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WARNING! Danger Will Robinson! (TWP - Part 1)

Eagle

Lifetime NAXJA Member
NAXJA Member
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Terra Firma
Just received an e-mail from the land use coordinator for some of the clubs here in the northeast, with an alert about The Wildlands Project. I've known about it for a couple or three years, and there are some very stupid (as well as sneaky and under-handed) aspects to this plot.

NOTE: Too long for one post. I'm splitting it into two sections -- please be sure to read both.

Dave Brill said:
Here is a bit of an article on the Wildlands Project... I know its been awhile and I think its a good time to throw back out there to remind everyone what we are up against... we all pay taxes to up keep these areas... we pay taxes to up keep hundreds of areas that we will never be able to use because tyhey have been shut down to 4WD use... although at one point in time they may very well have been open to our use. That should get your ire up just a bit... if it doesn't consider the next step... the green whackos going after our rights to use PRIVATE land... yep.... Private isn't necessarily our sanctuary... We must be aware of bills and legislation presented that will wear down our property rights... rights that don't/won't only affect our ability to wheel but you mr and mrs homeowner's right to construct a pool, or a deck or cut some trees on your land or add an addition or use a lawn mower (yes... in California there is legislation attempting to ban many two stroke mowers...)
Anyway.... here is the article. It is NOT some conspiracy theory... there are people out there working very hard, with millions more dollars then we have, to make it happen.

For additional information, check out these web sites:

http://www.wildlandsproject.org - an informative site by Matt Bennett
revealing the dark side of the Wildlands Project.

http://www.twp.org/ - the site of the Wildlands Project.

For the past 12 years, state and federal land managers have dismissed
The Wildlands Project as a myth while writing key elements of The
Wildlands Project into management plans.

Today, you will find key elements of TWP in legislation, legal
decisions, and administrative actions at al levels of government in
the form of conservation easements, multiple species habitat
conservation plans, critical habitat designation and proposed
wilderness areas.

It is more than loss of access to a recreation route. It is
restrictions that limit fire prevention measures around your home.
It is restrictions that levy increased costs on businesses. It is
lawsuits filed to stop timber salvage operations.

**********************************
<http://www.insightmag.com/news/2001/04/23/Nation/The-Wildlands.Project.WildEyed.In.The.Wilderness-210931.shtml>

THE WILDLANDS PROJECT - Wild-Eyed in the Wilderness

By John Elvin

Sure, life is wild in this country now, but you ain't seen nothin'
yet. With the support of major corporations, wealthy foundations,
environmentalist groups and friends in government, convicted
eco-terrorist Dave Foreman, a founder of the radical Earth First
"Monkey Wrench" gang of professed saboteurs, is mapping a new
"re-wilded" America that would be 50 percent "off-limits" to human
occupation. This huge portion of the re-wilded U.S. mainland would be
home to large carnivorous predators such as grizzly bears, jaguars,
panthers, pumas and packs of wolves.

Ridiculous? Most Americans would have said the same thing only a few
decades ago if told that every driver and passenger in a motor
vehicle would have to be harnessed in or that cigarettes would be
$3.50 a pack and harassed smokers would be huddled on sidewalks like
derelicts.

Foreman's self-proclaimed "baby," the Wildlands Project, is more than
a vision. It's more than a plan. It's an in-the-mill, happening thing.

The Wildlands Project (TWP) is "the most ambitious and far-reaching
attempt yet to reinvent the North American" continent according to
ecologically correct guidelines, says Matt Bennett of the Citizens
With Common Sense monitoring group. "Wildlands will be core reserves
of millions of acres connected by vast corridors following rivers and
other migratory paths from west to east, from Central America and
Mexico through the U.S. and Canada, using national forests and other
government lands."

Where government lands or trust lands owned by environmental groups
are unavailable, private property will be acquired by regulatory
decree or eminent domain. When you see a river, tract of land or
whole region designated as a U.S. Heritage site, U.N. Biosphere
Reserve, greenway, trail, path or some other special name conferred
by environmentalists and their legislative and bureaucratic allies,
"think Wildlands in the making," warns Bennett.

Designating these areas as environmentally unique provides a foot in
the door, "creating the impression that the area has some sort of
holiness, some sort of mystical significance and really should be
protected in a special way," says Carol LaGrasse, president of the
Property Rights Foundation of America. LaGrasse should know: She
lives in Stony Creek, N.Y., a rural hamlet in the heart of the
Adirondack Mountains ordained a U.N. Biosphere Reserve without so
much as local consultation. The spiritual aura that she sees implied
in these designations discourages normal human uses of the land such
as "modern home life, farming, forestry, mining, industry and
commerce," she tells Insight.

