent last December informed owners of forestland
tracts larger than 500 acres that they were required to submit a Road
Maintenance and Abandonment Plan (RMAP) for all “forest roads”
on their land (including driveways). The new law, explained the April
22nd Seattle Times, requires “the state’s 91,000 small-forest
owners to map, and in many cases, upgrade private roads to save
fish. Estimated cost: $375 million.”
To facilitate “recovery” of salmon, steelhead, and
bull trout, Washington State devised a set of road maintenance rules
“designed to repair fish-blocking culverts and stem runoff from
forest roads that load waterways with sediment that smothers fish
eggs, raises water temperature and alters stream courses,”
reported the Seattle Times. According to Pat McElroy, director of
regulatory programs for the DNR, “The roads issue is very,
very important to meeting our obligations, and fundamental to
improving salmon habitat and moving recovery forward.” But as
is so often the case, recovery of endangered nonhuman species in
Washington threatens to make human property rights extinct,
and key decisions have been made without input from the endangered
property owners.
The RMAP rules are part of the Washington State Forest and Fish
agreement, finalized in April 1999, intended to bring the state into
compliance with the federal Endangered Species Act. Although RMAP
initially targets owners of large tracts of forestland, by 2004 it will
encompass landowners possessing as little as two acres of land capable
of supporting forest. The measure’s ostensible purpose is to abate
sediment runoff that supposedly makes streams and rivers unsuitable for
endangered salmon and trout. To that end, owners of forestland or
“forest-capable” land are required to provide, by 2005, detailed
plans to bring their access roads -- including private driveways -- into
compliance with federally mandated state environmental standards.
The estimated cost of mapping, surveying, and upgrading the roads runs
into tens of thousands of dollars per property owner. RMAP provisions
dictate that owners wishing to sell their forestlands must inform
potential buyers -- through the Department of Natural Resources --
of the “continuing obligation” to upgrade the roads. This
effectively makes the DNR a joint owner of privately owned lands. Should
a property owner fail to follow this procedure in selling his
forestland, he would face a summary civil judgment requiring him to pay
the estimated cost of the upgrades. RMAP does offer one other
alternative: After conducting mapping and surveys at their own expense,
owners of forestlands can choose to abandon their access roads.
“Those are our only choices under RMAP,” Okanogan County Farm Bureau
President Joel Kretz told The New American. “We can somehow pay the
expense to bring the roads up to standards, or we can physically block
them off and never use them again.” In addition, Kretz continued, RMAP
“essentially provides a continuing conservation easement on your land
-- forever. It requires that you grant open-ended access to your land to
multiple parties, such as environmental enforcement agencies, various
Indian tribes, and so on. People who thought that they owned their
forestlands now find that they have been relegated to co-manager status
over that land with practically every agency under the sun. Quite
simply, what has happened is that tens of thousands of people across
this state suddenly discovered that, according to our state government,
they don't own their own land.”
Okanogan County resident Kathy Power teaches a continuing education
program on real estate law. She declares that the Endangered Species Act
(ESA), of which the RMAP measure is an outgrowth, is “one of the most
fascist laws this country has ever seen.” Addressing an audience of
1,000 people at a March 26th town meeting in Tonasket, Powers noted that
RMAP claims to regulate “public resources on private lands” -- a
description that harmonizes with the fascist concept of government
control of nominally private property.
“I'm not about to be run out of town by a fascist law with no
constitutional basis!” Powers declared to the applause of her
audience. Seeking to channel her neighbors’ outrage into constructive
activism, Powers stated: “We have to remember [that] to win we must do
it peacefully. We will never be able to change this law if the National
Guard comes in and shuts us down.”
Confiscation
by “Consensus”
The negotiations leading to RMAP began in 1986 as a series of meetings
between timber companies, Indian tribe representatives, and activists
from the “environmental community.” The final plan listed the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Marine Fisheries Service, and
the Environmental Protection Agency as key authors. The
“stakeholders” in the process included large timber companies such
as Weyerhauser and Boise Cascade, who can absorb the costs imposed by
the new plan. But the “consensus” reflected in RMAP was created
without significant input from either private forestland owners or
representatives of the affected counties.
