| With the Grand Canyon National Park as his backdrop,
President Bill Clinton used the 1906 Antiquities Act to set aside
one million acres of land into three national monuments in Arizona,
Nevada and California on January 11 this year. "I know we’re
doing the right thing, because look at the day we’ve got,"
Clinton said. "We’ve got the good Lord’s stamp of approval
on this great day."
This was the second time President Clinton used the Antiquities
Act to lock up vast tracts of federal land. Just days before the
presidential election in 1996, he designated 1.7 million acres in
southern Utah as the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument. In
both cases, mining and other natural resource extraction are
prohibited.
The president’s most recent action represents one more
installment in a long list of land to be locked up. Secretary of the
Interior Bruce Babbitt has recommended that a total of five million
acres of national monuments and wilderness areas be set aside this
year. Last October 13, President Clinton declared 60 million acres
as "Roadless Areas" within the National Forest System. In
1998 he initiated the Clean Water
Action Plan that calls for creating even more roadless area
through the withdrawal of 5,000 miles of roads on federal land each
year through 2002.
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Dr.
Michael S. Coffman is CEO
of sovereignty International, president of Environmental
Perspectives, Inc. and editor of Discerning the Times Digest
and NewsBytes in Bangor, Maine. Sovereignty International is
a UN watchdog and provides educational materials for
policymakers and citizens concerning UN global governance.
Environmental Perspectives, Inc. is a consulting
organization providing educational information on
environmental and global issues. Dr. Coffman has a Ph.D. in
ecosystems analysis and classification. he played a key role
in helping to stop the Convention on Biological Diversity
from being ratified.
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Although these actions greatly change land management practices
on federally controlled land, all were done without any action or
review by Congress. This has not gone unnoticed. "It appears
the administration has launched an orchestrated campaign to preclude
mining on vast acreages of public lands governed by multiple-use
laws, and to do so without consulting Congress and without
soliciting public input or independent scientific review,"
wrote Missouri Republican Senators John Ashcroft and Christopher S.
Bond and Representative Jo Ann Emerson in a letter to Secretary
Babbitt in June last year.
It seems it is exactly what Babbitt had planned. Last May he
said, "We’ve switched the rules of the game. We’re not
trying to do anything legislatively."
Babbitt reaffirmed this on October 19: "I am not prepared to
sit back and let this Congress do what it has done for the last
seven years on these areas, which is virtually nothing . . . If
Congress does not act and produce an acceptable bill protecting
these lands, I will consider asking the president to use his power
[the Antiquities Act]."
The president is now doing exactly what Secretary Babbitt asked.
Private Property Also Targeted
Supporters of the president’s efforts shrug off criticism by
saying the designations affect only land that is already controlled
by the federal government. Not so, argue his critics. They claim the
Clinton administration is not interested in locking up only federal
land; it wants to lock up private land as well through programs such
as the Clean Water Action Plan and the Lands Legacy Initiative.
The Clean Water Action Plan dramatically expands the 1976 Clean
Water Act by administratively shifting water protection from point
source pollution (a single factory or city) to non-point source
pollution over an entire watershed. Again, Congress has taken no
action to authorize such a huge change in national policy. Yet when
the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) and Department of
Agriculture’s (USDA) Clean Water Action Plan is completed it will
extend federal land use jurisdiction to all of the 2,100 watersheds
in America.
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MORE
THAN 20 MILLION ACRES OF PRIVATE LAND COULD BE PURCHASED
OVER THE NEXT DECADE WITH NO CONGRESSIONAL OVERSIGHT
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The Action Plan also imposes buffer zones of "natural"
habitat with a minimum of 100 feet on private land along two million
miles of U.S. streams and rivers — a minimum of 48 million acres
of private property (using a 100-foot buffer on both sides of a
stream or river). The USDA’s
Stream Corridor Restoration manual, which defines how the stream
buffers will be organized, actually calls for the buffer to extend
over the entire 100-year floodplain, which can be several miles wide
in some regions.
The Lands Legacy Initiative historically has been funded by
Congress at $200 million to $300 million annually to buy private
land. The president wants that increased to nearly $1 billion a
year. Even more disturbing, he is asking that the funding be
included in a new budget item so that the $1 billion is granted in
perpetuity. More than 10 million acres of private land could be
purchased over the next decade with no congressional oversight.
