Environmentalism

The Four Corners of Environmentalism | Eco-Friendly Journal

May 18th, 2012


environmentalismI’ve been struggling with what I perceive as a common problem.  While everyone is being told to Go Green, no one tells us what Going Green is.  We are left to a non-descript and unregulated free market of ideas as to what Green is.  In the end, confusion reigns when it comes to the concept of Green, and everyone wants to hitch a ride on the Green popularity bandwagon.

So, I saw ads for Green cars that use energy better, and I wondered if energy savings is actually Green or was it actually an environmental or sustainable factor involved here.  Well first of all, we need to define these terms because part of the confusion comes from the free interchange of all these terms.  To help you with this concept, I propose the Four Corners of Environmentalism to give an enlightened perspective to the subject.

First of all, Environmentalism is the master topic.  This is well defined in Wikipedia as: “Environmentalism is a broad philosophy and social movement centered on a concern for the conservation and improvement of the natural environment, both for its own sake as well as its importance to civilization.”  Ecology, by the way, is the science of how all things in this world interact including climate, geology, and earth sciences.

Environmentalism, as I see it, breaks into four areas of human-related application, and these would be the four corners of the greater topic.  Though I am sure to take flack for daring to quantify and restrict the terms, I feel an urgent need to add clarity to a confusing subject.  Therefore, I suggest these four corners that make up the greater concept of environmentalism:

1- POLLUTION:  The most obvious issue in environmentalism is the process that harms the environment.  Whether air, water, land, or the destruction of habitat or rain forest; stopping pollution is the premier issue of environmentalism

2- SUSTAINABILITY:  Though the earth is very resilient, there is a growing concern for the depletion of our natural resources.  Sustainability deals with the “Life Cycle” for products used at every level.  This issue considers the harvesting, manufacture, use, and disposal of earth’s resources stressing the key issues of conserve, recycle, and reuse to lessen the environmental impact on mankind’s growing demands.

3- GREEN and GREEN CLEANING:  Green is distinctly about health of the living creatures in this earth.  It frankly moves the primary focus from the larger issues of the world to the more narrow issues of life, health, and well-being.  Conflicts between Green and Environmentalism exist in a complex world of diverse needs not always in harmony.

4- CONSERVATION:  This area is concerned for the preservation of wildlife and wildlands anywhere in the world.  Preserving the rain forest, saving the whales, or protecting natural habitat is a duty of each generation.

While there are various subtopics to each of these four divisions, it is helpful to realize how we participate in each major area of environmentalism.  So, as I see it, an energy-savings car is not Green, per se, as it is an asset in the Sustainable issues that we face.  A car does not make us healthier as a direct consequence though in the greatest extension, there are Green ramifications.  Saving the whales does not add years to my life, but it is very ecological.  Removing phosphates from soap is not Green though it helps the pollution issue under the smaller topic of eutrophication.

Therefore, I struggle with everything being called Green when it is better defined by other excellent categories of environmentalism.  And yes, I know that nearly everything in the grand topic of environmentalism has health benefits to the world and all in the world.  The stretching of the Green moniker to every aspect of environmentalism is hurtful to our intelligent efforts to make a difference.  What is wrong with addressing pollution as pollution instead of Green concept?  Shouldn’t sustainability stand in its own  strength when we plant more trees rather than calling is “Greenification”?  Every cause and endeavor needs to have clarity in their terms and definitions, and the immense environmental movement needs clarity if we are to make serious progress.

Written by R. Michael Richmond, Director of Green Clean Institute

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Environmentalism and the West | Climate Nonconformist

May 18th, 2012

Walter Starck brilliantly analyses the impact environmentalism has had on Western civilisation.

While the benefits of cleaner air and water have been apparent and undeniable, the damage inflicted by misguided environmentalism has been largely unrecognised even though massively extensive and deleterious to human wellbeing.

This damage has included direct impacts and benefits prevented as well as the more indirect effects of repression and loss of freedom and opportunity.

[...]An unholy coalition of politicians, activists, bureaucrats, academics, and the media have found it profitable to feed into and use the urban eco-delusions for sundry other agendas. For the politicians it affords a cheap shop at green votes. For activists it’s campaigns that attract public attention and donations. For bureaucrats it’s increased authority and budgets. For academics it’s grants and recognition. For the media it’s the attention grabbing drama of threats and conflicts.

