The one abiding goal of both the Greens and animal rights lunatics
is to attack America's economic base in every way possible. This is why,
for the past few decades, they have sought to undermine every kind of
industry in the nation, from timber to energy, from agriculture to fast
foods, from mining to ranching.
Whole books have been written on this subject, but it is instructive to
take a quick look as just some of the recent headlines that reflect the
myriad ways Greens and Animal Rights people engage in an endless war on
America.
In early April, the US Navy announced drastic cutbacks at its large
base in Puerto Rico. Some 2,300 employees at the Roosevelt Roads Naval
Station, including both military and civilians, will be transferred
elsewhere or lose their jobs. Why? Well, maybe you recall the outcry
against the Navy's use of the Vieques bombing range to train its aviators.
The protesters, among them a large contingent who said the bombing was
harming the wildlife and environment on the small island, won out.
The loss of more than 2,000 jobs leave Puerto Rico is a Green's dream
come true. Depriving the Navy of a training area it had used for some
sixty years was also another Green victory. They have used environmental
laws to thwart military training on bases throughout the nation. Now some
22,600 acres will be returned to the turtles, birds and whatever wildlife
may want to live there. How the base's former employees will live is of
little concern to the Greens.
Not surprisingly, the Defense Department is asking Congress to exempt
it from environmental laws that are burdensome and restrict military
training. Hearings were held in March on The Readiness and Range
Preservation Initiative. Brock Evans, a spokesman for the Endangered
Species Coalition, called the exemptions a "shocking occurrence" at a
press conference of several environmental organizations. Given the
extraordinary performance of our military in Iraq, shouldn't we give these
people what they want and need?
Also in April, an environmental group called American Rivers has
engineered the buyout of the Naches Hydropower Plant near Yakima,
Washington. Owned by Pacificorp is a large power producer in the western
United States and the plant had been in operation since 1904. All of a
sudden, though, the Naches River became "navigitable", a legal definition
that had never previously applied to it. The Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission is required to insure that such plants do no harm to 90% of the
fish in such rivers. The cost to Pacificorp to meet this requirement
turned the plant into a liability.
This is what all "environmental" laws are intended to achieve.
Washington State will spend $1.2 million and the Bureau of Reclamation
will spend $7.3 to buy and close down the plant. The fish will be happy,
but those who received their electricity from this plant ware likely to
see their energy bills rise. A nation that lacks sufficient energy
generation will find itself in decline sooner or later. The Greens oppose
any energy generation other than windmills and solar panels.
Amidst all the war news coming out of Iraq, it was easy to miss the
bombings occurring here at home. Oh? You didn't know about them? How about
the attempted bombing of not one, but two McDonald's in Chico, California,
in March? The perpetrators had scrawled "Meat is Murder", "Species
Equality" and "Animal Liberation Front" in red spray paint on the exterior
of the Happy Meal's home.
And it's not just McDonald's and other fast-food establishments the
Animal Rights lunatics have declared war upon. In March, Michelle Malkin,
a syndicated columnist, took note of the way these domestic terrorists
have declared war on the United States. Oh? You didn't know about that
either? In a manifesto published on several left-wing Internet sites,
"eco-thug" Craig Rosebraugh called on the anti-war crowd to take "direct
actions" against American military facilities, government buildings, and
against corporations and media outlets. Sounding like al Qaeda, the
manifesto called for attacks on the financial centers of the nation, urged
large-scale urban rioting, and efforts to close down national networks.
Okay, right about now you're thinking, but this guy is one lone nutcase.
Wrong! There is a widespread Animal Rights and Earth Liberation network of
people ready to do whatever they can to wreak havoc here at home.
Also in March, David Barbarash of the North American Animal Liberation
Front released its annual report for 2002 and bragged over "100 illegal
direct actions" committed against American businesses, government
agencies, and universities. Didn't know about that either? Well, now you
do.
The problem, of course, is that these attacks occur here and there, are
never reported in a cohesive fashion, and the result is that we don't see
how they add up over the years in terms of the harm done. Nor are they
perceived to be another form of war on America. But they are.
It is time to use The Patriot Act against the Green and Animal Rights
terrorists in our midst. Indeed, it is long overdue.
Alan Caruba is the author of a new book, "Warning Signs", and a
commentator whose weekly column is posted on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center.
Copyright, Alan Caruba, 2003
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