Tuesday, September 03, 2024


We Can’t Compromise When It Comes to Preserving Wilderness


  
 September 3, 2024
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Gallatin Range, Montana. 

Photo: Jeffrey St. Clair.

In the 1930s, Bob Marshall (for whom the Montana wilderness is named) started the Wilderness Society.

Marshall declared at the organization’s founding: “We do not want those whose first impulse is to compromise. We want no straddlers, for, in the past, they have surrendered too much good wilderness and primeval areas which should never have been lost.”

Marshall realized long ago that wilderness designation is the gold standard for conservation. If you want to protect an area’s ecological function, wildlife and wildness, there is no better way than formal wilderness designation.

Tragically, most of the so-called conservation groups in Montana, including the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, The Wilderness Society, and Wild Montana (formerly Montana Wilderness Association), have forgotten Marshall’s admonishment.

Today, these organizations support the Gallatin Forest Partnership, a proposal to reduce wilderness protection acreage in the Gallatin Range south of Bozeman.

Congress gave the Gallatin Range interim wilderness status in 1977 as part of Senate Bill 393. The legislation designated the 155,000-acre Hyalite-Buffalohorn-Porcupine Wilderness Study Area.

The Act requires that “the wilderness study areas designated by this Act shall, until Congress determines otherwise, be administered by the Secretary of Agriculture so as to maintain their presently existing wilderness character and potential for inclusion in the National  Wilderness Preservation System.”

The word “shall” means the Forest Service has no choice but to protect the wilderness quality of the WSA. Unfortunately, the Forest Service has neglected its obligation to maintain wilderness character with the express support of the above organizations.

Approximately 155,000 acres of the Gallatin Range are within S. 393, while the Gallatin Partnership proposal only proposes 104,000 acres for wilderness designation.

Worst for wildlife and wildlands, the Partnership proposes changing WSA status for two of the Gallatin Range’s most important wildlife areas—the Buffalo Horn and Porcupine drainages to permit mechanical access by dirt bikes and mountain bikes permanently,

The Gallatin Range deserves full wilderness protection for the 155,000 acres of the S. 393 WSA and up to 100,000 acres of additional roadless lands for a 255,000-acre wilderness.

We cannot create wilderness. We can only lose it. We must acknowledge Marshall’s admonishment and keep the (fence) straddlers from compromising away one of the best wildlands in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

George Wuerthner has published 36 books including Wildfire: A Century of Failed Forest Policy


Please, No Diamonds for the Wilderness 


Act’s 60th Anniversary


 





South Sister Mountain, Three Sisters Wilderness, Oregon. 

Photo: Jeffrey St. Clair.

The 1964 Wilderness Act celebrates its 60th anniversary on September 3rd. Diamonds are a gift for a 60th wedding anniversary and presumably represent strength, but from a humanitarian lens diamonds have evolved to represent consumption and exploitation.

This duality resonates with the 1964 Wilderness Act’s diamond anniversary and provides an opportunity to reflect on where we are now and what the National Wilderness Preservation System—Wilderness—faces moving forward.

The Wilderness Act is exceptional. Unlike the National Environmental Policy Act, which requires the government to understand the possible environmental impacts of its proposed actions, unlike the Endangered Species Act, which protects only those species close to disappearing entirely, the Wilderness Act proactively protects ecosystems by minimizing human interference. Ecosystems and organisms within Wilderness simply exist on their own evolutionary terms, sculpted by climate, weather, and wildlife.

The Wilderness Act is our promise to restrain ourselves from consuming Wilderness in a way that degrades its future wildness. We experience Wilderness on its terms—hiking, camping, canoeing, horseback riding, hunting, and fishing. The Wilderness Act prohibits us from developing, mechanizing, degrading, or manipulating Wilderness, even with well-intentioned ideas.

Wilderness is rare. Although Wilderness encompasses 150 distinct ecosystem types nationwide, Wilderness comprises under three percent of the contiguous United States, or about five percent including Alaska. Yet Wilderness tempts special-interest groups. Surrendering to that temptation—creating exceptions for prohibited activities, the diamonds we exploit in Wilderness—will undo the Wilderness Act. The turning point is already here.

One group teeters on the precipice of attaining a nationwide exception. The EXPLORE Act would permit rock climbers to drill metal into Wilderness rock faces and leave these “fixed anchors” as permanent human footprints. One can hike without handrails, and one can climb without fixed anchors, but occasionally one must avoid a route that is otherwise too dangerous. But some climbers want their diamond! The House passed the EXPLORE Act and the Senate is considering it.

