And I think alot of ecologists echo Alan's basic view.
here's:

Matters of survival in a 'shattered world'
Talking about the Earth with David Suzuki and C.W. Nicol

on JapanTimes
http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?fe20050421a1.htm


but I wonder what those guys would have to say about
Pentii Linkola:
http://www.angelfire.com/zine/thefallofbecause/articles/humanflood.html

which brings us around to looking at Ecofascism.
(as illustrated by sites like http://www.nazi.org/, home of the
Libertarian National Socialist Green Party)
The best article I have read is here which is fascinating.

http://www.spunk.org/library/places/germany/sp001630/ecofasc.html

I am sure this type of material is highly repugnant to most, but I
encourage you to read the article on ecofascism simply for a greater
historical understanding. This work is put out on AK press
a 'respectable' underground anarchist house. And lest you think these
folks are Green Nazi's themselves, here is the introduction to the
book:

Introduction
For most compassionate and humane people today, the ecological crisis
is a source of major concern. Not only do many ecological activists
struggle to eliminate toxic wastes, to preserve tropical rainforests
and old-growth redwoods, and to roll back the destruction of the
biosphere, but many ordinary people in all walks of life are intensely
concerned about the nature of the planet that their children will grow
up to inhabit. In Europe as in the United States, most ecological
activists think of themselves as socially progressive. That is, they
also support demands of oppressed peoples for social justice and
believe that the needs of human beings living in poverty, illness,
warfare, and famine also require our most serious attention.

For many such people, it may come as a surprise to learn that the
history of ecological politics has not always been inherently and
necessarily progressive and benign. In fact, ecological ideas have a
history of being distorted and placed in the service of highly
regressive ends--even of fascism itself. As Peter Staudenmaier shows
in the first essay in this pamphlet, important tendencies in
German "ecologism," which has long roots in nineteenth-century nature
mysticism, fed into the rise of Nazism in the twentieth century.
During the Third Reich, Staudenmaier goes on to show,
Nazi "ecologists" even made organic farming, vegetarianism, nature
worship, and related themes into key elements not only in their
ideology but in their governmental policies. Moreover,
Nazi "ecological" ideology was used to justify the destruction of
European Jewry. Yet some of the themes that Nazi ideologists
articulated bear an uncomfortably close resemblance to themes familiar
to ecologically concerned people today.

As social ecologists, it is not our intention to deprecate the all-
important efforts that environmentalists and ecologists are making to
rescue the biosphere from destruction. Quite to the contrary: It is
our deepest concern to preserve the integrity of serious ecological
movements from ugly reactionary tendencies that seek to exploit the
widespread popular concern about ecological problems for regressive
agendas. But we find that the "ecological scene" of our time--with its
growing mysticism and antihumanism--poses serious problems about the
direction in which the ecology movement will go.

In most Western nations in the late twentieth century, expressions of
racism and anti-immigrant sentiments are not only increasingly voiced
but increasingly tolerated. Equally disconcertingly, fascist
ideologists and political groups are experiencing a resurgence as
well. Updating their ideology and speaking the new language of
ecology, these movements are once again invoking ecological themes to
serve social reaction. In ways that sometimes approximate beliefs of
progressive-minded ecologists, these reactionary and outright fascist
ecologists emphasize the supremacy of the "Earth" over people;
evoke "feelings" and intuition at the expense of reason; and uphold a
crude sociobiologistic and even Malthusian biologism. Tenets of "New
Age" eco-ideology that seem benign to most people in England and the
United States--specifically, its mystical and antirational strains--
are being intertwined with ecofascism in Germany today. Janet Biehl’s
essay explores this hijacking of ecology for racist, nationalistic,
and fascist ends.

Taken together, these essays examine aspects of German fascism, past
and present, in order to draw lessons from them for ecology movements
both in Germany and elsewhere. Despite its singularities, the German
experience offers a clear warning against the misuse of ecology, in a
world that seems ever more willing to tolerate movements and
ideologies once regarded as despicable and obsolete. Political ecology
thinkers have yet to fully examine the political implications of these
ideas in the English-speaking world as well as in Germany.

What prevents ecological politics from yielding reaction or fascism
with an ecological patina is an ecology movement that maintains a
broad social emphasis, one that places the ecological crisis in a
social context. As social ecologists, we see the roots of the present
ecological crisis in an irrational society--not in the biological
makeup of human beings, nor in a particular religion, nor in reason,
science, or technology. On the contrary, we uphold the importance of
reason, science, and technology in creating both a progressive
ecological movement and an ecological society. It is a specific set of
social relations--above all, the competitive market economy--that is
presently destroying the biosphere. Mysticism and biologism, at the
very least, deflect public attention away from such social causes. In
presenting these essays, we are trying to preserve the all-important
progressive and emancipatory implications of ecological politics. More
than ever, an ecological commitment requires people today to avoid
repeating the errors of the past, lest the ecology movement become
absorbed in the mystical and antihumanistic trends that abound today.

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