The   Lands in Between: Key to the Future of the West

The Lands in Between: Key to the Future of the West

In Idaho, state wildlife biologists are doing something they never learned in college—teaching trout how to eat native foods. It seems that the hatchery-raised fish, fed a diet of protein pellets instead of stoneflies, have developed rather discriminating palates. They react to worms and other traditional fare the way most five-year-olds do to broccoli. This […]

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 Repost: Building   Trust and Respect in a New West

Repost: Building Trust and Respect in a New West

It’s clear the rural American West is in transition. Ways of life, deeply rooted in the culture of ranching, mining and logging, are challenged by new social and economic forces. Immigrants arrive with their wares stored in hard-drives rather than Conestoga wagons. People move to the region for its amenity values–wilderness, clean air, fish, wildlife […]

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 Flying Blind or Running Scared?

Flying Blind or Running Scared?

In its foreward, Vice President Al Gore announces that Our Stolen Future “raises compelling and urgent questions that must be answered.” The book has been promoted as the next Silent Spring, Rachel Carson’s 1962 book that spawned much of the environmental movement. More likely, it marks the end of an era of gullibility, hysteria, and […]

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 Fostering a new west that respects old values

Fostering a new west that respects old values

New demographics and cultures are defining the next American West. Newcomers, urban and affluent, are escaping cities to build better lives. They work with information and manipulate symbols rather than stuff, and bring with them an utterly different value system for the land. A value system based on a romantic notion of the West’s ecosystems […]

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 Promoting Dialogue, Vision For A New West

Promoting Dialogue, Vision For A New West

Economic analysis can promote environmental quality. By identifying subsidies, inefficiencies, and new opportunities, economists apply their powerful analytical tools to environmental ends. Yet despite its great potential, economic analysis has failed to improve environmental policy in many areas. Environmental regulators often ignore the importance of secure property rights and advocate regulatory “takings” of property with […]

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 Perverse Consequences (P.C.) of the Nanny State

Perverse Consequences (P.C.) of the Nanny State

The feuding between the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and the Hooters chain of restaurants results from government overstepping its bounds. Government has made “Hooters” a household name by stimulating confrontations between market forces and those who abhor sexism and their allies in the Nanny State. People become hot and bothered over Hooters simply because […]

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 Diversity and harmony merge in the marketplace

Diversity and harmony merge in the marketplace

Markets economize on love, that most precious of values. They encourage cooperation and civility among disparate people. This was one of the great lessons of Kenneth Boulding, a Quaker economist who was founding editor of The Journal of Conflict Resolution. Boulding developed the concept of “Spaceship Earth” with the understanding that we’re all in this […]

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 A new coherence emerging in the West

A new coherence emerging in the West

At each summer’s end, I leave our Montana ranch and return to Washington. I love to drive the West. This is a good time to reconsider our culture, ecology, economy and politics. Increasingly, I’m having second thoughts about these subjects. Many friends, academics, business people and environmentalists, are also re-evaluating their approach to environmental goals. […]

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 Hunting plays a key role in habitat conservation

Hunting plays a key role in habitat conservation

MANY environmentalists oppose hunting. They find the idea of killing animals for sport repulsive and incomprehensible. For these people, sport hunting is an obsolete remnant of our barbaric past, one excised by civilized cultures This position is empathically understandable, but logically paradoxical because hunters are important supporters of wildlife habitat protection. Hunters save habitat as […]

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 Recognizing real heroes of free-market principles

Recognizing real heroes of free-market principles

WHAT is a hero? In literary epics such as “Gilgamesh,” the “Illiad,” or “Beowulf,” heroes are those who defy pain and death to live out a personal code of unqualified honor. In economists’ parlance, heroes risk significant personal costs to help others. Heroism continues today, though it is, as always, in short supply. The familiar […]

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