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To: Olympiad Fisherman

Don’t blame him for what’s been done with his legacy. He was not anti-industry at all and would not tolerate today’s Environmental wackos.


5 posted on 05/06/2012 8:54:08 AM PDT by Borges
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To: Borges

I don’t think he would find much in common with modern greenies at all.

I personally understand his awe at nature. I’ve lived every day of my life with it and I still find myself awestruck by something in nature every single day.


11 posted on 05/06/2012 9:11:30 AM PDT by cripplecreek (What does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul?)
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To: Borges

He was one of the first counter-culture environmental eccentrics in America. Environmental historian Donald Worster summarized his personal character very well, “Henry Thoreau was not a respectable gentleman in the eyes of his neighbors, in part because New England had no tolerance for the idleness implied by unemployment, and in part because Thoreau had no regard for affluence or the trappings of respectability.” Thoreau even spent a night in the Concord jail for refusing to pay taxes to support the war against Mexico. Thoreau also hated what the Puritans did with their industry to the landscape of New England, and came up with a goofy so-called ecological scientific empiricism called “nature looking into nature” which reduces man to a mere animal. In reality, what he was espousing was a environmental existentialism, a ‘new’ philosophy of man and nature that was essentially reverting back to paganism. Thoreau is at the very heart of what is wrong with America today. He was the first anti-hero of America.


15 posted on 05/06/2012 9:15:20 AM PDT by Olympiad Fisherman
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