ENVIRONMENTALISTS TURN TO TERRORISM
The Columbian (Vancouver, WA.)
September 15, 2002
By Dennis Avery
Have environmental activists adopted the ethics of the Ku Klux Klan?
In Africa, environmental groups like Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth have lobbied the
governments of drought-stricken countries not to distribute American corn donated as food
aid to their millions of starving people because it might contain genetically modified
kernels.
No matter that most of their American members have been eating such foodstuffs for the
past decade with no ill effects. The membership of Greenpeace and Friends say starving
Africans should forgo it so Western greens can make an obscure political point. The
president of Zambia says the activists told him the corn is "poison." This is
the same pest-resistant corn approved for safety by three different U.S. government
agencies and eaten daily since 1995 by millions of Americans in such forms as corn flakes,
corn flour and, through livestock feed, hamburgers and ice cream. Biotech foods have
undergone more testing than any foods in history, with no danger found.
But in Zambia, 17,000 tons of U.S. corn is locked in warehouses, while desperate women and
children grub for roots and eat tree bark. A blind old man cries out for something,
anything to eat.
An observer in Johannesburg writes, "The message of death from Greenpeace was clear:
'You darkies must go hungry, poison your soils, and poison your biodiversity until we, the
wise white Bwanas from Europe, decide that GM crops are acceptable.' The sickening,
condescending, callous, racist arrogance of Greenpeace!"
At the "Earth Summit Plus 10" in Johannesburg, three policemen were wounded by
angry activists. The protesters weren't angry about the wild creatures being killed and
eaten by starving people whose farming systems are too primitive to provide food security.
The activists were declaring their solidarity with Palestinian suicide bombers.
In the Netherlands, a candidate for prime minister was murdered last year by an
animal-rights activist apparently angry over fur farming and confinement hog production.
Animal-rights fanatics beat a medical research executive with a baseball bat and burned
the apartment of a financial firm's president. The men attacked had committed the
"crime" of aiding the search for medicines to cure diseases in the most
effective way we know: testing new medicines on a few laboratory animals.
In August, the Earth Liberation Front torched a U.S. Forest Service research laboratory in
Pennsylvania. The lab was researching sustainable forestry. The group said it was
protesting "proposed timber sales, oil drilling and greed-driven manipulation of
nature."
Worse, the ELF communique claiming responsibility for the fire declared that segments of
this global revolutionary movement are no longer limiting their revolutionary potential by
adhering to a flawed, inconsistent "nonviolent" ideology: "Where necessary,
we will no longer hesitate to pick up the gun to implement justice."
Elevated priorities
Of course, we all owe a debt to the environmental movement. They called our attention to
the environmental dangers years before we might have elevated eco-priorities without their
urging.
The very success of the environmental movement may have made it inevitable that some
eco-zealots would overestimate their virtue and power.
Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth are zealots who believe they are pursuing a noble
cause and that their way is the only way.
We must remember that those sentiments are held by the remnants of both the KKK and the
primitive fanatics who attacked us last September.
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