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Eco-logic

The environmentalist agenda.

In many ways, the world view of the environmentalist resembles that of the anticommunist of the 1950s. Both see the world dominated by a twilight struggle between the forces of light and the forces of darkness. Both contend that a defeat for our side, however remote the location (the South China Sea, the harbors of Alaska), moves the world one step closer to global apocalypse. Both believe in the Manichean notion that those who aren’t with us are against us.

But most Americans aren’t Manicheans. Most of us are too busy making a living and raising a family to worry about the fate of the earth. In many ways, environmentalism is a luxury for those: with enough time and wealth to be green. The only poor environmentalists are those who freely choose to live with low incomes.

Most of the major environmental questions on the ballots last November failed because environmentalists forgot their roots. Most environmental organizations are based in New York, Washington, and San Francisco and are staffed by people who moved to those cities to flee their past. The green groups forgot that most voters are primarily concerned with issues that directly affect their lives. The Republicans were able to use the Willie Horton case to their advantage in 1988, for example, not because voters are dupes easily swayed by a slick media campaign, but because violent, random crime is a problem that most Americans worry about.

But the environmental movement, instead of focusing on concerns that are of immediate consequence to most families (safe neighborhoods, good schools, taxes), stresses risks that are increasingly small and disasters that, if they occur, will happen in the distant future. Most voters will support actions that result in higher prices and a reduced selection of goods only if these actions produce substantial benefits. Moreover, few voters will voluntarily support tax increases. The only Americans who complain about being under-taxed are those, such as the heads of environmental organizations and columnist George Will, who have six-figure salaries and can easily afford reductions in disposable income.

But environmentalists, faced with their defeats, haven’t criticized themselves. Instead, they tend to blame malign, uncontrollable forces.

Thus Merritt Clifton, in the January/February Animals’ Agenda, surveys the November elections and concludes that the voters who rejected “Big Green” in California and tossed out similar referenda in New York, Washington, Oregon, Missouri, and elsewhere did so because of “the spending power of polluting and exploitative industries.”

Clifton searches for capitalist plots with a misguided vigor similar to that of an earlier generation of fanatics who hunted for communist plots. For example, the voters of Telluride, Colorado, resoundingly defeated a proposal to ban fur. The bill lost, says Clifton, because “of massive opposition from the fur trade, whose mailings portrayed it as an attack upon Constitutional rights (even though the U.S. Constitution does not in any way guarantee freedom of commerce).”

One wonders if Clifton has ever heard of the Interstate Commerce Clause, the Ninth Amendment, or the Contract Clause. Perhaps he believes the US Constitution, like the Soviet one, is founded on the rule that everything not permitted is forbidden. But his argument shows one of the many annoying tendencies of environmentalists-a hostility to capitalism and free trade.

An article by David Morris in the March-April Utne Reader reflects that hostility. Morris argues that to save the planet, environmentalists should embrace protectionism.

Morris says free trade in recent years has been replaced by “a radical reinterpretation... laissez faire economics on a global scale, and the abolition of virtually any government regulatory or planning authority.” Free traders, he believes, are tools of “planetary corporations,” which “pledge allegiance to no flag.” “Would it be too provincial to call these people ‘free traitors’?’’ he asks.

Morris’s antitrade case is weak and unconvincing.He attacks American efforts to force Japan to repeal its law existing grocery stores from forming chains or expanding beyond the size of a 7-Eleven. Japan is right to ban the supermarket, says Morris, because this measure protects “neighborhood stores from ruination by shopping malls.” European efforts to use environmental standards as trade barriers, such as Denmark’s requirement that all liquids be sold in refillable bottles (a decision overturned by the European Court of Justice as anticompetitive), are, in Morris’s eyes, sound and necessary ways to combat corporate globalism.

Imagine if we adopted Morris’s standards. Suppose the Environmental Protection Agency decided to ban all supermarkets and insisted that products made in other countries either meet American environmental regulations or be subject to high tariffs. This thought experiment is remarkably easy to conduct, because areas resembling Morris’s dream already exist. They are America’s ghettos.

No, the rich wouldn’t have to worry in the brave new world of the ecological protectionist; as David Frum points out in the February American Spectator, the major losers in any protectionist scheme aren’t the wealthy but the poor, who are forced to pay brutally high prices for the necessities of life. If ecologists want to use trade as a tool to make the world green, they should fight farm subsidies, which not only encourage farmers to plant millions of acres that, in a free market, would be left in their natural state, but also give billions of dollars, francs, marks, and ECUs to corporate fat cats.

But instead of reducing government, most greens would rather expand it. The same is true of reporters. In the January/February Quill, syndicated columnist Warren T. Brookes examines why the press is so fascinated with the “statist quo.” In a sweeping article, Brookes determines that most cries of Eco-doom echoed in the news media are shallow and scientifically inaccurate. Some examples:

  • America’s forests aren’t shrinking -- they’re growing. In 1952, the United States had 664 million acres of forests; in 1987, 728 million acres. Most of this growth has come in privately owned forest lands east of the Mississippi.
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