Posted on 07/29/2020 8:32:00 AM PDT by Kaslin
Digging up comments by Sierra Club founder John Muir set off Black Lives Matter-inspired outrage intended to depict national treasures as intrinsically racist.
Want to get away from the civil strife that has torn the country apart as both the coronavirus pandemic and violent riots have turned Americas cities and cable news into a battlefield? If so, perhaps you think the ideal getaway might be a national park. There you can commune with nature and admire some of the most beautiful places in the world free from politics. Nope.
The idea that national parks could be a refuge from cancel culture’s obsession with rooting out what woke social media mobs and left-wing ideologues have labeled white privilege went out the window last week after the Sierra Club disavowed its founder, John Muir. In an essay portentously titled Pulling Down Our Monuments and published on its website, Michael Brune, the groups executive director, effectively canceled Muir more than a century after his death in 1914.
The reason was that Muir, who was born in Scotland in 1838, had in some of his writings made disparaging remarks about Native Americans and African Americans. The offensive statements are contained in his voluminous published writing and correspondence.
While even a recent Sierra Club study of his embarrassing comments admitted his views were progressive for their time, he also used words that were hurtful even in context. He referred in his correspondence to surviving members of tribes that were largely exterminated by white settlers in California as savages a term he also sometimes used to describe whites as well as dirty, garrulous as jays, superstitious, deadly, lazy, and wife stealing. He also called blacks dirty, described their appearance in stereotypical terms, and claimed their diseased and incurable dirt [was] evidently chronic and hereditary.
Although his sometimes-contemptuous attitudes toward both groups are indefensible, they were also not part of advocacy for discriminatory policies nor the main point of any cause he pursued. They merely document that Muir was a person of his time, however wrong.
In addition, Muirs views of Native Americans evolved, and he ultimately regarded with sympathy their plight as a dispossessed and marginalized population, even if he was always more interested in the land than in the people who used to live there until they were driven out in the generation before he arrived in California.
Nor is there any evidence that he actively supported Jim Crow laws. At worst, he was a man of his time and someone more interested in trees, plants, rocks, and animals than in humans of any type.
Long regarded as a saintly figure whose ideas about preserving natures wonders were deeply spiritual, Muir was the driving force behind the preservation of the Yosemite Valley and Sequoia National Park, as well as many other wild places in the western United States. He regarded these places as inherently valuable, as temples made not by human hands.
Muir considered the outdoors as places for rest, inspiration, and prayers. He deemed attempts to exploit them as sacrilege, and his essentially apolitical influence runs deep in the history of environmentalism.
All of that makes Muir a particularly problematic candidate for cancelation. His name graces dozens of sites in his adopted state of California, including schools, Muir Beach in Golden Gate National Park, and the Muir Woods National Monument, where his beloved redwoods stand. But the Sierra Club post has set off a torrent of news coverage that has condemned the national parks he helped create and the very idea of enjoying them as an expression of whiteness.
The assault on Muirs legacy is merely an excuse to accuse yet another aspect of American life of institutional racism, as is demonstrated by articles about the controversy in the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times. These arguments build on prior attacks on environmentalisms racist past. Those rebukes focus on the fact that many early Sierra Club members and Muirs allies in the fight to create and preserve the national parks, such as Henry Fairfield Osborn and Madison Grant, were believers in the pseudo-science of eugenics.
The fashionable racist belief undergirding eugenics considered blacks, Native Americans, and non-Anglo-Saxon immigrants to the United States from Southern and Eastern Europe to be inferior people polluting the country with foreign habits and their Catholic and Jewish faiths. Muir was not connected with eugenics, but support for the practice bolstered a lot of that era’s supposedly high-minded initiatives, including the contraceptive and abortive efforts of Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger.
Brunes effort to disavow his organizations founder and to assert that Muir’s stray racist comments continue to cause harms to minorities seems less a matter of genuine repentance and more an effort to be in tune with the Sierra Clubs largely leftist membership and to stay relevant in a conversation dominated by Black Lives Matter.
