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 <A
HREF="http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_lamb/20000201_xchla_gloria_doe.shtm
l">Gloria doesn't get it: the tug-of-war for land</A>
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/bluesky_lamb/20000201_xchla_gloria_doe.shtml

Gloria doesn't get it:
the tug-of-war for land

By Henry Lamb
� 2000 WorldNetDaily.com

Gloria Flora resigned her job as supervisor of the largest national forest in
the lower 48, because what she calls an "anti-government" sentiment had
reached a "fevered pitch." Something had to give. "Rather than waiting for a
bomb, or for someone to get hurt, I decided to step down."
That fever pitch of "anti-government" sentiment is what others call defending
their freedom from a government they believe has overstepped its
constitutional authority.

The immediate issue that led to Flora's resignation stems from a small
stretch of South Canyon Road in Elko County, Nevada, which was washed away by
floods. The county wanted to rebuild the road; Gloria's Forest Service said
no.

The South Canyon Road situation is but one of thousands of similar cases
confronting property owners and land users all across the country. An
examination of the attitudes and issues reveals why America is in a
winner-take-all tug-of-war for the land and its resources.

Gloria spoke to about 100 supporters on Jan. 26 in Kalispell, Montana, at a
gathering sponsored by the Montana Human Rights Network and Public Employees
for Environmental Responsibility. Across town, more than 600 people attended
a rally sponsored by Montanans for Multiple Use. These people brought shovels
to send to Elko in a show of support for the county's determination to
rebuild South Canyon Road.

"The road isn't even the issue," Gloria told a reporter. "The issue here is a
serious anger toward the federal government in general."

Gloria doesn't have a clue about why the people are angry. "While a bit of
protest is a good thing in any democracy," she said, "you can have too much
of a good thing. I'm coming (to Kalispell) to talk about civility in our
public discussion."

The absence of civility in public discussions is a major reason for the
frustration Americans have with federal agencies. In America, discussions
about public policy are supposed to be open and honest. If they are heated,
so much the better. All opinions should be welcome. Differing opinions about
public policy are supposed to be resolved, finally, by elected officials, in
a public vote.

To Gloria, civility in public discussion means that the public should listen
to her agency's presentation, make suggestions -- if invited to do so --
about how to implement the object of the presentation, and be thankful for
the opportunity to speak. Dissent from the object of an agency's presentation
is considered to be anti-government, by Gloria and many of her colleagues.

It's not Gloria's fault; it's her training. Since the President's Council on
Sustainable Development (PCSD) was created by executive order in 1993 (to
conform to the recommendations of Agenda 21, a policy document adopted by the
United Nations Conference on Environment and Development in 1992), the
agencies of the federal government have been trained to substitute the
"consensus" process for the old-fashioned hearing process in public
discussions.

Public policy-making is not within the constitutional purview of the
president, nor any of the federal agencies. Executive branch functions are
limited to the implementation of the public policies enacted by Congress.

The PCSD, however, in compliance with the recommendations contained in Agenda
21, said, "We need a new collaborative decision process that leads to better
decisions; more rapid change; and more sensible use of human, natural, and
financial resources in achieving our goals." Neither Congress, nor the
Constitution has authorized any change in the "decision process," but
Gloria's agency, at the direction of her White House boss, has changed the
decision-making process. The new process is designed to limit -- or prevent
-- public discussion of views that dissent from the government's objectives.

The president announced recently that he had instructed the Department of
Agriculture to promulgate rules to close the roads on nearly 40 million acres
of federal lands. This is a new public policy, which Congress has not
authorized. Gloria doesn't understand why Americans are angered by this
policy-making-by-decree.

Because the law requires public comment and input when the rules for
implementing legislation are changed, The Department of Agriculture's Forest
Service conducted what they called public hearings on the proposed road
closure rule change.

The president made his "roadless" announcement in October. Within 30 days,
the department announced that each of eight federal regions would hold a
series of public meetings. More than 100 such meetings were held between
November 17 and December 16. The comment period closed at the end of
December. The agency could say it had complied with the law, and issue its
new rules.

Did the agency comply with the intent of the law to provide Americans with
ample opportunity to speak for or against the proposed rule change?
Absolutely not!

The meetings were held only a few days after the schedule was announced,
during the busy holiday season. Why the rush? When the people arrived at the
meetings, they were confronted with a presentation on how wonderful the
roadless plan would be. Those who wanted to speak were told to write their
question -- not questions -- on a card, and time permitting, they might be
allowed to ask it. Those who were chosen to speak were given a strict time
limit, often no more than two minutes. Video taping of the meetings was not
allowed in some cases.

Gloria, this decision-making process is not public discussion. The Forest
Service knew what it was going to do before the pubic comment meetings were
held. The meetings were held only because the law requires it. They were
designed to screen out dissent. The people who are most directly affected by
the policy changes were muzzled. And Gloria doesn't understand why people are
angry?