[...]A peculiar adjunct of all this has been the enshrinement of an imaginary precautionary principle concocted to mandate that any suggestion of a detrimental environmental effect must be addressed with full measures to prevent it. Its formulation makes no reference to probability, cost, or risks and it offers a ready cloak for sundry other agendas. Logically it would even preclude itself as everything we do or don’t do entails risk, including precautionary measures themselves. Amazingly, this vacuous and pernicious piece of nonsense has even been written into the enabling legislation of various government agencies charged with various facets of environmental management.

And taught as fact in schools, I might add.

(Via: Australian Conservative)

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Globalized Eco-Islam – a Survey of Global Islamic Environmentalism

May 18th, 2012

Does Islamic Environmentalism exist? That is a question posed by researchers at Leiden University in a paper entitled Globalized Eco-Islam – A Survey of Global Islamic Environmentalism. The survey published earlier this year seeks to answer who is speaking out for Islam about environmental issues (the actors) and what ideas, theories, perspectives and views are proposed (the discourses)?

The researchers argue that a new type of environmental movement is emerging, Islamic Environmentalism, that includes Muslim engaged within a wide range of environmental and sustainability issues such as eco-philosophies, environmental law and eco-certified halal products and services.

The report is chronologically structured, documenting the rise of the environmental movement from the early seventies to the present, highlighting the evolution of Islamic environmental theories. It also covers Muslim environmental policy makers, interfaith platforms, civil society groups, individuals and communities, the financial and business sectors and the contributions of Islamic scholars towards the development of Islamic Environmentalism.

The findings of the review confirm that Islamic Environmentalism does exist and that it has taken on various forms over the last forty years, evolving from a more theoretical approach in the 1970’s that concentrated on Islamic theories of nature and its implications, to the last decade where these principles were put into practice. Recently it has spread to larger and more receptive audiences that aim to Green their Deen, through adopting renewable energy, clean technologies and sourcing organic and/or regionally grown food.

The survey summarizes the approaches taken by the Muslim community under the umbrella of Islamic Environmentalism. These include:

1)      Theological and Islamic law based (classical normative)

2)      Mystical philosophical nature or eco-philosophy (ethical)

3)      Reform of science and technology (Islamic science)

4)      Social political reform (Eco-Islamist)

5)      Land-water resource management, nature conservation (conservationist)

6)      Green lifestyles and the economy (Green Deen)

7)      Sustainable Islamic Finance and economics, commerce and trade

While the researchers readily admit that this is a snapshot of a developing movement, there is great potential for further research to be conducted, especially in capturing grass-roots projects and initiatives already in place but not documented in the developing world. Leiden University will continue research into the area Islamic perspectives on sustainable development and currently has a proposal before the Netherlands Scientific Research Fund.

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Go Green: Environmentalism Has Failed

May 13th, 2012

Imagine my surprise when only a few minutes into his interview David said 'Environmentalism has Failed'. That we haven't really gotten anywhere since the movement was born 50 years ago and that in some cases we have

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


OneSTDV: Conservatism and Environmentalism

May 13th, 2012

An influential activist living in Michigan

was organizer and first chairman of the Federation for American Immigration Reform” (FAIR), a non-profit educational group that advocates for a reduction in the level of immigration into the U.S. He also helped to start two other groups with a similar goal: the Center for Immigration Studies, a non-profit research group; and NumbersUSA, a grassroots lobbying group.  He has also been a leader in efforts to make English the official language of government in the U.S. To that end, he was co-founder (1983) and chairman of U.S. English and later (1994) of ProEnglish, of which he is still a director.

A retired ophthalmologist and political lobbyist

has also held national positions in environmental organizations and founded local chapters of the Sierra Club. He is a strong conservationist and leading advocate for the environment.
In 1975, his essay “Human Migration” won the Mitchell Prize contest and was published as the cover article of The Ecologist.  He founded the Petoskey regional Audubon Society and has been active in a large number of environmental organizations.
Dr. Tanton’s recognition that continued human population growth is a
significant contributor to environmental problems lead to his
involvement with the Sierra Club Population Committee and to becoming President and board member of Zero Population Growth.

Of course, these are the same person – Dr. John Tanton.  For the past 40 years, the retired doctor has led an almost one-man crusade for immigration restriction AND environmentalism.  From internal memos, Tanton easily fits into the race realist wing of the conservatism.  Yet he’s an avowed environmental conservationist, championing that cause with equal gusto as he does immigration restriction.

Basically, he’s a tree-hugging race realist conservative – not exactly the most common political amalgam.  But I applaud Dr. Tanton for his relative heterodoxy.  As I’ve lamented on many occasions, both mainstream and anti-PC conservatism are plagued by a reflexive stance in which they reject anything nominally liberal and even sometimes support the exact opposite just out of spite.

