Between the Forest and Greed
Within the past decade there has been a rising "environmentally
conscious" movement. The spectrum of issues in contention by
environmentalism has expanded virulently and is reaching its zenith.
Public dissatisfaction with the environmental movement is forming, as
the movement has taken the fight for the environment too far. Donella
Meadows is an environmentalist who has yet to fully think about the
issue she is arguing. In her piece "Not Seeing the Forest for the Dollar
Bills," she takes an almost infantile approach to the logging industry
and the concept of clear cutting. The monetary motivations behind the
logging industry is her explanation for clear cutting, trying to portray
the logging industry as a cold money making machine. This of course
neglects the fact that the reason logging generates capital is because
the world needs wood. There are several economic and environmental
issues that are considered when loggers enter and area. Haphazard clear
cutting of forests, while it maybe what Meadows would like us to think,
does not happen. With every industry, every aspect is carefully debated
and analyzed for the short and long term outcomes.
Any industry that capitalizes on earth’s resources figuratively signs a
pact with the earth. This pact bonds this industry to the earth and
requires that any harvesting of resources is not done so with haste and
waste. There is a symbiotic relationship between the two. For the
industry to exist there must be a constant supply of the resource.
Without a constant supply the industry dies. Now, many people believe
that the logging industry’s objective is to cut down all the trees that
are currently standing. As horrific as this scenario may sound, it is
far from the truth. Without trees to cut down there is no industry. The
logging industry is not so foolish as to rampage the forests and cut
down all the trees. As they cut, they plant. Replacing forests with
samplings may look inadequate, but over a long period of time these
samplings will become a new forest. The earth as we know it today has
been in existence for millions of years. Even if newly planted tress
take a century to grow back that is only a pinpoint on the time line.
The millions of acres of forested land left untouched currently will not
be engulfed by blades and tractors instantly. It will take time to cut
down the trees, as it will take time to grow them back.
Meadows seems to have a misconception of industries and the service they
provide. All industries, whether it be recycling to logging, are trying
to maximize their profits. If this means moving their plants off shore,
so be it. These industries provide the world with services that we need
to operate as an advanced civilization. She claims that the remaining
old growth forests are on protected federal land. If this is the case
she has little to complain about. The remaining portion of what she is
trying to protect is protected. At the same time she is also claiming
that old growth forest can not be recreated. This seems far fetched from
the eyes of an historian. Referring back to the history of the earth,
one can assume that before humans inhabited the land that forests burnt
to the ground leaving nothing but charred remains. Yet forests still
exist today. Now, when they are threatened by fire, we save them instead
of allowing nature to take its course. Meadows gives the reader a choice
between "the forest and greed". If her choices were accurate one would
probably choose the forest. The problem lies in her choices. They are
given to the reader from only one perspective... hers. When an argument
is based upon a one sided view it loses strength. It only leads to flaws
and the eventual dismissal of the argument. In any debate one should
look at the topic from the opposing side before approaching it from
one’s own.
In every country, forests are considered a valuable resource. They
provide us with wood to build homes and paper to communicate. With a
constantly growing population, the need for homes becomes greater and
thus the supply of wood must also increase. The real choice that should
be analyzed is "the forest or your home". Many alternate forms of
building materials are phased into the system as need be, but the need
for wood will always exist. Knowing that the world will continue to cut
down trees, the only solution to the forest depletion, is reforestation.
A forest ecologically engineered with the proper plants and bacteria may
not be perfect initially but it will someday become an old growth
forest. The animals that live in these forests, will learn to adapt. The
few animals that don’t adapt will probably die off or move. One may say
that is a cold way to look at the problem, but thousands of species have
become extinct and this process is called evolution. Whether evolution
is accelerated by man or comes in due time by nature, the outcome is the
same. I would propose that a human life is more important than any other
life on this planet, and that taking care of humans is a higher priority
than that of animals. Meadows has yet to understand the logging industry
and what it is trying to accomplish. Her piece is based on fear and poor
preparation and that is why the choices she gives the reader is
inaccurate.
BACK TO DIRECTORY |
BACK TO SUB DIRECTORY:
ENVIRONMENT
BACK
TO MAIN