The Clinton administration is locking up land so fast that the
Associated Press reported on January 16, "Conservation
proposals are falling like rain from the White House as President
Clinton tries to create an environmental legacy . . . Authorities
inside and outside government cannot remember when there has been so
much activity."
During the landmark dedication ceremonies at the Grand Canyon,
Clinton had rebutted such criticisms by assuring us that "If
it’s a legacy for the children of America . . . for hundreds of
years into the future, then it’s not a bad gift to give."
The problem is that Clinton’s record doesn’t support his
claim to concern for children. When he decreed the 1.7-million-acre
Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in 1996, he locked up
the largest clean coal deposit in the world, forcing U.S. industry
to go to foreign sources for clean coal in the future. In the
process, 1,000 jobs were lost, and families across America are
having to pay more for electricity. Of greater concern, the public
school system of Utah was denied an estimated $2 billion in
royalties, according to the Mountain States Legal Foundation.
If the president is not locking up land for the children, as he
claims, just why is he locking it up? Government already owns or
controls 40 percent of the United States. Just how much land is
enough?
The International Connection
Critics of the administration’s land grab point to the United
Nations (UN). They accuse the president of implementing the UN’s
Agenda 21 and the Convention on Biological Diversity. Both were
introduced during the June 1992 Earth Summit held in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil.
Agenda
21 is a 40-chapter tome focused on reorganizing society around
"sustainable" use and development of the planet. Based on
socialist principles of equal sharing of all natural resources,
Agenda 21 sets a goal to control all human activity to protect the
Earth’s ecosystems and biological diversity. Mining, for instance,
would have to be "environmentally sound" and could only be
done "in areas adjacent to protected areas with a view to
furthering protection of these areas." The meaning of
"protected areas" and "environmentally sound" is
not defined in Agenda 21, but it is clarified in the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity (Biodiversity Treaty) and the
Wildlands Project.
| |
| For a larger
scale map, click
here. The Wildlands Project would set up to one-half of
America into core wilderness reserves and interconnecting
corridors (red), all surrounded by interconnecting buffer
zones (yellow). No human activity would be permitted in the
red, and only highly regulated activity would be permitted
in the yellow areas. Four concerned conservative activists
who now make up the board of Sovereignty International were
able to find UN documentation that proved the Wildlands
Project concept was to provide the basis for the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity and used this information
and this map to stop the ratification of the treaty an hour
before its scheduled cloture and ratification vote. ©
2000 Discerning the Times Digest and NewsBytes Join
Discerning the Times
now
and get this 8½ x 11" map free. |
The Wildlands
Project is the master plan for both Agenda
21 and the Biodiversity Treaty, and represents a grandiose
design to transform at least half the land area of the continental
United States into an immense "eco-park" cleansed of
modern industry and private property. The Wildlands concept is
largely the work of Dave Foreman, the principal founder of the
eco-terrorist group Earth First! and a current member of the board
of the Sierra Club. Foreman describes the Wildlands Project as an
effort to "tie the North American continent into a single
Biodiversity Preserve." Foreman summarizes Wildlands as "a
bold attempt to grope our way back to 1492" — that is, to
repeal a half-millennium of Western civilization, with its unique
blessings of material prosperity, technological progress, private
property and individual rights.
According to Foreman, Wildlands activists would "identify
existing protected areas" such as federal and state wilderness
areas, parks, national monuments, refuges and other designated
sites; such tracts would serve as "core reserves"
completely off-limits to human activity. The next step would be to
create wilderness corridors along streams, rivers and mountain
ranges that interconnect the core reserves. Where necessary, private
property would be purchased, condemned or regulated to fill in the
gaps where public land did not exist.
The activists would then demand the creation of "buffer
zones" to further protect the core areas and corridors.
Wildlands Project co-author Reed Noss explains that in the core,
corridor and buffer areas, "The collective needs of non-human
species must take precedence over the needs and desires of
humans." Because mining is viewed as highly destructive, it
cannot be allowed in protected areas, and its use must be severely
limited elsewhere so as to be "environmentally sound."
Noss defined the all-encompassing magnitude of the Wildlands
Project in Wild Earth, the
publication of the Cenozoic Society. Noss explains that "Half
of a region in wilderness is a reasonable guess of what it will take
to restore viable populations of large carnivores and natural
disturbance regimes, assuming that most of the other 50 percent is
managed intelligently as buffer zones. Eventually, a wilderness
network would dominate a region and thus would itself constitute the
matrix, with human habitations being the islands."
