Cites the motto of No Labels-
Stop Fightin, Start Fixing
 
from the site:
Resilience
 
 
 
The Radical Center

by _Courtney  White_ 
(http://www.resilience.org/author-detail/1449628-courtney-white) , originally 
published by _The Carbon Pilgrim_ 
(http://carbonpilgrim.wordpress.com/2013/12/15/the-radical-center/)   | Dec 16, 
 2013 

 
Recent events in Washington, D.C., reminded me of an anguished question 
that  I’ve had on my mind since 1997: if ranchers and environmentalists can get 
along,  why can’t Democrats and Republicans? 
That was the year I co-founded the Quivira Coalition, a nonprofit  
organization dedicated to creating a common ground where ranchers,  
conservationists, scientists and others could meet to explore their shared  
interests rather 
than argue their differences. By doing so, we became part of  the “the 
radical center,” a term coined by rancher Bill McDonald in southern  Arizona to 
describe an emerging consensus-based approach to land management  challenges 
in the West. 
At the time, the conflict between ranchers and environmentalists had 
reached  a fever pitch, with federal agencies and others caught in crossfire. 
It 
was an  example of how the West had balkanized into ideological fiefdoms by 
the  mid-1990s. One important consequence of the trench warfare was gridlock 
where it  hurt the most – on the ground. Very little progress was being made 
on necessary  projects, such as lighting prescribed fires, improving the 
chances of endangered  species on private land, or helping ranchers fend off 
the predatory interests of  real estate developers. Instead, it became a war 
of attrition, with the only  real winners being those who had no interest in 
the long-term environmental or  social health of the region. 
The radical center was a deliberate push-back against this destructive  
process of balkanization. It was “radical” (whose dictionary definition means  
“root”) because it challenged various orthodoxies at work at the time, 
including  the conventional belief that conservation and ranching were part of 
a ‘zero sum’  game where one could only advance as far as the other 
retreated. There were  plenty of examples to the contrary, as Bill McDonald and 
the 
collaborative group  he helped to co-found, the Malpai Borderlands Group, 
demonstrated. Success,  however, also meant working in the “center” – which 
refers to the pragmatic,  middle-ground between extremes. It meant 
partnerships, respect, and trust. But  most of all, the “center” meant action – 
a 
plan signed, a prescribed fire  lit, a workshop held, a hand shook. Words were 
nice, but working in the radical  center meant walking the talk. 
In 1997, two Sierra Club activists – myself and Barbara Johnson – and 
rancher  Jim Winder decided to put the radical center to a test in New Mexico. 
Jim had an  idea: start a nonprofit organization that would step outside the 
continuum of  brawling between ranchers and environmentalists and create a ‘
third way’ that  emphasized progressive cattle and land management 
practices. We called it the  ‘New Ranch’ and invited any rancher, 
conservationist, 
agency person, scientist  or member of the public who was interested in “
sharing common-sense solutions to  the rangeland conflict” to join us. We took 
a 
public vow of no legislation and  no litigation. We promised ourselves to 
not waste any energy trying to pry open  closed minds. We focused instead on 
those who literally wanted to start over at  the grass and the roots. 
Quivira was different from other radical centrist groups at the time  
principally because we weren’t confined to a watershed or a bounded region. We  
went wherever we could find ‘eager learners’ willing to try new ideas, 
embarking  on a lengthy series of workshops, tours, outdoor classrooms, 
conferences,  clinics, and public speaking engagements around the Southwest. 
In the process, we helped to define what the radical center in the 
so-called  ‘grazing debate’ actually meant, culminating in an “Invitation to 
Join 
the  Radical Center” signed by ranchers, conservationists, and others in 2003 
that we  hoped would signal the end of conflict and the beginning of a era 
of peace. 
Here’s an excerpt and a list of its radical centrist conditions: 
“We therefore reject the acrimony of past decades that has dominated  
debate over livestock grazing on public lands, for it has yielded little but  
hard feelings among people who are united by their common love of land and who  
should be natural allies. We pledge our efforts to form the `Radical Center’
  where:  
    *   “The ranching community accepts and aspires to a progressively 
higher  standard of environmental performance; 
    *   “The environmental community resolves to work constructively with 
the  people who occupy and use the lands it would protect; 
    *   “The personnel of federal and state land management agencies focus 
not  on the defense of procedure but on the production of tangible results;  
 