Driving the effort to create a “consensus” was the threat of
Draconian federal intervention. “During the late 1990s, the feds
listed a bunch of fish species as endangered, and threatened to shut
down all rural activities across the state if it didn't come up with a
‘recovery’ plan,” Joel Kretz explained to The New American. “Al
Gore came here personally and sat at the negotiating table, along with
representatives of state and federal agencies, local Indian tribes, and
people from some of the big corporations. But there was only one token
landowner present during those talks. So it shouldn't surprise us that
the plan was good for the agencies, and acceptable to large corporate
interests, and utterly disastrous for small landowners.” Kretz
describes the deliberations that produced the RMAP as “a large table
of vultures fighting over scraps of the carcass of the small private
landowner. The only seat we got at the table was as the main course.”
“It’s really the federal agencies and members of the
‘environmental community’ that have driven this process,”
commented Okanogan County Farm Bureau researcher Darlene Hanjy to The
New American. “They've set themselves up like little tin gods,
arrogantly sitting on panels that have the power to take people’s
homes and land away.” Hanjy points out that many of the most important
details of the RMAP scheme -- such as the estimated costs to property
owners to bring their private roads into compliance with the ESA -- were
concealed in confidential memos circulated among regulatory officials.
One private DNR document admitted: “No federal or state funds
currently exist to pay for professional engineering to prepare plans or
to help landowners pay for required road work. In addition, what little
cost share money is available for family forests cannot be used for
these purposes as federal regulations prevent cost share money being
used to achieve compliance with requirements imposed by law.”
Accordingly, this mammoth unfunded federal mandate falls directly on
private landowners, most of whom would simply be driven off their
property. The confidential DNR memo continues: “This extensive
investment in the public good may further erode the economic viability
of family forestry. Despite the cash outlay, private landowners cannot
expect any financial return on their investment.”
“They knew that the RMAP was targeting small property owners in our
state’s poorest counties -- people who cannot bear the financial
burdens it imposes,” Hanjy commented to The New American. “Yet they
tried to bury these facts in documents that the public would never see,
unless someone dug them out, which we were fortunate enough to do. When
we brought this up at a meeting with the DNR, and asked why the public
hadn't been told, we were informed that these memos were ‘addressed to
a different audience for a different purpose.’”
While RMAP’s architects sought to keep the public ignorant about the
measure’s effects, they have also made it clear that ignorance of this
law would not be considered an excuse for noncompliance. “They had
hoped to implement this program on a one-to-one basis, which would mean
that each targeted property owner would have no understanding of the
bigger picture,” observed Hanjy. “It’s easy to imagine how some
elderly couple could try to sell their small tract of forestland without
filing the proper papers with the DNR, finding themselves tied up in
court and eventually forced to pay the costs of upgrading their
roads.”
In his address to the March 26th meeting in Tonasket, Doug Sutherland,
Washington state commissioner of public lands, pointed out that the fate
of Washington’s rural forestland owners will ultimately be determined
by “those voters living within a 40-mile radius of the Space Needle”
-- that is, voters composing one of the nation’s most liberal
population centers. With the regulation firmly in place and prospects
for political change uninviting, Sutherland promised the outraged
landowners that he would do what he could to “sweeten the lemonade.”
This prompted one member of his audience to comment: “If it’s Jim
Jones’ Guyana lemonade he’s talking about, sweetening it won't undo
the final effects.”
Eco-Soviets
“We're clearly being used as guinea pigs,” Joel Kretz told The New
American. “This is an ideal set-up for an experiment with implications
for the entire western United States. There is a huge urban population
in Seattle that supports radical environmental measures like [RMAP], and
a huge disparity in economic and political influence between urban and
rural Washington. So if this thing finds traction here in Washington, it
will probably expand to include private owners of forestlands across the
West.”
In fact, Washington’s RMAP law is just one of numerous efforts to shut
down human access to western lands. In the Klamath Basin along the
Oregon-California border, federal regulatory officials denied
desperately needed irrigation water to thousands of farmers. This was
supposedly done to protect the habitat of two “endangered” species
of sucker fish -- even though the local reservoir was full, and wildlife
biologists point out that the fish actually thrive in shallow water.
Nationwide public outrage prompted federal officials to grant the
embattled Klamath Basin farmers what may prove a temporary reprieve.
In the early 1990s, federal initiatives to protect the alleged habitat
of the supposedly endangered northern spotted owl placed millions of
acres of timberland off-limits to loggers, costing more than 100,000
jobs in the Pacific Northwest timber industry. A similar effort to
protect the Mexican spotted owl in the Southwest destroyed thousands of
logging jobs in Arizona and New Mexico.