John Davis, editor of Wild Earth, acknowledges that the Wildlands
Project seeks nothing less than "the end of industrial
civilization.... Everything civilized must go. . ."
In this bizarre scheme, human civilization must be radically
reconfigured, mines would be closed, roads torn from the landscape,
timber harvesting stopped and human populations relocated. All of
this is to be done, according to Wildlands co-founder Michael Soulé,
in harmony with a prophetic vision: "The oracles are the fishes
of the river, the fishers of the forest and articulate toads. Our
naturalists and conservation biologists can help us translate their
utterances. Our spokespersons, fund-raisers and grass-roots
organizers will show us how to implement their sage advice."
Defeating the Biodiversity Treaty
All of this could be dismissed as flatly ridiculous were it not
for its central role in the UN
Convention on Biological Diversity. The Biodiversity Treaty
would permit a restructured and unaccountable UN Trusteeship Council
to regulate any human activity that presents potential harm to
biological diversity. In principle, this mandate would cover all
human activity, given that almost anything humans do is deemed as
harmful to biological diversity. The text
of the treaty itself was a skimpy 18-page framework, or what
Senator Jesse Helms (R-NC) correctly called "a preamble falsely
described as a treaty."
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THE
BIODIVERSITY TREATY WOULD PERMIT A RESTRUCTURED AND
UNACCOUNTABLE UN TRUSTEESHIP COUNCIL TO REGULATE ANY HUMAN
ACTIVITY THAT PRESENTS POTENTIAL HARM TO BIOLOGICAL
DIVERSITY
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The Senate was asked to authorize the creation of implementing
"protocols" that would be written after the treaty had
been ratified and would be binding upon the signatories. The
"factual" information upon which the implementing language
was to be based was found in a 1,140-page UN
Global Biodiversity Assessment (GBA) that was in draft form when
the Senate was considering the treaty.
The Senate was poised to ratify the Biodiversity Treaty in
September 1994, when the American sheep industry obtained a portion
of the draft GBA from the International
Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) in Switzerland, the
original author of the treaty. To carry out the terms of the treaty,
according to the GBA, "Representative areas of all major
ecosystems in a region need to be reserved," and such
"[reserved] blocks should be as large as possible . . . buffer
zones should be established around core areas and . . . corridors
should connect these areas. This basic design is central to the
Wildlands Project in the United States . . . a controversial . . .
strategy . . . to expand natural habitats and corridors to cover as
much as 30 percent of the U.S. land area."
In fact, Wildlands would re-primitivize no less than 50 percent
of the U.S. land area.
The draft GBA, along with maps provided by Environmental
Perspectives, Inc. depicting what this would look like when fully
implemented, arrived the day of the vote and was taken to the Senate
floor by Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX) a mere hour before
the scheduled cloture vote for the treaty. The extremely
controversial UN information caused then-Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell (D-ME) to withdraw the treaty from consideration. It
was never voted on.
The connection between the Biodiversity Treaty and the Wildlands
Project was not a coincidence. The treaty was originally written by
the IUCN in 1982, about the time it was promoting a new science
called conservation biology, which, in turn, provided the
justification for the Biodiversity Treaty. Two of the key promoters
of this unproven science were none other than Reed Noss and Michael
Soulé who, along with Dave Foreman, co-authored the Wildlands
Project. Although few Americans have even heard of the IUCN, this
organization has its fingerprints on just about every alleged
environmental problem in America today.
The IUCN
The IUCN
is an accredited scientific advisory body to the United Nations.
Its members include 878 state and federal governmental agencies and
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in 181 countries. The IUCN’s
official mission is "to influence, encourage and assist
societies throughout the world to conserve the integrity and
diversity of nature and to ensure that any use of natural re-sources
is equitable and ecologically sustainable."
The IUCN has provided many laudable services since its creation
in 1946. There are problems, however, originating from its very
peculiar vision of "equity," "sustainability"
and natural "diversity."
The spring 1996 issue of the IUCN’s Ethics Working Group’s
publication, Earth
Ethics, candidly admits that the IUCN "promotes alternative
models for sustainable communities and lifestyles, based in
ecospiritual practices and principles . . . to accelerate our
transition to a just and sustainable future . . . humanity must
undergo a radical change in its attitudes, values and behavior. . .
In response to this situation, a new global ethic is taking form,
and it is finding expression in international law." [Italics
added.]