Groups are lining up behind the climbers. Utah’s Senator Lee has introduced a bill that would amend the Wilderness Act to allow bicycles—mechanized transport—in Wilderness. Exceptions are a cancer that will spread if ignored. Hand gliders are mechanized like bicycles, why not them? Electric bicycles are quiet bicycles. Electric bicycles have motors, so then why not motorized bikes, too?

Some argue that recreationists are the best wilderness advocates. But if a climber only cares about Wilderness so long as she can use fixed anchors, or a biker only cares about Wilderness insofar as he can bike there, do these folks really care about Wilderness? Or are they more enamored by the sparkly allure of a wild place to recreate with their toys?

Recreationists are hardly the only exception-seekers. Some scientists argue for installations—which the Wilderness Act prohibits—to mine data. Installations are stationary or include tracking collars that researchers and agencies shackle onto wild animals after chasing them down with helicopters. Tracking collars disorient, chafe, and sometimes even kill animals, as one researcher discovered when he found a black bear that suffocated himself trying to remove his collar. State fish and game agencies want to tinker with animal populations for hunting or fishing. These exceptions, sought in alleged pursuit of science or conservation, degrade the lives of individual animals, ignore the role of unmanipulated control groups in scientific experiments, and undermine the Wilderness Act’s mandate for untrammeled communities.

Without restraint, Wilderness dies. Half of the approximately 40 wilderness-related bills introduced to the current Congress create special-interest exceptions in proposed Wildernesses or amend the Wilderness Act. These exceptions allow motorized use, mechanized use, installations, and wildlife manipulation. Alternatively, these bills draw absurdly gerrymandered Wilderness boundaries so although a trail physically cuts through Wilderness, the trail itself is technically not Wilderness, and bikes can ride on through this loophole.

When asked why a Wilderness bill allows exceptions, which normalize Wilderness-degrading activities, Congressional offices point to stakeholders. Stakeholders want to exploit Wilderness for their diamonds, and some conservation organizations—including nationally recognizable names as well as local groups—want the nominal win of a “Wilderness” designation. Perhaps these organizations fail to consider the cost to creatures and their last truly wild sanctuaries. Worse yet, perhaps these organizations understand this market and intentionally traffic in diamonds.

We strengthen laws, follow them, or undo them. Currently, special-interest groups, abetted by Congress and some conservation organizations, are slowly undoing the Wilderness Act. This undoing leads to a future where “Wilderness” becomes an arbitrary title, bestowed without a critical look at ourselves and our ambitions.

Unlike those whose support is conditioned on exceptions, the best Wilderness advocates understand that Wilderness is where we exercise restraint—where nature evolves without intentional human interference, where humans visit without mechanization, and where we refrain from harassing wildlife and degrading their habitat. Wilderness without special-interest exceptions should be our promise to Wilderness for the next 60 years.

Katie Bilodeau is the Legislative Director and Policy Analyst for Wilderness Watch, a national Wilderness organization headquartered in Missoula, Montana. 


Collaborators on the Ropes as Wilderness 


Advocates Fight Back



 

September 2, 2024
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Emigrant Peak Trail in the Custer-Gallatin National Forest. Photo by Jacob Frank, National Park Service.

Somewhere, the industry lobbyists who successfully introduced “collaboration” to the arena of conservation policies and politics are toasting their success at splitting the conservation community.  The proof is playing out right now over the collaborators’ Gallatin Conservation and Recreation Act — which is meeting significant opposition from long-time wilderness advocates.

This is nothing Montanans haven’t seen before in a number of collaborator bills, including Jon Tester’s failed Forest Jobs and Recreation Act.  Likewise, his Blackfoot-Clearwater Stewardship Act is resting peacefully in the Senate since Montana’s Sen. Steve Daines, who now heads the National Republican Senatorial Committee, and will never give Tester a legislative win in an election year.

Yet, despite the utter failure of those oh-so-highly lauded collaborator bills, the Greater Yellowstone Coalition, the Montana Wilderness Association (now doing business as Wild Montana), and The Wilderness Society are pushing their attempt to chop up and dole out the remaining wilderness quality lands and Wilderness Study Areas located between Yellowstone National Park and Bozeman-Livingston.

Like the former collaborator measures, this is another “slice up the pie” act that takes wilderness quality lands and deals them out to special interests — in this case, primarily the mountainbikers, snowmobilers, and other recreationists who are legally prohibited from taking their mechanized toys into the Wilderness Study Areas, which are mandated by law to be managed as wilderness until Congress decides otherwise.

