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The Shrinking of the Greens (An environmental movement that shuns the right is bound to fail)
The Weekly Standard ^ | May 30, 2005 | William F. Pedersen

Posted on 05/25/2005 7:58:45 PM PDT by RWR8189

WHY IS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ALMOST universally seen as a left-wing issue? A lively debate within the "environmental community" makes one reason clear. Many professional environmentalists want it that way. Sound evidence--and the actual needs of environmental protection--come second to that agenda.

This debate began with the release last fall of an essay called "The Death of Environmentalism" by two long-time environmental activists, Michael Shellenberger and Ted Nordhaus. Later published with periodic follow-on comments in the online magazine Grist, the piece has become must reading among environmental types. It attempts to explain what the authors see as the 30-year decline in the political influence of their cause.

According to Shellenberger and Nordhaus, during the 1960s and 1970s environmentalists and other "progressive" forces won landmark victories, but failed to build a permanent social transformation on these gains. This left them unable to resist effectively when right-wing advocacy groups targeted them in a decades-long and largely successful ideological offensive apparently claiming (though the essay is vague here) that environmental protection causes unemployment. In consequence, it is said, the government for 15 years has ignored the proven imminence of "the greatest calamity in modern history"--namely, global warming--despite the expenditure of "hundreds of millions of dollars" by environmental groups urging action, and has failed to embrace the program of total economic and social transformation that would be needed to address it.

The authors leave the nature of this transformation undefined. Apparently it would rest on a multibillion dollar program of government-directed investment in alternative energy sources. However, they are by no means vague about where support for that transformation should be found. Shellenberger and Nordhaus explain that "most of the intellectuals who staff environmental groups are so repelled by the right's values" that they have "assiduously avoided examining [their] own in a serious way" in response to the conservative challenge.

Such a reexamination, Shellenberger and Nordhaus conclude, would reveal that future success in environmental protection depends on making common cause with such other "progressive" groups as people of color, gays, feminists, peace advocates, and labor unions. Virtually all of the subsequent comments in Grist have agreed.

This self-centered and self-important narrative rests almost entirely on historical and scientific fantasies. The keystone environmental laws of the 1960s and 1970s, far from being achievements of the left, arose from a broad social consensus and were supported and signed essentially without exception by Republican presidents. Attributing these laws to professional environmentalists is like giving the surfer credit for the wave. Levels of all regulated pollutants are lower today than in 1970 and are projected to go still lower, while once imperiled predators like wolves and mountain lions are returning to areas from which they had long been exterminated. Even on global warming, there is a broadening consensus that more can and should be done despite scientific uncertainties.

But Shellenberger and Nordhaus's underlying political analysis is far worse. One might expect a movement taking stock of its political assets to reexamine the strength of its core appeal, and to identify new groups that might be persuaded to support it. Shellenberger and Nordhaus do neither.

On the contrary, they contend that since "everything is connected to everything else," and since all our perceptual categories are somewhat arbitrary, the term "environment" is simply a mental construct. They therefore counsel against any revitalized effort to dramatize the beauty and wonder of the natural world, or to explain why more action is needed to protect such beloved features as mountain meadows in the Rockies or maple forests in New England. Instead, they claim, "environment" needs to be viewed in a larger context to have meaning. That larger context must be provided by "progressive" causes in general. No reason is offered why this larger construct should necessarily be "progressive," and none suggests itself.

One might think that environmentalists in a conservative country would seek conservative support. Indeed, one might think that environmentalists could recognize natural allies in those who find pleasure and fulfillment in pursuit of wild animals in their habitat, or who have become convinced that God commands them to protect the full abundance of His creation, or who believe that their great country's uncurbed appetite for energy puts it at risk in a dangerous world. By contrast, there is no reason to think--and none is offered--why people of color, feminists, gays, or peace advocates--let alone union members--should be more environmentalist than the public at large. Yet reaching out to hunters and fishers, evangelical Christians, or "geo-green" conservatives is barely mentioned in this debate. Evidently support from those who might have endorsed the war in Iraq, or might oppose gay marriage, or, it seems, might not have voted enthusiastically for Howard Dean will not be welcome in addressing "the greatest calamity in modern history."

Certainly cheap shots against "environmental extremists" have long characterized the rhetoric of conservative publicists and politicians. But a mature political judgment should look beyond the cheap shots on all sides to assess, and make use of, the more fundamental forces at work. It should also examine the widespread distrust of environmentalists among outdoorsmen and evangelicals with no apparent reason for striking poses on this issue.