In late 2001, a whistleblower in the U.S. Forest Service revealed that
seven researchers employed by the agency to conduct a habitat survey of
the endangered Canadian lynx had planted hairs from that wildcat species
in three national forests in Washington. Chris West of the American
Forest Resource Council points out that another federally employed
biologist had been caught planting lynx hair samples in the Oregon
Cascades. If successful, these deceptions could have led to a federal
ban on nearly all human use of millions of acres of forest land in
Washington and Oregon -- to protect the fraudulently designated lynx
habitat.
In June 1997, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) announced a
“Grizzly Bear Recovery Plan” mandating creation of 32 million acres
of “protected recovery zones” throughout the Rocky Mountain West.
The intention was to restore grizzly bear populations in Montana,
Wyoming, Idaho, Washington, and Colorado, and to create “wildlife
corridors” connecting these “island” populations with each other.
Shortly before leaving office, Bill Clinton issued regulatory decrees
locking up nearly 60 million acres of national forests across the West
as “roadless areas.”
The most ambitious effort to create a wildlife corridor is the Yukon to
Yellowstone Initiative (Y2Y) [NOTE: There is now a second Y2Y:
Yellowstone to Yucatan], which seeks to create a transnational
“bioregion” 2,000 miles long and 300 miles wide. The initiative
describes its vision as one in which a “web of protected wildlife
cores and connecting wildlife corridors has been defined and designated
for the Yellowstone to Yukon region,” and all land-use and development
decisions within the affected region would be “based first and
foremost on ecological principles.” A UN-approved “bioregional
council” would ultimately administer a bioregion consuming two-thirds
of Idaho and roughly half of Montana. Yellowstone National Park,
declared a “World Heritage Site in Danger” by the UN in 1995,
provides an anchor for the bioregion on the U.S. side of the border.
The grandiose Y2Y project is an outgrowth of the “Mackenzie
Decision,” which created a 16-million-acre wilderness area in British
Columbia. Proudly describing the set-aside as “Canada’s gift to the
world,” B.C. Premier Ujjal Dosanjh pointed out that creating the West
Virginia-sized wildlands area “establishes an important precedent.”
First, with the decision, British Columbia became the first jurisdiction
in North America to comply with a UN mandate to set aside 12 percent of
its land base as protected area. Second, the decision -- like Washington
State’s RMAP plan -- was created by an assembly of “stakeholders,”
rather than accountable elected officials.
Dr. Michael S. Coffman, a widely revered forest scientist, points out
that this model of decision-making by “consensus” is prescribed by
the UN’s Global Biodiversity Assessment (GBA), a mammoth document
created to guide implementation of the UN’s Convention on
Biodiversity. “Under the GBA plan, land-use decisions would be made
through a new form of governance whereby local people form
‘stakeholder groups’ or ‘partnerships,’ which would make
land-use rules by ‘consensus.’ Of course, this arrangement would
effectively dispense with property rights altogether.”
Henry Lamb, director of the Environmental Conservation Organization
(ECO), notes that Our Global Neighborhood, an authoritative blueprint
for UN “reform,” envisions the organization of land masses across
the globe into “bioregions administered by bioregional councils under
the direct supervision of the UN and with enforcement authority....” A
more appropriate label for such “bioregional councils” would be
“UN eco-soviets.” The purpose of soviets in Communist Russia was to
dictate a local “consensus” on behalf of policies emanating from the
Communist Party’s Central Committee.
Failure to achieve
such a “consensus” voluntarily would result in its imposition by
force, generally through liquidating resisters.
Mike Low, a forest industry representative who participated as a
“stakeholder” in the process that created the Mackenzie Decision,
testifies that while British Columbia’s methods weren't as severe as
those employed by the Soviets, the same principles drove the process:
“One of the fears we had was that if we couldn't reach consensus then
the government would make the decisions for us, and none of the
stakeholders wanted that.” In the same fashion, looming behind
deliberations of the eco-soviet that created Washington’s RMAP plan
was the prospect of federal intervention that would amount to a “Final
Solution” for the state’s rural economy.