"Re-wilding" means that huge core areas in each region will be
returned to prehuman conditions, connected by large roadless and
unoccupied corridors maintained for migratory purposes. Extensive
buffer zones will separate the completely wild areas from enclaves
where humans may work and live. And that's just the beginning. The
wild cores would be expanded as the buffers become depopulated and
re-wilded.

Feeling a little claustrophobic? Well, you won't get any sympathy
from the Wildlanders. Telegraphing the united environmental front he
represents, project founder Foreman says: "All of us are warriors on
one side or another in this war; there are no sidelines, there are no
civilians."

Can this really be? You betcha! Activists involved in Wildlands
planning in Nevada, for instance, see all but Reno, Las Vegas, the
gold mines and the I-80 corridor as returned to nature. "I like the
idea of taking it all and making `people corridors,'" Marge Sill,
federal-lands coordinator for the Sierra Club, told High Country
News. "Move out the people and cars," says Foreman.

"No compromise" is another favored phrase, though Foreman and others
in his group have expressed the belief that their overall re-wilding
plans may not be fully realized for hundreds of years.

One reason to take the project seriously is the big money behind it.
Major foundations fund TWP and its affiliates. Ted Turner's
foundation has been a source of heavy funding, according to Ron
Arnold's book Undue Influence. Other major funding comes from large
donors, including the Pew Charitable Trusts and Patagonia outdoor
gear. Because Wildlands is the nerve center for so many connected,
cooperating regional groups, observers consider foundations providing
those groups with funds, such as the Rockefeller Brothers Foundation,
to be Wildlands supporters.

Turner is of special interest because, when it comes to property
rights, he has reason to be the country's most outspoken advocate.
The billionaire environmental crusader owns close to 2 million acres,
more than any other individual. Yet he not only funds TWP but appears
engaged personally in initiating it.

For one thing, his huge holdings - located in the Northwest,
Southwest, Midwest and South - are described as "a swath," indicating
that he is building his empire in cooperation with the corridor
concept. Conservation easements already are in place on several of
his largest properties. While Turner dismisses concern that his lands
will be given to the government as parks to be re-wilded, he told
Progressive Farmer magazine that he can't guarantee what will happen
in a hundred years. For now, the plan is for the Turner lands to go
to foundations and trusts.

TWP's broader strategy calls for using existing parks and land trusts
and acquiring the rest through methods some critics consider
stealthy. Foreman explained the concept to Derrick Jensen, author of
Listening to the Land, published by Sierra Club Books. "If we
identify, say, a private ranch in Montana that's between two
wilderness reserves, and we feel that 50 years from now it will be
necessary as a corridor for wolves to go from one area to another, we
can say to the rancher, `We don't want you to give up your ranch now.
But let us put a conservation easement on it. Let's work out the tax
details so you can donate it in your will to this reserve system.'
When it's needed for a corridor, it will be there."

Conservation easements can take various forms, the key being that
they essentially prohibit any kind of development. In some instances,
such as Foreman's example, the land may be used agriculturally for
the lifetime of the farmer or rancher, then become a conservation
area. Other arrangements simply prohibit future human use other than
farming or ranching, eliminating development value but keeping the
property private until some advocacy group or government agency sees
it as vital to the cause. Usually, the owner at least has to agree to
develop wildlife habitat on the private land, setting the stage to
call for further "preservation." All such easement arrangements are
subject to legal challenges by interested parties trying to upset the
agreement one way or another, be they heirs or conservation
organizations.

Bennett tells Insight that conservation easements are a major part of
the Wildlands plan. As he sees the process, it's almost diabolical.
Government, acting on behalf of environmental zealots, puts economic
pressure on rural communities through restrictions on logging,
ranching, mining and farming. "As the economic opportunities decline
to the point that it is impossible to make a living, a conservation
easement or even donation of land for some kind of tax credit may
make sense to a landowner," he says.

LaGrasse agrees. Speaking of those who convey title to land trusts,
she says landowners often believe - or often are led to believe -
that land will remain in agricultural use and will not fall into
government hands. "But land trusts acquire land mainly with the
specific purpose of reselling it to the government rather than
holding the title themselves to keep the land as a private preserve,"
she maintains. "And they often make fabulous profits when the land is
rolled over to the government."
 
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