If, as may well be true, the goal of this debate is not to revitalize environmental protection as such, but to invest its appeal in a generic revival of "progressive" politics, then these criticisms are beside the point. But to the extent that protecting the environment is still a goal of the environmental movement, one may hope that as the reassessment continues, it will include a deeper look in the mirror.

 

 

William F. Pedersen practices law in Washington, D.C. He last wrote for The Weekly Standard on global warming.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: cary; climatechange; environment; environmentalists; globalwarming; greenparty; greens; leftistagenda; leftisthubris; leftistlies; theright

1 posted on 05/25/2005 7:58:45 PM PDT by RWR8189
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To: RWR8189

Great essay. Thanks.


2 posted on 05/25/2005 8:03:06 PM PDT by Northern Alliance
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To: RWR8189
WHY IS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ALMOST universally seen as a left-wing issue?

Socialism is the goal.

Enviromentalism is the tool.

3 posted on 05/25/2005 8:12:59 PM PDT by Balding_Eagle (God has blessed Republicans with really stupid enemies.)
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To: farmfriend


4 posted on 05/25/2005 8:19:29 PM PDT by Libertarianize the GOP (Make all taxes truly voluntary)
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To: RWR8189

Oh please, what is wrong with this author? It is this blinkered type of analysis that makes "the weekly standard" my least preferred of the mainstream conservative sites. They've got some good stuff there sometimes, but this is on a par with the letters to the editors they choose to run, third rate at best.

Doesn't our writer get it? These so-called environmentalists are not truly concerned about the environment, they are watermelons, pure and simple. Green on the outside, (commie) RED on the the inside.

And hand in foot with the ALF/ELF terrorists I might add.


5 posted on 05/25/2005 8:20:41 PM PDT by jocon307 (Legal immigrant Irish grandmother rolls in grave, yet again.)
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To: RWR8189
On the contrary, they contend that since "everything is connected to everything else," and since all our perceptual categories are somewhat arbitrary, the term "environment" is simply a mental construct.

No wonder the lefties are so incompetent. The not only spout this rubbish (which is bad enough), but apparently they believe it! They are buggered before they begin.

6 posted on 05/25/2005 8:38:22 PM PDT by expatpat
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To: RWR8189

Environmental concerns are important, but they are one of many concerns (like economic growth) that need to be thrown into the policy mix. The environmentalists are single issue fanatics.


7 posted on 05/25/2005 9:11:16 PM PDT by Unam Sanctam
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To: expatpat

We should reclaim the conservation issue and let the enviornmentalists specialize in courtrooms.


8 posted on 05/25/2005 9:12:45 PM PDT by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: RWR8189
I refuse to call myself an enviromentalist because of reputation the green groups have, especially when it comes to their top issue - global warming. They are also tied to animal rights groups (wolves and mtn lions especially) on issues too often for my tastes. There needs to be balance with jobs as well.

That said. I'm a conservationist. I'm an outdoorsman. I'm a hunter. I'm a fisherman. Unlike these concrete jungle warriors I live in the environment and understand nature.

I also have no use for polluters who poison our water and land systems. Those that screw it up need to clean it up. Litterers should be fined and dumpers need to get their arse kicked.

The biggest mistake the left made on this issue was alienating us - especially by siding with gun grabbers and anti-hunters - and now they are all PO'ed that the NRA is backing candidates they don't like.

9 posted on 05/25/2005 9:20:12 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan (June 14 - Defeat DeWine - Vote Tom Brinkman for Congress (OH-2) - http://www.gobrinkman.com)
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To: Unam Sanctam; Carry_Okie
"The environmentalists are single issue fanatics."

That about says it all!!! Especially GovernMental EnvironMentalists!!!

10 posted on 05/25/2005 9:23:47 PM PDT by SierraWasp (The "Heritage Oaks" in the Sierra-Nevada Conservancy are full of parasitic GovernMental mistletoe!!!)
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To: RWR8189
If we ended immigration fifty years ago, we'd have half as many people in America today.

And we'd only need half as many environmental laws.

We'd also have twice as much oil and gas and other resources to go around.
11 posted on 05/25/2005 9:29:16 PM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: RWR8189
It was essentially a conservative movement from the beginning - see the origins of the old Sierra Club, for example. Ducks Unlimited. People who had been at it for decades before it was discovered by hyperemotional leftists around about the late 60's and transformed into a quasi-"liberation" movement.