In their own words, the collaborators contend it’s “Act now or lose it all” — which is nothing more than fear-mongering by these big-dollar groups who have been milking the collaborator-friendly foundations for millions of dollars for decades.

Given the fact that Wilderness Study Areas are already protected by law, there’s no particular Sword of Damocles hanging over their heads, nor any deadline on Congressional action, nor any chance of development pressures intruding into these wilderness-quality lands.

Not only are they lying about “losing it all,” they’re equally lying about “permanent protection.”  Perhaps it’s merely a sign of their incredible legislative naivete, but there is no such thing as “permanent” in law.  In fact, laws are meant to be changed or they would still be burning witches at the stake, women couldn’t vote, and slaves would be in chains.  If and when Congress decides to, they can amend the Wilderness Act, change designations and allowable uses, or even repeal it completely.

Moreover, their “act” hasn’t even been introduced yet in the rapidly-closing session of Congress and it’s clear they’re blowing a lot of smoke at Montanans.  And guess what? True wilderness advocates are fighting back against their attempt to chop up the wildlife habitat of these incredible wilderness quality lands.

Some 40 former staffers for the Greater Yellowstone Coalition as well as a former Superintendent of Yellowstone National Park penned a strong rebuttal to the collaborators in a column  titled “Let’s Not Squander Our One Opportunity To Protect A Nationally-Significant Wild Mountain Range.”  Likewise, a group of prominent long-time conservation advocates and former board members of the collaborator groups put their opposition to the plan in their “Park County Leaders and Citizens Call for Protection of Wilderness Landscape” column.

While the collaborators fear-monger, the lesson, as one long-time conservationist put it, is to “advocate, not capitulate.”  The Greater Yellowstone Coalition, Wild Montana and The Wilderness Society have obviously lost their way from years of wandering in the fruitless weeds of collaborative capitulation.  That they’re now facing significant opposition from former staffers, board members, and long-time conservation advocates is good news for wilderness — and a wake up call to the big money collaborator groups and their plan to dole out our remaining wilderness quality lands.

George Ochenski is a columnist for the Daily Montanan, where this essay originally appeared.




Lost in Translation: Radical Politics of a Trans Trade Unionist

 

September 2, 2024

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Image by Josue Isai Ramos Figueroa.

Imane Khelif: Working Class Muslim Hero

For the millionth time: Imane Khelif is not a trans woman. She is AFAB, has female body parts from birth, all the essentialist markers that transphobes use to justify their bigotry.

This truly is an instance of horse-shoe theory at its best. Transphobes start off by laying down these rather invasive and personal markers that women supposedly should be compelled to meet, they denigrate and ostracize those who do not, and then you come full circle with cis women who fail to accomplish their standard of feminine acceptability. (The Onion once had a great headline about the absurdity of this idea, ‘Trans Teen Hatches Nefarious Plot To Undergo Years Of Medical Treatments And Counseling To Win At Swimming.’)

On top of that, let’s talk about everyone’s favorite monograph by Joseph Stalin, the national question. Khelif is from a North African and conservative Muslim country. Her father is a welder in a poor province of Algeria, not a rich, Western-educated secular oligarch whose family lives in some privileged existence on a secluded hill, divorced from the masses of the working poor akin to Kennedys on Cape Cod.

Even if it were the case that Khelif wanted to initiate gender confirming medical care and identify as trans/nonbinary, it would be absolutely impossible because, oops, Algeria outlaws LGBT civil protections and rights, including gender transition, same-sex marriage, and even non-heterosexual coitus. Which is another way of saying that she comes from a country where her working class status makes it fundamentally impossible to safely identify as trans!

There’s also a distinct level of misogynoir, anti-Black/anti-Brown, and anti-Muslim ideology embedded in the subtext of this argument, which is not surprising considering how Brexit demonstrated those sentiments run rampant in the UK when it comes to postcolonial migration. “That devious Arab Muslim, he corrupted the sport and stole the gold from that beautiful European woman Angela Carini! The swarthy Saracens strike again!”

It’s a conspiracy theory that would make the Tory demagogue Enoch Powell proud and provides sustenance to the nativism and racialism unleashed by Brexit.

“Is Black Existence Valid? Over to Our White Correspondent Strom Thurmond!”

Obviously that analogy and rhetorical postulate is grotesque and offensive.

But it also demonstrates the way that the media gate-keeps the reality of trans experience and its validity. There are no non-cis correspondents in the major news media outlets that cover the LGBTQ+ beat in a fashion akin to the late Randy Shilts. The author of And the Band Played On: Politics, People, and the AIDS Epidemic and The Mayor of Castro Street: The Life and Times of Harvey Milk was one of the first openly-gay journalists to write for a mainstream outlet, the San Francisco Chronicle. Today he is acclaimed by scholars and historians for that accomplishment.

