The Environmental Movement
Dixie Lee Ray
[Reprinted from Science and the Environment,
the Acton Institute
for the Study of Religion and Liberty / 1992]
R&L: With the world-wide decline of socialism, many
individuals think that the environmental movement may be the next
great threat to freedom. Do you agree?
Ray: Yes, I do, and I’ll tell you why. It became evident
to me when I attended the worldwide Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro
last June. The International Socialist Party, which is intent upon
continuing to press countries into socialism, is now headed up by
people within the United Nations. They are the ones in the UN
environmental program, and they were the ones sponsoring the
so-called Earth Summit that was attended by 178 nations.
R&L: Did you have a specific purpose in attending the Earth
Summit?
Ray: I was sent there by the Free Congress Committee, headed by
Paul Weyrich. Fred Smith and I were sent down as observers, with
reporters’ credentials, so we could witness the events.
One of the main organizers of the program, Prime Minister Gro Harlem
Brundtland of Norway was the assistant executive for the conference.
She is also the vice-president of the World Socialist Party. When
she was questioned by Brazilian reporters after her talk and asked
if what they were proposing didn’t have a peculiar
resemblance to the agenda of the World Socialist Party she said, “Well,
of course.” That was reported in Brazil but not picked up
by the American press.
R&L: Did you see a big influence by the radical
environmentalists there?
Ray: Oh yes. No question about that, the radicals are in charge.
One of the proposals that did indeed pass as part of Agenda 21
proposes that there be world government under the UN, that
essentially all nations give up their sovereignty, and that the
nations will be, as they said quite openly, frightened or coerced
into doing that by threats of environmental damage.
R&L: Much of the current environmental movement is couched in
terms of pagan religions, worshiping the Earth, goddess Gaia,
equating the value of trees and people, animal rights, etc. Can you
account for how this is accepted in the public forum, when
traditional Judeo-Christian religious ethics are basically outlawed
from policy making decisions? Do you think the general public is
just unaware of the tendency to make environmentalism a religion?
Ray: I understand what you’re asking, and I have to tell
you, no, I can’t account for it. It is not classified as a
pagan religion. The so-called New Age activities and this are not
called religions and therefore don’t come under the
prohibition of mingling church and state that we have in this
country. It’s almost as if nature worship were accepted
without its being considered a religion.
R&L: One could argue that the decline of Marxism vindicates
Thomas Jefferson’s assertion that the less government does
to the complex order of a national economy, the more likely it is
that the economy will prosper and the liberty of its citizens will
be secured. In the complex order of the environment, what things are
appropriate for government to do in order to protect the natural
workings of the environment and simultaneously secure liberty?
Ray: I think it’s appropriate for the government to set
standards. For example, to describe what is permitted in the terms
of releasing waste products into the environment. I think that it’s
appropriate for there to be standards with respect to pollution of
the air and the water and so on. I do not believe that the
government is in any position to say exactly how every single
business and every single activity shall reach those performances.
The government should set a goal for a clean environment but not
mandate how that goal should be implemented.
R&L: What is the role of property rights in the
environmentalism debate?
Ray: There is a deliberate and quite outspoken attack on the whole
idea of people owning private property. Mr. William Riley, the head
of the Environmental Protection Agency, has said publicly on a
number of occasions that he does not believe that people should have
the right to own private property. To use his words, “The
ownership of private property is a quaint anachronism.” He
has called for a repeal of the Fifth Amendment as it affects the
right of private property. There are two laws that have been passed
by the Congress that are being used to take property away from
people. One is the Endangered Species Act, and the other one happens
to be the Clean Water Act. The Clean Water Act has a section, 404,
which allows the Corps of Engineers to regulate the water that is
navigable. By a series of very twisted definitions, the Corps has
adopted the idea, which the Fish and Wildlife and EPA are also
following, that any body of water, or any moist land, anything that
they can call “wetland” constitutes navigable
water.
R&L: So this causes problems where land can’t be
developed?
Ray: Not only just that, but actually, they can take property away
from, let’s say a farmer, who has a farm pond and uses
that to irrigate his land. This has in fact happened, and there is
an enormous, country-wide movement being started of property rights
proponents to oppose this, but it is very difficult to stop the
momentum that the radical environmentalists already have.
R&L: The natural world operates on the principle that for some
to live others must die, whether it is predatory animals killing for
food, or plants dying as food of herbivorous animals, or
micro-organisms dying to enrich the soil and feed plants. Yet much
of the environmental rhetoric ignores or denies these processes and
makes man guilty for sustaining his own life. Do you have anything
to say on this topic?
Ray: I don’t know how they can justify the position,
because I can’t understand their motivation. But what you
have said is certainly true. Mankind is considered (by the radical
environmentalists) the lowest and the meanest of all species and is
blamed for everything. They fail to recognize the broad biological
principle that organic material is constantly being recycled.
Everything has a time of being—a birth, a life span, and a
death. The organic material, as the laws of chemistry state, can
neither be created nor destroyed.
R&L: Could you describe the progress of environmentalism from
its earlier days to the current radical, “Earth First!”
type of activists? How did it so obviously drift so far to the left?
Ray: The only way that could have happened was for the misguided
and false information, much of it very hysterical or dramatic, like
the earth is warming and the ozone has a hole, and all that kind of
thing— could not have lead to the passage of laws and
regulations that affect everyone’s lives were it not for
the cooperation of the press. It is the press that has taken these
charges and accusations and blown them up without any kind of
skepticism whatsoever—blown them into realities and treated
them as if they were true. A simple example:
We have heard recently the charge that supposedly because of the
chemical chlorofluoro-carbons that humans make for use as a
refrigerant, that molecules of that substance get into the
stratosphere, destroy the ozone, and therefore allow ultra-violet
light to penetrate. We know that the greatest amount of flux in the
ozone in the atmosphere is over the Antarctic, because the sun is
down below the horizon during the Antarctic winter. This is
background.