Environmentalism, which has now become perverted into the pseudo-religion of global-warming backed Gaiaism, is one of those issues.  Conservatives view any defense of the environment as an acceptance of hippie-liberalism, the granola-eating, dirty-haired fruits who tie themselves to trees and protest oil companies.  Instead of preserving natural landscape, most conservatives would prefer to stick it to those liberals by mocking their cause and advocating on the part of oil companies and other polluters.

I understand the knee-jerk reaction; I too feel uneasy accepting any liberal-leaning ideal, but there’s nothing inherently politically liberal about trying to carefully blend civilization into nature, instead of just bulldozing anything that gets in our way.  Sure, go for a hike at your nearest park and it’ll be full of SWPLs, but just because they do it the most often, doesn’t mean a conservative should hurt himself by refusing to participate.  It goes without saying that there’s a valid reason for doing so – nature provides humans with a sense of satisfaction and pleasure that the artificial constructs of man can not mirror.

The notion of melding conservatism and environmentalism is especially interesting in this particular sphere where paleo-thought, in regards to evo-psych and diet, underpins much of the ideology.    

Today’s questions: Are you an “environmentalist” in the sense of wanting to preserve the environment?  Or do you just not care, apathetic to shopping malls and parking lots replacing green space?  If you’re an environmentalist, how do you feel about the connection to liberalism?  Can conservatism and environmentalism coexist?  Can alt-conservatives and liberal environmentalists pursue the same goals (Tanton tried this when he first started FAIR)?

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Paradigms and Demographics: More History of Environmentalism …

May 13th, 2012

Look how little the leopards have lost their spots! Professor Gasman's Haeckel's Monism and the Birth of Fascist Ideology provides insights into the coherent fascist intellectual doctrine that, by 1920, was embraced by a wide

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Watch Now: Climate Depot's Morano on Modern Environmentalism …

May 8th, 2012

Watch Now: Climate Depot's Morano on modern environmentalism and human progress Read the Full Article. Sunday, May 06, 2012By Marc Morano – Climate Depot. Comments 0 Print Filed under: videos, mediacd. Get updates by email

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Everything Is Backwards: Lord Monckton Gets It Right …

May 8th, 2012
Good Monday morning, y’all.

I had originally planned to ask a question of you today. Consider it a bit of mental homework if you will: Why doesn’t anyone ask “Why?” these days?

It seems that intellectual curiosity is on the wane. Far too many otherwise intelligent people lack this one vital part of their thinking process. The Ancient Thinkers had this quality, and for a long while, their teachings of this timeless question were always present in our modern society. Indeed, I would propose that our modern societies were built upon the answers to their intellectual curiosity.

However, this recognition of ageless truths seems to be in decline for reasons I have yet to fathom. Our educational system relies less and less on teaching children how to learn and tends to focus instead on whatever socially popular theories are currently floating about. The emphasis appears to me to be misplaced: hard truth, that which has remained constant throughout our recorded history, is discarded in favor of consensus.

Nowhere is this more evident than in science classes. Studies of the laws of physics has been displaced in recent years with what I’d call “consensus science.” In this strange, new discipline, long-held accurate descriptions of the world around us and the various physical laws that guide it take a back seat to a form of crowdsourcing wherein an organized group of scientists are paid to agree on an erroneous, yet-to-be-proven theory, and this is promoted as a fact.

I’m old enough to remember what was called the “Scientific Method” of research. It was and remains basic and easy to grasp: the first step was to observe a phenomenon, the second step was to experiment based upon the results of the observation to test the validity of the observation to see if the results could be duplicated. Simple enough.

However, there is a trend these days to forward outrageous theories that not so long ago would have gotten you laughed out of the bar. If you said that the human race had the capability of affecting the climate of the whole planet, you would have rightly been considered on the edge of sanity. Yet, this preposterous idea is the foundation for a worldwide movement today called “environmentalism.”

Granted, it has taken us a while to begin to question this premise, but question it we have. And those of us who have dared to question something that we know innately to be false have been excoriated, denigrated, and called any and every name you can think of. That this is so proves that those who are advancing this hoax is proof enough that their entire movement is bullshit.

But I digress. I’d almost forgotten how to do that.

In this unholy marriage of “science” and politics, the environmental movement has become the shiny new face of an ancient enemy, Totalitarianism (or Communism or Progressivism).  In the following video from Trevor Loudon’s site, Lord Christopher Monkton examines this movement and its attempt to impose a One World Government on us in the name of Goddess Mother Earth. Entitled Lord Monkton on Agenda 21 and Environmental Marxism, it’s well worth your time to view.

