Posted inOctober 12, 2009: Silenced Springs?

Merit, more broadly defined

Ray Ring’s article “Is Obama’s goal of diversity trumping other goals?” suggests that the administration’s decision to hire minorities for key governmental positions compromises environmental goals in favor of ethnic diversity (HCN, 8/17/09). While there are undoubtedly some traditional “heavy hitter” white men who would merit these positions, merit in this context should be understood […]

Posted inSeptember 14, 2009: Home

A win for the gipper?

Though there has been widespread praise in some quarters, I find it difficult to muster much enthusiasm for Sen. Tester’s Forest Jobs and Recreation Act described in “Taking Control of the Machine” (HCN, 7/20/09). Perhaps a historical anecdote will help explain. In 1988, both houses of Congress passed a Montana wilderness bill that protected 1.4 […]

Posted inSeptember 14, 2009: Home

Beef: It (should be) what’s for dinner

The reference in Andrea Appleton’s review of Righteous Porkchop: Finding a Life and Good Food Beyond Factory Farms (HCN, 8/03/09) to the “soil erosion and desertification intensive grazing can cause” is technically and ecologically incorrect. Modern, progressive ranchers follow a management scheme called intensive grazing that results in increasing the organic content of the soil, […]

Posted inSeptember 14, 2009: Home

Lawsuits of last resort

“Thinking Outside the Timber Box” discussed the Center for Biological Diversity’s efforts to restore northern Arizona’s once-stately ponderosa pine forests (HCN, 7/20/09). Our memo of understanding with Arizona Forest Restoration Products does not waive the Center’s right to appeal or litigate Forest Service decisions. It instead promotes high-quality ecological restoration projects to preclude the need […]

Posted inSeptember 14, 2009: Home

Pass on gas

I find it unfortunate that Randy Udall has suggested that natural gas, a fossil fuel, can save the world (HCN, 8/17/09). The implication is that the relatively recent discoveries about how to better exploit shale gas will be sufficient to meet a substantial part of our energy needs. The article gives citizens a false sense […]

Posted inAugust 31, 2009: The dark side of dairies

Collaborative misinformation

Gary Nabhan’s hit piece on Jon Jarvis, Obama’s nominee for Director of the National Park Service, is misinformed, replete with false assertions and does a disservice to dedicated, longtime agency employees (HCN, 8/3/09). Nabhan’s assertion that Jarvis and Point Reyes National Seashore Superintendent Don Neubacher are trying to “phase out” and “evict” oyster farming and […]

Posted inAugust 31, 2009: The dark side of dairies

Righteous steak, too

Your review of my book Righteous Porkchop had a serious flaw (HCN, 8/3/09). The reviewer suggested that I intentionally avoid criticizing cattle ranching because of my own involvement in it. This fundamentally misses the argument the book is making about modern industrialized food production, namely that today’s confinement poultry, hog, and dairy operations, which keep […]

Posted inJuly 27, 2009: The Most Cooked-Up Catch

Deals on wheels

“Thinking Outside the Timber Box” left out the struggles of the Montana Mountain Bike Alliance, which represents the thousands of mountain bike riders in Montana (HCN, 7/20/09). There is a middle ground of recreation that lies between the “motorheads” and the wilderness-loving hikers. Bicyclists have gravitated to the beautiful locations in the Beaverhead-Deerlodge that were […]

Gift this article