Despite its pretensions to being a scientific body, the IUCN
eschews the scientific method when it is convenient to do so. The
organization’s Commission on Environmental Strategy and Planning
(now the Commission on Environmental, Economic and Social Policy)
claims a mandate to "change human behavior" by using a
strategy "based less on the facts . . . than on the values they
hold."
Indeed, the IUCN’s entire approach to conserving the
"integrity and diversity of nature" is based not on facts,
but essentially on religious theories of conservation biology. The
theories are themselves rooted in a version of pantheism — the
belief that nature is god and therefore knows best, and that all
human activity leads to "fragmentation" of ecosystems,
which in turn leads to a depletion of biodiversity.
Fragmentation leaves "islands" of undisturbed
ecosystems that supposedly are too small to maintain biodiversity.
Protecting and expanding these "islands" of biodiversity
thus becomes imperative, as does connecting these
"islands" by "wildlife corridors." Thus the
basic template of the Wildlands Project is derived directly from the
IUCN’s "ecospiritual" assumptions.
The IUCN bias for "values" rather than
"facts" is reflected in the very first issue of the IUCN-created
journal Conservation
Biology: "By joining together those who are [wise], the
worst biological disaster in the last 65 million years can be
averted. We assume that environmental wounds inflicted by ignorant
humans and destructive technologies can be treated by wiser
humans." As might be expected, the "ignorant humans"
are the miners, timber harvesters and resource developers who
provide goods and services to all Americans.
Beyond IUCN
Of particular concern is the shocking realization that IUCN
membership incorporates various U.S. federal agencies, NGOs and UN
agencies as allies in its war against "ignorant humans."
Through the IUCN, government agencies such as the U.S. Fish &
Wildlife Service, the National Park Service, the U.S. Forest
Service, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
and EPA can huddle in private with the Society of Conservation
Biology, the Sierra Club, the Nature Conservancy, the National
Wildlife Federation, the National Audubon Society, the Natural
Resources Defense Council and the Environmental Defense Fund. Also
included are the United Nations Education Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO), the United Nations Development Program (UNDP)
and the United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP).
Most IUCN funding comes from government agencies and private
foundations like the Ford and MacArthur foundations. The U.S. State
Department is contributing $255 million to the IUCN in FY 2000 and
is budgeting an equal amount for 2001. The U.S. Forest Service,
National Park Service and Fish and Wildlife Service also contribute
unspecified amounts of funds.
By playing the role of scientific advisor, the IUCN coalition of
federal agencies and NGOs is developing joint strategies to
implement the "ecospiritual" theology like the science of
conservation biology in America. Federal agencies then redefine
existing law to conform to international law and agreements like the
Biodiversity Treaty, UNESCO’s
Man and the Biosphere Program (MAB) and UNESCO’s
World Heritage Treaty. The Senate gave its advice and consent to
ratification of the World Heritage Convention in 1973; the MAB
program was unilaterally implemented by the State Department the
same year through "memoranda of understandings" without
input or oversight by Congress.
Both programs have been quietly implemented by federal and state
bureaucrats with little or no input from local citizenry. An
archipelago of 47 Biosphere Reserves and 20 World Heritage Sites
occupying more than 53 million acres of U.S. soil already has been
established with little to no congressional oversight. Even so, the
United Nations claims no sovereignty over our parks. This begs the
question: How is "sovereignty" defined in this context?
Implementing the Global Vision
During a September
22, 1997, address to the UN General Assembly, President Clinton
suggested he is in agreement with UN goals: "The forces of
global integration are a great tide, inexorably wearing away the
established order of things . . . New global environmental
challenges require us to find . . . a new strategy of security . . .
Nations have begun to put that strategy in place through a new
network of institutions and arrangements . . . Through this web of
institutions and arrangements, nations are now setting the
international ground rules for the 21st century . . . isolating
those who challenge them from the outside." [Italics added.]
In saying this, the president reaffirmed that his administration
has been conforming U.S. policy to UN strategies since he took
office. An August
1993 EPA internal working document has provided the blueprint
for implementing UN policy in the United States during his entire
presidency: "Natural resource and environmental agencies . . .
should . . . develop a joint strategy to help the United States
fulfill its existing international obligations (e.g. Convention on
Biological Diversity, Agenda 21) . . . The executive branch should
direct federal agencies to evaluate national policies . . . in light
of international policies and obligations, and to amend national
policies to achieve international objectives."