The tug-of-war between the federal government and the people who live on, and
use, the land, is much deeper than process. It goes to the very principle of
property rights in America. Gloria correctly says, "Many of the land-use
decisions we are making today are almost irreversible." That's why it is
imperative that the decisions reflect the will -- and the consent -- of the
people who will be most affected by them. But Gloria says, "Half the people I
represent are not even born yet." And President Clinton's mantra in the land
lock-up scheme is to protect the land for future generations.

The reality of the land lock-up scheme is that the land will be protected
from future generations as well as from the present generation that depends
upon it. Once land is designated as wilderness, the wealth of resources it
contains is no longer available to human beings. Neither this, nor future
generations, can enjoy the benefits the land offers. As the roads are closed,
people cannot even see the land, nor cultivate its resources.

Congress authorized nine million acres to be designated as wilderness in
1964, as the result of a five-year campaign by the Wilderness Society.
Additional wilderness acreage has been authorized by Congress over the years,
until now we have more than 100 million acres in wilderness. Without
congressional authorization, the Clinton administration has expanded
wilderness areas substantially by executive decree. His new initiative, if
successful, will expand wilderness to nearly 200 million acres.

Why? How much wilderness do we need?

Since future generations cannot use the wilderness, it makes no sense to say
that we are protecting it for them, although it makes for a nice sound bite
on television.

The truth is that there are two conflicting views about who should own the
land. America was founded on the belief that individuals should own the land.
In fact, the Constitution says that the federal government should own only
that land required for public buildings and facilities. That was a unique
view in the 1700s. Throughout the rest of the world, land was the exclusive
property of the king, or czar, or ruling government -- whatever it was
called. The government granted individuals the right to use some portion of
the land in exchange for a percentage of its yield. The American revolution
was about getting out from under that kind of servitude to government. It was
about gaining the freedom to possess land and use its bounty for personal
gain. This principle of private ownership of land is the foundation of
America's greatness.

Not all Americans, however, agree with this fundamental principle. Throughout
the 1900s, the notion that government should own the land gained prominence,
fanned by the strong socialist movement in America following the 1917
revolution in Russia. Federal land -- given to anyone who would homestead it
in the 1800s -- was locked into federal ownership by the Federal Land Policy
Management Act of 1976.

Ironically, that same year, the American delegation to the United Nations
Conference on Human Settlements signed a document in Vancouver, British
Columbia, that says, in part:


Land ... cannot be treated as an ordinary asset, controlled by individuals
and subject to the pressures and inefficiencies of the market. Private land
ownership is also a principal instrument of accumulation and concentration of
wealth and therefore contributes to social injustice. ... Public control of
land use is therefore indispensable. ...

In 1993, President Clinton signed the Convention on Biological Diversity,
which requires every nation to establish a system of "protected areas,"
according to a plan identified as the Wildlands Project, published in the
United States in 1992. The Wildlands Project says:

... at least half of the land area of the 48 conterminous states should be
encompassed in core reserves and inner corridor zones ... assuming that most
of the other 50 percent is managed intelligently as buffer zone.

The president's "Lands Legacy" program is the implementation of the
unratified Convention on Biological Diversity, initiated by executive decree,
without congressional authorization, and implemented by the agencies of the
federal government. With the continuing wilderness lock-up of federal lands
and the administration's efforts to establish a $3 billion yearly slush fund
to purchase private property, we are well on the way to converting "at least
half" of the nation into wilderness and most of the other half to
government-owned or controlled buffer zones.
And Gloria doesn't understand why Americans are angry?

To be fair to poor Gloria, she has probably never read the Convention on
Biological Diversity, or the Global Biodiversity Assessment. She is mystified
-- as are many of her colleagues -- by Americans who have read these
documents, and who refer to the influence of the United Nations. She calls it
"getting down and dirty" when dissenters "confuse the public" by making
"villains where villains don't exist, or making heroes where only villains
exist."

The tug-of-war is over much more than South Canyon Road in Elko, Nevada.
Angry, frustrated Americans are sending thousands of shovels to Elko -- not
bombs, Gloria -- to express their belief that the land and its resources
should belong to the people, not to the government. Individual owners are far
better, more responsible, managers of their own property than any agency of
government. Gloria, and the Clinton administration disagree.

To Gloria and the Clinton administration, Americans who have the audacity to
speak out against their policy-by-decree to lock the land away from
individuals in this and future generations, are nothing more than
anti-government villains. She says, "These anti-government groups have
slogans like, 'Remember Waco,' 'God is on our side,' and 'God loves
freedom-fighters.' These kinds of slogans can encourage a certain kind of
person, and that can lead to a very dangerous situation."

Gloria just doesn't get it. But she is right about one thing. Continuation of
the arrogant, dictatorial behavior of the administration and its agencies can
lead to a very dangerous situation: it's called unemployment.



-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Henry Lamb is the executive vice president of the Environmental Conservation
Organization and chairman of Sovereignty International.




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