The Sierra Clubs clumsy proclamation of contrition is about the fact that it has had, as Muir intended, a narrow focus on nature stewardship rather than a broad leftist agenda. Brunes pledge is not only to rid the group of white privilege by sending its staff down the bogus White Fragility rabbit hole of racism training, but also to align it with a broad social justice agenda on issues such as immigration. In the current moral panic about racism, no other course is open to those who wish to be woke enough to pass muster.
As such, Brune is also promising to transform the leadership of a group whose hundreds of thousands of contributors are overwhelmingly white liberals, into one in which a majority of the team making top-level organizational decisions at the club are black, indigenous or other leaders of color.
But there is more at stake in this discussion than the the Sierra Club’s awkward contortions to demonstrate its anti-racist bona fides. Those who want to transform environmentalism into an auxiliary of the Black Lives Matter movement are not making the Sierra Club nor the parks more minority-friendly. Rather, theirs is an attempt to depict the national parks Muir created as inherently racist and a product of whiteness.
The New York Times article cited a study claiming that the low number of minorities visiting the national parks proves they are the product of institutional racism. Most lower-income minority Americans who live in urban areas are less likely to drive to the remote locations of many national parks. But the notion that such visits are prohibitively costly or exclusively white is absurd.
Driving to a park is generally not as expensive as, say, a trip to Europe. The parks cannot be moved to make them more accessible, even if those who dont enjoy camping or park visits decided they do want to use them. Despite the New York Times’s repetition of the claim that outdoor recreation is a white activity, there is nothing intrinsically race-based about enjoying what Muir described as the spiritual elevation one derives from appreciating nature.
In the past, African Americans experienced the horrors of segregation at national parks the same as everywhere else. But the same studys claim that blacks view parks such as Yosemite as inherently unsafe” because the outdoors is connected to lynchings and slavery-related flights is plain ideological cant. Such far-fetched assertions have nothing to do with the real problems that blacks or any other ethnic group face.
Regardless of who chooses to visit the parks, Muirs idea that preserving nature for future generations is a sacred obligation remains valid. The attempt to superimpose a dubious race-based agenda over the environmentalist cause of protecting natural wonders from exploitation has little to do with actual racism. It has everything to do with a political fashion that makes leftist groups like the Sierra Club particularly vulnerable to canceling.
Blacks like camping as much as they like swimming...
Well, I guess we have to burn down all the national parks........./s
Let’s just cut to the chase. The marxists will be declaring all of white history and culture to be racist. Communism needs to tear down before it replaces. They have a lot of useful idiots buying into the blm smokescreen.
> camps and parks are racist <
Well, sure they are. And you know what else is racist? Everything! Go ahead, pick out any random noun from a dictionary. Then declare it to be racist. Its easy!
I just gave that a try. End tables are racist!
This is the drivel you get in a country where not enough people are tired at the end of the day.
Giant motor homes with satellite dishes and web hotspots are still okay though. /jk
I dunno. Black people love fishing and crabbing in national parks where I am at.
Except Chaz Occupy camps? Them are the racist camps by definition
“Blacks like camping as much as they like swimming...”
I know plenty of black people that go camping and swimming. They must be Uncle Toms...
I’m outside Philly. Maybe it’s locality dependent.
Going camping or using parks is an individual CHOICE. If blacks do not CHOOSE to participate, how are whites responsible?
Yep. This is a piecemeal attack, one minority hobby after another, just like with the “assault weapon” ban
Blacks are not interested in sleeping in tents or huts in the woods when they go on vacation - it is too much like the way things used to be. They’d much rather get dressed up and stay at a nice hotel or go on cruise.
I suppose the best thing is to ignore them.
30 years ago I rose high in an organization called Trout Umlimited. There was a lot of crossover and mutual work between TU and the Sierra Club. As I moved into a state level position, I started working with state and national position holders in both organizations. I was shocked to learn they were all commies. I got out.
This was in the late 80’s early 90’s.
Above should read Trout “Unlimited”.
Well I did hear the head park ranger say that POC can’t afford to travel to the parks. Neither can I right now. So, move the parks closer to those that can’t afford to go right now. How hard is that?
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