Clinton’s actions in setting aside huge national landmarks,
wilderness areas and interconnecting river corridors via the Clean
Water Action Plan are being done to fulfill the requirements of the
Convention on Biological Diversity and the Wildlands Project, even
though the U.S. Senate never gave its advice and consent to
ratification of the treaty as required by the Constitution of the
United States.
Will Environmentalism Destroy the
Environment?
These initiatives represent a major threat to private property
and the control of government over American citizens. The cabal of
IUCN, NGOs, federal agencies, UN bureaucracies and private
foundations are knowingly and unknowingly manipulating the system to
destroy the mining and extractive industries in America. By doing so
they are forcing citizens of industrialized nations to get needed
raw materials from Third World nations that — even with mining and
environmental laws on the books — often have no means or desire to
enforce them.
This point was tragically brought home earlier this year when
three devastating dam breaches occurred at two different northern
Romanian mines. The January spill occurred at the Aurul Gold Mine
and dumped 100 metric tons of cyanide-rich slurry into the River
Somes. Half the mine is owned by Esmeralda Exploration, an
Australian company. The other 50 percent is owned by the Romanian
government.
The second and third spills occurred at Baia Borsa, dumping zinc,
lead and copper into the Viseu River. The Viseu flows through the
Ukraine, then Hungary, where both rivers empty into the Tisza River.
The Tisza joins the Danube in Serbia before looping back along the
Romania-Bulgaria border and then through eastern Romania to the
Black Sea. Thousands of fish were killed, along with the supporting
habitats of the river ecosystems.
Romania has mining laws. They just were not enforced effectively,
and a horrible environmental disaster occurred. Could the world see
more of these disasters if mining is relegated to areas where
enforcement is less than it should be?
The March to Global Governance
The United Nations advocates a solution in what is known as
"global governance." The kinds of accidents that occurred
in Romania theoretically would be prevented through interlocking
international environmental and social treaties and agreements like
the Biodiversity Treaty. Implementing global governance, however,
would require a complete restructuring of the United Nations. The
changes that would be necessary are spelled out in the United
Nations-funded Commission on Global
Governance’s 1995 report Our
Global Neighborhood. If implemented, the restructuring would
enable the United Nations to control every aspect of global society
and commerce.
UN Secretary General Kofi Annan began to implement
these recommendations in July 1997. The changes include
redirecting the mission of the UN
Trusteeship Council to enforce environmental treaties and
agreements so as to protect Earth’s environment. However, this
change in mission and many other recommended changes would require a
new UN charter. Such a charter originally was to be signed by all
heads of state during the UN
Millennium Summit in New York, scheduled to start September 6
this year. That goal was changed, however, when it was exposed by
Sovereignty International, a UN watchdog organization.
The United Nations now denies it will produce a new charter for
signature; however, Sovereignty
International believes the same or a similar goal is going to be
forced by NGOs through their newly published Charter
99 — A Charter for Global Democracy. This document essentially
is a duplication of the recommendations in Our Global Neighborhood.
As bad as the attacks by U.S. federal agencies on mining and
natural resource extraction industries have been for the past few
years, they are nothing compared with what they will be if a new UN
Trusteeship Council becomes operational. In the global governance
plan there are no real checks and balances built in to keep
bureaucrats and NGOs from doing as they please. There is no
accountability, even to the people of the world. Such a system can
bring only corruption, inefficiency and eventually tyranny.
Education Is the Key
It seems incredible that there are those in positions of power
who knowingly or unknowingly seek to destroy the very sector of our
economy that provides the goods, services and fundamental wealth of
the United States. Until technology can create materials out of thin
air, everything that we use and eat starts as a natural resource
either on or under the land.
Yet America can have the best of both worlds. It has some of the
toughest mining laws in the world. Our society has the wealth to pay
for environmental protection while providing the goods and services
people demand. The overwhelming majority of our mining companies
employ environmental protections even for their operations in
developing nations that do not require them.
In every place where a part of the global governance agenda has
been exposed, people have effectively rallied to stop its
implementation. The role of informed citizens has repeatedly
vindicated Thomas Jefferson’s belief that there is "no safe
depository of the ultimate powers of the society but by the people
themselves. And if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise
their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take
it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
Stopping the march to global governance will only happen if
principled Americans unite, get the facts straight and expose the
Wildlands Project, Agenda 21, the Biosphere Reserve program and
related endeavors as lethal threats to our independence and
constitutional order.
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