Earth Day Is the Time to Challenge
the Environmentalist Premise that
Man Should Be Sacrificed in Order
to Preserve Nature
By Peter Schwartz
For the first time in American
history, the government is ordering the destruction of a dam — for environmental
reasons.
This July,
Edwards Dam, a small hydroelectric facility on the Kennebec River in Augusta,
Maine, will be torn down by the
Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.
Its crime? It is blocking the path of fish that swim upstream to spawn.
As recounted in
a N.Y. Times article, “the hindrance
the Edwards Dam posed to migratory fish outweighed the benefit it provided
in electric
generation.”
On Earth
Day, it is worth noting this event, for it illuminates the essential meaning
of environmentalism. The closing of
Edwards Dam is the implementation
of environmentalism’s fundamental, though often unrecognized, tenet: that
man ought to be
sacrificed for the sake of nature.
The common
view of environmentalism is that its goal is the betterment of mankind
— that it wants to purify our air and
clean up our parks so that we can
live healthier and happier lives. But that is a very superficial interpretation.
When
environmentalists are faced with
a conflict between the “interests” of nature and those of man, it is man
who is invariably
sacrificed. If there is a choice
between electric power for human beings and swimming lanes for salmon,
it is always the fish that
are given priority. If there is
a choice between cutting down trees for human use and leaving them untouched
for the spotted
owl, it is always the bird’s home
that is saved and human habitation that goes unbuilt. Why?
Because
the requirements of human life are not the standard by which environmentalists
make their judgments. Their goal is
to maintain nature in its virginal
state — despite the demonstrable harm this inflicts upon people. They want
to preserve
wildernesses, to enshrine wetlands,
to tear down dams and levees — i.e., to prevent the man-made “intrusions”
upon nature.
In the
case of Edwards Dam, for instance, they want to protect the salmon not
because it is a source of food — or of any
other human value. (They regularly
denounce hatcheries as “unnatural” and commercial fishing as the “exploitation
of nature” —
and the very eating of animals
as insensitive “speciesism.”) Rather, they regard the “welfare” of the
salmon as an end in itself —
for the sake of which man must
forgo the benefits of the dam.
Environmentalists
often declare their philosophy openly. For example, David Graber, an environmentalist
with the National
Parks Service, described himself
as among those who “value wilderness for its own sake, not for what value
it confers upon
mankind. . . . We are not interested
in the utility of a particular species, of free-flowing river, or ecosystem
to mankind. They
have intrinsic value, more value
— to me — than another human body, or a billion of them.”
David
Foreman, founder of the organization Earth First, bluntly stresses the
environmental irrelevance of human beings:
“Wilderness has a right to exist
for its own sake, and for the sake of the diversity of the life forms it
shelters; we shouldn’t have
to justify the existence of a wilderness
area by saying: ‘Well, it protects the watershed, and it’s a nice place
to backpack and
hunt, and it’s pretty.’”
The environmentalist
goal, in other words, is to protect nature, not for man, but from man.
But this
means that man must suffer so that nature remains pristine. Human beings
survive by reshaping nature to fulfill their
needs. Every single step taken
to advance beyond the cave — every rock fashioned into a tool, every square
foot of barren
earth made into productive cropland,
every drop of crude petroleum transformed into fuel for cars and planes
— constitutes an
improvement in human life, achieved
by altering our natural environment. The environmentalists’ demand that
nature be
protected against human “encroachments”
means, therefore, that man must be sacrificed in order to preserve nature.
If
“wilderness has a right to exist
for its own sake” — then man does not.
Litter-free
streets or pollution-free air — or any provable benefit to man — is not
what environmentalists seek. Their aim is
to eliminate the benefits of the
man-made in order to preserve — unchanged — nature’s animals, plants and
dirt.
Earth
Day is an appropriate occasion for challenging the environmentalists’ philosophy.
It can be the occasion for
recognizing the Earth as a value
— not in and of itself, but only insofar as it is continually reshaped
by man to serve his ends.
Peter Schwartz, editor and contributing
author of the recently published Return of the Primitive: The
Anti-Industrial Revolution (Meridian/Penguin)
by Ayn Rand, is chairman of the board of the Ayn Rand Institute.
http://www.aynrand.org
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