This movement has been derailed for several reasons, not the least of which that its constituency is essntially urban, anti-hunting, and ignorant of the wild areas with which they are in love in fantasy terms only. They are anticapitalist, and what worked best in wetland preservation was capitalism. They are anti-development and style themselves "progressives." They are anti-human because other people include those not like themselves.

But a lot of us old "conservationists" haven't given up, we've merely been out-shouted.

12 posted on 05/25/2005 9:32:01 PM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Dan from Michigan
Nicely said Dan. You & I have much in common.
13 posted on 05/25/2005 10:02:11 PM PDT by Rabble (Just When is John F sKerry going to submit SF 180?.......... Will we live long enough?)
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To: ClaireSolt

Yes. I've been a conservationist for many years -- long before it became fashionable. But some of the posters are right -- the socialists are using it merely as a tool to gain control.


14 posted on 05/26/2005 1:12:18 PM PDT by expatpat
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To: expatpat

I would go even further and argue that very big cities are the bane of civilization and a cause of its decline. People need to stay connected to the land and nature. Otherwise demogogues and dictators rise and wreck everything.


15 posted on 05/26/2005 1:35:16 PM PDT by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: ClaireSolt

I agree. Throughout history there has been major tension between city and countryside. The cities have invariably been sinks of iniquity and corruption -- and it's getting worse. Black American culture was much healthier before the mass-migration to the cities.


16 posted on 05/26/2005 1:40:11 PM PDT by expatpat
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To: RWR8189
>The Shrinking of the Greens (An environmental movement that shuns the right is bound to fail)
>
>
>WHY IS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ALMOST universally seen as a
>left-wing issue?
>


Because it is Eco-Marxism.

Rightwingers like me call themselves conservationists.


>A lively debate within the "environmental
>community" makes one reason clear. Many professional
>environmentalists want it that way. Sound evidence--and
>the actual needs of environmental protection--come second
>to that agenda.
>
>This debate began with the release last fall of an essay
>called "The Death of Environmentalism" by two long-time
>environmental activists, Michael Shellenberger and Ted
>Nordhaus. Later published with periodic follow-on comments
>in the online magazine Grist, the piece has become must
>reading among environmental types.
>
>It attempts to explain
>what the authors see as the 30-year decline in the
>political influence of their cause.
>

On which planet ? Eco-Marxism was nowhere thirty years ago and now it has a stranglehold on much policy-making.


>"the greatest calamity in modern history"--namely, global
>warming-

namely, Eco-Marxism. The Communists never stood a chance of reaching the Atlantic alive, but the Eco-Marxists are in amongst our lines and most of the time we can't even see them.


>-despite the expenditure of "hundreds of millions
>of dollars" by environmental groups urging action, and has
>failed to embrace the program of total economic and social
>transformation that would be needed to address it.
>
>The authors leave the nature of this transformation undefined.
>Apparently it would rest on a multibillion dollar program of
>government-directed investment in alternative energy sources.

More Eco-Marxism. Nothing is sustainable. Economics 101: "In the Long Run, we're all dead"

>
>Such a reexamination, Shellenberger and Nordhaus conclude,
>would reveal that future success in environmental protection
>depends on making common cause with such other "progressive"
>groups as people of color, gays, feminists, peace advocates,
>and labor unions. Virtually all of the subsequent comments
>in Grist have agreed.
>

In other words lots of other groups who see themselves as having victim-status of the right or establishment and therefore have common cause with the left (Eco-Marxism).


>This self-centered and self-important narrative rests almost
>entirely on historical and scientific fantasies. The keystone
>environmental laws of the 1960s and 1970s, far from being
>achievements of the left, arose from a broad social
>consensus and were supported and signed essentially
>without exception by Republican presidents. Attributing
>these laws to professional environmentalists is like
>giving the surfer credit for the wave. Levels of all
>regulated pollutants are lower today than in 1970
>and are projected to go still lower, while once
>imperiled predators like wolves and mountain lions
>are returning to areas from which they had long been
>exterminated.

The place needed a clean-up. We'd expanded into our world and we had used up 'clean space'. That's all. That's conservationism. Environmentalism is Eco-Marxism. It is only whatever the Military-Industrial complex does to the environment which is evil. If you are ex-Warsaw Pact, second or third world, then that's OK. After all, they're victims of the right too.


>Even on global warming, there is a broadening consensus
>that more can and should be done despite scientific
>uncertainties.

If you mean that the Eco-Marxists have run a highly successful propaganda campaign, then you are right.
17 posted on 05/26/2005 3:07:10 PM PDT by PzGr43
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