But even then, he was far from perfect.

Mayor is fundamentally a book about white middle class men that barely acknowledges the plurality of ethnicities and nationalities contained in San Francisco. There’s no discussion of Chinatown, the Latin American community, the militant dock worker unions, or anything outside a narrow strip, Castro Street, that ended up being the locus for a wider LGBT+ participation in San Francisco’s gentrification. (It also seems like lesbians and non-cis people are nothing more than side-show attractions, “biker dykes” and “bearded ladies.”)

Band Played On ended up being even more disturbing by promoting the grotesque myth of Gaetan “Patient Zero” Dougas, a scientifically-impossible fever dream for neoconservatives during the Reagan administration. In Shilts version of events, the 23-year-old French Canadian flight attendant came to the US on the Bicentennial Fourth of July weekend in 1976 and transmitted the virus to 40 of the original patients that contracted HIV/AIDS. (After four decades of research, we now know the virus instead emerged out of Africa and came to the US via migration from the Caribbean, perhaps Haiti, a decade prior.) Shilts was so sloppy here he even screwed up what Dougas was actually labelled as by the Centers for Disease Control. In CDC coding terms, Dougas wasn’t “Patient Zero,” he was “Patient O,” as in “Patient Out of California.” This ineptitude may have been bad journalism but the Reagan-era readership and critical establishment wasn’t really concerned because it fed into one of Hollywood’s oldest stereotypes and leitmotifs of LGBTQ+ representation, “The Wages of Sin is Death to the Queers.”

In other words, Shilts was not only establishing a timeline for the epidemic, he was also constructing a Respectability Politics that ran contrary to the more libertine inclinations of the community he desired to profile. His button-up-and-tie persona, the classic American shoe-leather reporter, included an injection of his own personal biases and prejudices against those he feared to be equated with. Shilts was a “good” queer because he was “responsible.” This responsibility included his designation of gay bathhouses as dens of vice and death, geographic locations wherein the virus spread like wildfire among debauched men who were not only killing themselves but also risking the safety of the general public, as occurred when the blood bank supply became tainted with the virus, which in turn led to the deaths of heterosexuals like Ryan White and Isaac Asimov. This sensationalizing of queer eros and sex as potentially-fatal by default is not journalism, it is a Culture War fantasia.

The late historian Douglas Crimp wrote “The fact that Shilts places blame for the spread of AIDS equally on the Reagan Administration, various government agencies, the scientific and medical establishments, and the gay community, is reason enough for many of us to condemn the book…predicated on a series of oppositions; it is, first and foremost, a story of heroes and villains, of common sense against prejudice, of rationality against irrationality.” Crimp, using a Marxist vocabulary in an LGBTQ+ liberation politics at a time when groups like the Communist Party were viciously homophobic, dissects the literary and dramaturgical archetypes invoked by both Shilts and playwright Larry Kramer. Crimp was emphatic this Respectability Politics, which hysterically screamed the major vaccination for the virus was chastity and monogamy, not only failed to accomplish anything for those who had contracted the virus, it complimented the lunatic ramblings of Sen. Jesse Helms, who took the floor of the chamber frequently to block federal funding for life-saving safe sex instructional materials and educational programs run by LGBTQ+ organizations like the Gay Men’s Health Crisis.

Crimp pointed to a passage authored by Shilts regarding “AIDSpeak” (the literary allusions to Orwell are blatant and seem to underwrite a certain authorial modus operandi so as to lend suspense to the otherwise-mundane realities of epidemiology conducted by under-funded federal agencies). One of these suspenseful notes is that every “journalist knows the reason for the lack of investigative zeal on the part of his fellows: the people who were dying were gay men, and mainstream American journalists don’t care what happens to gay men. Those journalists would rather print hysteria-producing, blame-the-victim stories than uncover the ‘truth.’ So Shilts would print that truth in And the Band Played On…

All this is to say that the non-cis journalistic beat reporter will confront a similar Respectability Politics. The contours of journalistic discourse in the mainstream press, film, television, and web will look for scapegoats, pariahs, tokens, and kapos. Kramer and Shilts, according to Crimp, became kapos for the neoconservative response to the epidemic.

The non-cis community cannot afford a similar mistake.

Andie Stewart is a documentary film maker and reporter who lives outside Providence.  His film, AARON BRIGGS AND THE HMS GASPEE, about the historical role of Brown University in the slave trade, is available for purchase on Amazon Instant Video or on DVD.