|
By Erich Veyhl - Environmentalists often smear a private landowner in rural Maine who builds a nice home on a large lot as if he is creating what they call a “kingdom estate,” rhetoric designed to promote a false image of feudalism in order to incite envy and leftist class warfare. But who is really creating a feudalist kingdom to impose on the people of rural Maine, intending that those who can remain live under government-imposed Alaska-like primitivism, deprived of their rights? They do not object to radical environmentalist multi-millionaire Roxanne Quimby's new acquisition of 28,000 acres – an entire Maine township in the north woods. Quimby intends to eliminate the private economy and traditional human activity on her land and elsewhere: She intends to turn her land – now 40,000 acres and growing – over to the National Park Service to help lock up more than 3 million acres as a federal wilderness preserve, a plan intensely opposed by local people, Gov. Baldacci and the entire Maine congressional delegation. The plan is often associated solely with the Massachusetts-based radical eco-organization RESTORE: The North Woods, with which Quimby is associated (including membership on the board of directors for several years). But it neither originated with RESTORE nor is it restricted to a “mere” 3.2 million acres, even though far larger than any national park outside Alaska (Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve in Alaska is 13.2 million). RESTORE, founded in 1992, seeks to “restore” most of what the national environmentalist lobby calls the North Woods Eco-System to primitive, pre-civilization “primeval” conditions in a federally controlled wilderness. This includes 26 million contiguous acres extending from the eastern Maine coast across most of rural Maine, northern New Hampshire and Vermont, to the Adirondacks in upstate New York. RESTORE is not alone. While regional director of the Wilderness Society, RESTORE executive director Michael Kellet told fellow activists at an environmentalist leadership conference at Tufts University in Massachusetts in 1990, “I think it's likely this [26 million acres] will end up, most of this will end up being public land, not by taking away, but that will probably be really the only alternative.”A radical, ardent opponent of advanced civilization, Kellet says that rural New England is “a region seriously damaged by industrial development.” A RESTORE brochure says he “believes that there is no better place to begin the restoration of the earth.” RESTORE board member Brock Evans, then vice president of the National Audubon Society, exhorted his fellow activist leaders, “We decided in the Northwest to treat it as an Ancient Forest Campaign ... all the forests, all of it. I suggest to you that you have your 'North Woods.' It's the same kind of situation. It should be all of it. There may be different solutions for different particular places, but it should all be treated together. Be unreasonable. You can do it. Yesterday's heresy is today's common wisdom. It happens over and over again" and "You have lots of strong urban centers where support comes from. So I would say let's take it back. Let's take it all back.”Following widespread, swift public opposition to the plans to eco-nationalize rural New England, the national organizations took a lower profile, putting the regional viro groups in front to make the plans appear “locally” inspired and not so radically sweeping in scope. The political strategy changed; the goals did not. In 1992 Chuck Clusen, representing Laurence Rockefeller's American Conservation Association, led an Environmental Grantmakers Association strategy meeting in Washington state concerning funding the campaign to take over Maine. Clusen, who led the environmentalists' Alaska Lands Coalition resulting in new national parks taking over massive areas in the 1980s, said: “Throughout this period the environmental community across these four [northeastern] states ... has come together in a very large coalition called the Northern Forest Alliance... It has the major national groups as well as the principal state groups of these four states.”Former Northern Forest Alliance executive director Karen Tilberg is now making state policy as Maine Deputy Commissioner of Conservation. Environmentalism is an ideological political movement driven by enormous funding. They are after nothing less than a cultural and political power grab for sweeping control across rural Maine. They must eliminate private property and the private economy if they are to attain their goals for “biodiversity-based” economics and massive wilderness restrictions to destroy civilized life and “restore” the “primeval” across tens of millions of acres. That can be done only by government coercion, which they intend to impose by replacing our independent town meeting local government and the American form of government legally protecting the freedoms and rights of the individual, with a feudalist/socialist system controlled by an eco-bureaucracy that would make the current abuses from Augusta pale in comparison. That is why they want federal control; it is the meaning of a federal conservation area. In Alaska – one of the viro “models” for “conservation” in Maine – less than 1 percent of the land is privately owned. The rest is controlled by the federal and state governments and Native Corporations (Indian). The economy survives largely from taxes on oil. Private property owners not living in the few cities but trapped by government conservation areas no longer live “by right” as Americans are supposed to. They are subjected to pervasive bureaucratic permissions, often denied, as government agencies over the decades have clamped down with increasing restrictions in the name of the environment, destroying the freedom of the traditional rural way of life. Private property owners are now often denied access to their own property, contrary to the “guarantees” in the “compromise” federal legislation authorizing the parks. This is the nature of environmentalist “compromise”: They take what they can get and come back for the rest later. Such is the eco-feudalist kingdom environmentalism would impose on the people of rural Maine. Link to article's website - http://moosecove.com/propertyrights/NFA/Quimby-DCP-031209.html? |
| BACK | Email to Colleagues |