The
Wildlands Scheme
The eco-radicals driving Washington’s RMAP plan tried to implement its
scheme on a one-to-one basis, thereby preventing landowners from
presenting organized resistance. In the same fashion, those behind the
continent-wide assault on property rights are trying to conceal the true
scope and nature of their ambition, outlined in a UN-approved program
called the “Wildlands Project.”
The centerpiece of the UN’s 1992 UN “Earth Summit” in Rio de
Janeiro was the Convention on Biodiversity, which Bill Clinton signed in
1993. The treaty stipulated that specific guidelines for preserving
biodiversity would be provided by the UN’s “Global Biodiversity
Assessment” (GBA), unavailable for Senate inspection until just
a few hours before the final vote on ratification in September 1994.
Once the GBA was made
available to the Senate, then-Majority Leader George Mitchell (D-Maine)
quietly took the ratification vote off the agenda -- because Section
13.4.2.2.3 identified the Wildlands Project as the framework for
implementing the treaty.
Little support existed
in the Senate for ratification of a measure mandating the eradication of
industrial civilization from one-half the surface area of the
continental United States.
Co-created by eco-terrorist Dave Foreman, founder of Earth First!, the
Wildlands Project envisions nothing less than “the end of industrial
civilization,” according to John Davis of Wild Earth magazine.
The Wildlands Project, states Foreman, “is a bold attempt to grope our
way back to October 1492 and find a different trail.” As the project
advances, Foreman predicts, “local and regional reserve systems linked
to others [will] ultimately tie the North American continent into a
single Biodiversity Preserve.”
“Our vision is
simple,” asserts the Wildlands Project Mission Statement: “We live
for the day when Grizzlies in Chihuahua have an unbroken connection to
Grizzlies in Alaska; when Gray Wolf populations are continuous from New
Mexico to Greenland.... Our vision is continental; from Panama and the
Caribbean to Alaska and Greenland, from the Arctic to the continental
shelves....”
Reed F. Noss, the radical “deep ecologist” who co-created the 1991
Wildlands Project proposal with Foreman, describes how the surface of
North America would be covered by “an interconnected system of
strictly protected areas (core reserves), surrounded by lands used for
human activities compatible with conservation that put biodiversity
first (buffer zones), and linked together in some way that provides for
functional connectivity … across the landscape.” In both the
“core” and “buffer” areas, Noss explains, “the collective
needs of non-human species must take precedence over the needs and
desires of humans.”
Every environmental preserve -- such as habitat for endangered species,
national monuments, wilderness areas, or UN-designated World Heritage
sites or Biosphere Reserves -- is a potential Wildlands Project “core
area.” Dave Foreman urges radical eco-activists on the ground to
“identify existing protected areas” and have them designated core
areas. They can then be connected to other core areas through
“corridors” across the landscape.
Foreman also instructs eco-radicals to “look for gaps between wild
lands or public lands” for future acquisition “by public agencies or
by private groups like the Nature Conservancy.” Wildlands activist
John Davis states that the whole purpose of this strategy is to keep
“expanding wilderness until the matrix, not just the nexus, is wild”
-- in other words, until property owners, miners, ranchers, loggers, and
others living and working in targeted areas have been driven off their
lands and cattle-penned in urban reservations.
Writing in Science magazine, Charles C. Mann and Mark L. Plummer warn
that as the Wildlands Project unfolds, “most roads would be closed;
some would be ripped out of the landscape.” This is certainly what
RMAP portends for owners of Washington forestlands. Eventually, continue
Mann and Plummer, the project will require “nothing less than a
transformation of America [into] an archipelago of human-inhabited
islands surrounded by natural islands.”
Environmental author
Alston Chase bluntly warns that consummation of the Wildlands design
will mean “the forced relocation of tens of millions of people … the
removal of human habitation from up to half of the country’s land
area.”
“Rural
Cleansing”
Even though the Senate refused to ratify the Biodiversity Convention,
the Clinton-era Interior Department created a National Biological Survey
intended (in the words of Department science adviser Tom Lovejoy) to
“determine development for the whole country and regulate it....”
Furthermore, key federal regulatory agencies -- the USFWS, the
Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Bureau
of Land Management -- have become infested with the ideology of
“Biocentrism” -- the concept that human rights, needs, and
prosperity must be subordinated to the good of the “global
biosphere.”
