Every
Bug Is Sacred, Every Bug Is Great. If a Bug Is Wasted, Heaven Gets Irate.
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
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Lets
say you want to reverse the American industrial revolution, restoring
Americas technology and economy to something much closer to
the way they functioned before the Civil War.
In fact, lets
say youre such a radical Luddite that you oppose even the
green technologies of wind turbines and solar energy
farms, since they have to be put where the wind and the sunlight
are not where the energy users are thus requiring
massive transmission lines, which dont fit into your plans
for restoring the country to the way it looked in 1850.
What would
you do?
With the public
increasingly up in arms about the costs of gasoline and heating
oil and electricity not to mention the political ramifications
of our growing dependence on foreign oil you certainly couldnt
expect to state those goals in a straightforward manner and win
majority support at the polls. Not even with the far-left press
ridiculing your opponents, calling them the tools of the greedy
oil companies, whatever.
No, youd
have to come up with a way to accomplish those goals through subterfuge
and misdirection, pretending to be interested in
protecting
cute and cuddly little animals. Yeah, thats the ticket.
There used
to be a lot more sage grouse in Nevada and our neighboring states
to the north and east, 70 years ago. (But not necessarily 170 years
ago, interestingly enough.)
Then, in the
1960s, those who seek to drive sheep and cattle ranchers off the
land got busy, eliminating both ranchers and state predator-control
hunters. Populations of coyote, wildcats, crows and ravens skyrocketed.
Those animals are predators of the sage grouse particularly
their young and their eggs. Surprise: Sage grouse numbers declined.
In 2005, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service declined to recommend the sage grouse
for listing as threatened or endangered, given that
there are still close to 100,000 of them, widely scattered out there.
But the Idaho-based radical group known as the Western Watersheds
Project sued, arguing that decision was politically motivated.
Theyre
making good headway with U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill in
Boise, Idaho, who has ordered the Fish and Wildlife Service to review
its decision.
Should the
green extremists succeed, public land administrators as well as
private developers would have to seek permission from federal biologists,
guaranteeing enough grouse remain and habitat is protected
before they could do
well, anything.
Theres
no question listing the sage grouse would restrict the
construction of solar, biomass and geothermal power facilities,
or maybe eliminate them altogether in the grouses
habitat, which includes most of northern Nevada and a lot of southern
Idaho and Oregon, says Charles Benjamin, director of the Nevada
office of Western Resource Advocates and president of Nevadans for
Clean, Affordable, Reliable Energy a less extreme outfit.
That would
also affect wind turbines or transmission lines that are bringing
energy from a more distant project, Mr. Benjamin says, since
some of the best locations for wind turbines and transmission lines
overlap the sagebrush habitat on which the grouse depend.
That doesnt
bother Katie Fite, biodiversity director for the Western Watersheds
Project, who (hang onto your seats) favors small renewable energy
projects next door to power users over big centralized facilities
and the transmission lines they require.
Ms. Fite doesnt
think much of oil and gas, either, complaining oil and gas exploration
in Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and Montana has ripped apart habitat
that was intact a decade ago.
If we dont have run-amok
oil and gas development, we have wind farms built in sage grouse
habitat, she says. Whats going on right now is
a scramble to get approval for projects and right-of-ways before
sage grouse do get listed because these power lines are not compatible
with the sage grouse.
DARN
those greedy capitalists, trying to make sure our lights and air
conditioners and refrigerators will still work when we flip the
switch in 2010, despite the green assault from the OTHER direction,
urging the replacement of clean, proven, affordable fossil and nuclear
technologies with the very technologies whose power Ms. Fite and
company now want to make sure we cant use
wind, solar,
and geothermal.
And its
all so unnecessary, when we could clearly get all the energy we
need to run our modern technological society, including a healthy
flow of happy tourists into Nevada via highway and affordable air
travel by simply
what?
What options
WOULD the green extreme now leave us? Burning buffalo chips, perhaps.
Surely the buffalo-chip-powered airliner is right around the corner.
Or would that
endanger the soon-to-be-listed buffalo-chip-loving maggot?
October
14, 2008
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2008 Vin Suprynowicz
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