100 Years of Forest Service Ineptitude

100 Years of Forest Service Ineptitude

1997 marks the centennial of the National Forest System. This is America’s best example of centralized government planning and management, our glorious experiment in “sylvan socialism.” In the Federalist Papers, America’s founders urged us to consider each law and policy as an experiment to be evaluated and perhaps modified. The end of a century’s experiment […]

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 The GOP Can’t See The Forest For The Trees

The GOP Can’t See The Forest For The Trees

The U.S. Forest Service continues to throw money and timber away, but don’t expect the Republican-led Congress to call a halt to this long-running story of government waste. The GOP is brain-dead when it comes to sparing live trees. Last week , Louisiana-Pacific Corp. placed the winning bid of $155,190 for 1.8 million board feet […]

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 Resurrection   of Hyalite Sale Betrays Agency Bias

Resurrection of Hyalite Sale Betrays Agency Bias

Like a zombie in a second-rate horror movie, the Hyalite timber sale is once again rising from the grave. Reaction is predictable: already on the defensive, the Forest Service promises a “kinder, gentler” project, while environmentalists scramble for silver bullets, trying desperately to send this beast to its grave. Resurrection of the Hyalite sale guarantees […]

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 The Failure of America’s Sylvan Socialism

The Failure of America’s Sylvan Socialism

February 22, 1997 marks the centennial of the creation of the national forest system. We can learn a lot from America’s century-long romance with sylvan socialism. This Progressive Era experiment featured centralized planning by green Platonic despots; it has inspired America’s environmental legislation ever since. The Progressive Era reformers, in contrast to America’s Founding Fathers, […]

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 Liberating National Parks from Political Dependency

Liberating National Parks from Political Dependency

“By establishing a nonprofit trust to manage the Presidio’s property, it gives us a blueprint for national parks that one day will be able to sustain themselves without government funds,” President Bill Clinton announced last month. He was in part referring to legislation he signed which turned over management of the Presidio National Park in […]

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 Environmentalism Needs A Free Press

Environmentalism Needs A Free Press

The First Amendment of the Constitution safeguards that most essential feature of democracy: the liberty to communicate ideas and advocate alternatives to the status quo. It protects freedom of the press, speech, assembly, and religion. It guarantees our right to complain to and about the government. Environmental advocates use these freedoms to champion reform. Greenpeace […]

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 Clinton’s “Green Decrees”: Easy Answers Postpone Reform

Clinton’s “Green Decrees”: Easy Answers Postpone Reform

Election politics brought a wave of “green decrees” from Washington. President Clinton has locked in the support of national environmental groups by resolving environmental controversies by executive order. Most recently, Clinton declared 1.7 million acres of southern Utah (seven times larger than Mount Rainier National Park) a national monument, using authority granted under the 1906 […]

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 Conquest of the Columbia Carried Tremendous Costs

Conquest of the Columbia Carried Tremendous Costs

Some books change our thinking about institutions long taken for granted. Marc Reisner’s Cadillac Desert explained how Western water flows uphill toward political payoffs. Alston Chase’s Playing God in Yellowstone exposed the politics which trump both science and economics in our national parks. They herald fundamental reform by publicizing the gaps between intentions and results. […]

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 Finding Defenses Against Parasitic Bureaucracies

Finding Defenses Against Parasitic Bureaucracies

More young Americans believe in UFOs than believe they’ll receive Social Security. Only 25% of Americans trust the federal government. 30 years ago it was 75%. No wonder — the federal government now runs trillion-dollar deficits, dedicates 15% of its budget to pay interest on the national debt, and spends two-thirds of what remains on […]

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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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