Kudos to Jim Stiles for his essay on Old and New Westerners (HCN, 3/21/05: A look at the West, in the funhouse mirror). Right on target. For 12 years, I have been fortunate to be a member of a group of Old and New Westerners that has, not easily, gotten mostly beyond the typical attitudes […]
Letter to the editor
Watson is selling lies
Regarding the letter “HCN has it wrong on Bush:” I retired from the Bureau of Land Management after 31 years in resource management (HCN, 2/21/05: HCN has it wrong on Bush). The Bush administration’s policies toward the environment and resource management agencies are best described by an old joke, “The difference between rape and ecstasy […]
Bush, Cheney, and the Three Stooges
The non-factual letter by Undersecretary of Interior Rebecca Watson was typical BushCO arrogance (HCN, 2/21/05: HCN has it wrong on Bush). The HCN rebuttal was excellent. Here are five concrete examples of the Bush assault on public lands: This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Bush, Cheney, and the […]
Thumbs up on Yellowstone snowmobiles
My wife and I just returned from a late winter trip to Yellowstone National Park, and as an ardent greenie and retired employee of the Department of Interior, I must admit the new rules for snowmobile use are a good compromise for us all. I have to give Gale Norton thumbs up on this one. […]
Private environmentalism: alive and well
I’ve been patiently reading your teary editorials and now an entire issue on the death of environmentalism (HCN, 2/21/05: Where were the environmentalists when Libby needed them most?). Political rubbish! Talk to the private people on the ground, the people like me who are “doing it” every day, year in and year out. I’ve put […]
Centigrade is fine, thanks
What’s wrong with centigrade for degrees C? (as noted by Charles Miller in “Corrections,” HCN, 3/7/05). After all, the scale covers 100 degrees, from ice to steam at sea level. I suppose it was invented by somebody called Celsius; I prefer the more explanatory centigrade, or just °C. Being corrected for using that is nonsense; […]
This environmentalist fought asbestos
I work as an environmentalist and as a geologist. I worked as a geologist at the Hamilton vermiculite mine mentioned in the Libby, Mont., article, when exploration and permitting was in progress (HCN, 2/21/05: Where were the environmentalists when Libby needed them most?). At a community meeting, I heard the managers tell officials and the […]
Outside the movement — and inside the system
As an environmental scientist who has been working on related issues for 30 years, I’ve never felt myself a member of any “movement,” and I would surmise that few of my practicing colleagues do either. On Earth Day, we’re generally out doing something besides marching in parades and selling T-shirts. If the “movement” as it […]
Environmentalists didn’t fail Libby
Ray Ring’s bizarre exercise in contorted logic raises the bar of non-sequitur journalism to dizzying new heights. But then, that should have been expected, given the fatuously malignant banner lead on your Feb. 21 cover: “Have Environmentalists Failed the West?” What’s next, HCN? “Did Seismologists Fail the Sumatrans?” Or maybe … “Did Firemen Fail the […]
Where were the unions?
High Country News asks: “Where were the environmentalists when Libby, Mont. needed them most?” (HCN, 2/21/05: Where were the environmentalists when Libby needed them most?). However, the more interesting question, closer to the bone, is: “Where were the labor unions?” As Montana’s congressman for 18 years, I knew many of the miners from W.R. Grace’s […]
Enviros need some help with public relations
Jim McCarthy’s comments relating to the end of power rate subsidies for farmers in the Klamath Basin illustrate clearly why conservationists are losing the battle for hearts and minds outside of our largely urban and/or liberal base of support (HCN, 2/7/05: Klamath farmers face new threat). According to the story, Klamath Basin farmers are faced […]
Let’s bury the word ‘environmentalism’
I kept hoping as I read “The Death of Environmentalism” that Shellenberger and Nordhaus meant their title literally, that the repetitive thud of the word across their text would lead them to suggest burying the word. They didn’t. But I will. Let’s stop using “environmentalism.” It’s a lousy word, not least for its harsh embedded […]
The environment is about all of us
I’d like to respond to one of your letter-writers, D.D. Sparks, in the Jan. 24, 2005, issue. Sparks hopes “that those who become so passionate about the environment realize there are other people in the world besides themselves.” I would have thought that any reader of High Country News would already know this fact, but […]
It’s capitalism, stupid
At a time when the morale of the environmental community is at such a low point, why do Ray Ring and the editor wish to feature a story casting aspersions and fomenting factional bickering? One is led to believe that behind every issue, especially here in Montana where I have lived and worked as an […]
Libby locals should have defended themselves
Let’s see if I have Ray Ring’s point of view right: Powerful resource extraction corporations spend years demonizing environmentalists. Not-very-sophisticated locals join the powerful and spend years speaking ill of “damn environmentalists.” Local enviros move on to other “opportunities.” Is Ray Ring telling us we should feel guilty for not assisting those whose lack of […]
Turning back the clock
I owe my career in the Forest Service to woman pioneers such as Wendy Herrett (HCN, 12/6/04: Transforming the Forest Service: Maverick bureaucrat Wendy Herrett). Yet I disagree that discrimination has ended and that ecosystem-based approaches are valued. I joined the Forest Service in 1983. I was the first female in a research management position. […]
HCN wants more drought?
I was startled, shocked, and horrified at the final sentence of the Editor’s Note (HCN, 1/24/05: Who’ll Stop the Rain?). Does the publisher really hope that a severe drought becomes more severe? A more severe drought could have devastating effects on people’s lives, perhaps causing famine and death. Do the people of the West need […]
Drought will come, regardless
I need to fine-tune your editor’s note on long-term drought (HCN, 1/24/05: Who’ll stop the rain?), I’m sure that you folks have heard about the tree stumps in Lake Tahoe. They are over 100 years old and reveal to us that drought has been here in our recent past and it lasted for a very […]
Eliza Murphy captures the West
I would like to commend HCN on running Eliza Murphy’s story, “The Asphalt Graveyard,” as the cover story (HCN, 2/7/05: Caught in the Headlights). I’m embarrassed to say I had never thought much about roadkill before meeting Eliza, last year at the University of Montana’s Environmental Writing Institute. I was struck then, as I am […]
A member of the roadkill community
The cover of HCN caught my eye as I sorted through the mail yesterday evening. I opened it and began reading Eliza Murphy’s article, “The Asphalt Graveyard,” while putting away groceries (HCN, 2/7/05: Caught in the Headlights). I was so gripped by it that I didn’t make it to the dining table but just spread […]
