Peddling the three E’s as I pedal to Montana

Peddling the three E’s as I pedal to Montana

THIS is my last column until I return from Montana next autumn. While there, I’ll continue working on the three E’s of environmental policy: ecology, economics and ethics. Only systems that link freedom to act with responsibility for the results of the action work well in dealing with them. Others fail. Linking action with accountability […]

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 Ban on log exports won’t save jobs, environment

Ban on log exports won’t save jobs, environment

MANY people share my deep concern with improving and protecting the wildlife, watersheds, and recreation values of forests. Good policy links these goods with sound economic practices. All require landowners’ confidence in the future. The proposed export ban on raw logs from private lands subverts this confidence and undermines the management required to reach these […]

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 Private log-export ban a deeply flawed policy

Private log-export ban a deeply flawed policy

IT is easy to understand why some people find banning private log exports an attractive idea. Superficially, it appears to save jobs, reduce domestic timber prices and slow environmental degradation caused by logging. But there are good, ethical reasons why a ban makes little sense. In later columns, I will discuss the likely economic and […]

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 The anti-chlorine chorus is hitting some bum notes

The anti-chlorine chorus is hitting some bum notes

HARVARD University Press recently published a book on risk regulation written by Stephen Breyer, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals, First Circuit. Breyer argued that “the resources available to combat health risks are not limitless.” He is exactly right. We maximize health and environmental quality by investing our money and efforts where the […]

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 America’s Earth Day supergift: Siberia

America’s Earth Day supergift: Siberia

1995 will be the silver anniversary of Earth Day. This will be a significant event, for it marks a full generation since we formally recognized our environment’s fragility and value. To celebrate the anniversary, I suggest that we begin a campaign to buy Siberia. This would be America’s Earth Day present to the world. Buying […]

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 Gun control may work, but you may not like it

Gun control may work, but you may not like it

I OFTEN defend the habitat of species I care for deeply: grizzly bears, wild trout and birds of all kinds. But, like most people, I care even more about preserving the quality of my own habitat, my neighborhood and community. Within that habitat, we not only worry about pollution and disease, we are concerned with […]

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 The global warming myth and its selfish defenders

The global warming myth and its selfish defenders

Some of the questions raised in this column are addressed in FREE’s forthcoming book, “Environmental Gore: A Constructive Response to Earth in the Balance.” THE global warming debate, like many environmental issues, is scientifically complex and highly emotional. Its complexity hinders informed debate and its emotionalism makes consensus elusive. Part of the problem is that […]

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 Free-market forces favor public good, not privilege

Free-market forces favor public good, not privilege

GOLD mining on federal lands, raising sugar cane near the Everglades, and irrigating Western deserts all illustrate the critical differences between being pro-free market and pro-business. It is easy to see why many people confuse the two. Wise Use groups and others, out of duplicity or ignorance, posture as defenders of the free market. But […]

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 Rural electrification: time to end subsidies for skiers

Rural electrification: time to end subsidies for skiers

PRESIDENT Clinton is desperately looking for places to cut the budget. He even hints of hitting the Rural Electrification Administration. REA is an egregious example of government subsidies that enrich the wealthy while retarding environmentally beneficial innovation. REA was established in 1935 by President Roosevelt. It subsidized the delivery of electric power to remote rural […]

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