If Agenda 21 rings a bell, it’s because I’ve written about it before here. I would recommend that you read that post and watch the accompanying video if you’re unfamiliar with it.

Anyway, back to my original question. Here’s a video of someone who has the intellectual curiosity to ask “Why?” and the capacity to understand the answer.

Bless you, Lord Monkton. The world needs more men like you.

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Democracy Gone Astray: Environmentalism Has Failed

May 8th, 2012

Environmentalism has failed. Over the past 50 years, environmentalists have succeeded in raising awareness, changing logging practices, stopping mega-dams and offshore drilling, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »


Environmentalism: Less About Hugging Trees, More About Bringing …

May 3rd, 2012


Posted on 02. May, 2012 by Stephan Helgesen in Energy/Environment


Despite his speechmaking touting an “all of the above” energy strategy, President Obama’s re-election could depend his willingness to stand in the way of developing America’s resources.

Back in November, at the time of the original Keystone XL pipeline decision, environmental groups threatened to pull their backing for Obama if he approved the pipeline.

Michael Brune, executive director of America’s largest environmental group, the Sierra Club, is on record as saying that the President’s decision on Keystone would have “a very big impact” on how they funnel their resources—with the obvious implication being that they would not support the President if he didn’t do their bidding.

Other environmental groups such as the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and the Environmental Defense Fund took a different tack but with the same goal. A press release from the Rainforest Action Network promised the President that if he denied Keystone, he would see a “surge of enthusiasm from the green base that supported you so strongly in the last election.”

Environmental groups clearly understand they have the ability to influence the President’s decisions based on their claims to support—or not support—his bid for a second term. So far, they must be pleased with his administration’s efforts.

On Wednesday, April 18, leading environmental groups came out with their official endorsement of President Obama—“the earliest” the groups “have ever endorsed in a presidential election cycle.” According to The Hill, “The groups are planning a mix of advertising and on-the-ground work on Obama’s behalf.”

However, Glenn Hurowitz, a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy, thinks the groups should have waited longer before endorsing the President. He believes the early endorsement removes the “greens’ leverage.”

Most pundits agree that the 2012 presidential election will be a hard fought, close race. In order to win, President Obama needs the four million votes from “greens” the groups represent—and they do not want increased domestic resource extraction.

According to BusinessWeek, funding from environmental groups is currently less than 50% of what it was through the same period in the 2008 campaign—one of the reasons cited: “renewing offshore drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Though receiving little press, the Obama administration is working hard to convince the “greens” that he is one of them. The NRDC (one of the groups promising support if Obama does the right thing) has launched a major fundraising effort—aided by the actor Robert Redford, to block a proposed mine that would provide America with access to one of the largest known deposits of copper in the world.

Copper is essential for electric transmission and America’s industrial future—and highly sought after by developing economies such as China. The land—already designated for mineral exploration and development—also contains gold, silver and molybdenum.

Despite the fact that the Native Alaskans living near the proposed Pebble Mine site want the infrastructure and jobs the mine would provide, rich sport-fishermen and out of state environmental groups (NRDC is based in New York City) are claiming to “pressure the Obama administration to reject any permits that could allow Pebble Mine to move forward. And if necessary, we will challenge this disastrous project in federal court.”

The fund raising letter states: “Only NRDC combines grassroots power with the legal clout of more than 400 attorneys.”

To date, there is no detailed plan or application submitted for a mine. The companies involved have already invested more than $400 million in research, studies, and field work but have not yet applied for federal approval. Pebble Limited Partnership’s CEO John Shively said, “I think in terms of the environmental side, I am relatively convinced that the technology is there for us to do what we need to do. Combining the technology with the economics, we have not gotten that far, and we have not finished designing.”

There are more than 65 different types of state and federal permits, certifications, and reviews that must take place before the Pebble project can move forward. Yet, the EPA is entertaining a “preemptive veto petition” which would prevent “due process,” deprive America of much needed resources and Alaskans of the economic security the project could bring to the remote region.

Test drilling for core samples at the mine site have been found to be nontoxic and up to municipal standards. The actual location of the mineral resource is farther away from the waters of Bristol Bay than Los Angeles is from San Diego.

The EPA is currently conducting a watershed assessment on the potential impact of a large development project on the region that could easily have the effect of blocking any and all future development proposal, including construction of a community airport. The EPA’s assessment is expected to be released in a matter of weeks.