In his book In a Dark Wood: The Fight Over Forests and the Rising
Tyranny of Ecology, environmental analyst Alston Chase describes
believers in Biocentrism as “apostles of the new order” and observes
that the Clinton administration “adopted biocentrism as the guiding
philosophy of all federal land management” immediately on coming to
power.
David Garber, a research biologist with the National Park Service,
offered the most useful summary of the biocentric world view:
“Human happiness, and
certainly human fecundity, are not as important as a wild and healthy
planet. I know social scientists who remind me that people are part of
nature, but that isn't true. Somewhere along the line -- at about a
million years ago, maybe half that -- we quit the contract and became a
cancer. We have become a plague upon ourselves and upon the Earth....
Until such time as Homo Sapiens should decide to rejoin nature, some of
us can only hope for the right virus to come along.”
This isn't to say that biocentric extremists are simply idling away the
hours waiting for Gaia to unleash a mutant pathogen to cleanse Earth of
less “enlightened” people. Biocentrists in the federal bureaucracy,
working with allies in environmental pressure groups, have been working
to lock away lands across the United States, particularly out West --
where the federal government is the largest landowner. The most useful
weapon in this campaign of “rural cleansing,” explained biocentrist
Bruce Babbitt, who served as Bill Clinton’s interior secretary, is
“one landmark law: the 1973 Endangered Species Act [ESA].” But as
Dr. Coffman points out, the ESA itself is adapted from the UN’s
Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Flora and
Fauna (CITES) -- meaning that the decades-long assault on property
rights and rural life conducted via the ESA has been carried out
pursuant to UN mandates.
In January 1996, Bill Clinton unveiled another key element of the
Wildlands apparatus by issuing Executive Order 12986, which granted
immunity to lawsuits to the International Union for the Conservation of
Nature (IUCN). The IUCN is a multinational advisory panel to the UN; its
membership includes hundreds of federal and state regulatory agencies
(including the EPA, BLM, and the USFS), as well as 133 UN-accredited
non-governmental organizations, or NGOs -- including scores of the most
powerful, foundation-funded eco-radical organizations. The IUCN
describes its mission as that of applying “eco-spiritual practice and
principles” with the intention of “chang[ing] human behavior” with
respect to nature.
Composed entirely of unaccountable bureaucrats and eco-radical
activists, and immune to civil lawsuits, the IUCN is at the center of
efforts to create “consensus” among the “stakeholders” who
create policies like Washington’s RMAP law. Okanogan County property
rights activist Darlene Henjy refers to the arrogance of the officials
responsible for creating and implementing the RMAP proposal. The
attitude she describes is of a piece with that expressed in an article
published by the IUCN journal Conservation Biology: “[W]e assume that
environmental wounds inflicted by ignorant humans … can be treated by
wiser humans.... Conservation biology is a crisis discipline. On the
battlefield you are justified in firing on the enemy.”
Stopping
the Juggernaut
Many beleaguered Western property owners hope that with the end of the
Clinton administration, the “rural cleansing” campaign will end.
Apparently, though, the UN-connected biocentrists in the federal
bureaucracy are merely retrenching, rather than retreating. In late
April, Interior Secretary Gail Norton announced new guidelines that
would encourage greater participation by state and local officials in
the administration of federally designated wilderness and national
monument areas. However, the Bush administration hasn't indicated
that it contemplates a rollback of the gains made by Wildlands
Project activists during Bill Clinton’s reign.
“I spend a lot of time talking to people in the [environmental regulatory]
agencies, and I have seen a real change in the attitude of the people
who've come in with the new administration,” Joel Kretz told The New
American. “But I'm a ‘Show me, don't tell me’ kind of person, and
it’s clear that many of the most radical people have burrowed
down deep in the bureaucracy, and they're still following the same
plan.”
Rooting out the deeply entrenched biocentric radicals from every
federal environmental agency would be the political equivalent of
rooting al-Qaeda terrorists from their caves in Afghanistan. A
better strategy would be to work through the House of Representatives to
cut off funding for eco-socialist initiatives. But we cannot
decisively defeat the Wildlands threat until we get our
nation out of the United Nations -- and permanently evict the UN
from our shores.
Copyright
2004 http://www.StopTheFTAA.org/
is a Campaign of the John Birch Society http://www.JBS.org
Examples
of language deception employed by federal agencies and by those who
'report' on them:
http://www.propertyrightsresearch.org/2004/articles5/wolves_on_westward_prowl.htm |