    *   “The research community strives to make their work more relevant to 
 broader constituencies; 
    *   “The land grant colleges return to their original charters, 
conducting  and disseminating information in ways that benefit local landscapes 
and 
the  communities that depend on them; 
    *   “The consumer buys food that strengthens the bond between their own 
 health and the health of the land; 
    *   “The public recognizes and rewards those who maintain and improve 
the  health of all land; and  
    *   “All participants learn better how to share both authority and  
responsibility.”


 
 
Fast forward to today. Were we successful? Did the radical center hold? 
Yes,  mostly. Indisputably, attitudes toward ranchers and livestock production 
among a  cross-section of the American public, including lawmakers, opinion 
leaders,  newspaper letter-writers and many conservationists, have shifted 
substantially  toward the positive. As a result, the so-called ‘grazing wars’
 have largely  faded from view, though there is still some shouting going 
on in places. More  importantly, portions of the radical center list above 
have been successfully  enacted to one degree or another. Especially 
encouraging has been the explosion  of watershed-based collaboratives across 
the 
West. Collaborative conservation,  once an outlier itself, has now become 
mainstream – to the point of  institutionalization by universities, national 
NGOs, 
and agencies. 
There are other examples of the radical center in action, even in the 
policy  arena, as groups continue their quest for common ground. While the 
region’
s  former tribalism has not faded away, it is clear that ranchers and  
environmentalists can get along when they have larger, common goals in sight. 
So 
 why can’t Democrats and Republicans? Could there be a political equivalent 
of  our grassroots-focused radical center idea? Could there be progress in  
statehouses and in Washington, D.C, in the way there’s been productive  
collaboration in watersheds across the West? 
It’s a question I get asked a lot – and I wish I had a good answer. In my  
experience, the radical center works because it is studiously 
non-political. We  focus on soil, grass and water, literally the common ground 
below our 
feet. In  the case of the Quivira Coalition, we took a vow to do no 
litigation or  legislation. We also avoided “nuclear” social and natural 
resource 
management  issues, such as the Mexican wolf and oil-and-gas development. 
This allowed us to  stay neutral politically which we saw as critical to our 
success as a  collaborative conservation organization, as well to the radical 
center idea in  general. Trust needed to be restored after decades of bad 
blood between ranchers  and environmentalists and the quickest way to do that 
was to focus on soil,  grass, and water – the grassroots beneath our feet. 
Democrats and Republicans, of course, can’t avoid politics, legislation or  
litigation. Picking fights and aiming to win elections by defeating the 
other  party are essential elements to any political system and it’s foolish to 
think  they can be minimized to any significant degree. Does that mean 
there can’t be  collaboration, however? Could there be some political 
equivalent 
to soil, grass  and water in which Democrats and Republicans could come 
together and agree? In  theory, yes. Out West, land restoration and wildlife 
management are two arenas  involving politics and policy where a great deal of 
common ground has been  created in recent years. Locally-sourced food has 
been another positive contact  point, especially between urban and rural 
residents. 
What about guns, however, or abortion or taxes or poverty programs or  
national defense? Is there a radical center here? Yes, I think. Gay marriage 
was 
 once a hugely divisive issue in this nation, with little hope of common 
ground –  and now look the progress that has been made! A type of radical 
center seems to  have prevailed with this formerly contentious topic. Could it 
happen with other  topics? I think so – but I’m out of my field of expertise 
on this. All I can say  is that some sort of radical center needs to happen 
politically in this great  nation, and soon, if we’re going to solve any of 
the mounting, pressing problems  we face. The cynic in me thinks it’s 
impossible given the rivers of bad blood  that now exist between Democrats and 
Republicans, but the optimist in me recalls  how bad things looked in the 
mid-1990s for any kind of détente between ranchers  and environmentalists. 
So, I’ll keep my fingers crossed. 
Here’s a start, I hope

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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