The EPA study, that pales in comparison to a multiyear $120 million environmental baseline review conducted by Pebble, is being used as a precursor for the agency to skip the established environmental review process and preemptively deny a 404 C Clean Water Act permit before the Pebble project has even applied for a permit. EPA preemptive action would be a first of its kind and would constitute a massive and devastating expansion of the administration’s environmental power.

In an April 18 letter to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson, Senator Lisa Murkowski said, “I have encouraged all stakeholders to withhold judgment until 1) a detailed development plan is released for review and 2) all relevant analyses of that plan are completed.

A preemptive veto, just like a preemptive approval, would be based purely upon speculation and conjecture. It would deprive relevant government agencies and all stakeholders of the specifics needed to take an informed position.” She concludes: “As the people of my state work to attract investment and create jobs, regulatory uncertainty is hampering those efforts and they need answers to questions about actions the EPA is considering.”

Opponents of the Pebble Mine project have asked, “Can science and engineering eliminate the risks posed by the Pebble Mine to Alaska’s economy? If the answer is yes, the backers should show how in a clear and unquestionable manner.”

Yet, before the designs and plans are even complete, environmental groups like the NRDC have called for the project to be rejected—not based on science, but on emotional hyperbole and an anti-development agenda. Would the Pebble Partnership have invested more than $400 million if they didn’t think the technology was there to do what they need to do to meet the state and federal requirements?

The EPA’s preemptive actions in Alaska are just one example of the Obama administration’s attempts to prove to the greens that he is on their side. Another is the National Ocean Policy created through an executive order.

The order was signed nearly two years ago, but is only coming to light now because of the “potential this far-reaching policy has to hinder job creation because of the uncertainty it creates due to increased regulation.”

Lawmakers, in an April 2 letter, are asking “to put the brakes on the Obama administration’s National Ocean Policy.” The letter, to House Appropriations Committee Chairman Harold Rogers (R-KY), asks the committee to “specifically prohibit the use of funds for the implementation of the National Ocean Policy.”

On April 3, Rep. Don Young (R-AK) explained the new policy as “a complicated bureaucratic scheme which includes a 27-member national ocean council; an 18-member governance coordinating committee; 10 national policies; nine regional planning bodies—each involving as many as 27 federal agencies as well as states and tribes; nine national priority objectives; nine strategic action plans; seven national goals for coastal marine spatial planning; and 12 guiding principles for coastal marine spatial planning.

The administration claims that this whole National Ocean Policy is nothing more than an attempt to coordinate federal agencies and make better permitting decisions. Forgive me if I am a little suspicious when the federal government—through an executive order—decides to create a new bureaucracy that will ‘help’ us plan where activities can or cannot take place in our waters and inland.”

In an April 17 article written by award-winning investigative journalist Audrey Hudson and published in Human Events, Hudson opens: “President Barack Obama has an ambitious plan for Washington bureaucrats to take command of the oceans—and with it control over much of the nation’s energy, fisheries, even recreation in a move described by lawmakers as the ultimate power grab to zone the seas.”

She continues, “The ocean policy has already impacted oil and gas development in the Mid and South Atlantic, where more environmental analysis is now required to determine whether new studies must also be conducted to determine its safety, according to Interior Department Secretary Ken Salazar.”

Not surprisingly, environmental groups support the policy. The Sierra Club hosts an “Activist Network” that includes the National Ocean Policy: “This project is to promote implementation of the National Ocean Policy through recruitment, education and engagement of Sierra Club Activists throughout the nation.”

The NRDC “Switchboard” blog states: “The National Ocean Policy is a landmark policy that calls on us to evaluate all of the uses of the ocean—fishing, tourism, industry, military, energy—and identify how to manage these uses more sustainably.”

Rep. Bill Flores (R-TX) comments: “If you look at the catalyst for the entire initiative, it comes from the playbook of environmental groups that think the ocean ought to be controlled by the federal government.” Senator David Vitter (R-LA) adds, “This has largely been completely under the radar.

And that is exactly the way the administration and their environmental allies want to do it—announce the administrative fiat is complete and that we have this new way of life that nobody knew was coming.”

Pebble Mine and the National Ocean Policy are just two of myriad possible examples of how the environmental organizations and the Obama administration are working together to change America. When you think of the environmental movement, realize they have gone way beyond hugging trees. They now want to bring America to its knees.

This article was submitted by the author of Energy Freedom, Marita Noon, who serves as the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy (CARE). Together they work to educate the public and influence policy makers regarding energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of life. Combining energy, news, politics, and, the environment through public events, speaking engagements, and media, the organizations’ combined efforts serve as America’s voice for energy.


Tags:











Leave a Reply










Posted in Environmentalism | No Comments »