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Henry Lamb
19 February 2002
Wandering in the wilderness
© 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
Our
governments – federal, state and local – have bought into
a concept of land-use management that violates the principles
of freedom enshrined in our Constitution.
This
land-use management concept is referred to as "Ecosystem
Management." It arises from a pseudoscience called
conservation biology, which claims that biological diversity
must be restored to, and managed to maintain, the conditions
that existed before Columbus sailed the ocean blue.
The
magnitude of this concept is enormous. Visualize half the land
area in North America as pre-Columbian wilderness, off-limits
to humans, connected by corridors
of wilderness. Most of the remaining land would be owned
or managed by government as buffer zones, with the vast
majority of people living in sustainable communities
delineated by growth boundaries surrounded by open space.
Both
food and manufactured goods would be provided by
public/private partnerships that would produce what the
government determined to be sustainable for use by the urban
population.
Through
this system, government could protect the environment, balance
economic development, and thereby achieve social equity. This
is sustainable development as described in Agenda
21, and detailed much more completely in the U.N.'s Global
Biodiversity Assessment.
Federal,
state and local governments already own more than 42 percent
of the total land area in the United States. Under the guise
of environmental protection, using the Endangered Species Act,
wetland policies, heritage and historical designations,
national monuments and wildlife refuges, governments have
jurisdiction over virtually all the land in the United States.
This
vision of land-use management is not what our founders had in
mind. In fact, the federal government is prohibited from
purchasing land other than for purposes enumerated in Article
I, Section 8, of the U.S. Constitution – and then only with
the consent of the state legislature. The Supreme Court,
however, has found ways to ignore this plain language.
In the
last decade, the government has made an unprecedented effort
to acquire more land. Federal funds for land acquisition have
increased dramatically. The Bush administration is continuing
the land grab, proposing a 50 percent reduction in capital
gains tax on land sales to the government or to qualified
environmental organizations such as The Nature Conservancy.
No one
in government has yet suggested how much land might be enough
for the government to own. Since the land is paid for with tax
dollars, free market price constraints are absent. The
government is gobbling up private property, and sellers are
often eager to accept top dollar.
When
government owns the land, it can manage the land any way it
wishes. It will decide what crops to grow and which products
to manufacture on its land, and invite selected private
parties to enter into partnership arrangements to provide the
labor.
State
Rep. Brad Johnson has introduced H.B.
208 in the Utah Legislature, which would require state
legislative approval for the purchase of land within the state
by the federal government for any purpose other than those
enumerated in the U.S. Constitution.
Opposition
to his bill is strident, and profuse, even though the federal
government already owns 63 percent of Utah's land.
There
have been many unsuccessful
efforts in the past to limit government land acquisition
and force the federal government to divest its land holdings.
Environmental organizations, though, have increased pressure
on the government to accelerate its land-acquisition program
by appealing for "open space" and using
"species extinction" propaganda.
America's
founders realized that land is the source of wealth and
drafted the Constitution to ensure that the land would remain
in the hands of the people. The poorest people on the planet
are landless, and most live where government owns the land or
controls its use.
There is
no justification for the federal government to own land beyond
that authorized by the Constitution. The private sector, and
locally elected officials, can provide all the protection and
prosperity the people desire.
This
gluttonous acquisition of land by government is clear evidence
of the growing influence of socialist philosophy in America.
Without the land, the people become no more than tenants,
subject to the whims of the ruling party.
The
vision of a pristine, pre-Columbian America is trumping the
vision of our founders, of a nation where free people could be
free forever, assured of the right to prosper from the use of
their own property.
Henry Lamb is the
executive vice president of the Environmental
Conservation Organization and chairman of Sovereignty
International. |