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As I stated in another post, Hanscom, Watson, LaFollette, Force, and Zuckerman do not vote as a bloc, and any look at the minutes of the Sierra Club BOD meetings will confirm this. It is Fahn, McGrady, O'Connell, Catlin, Aumen, Cox, Ferenstein, Wells, and Zaleha who vote as a bloc. Ed Dobson is an independent voice along with Hanscom, Watson and the others.
The only thing Hanscom, Watson, LaFollette, Force, and Zuckerman vote as a bloc on is the important issue of protecting club democracy and defending the right of all different viewpoints to be treated fairly within the club, and to have a voice on the Board of Directors. And it is precisely the other nine who predictably vote as a bloc against club democracy and against fair representation on the board for all viewpoints.
It's too bad that the Sierra Club took their BOD minutes off their website, but I do have a copy of one of the recent meetings and can post how all the board members voted to illustrate my point. Otherwise I'd point interested readers here to the BOD minutes so you can see for yourself.
Re: Pimentel serving on the board of DASA and CCN: So what? That means that he accepts the traditional environmentalist position that immigration levels should be set in terms of long-term ecological carrying capacity and stabilizing the population, a position held by every single major reputable ecologist and environmental activist, including Dave Foreman, Lester Brown, Brock Evans, Garrett Hardin, Stuart Udall, David Brower, Edward Abbey, Paul Ehrlich, and others too numerous to list here. A position that the leadership of the Sierra Club suddenly decided during the wave of post-modernism and political correctness that swept across the left during the 1990s to abandon.
Furthermore, his statements on the Sierra Club's election website indicate that even though he does hold the environmentalist position on immigration rather than the post-modernist position, he does not have the intention of pushing the immigration issue or making it a priority. Pimentel: "Currently, I hold a neutral position on immigration. I feel that there are far more important and pressing environmental problems than immigration, including pesticides, soil erosion, water pollution, air pollution, energy conservation, and protecting forests."
The Sierra Club leadership could have avoided this whole controversy that is going on right now had they simply not tampered with the club's longstanding position on immigration, and left in place their 1989 resolution that immigration into the U.S. should be no more than that which would allow for the stabilization of U.S. population to zero population growth. Instead, they chose to tamper with their immigration position, impose a gag rule that nobody could talk about immigration while identifying themselves as a member of the Sierra Club, while secretly stacking the national population committee with members of pro-open borders groups, disciples of cornucopian anti-environmentalist Betsy Hartmann, and supporters of ultra-leftist fringe groups like the "Political Ecology Group." That was the real outside takeover, it was done by stealth, and it was rather despicable. If the Sierra Club is being torn apart right now, they have nobody but themselves to blame for this.
Re: Your calling the journal Population and Ecology "anti-semitic": Anyone can call anything any name they want. Where's the evidence? A lot of people such as those who frequent anti-Palestinean chat boards call Democratic Underground "anti-semitic" too, but where's the evidence?
You: "The Sierra Club also, long ago, used to bar Jews and Blacks from membership"
You mean Blacks like Frank Morris and Jews like Ben Zuckerman? And what does this have to do with the Sierra Club adopting a policy on an ecologically sound level of legal immigration into the U.S. to begin with? Limiting immigration into the U.S. was the dominant view of 1970s ecologists and was based on population and carrying capacity concerns. Barring Blacks and Jews from membership was based on racism and was - what, back in the 1910s? How is that even relevant today or to this issue?
Re: Your calling the L.A. Weekly "progressive", and Groundswell the "progressive" candidates: A good way to ensure that I will regard somebody with suspicion is if they go around proclaiming themselves as a "progressive". Here's an example: "Americans for Jobs, Health Care, and Progressive Values", the ones linked to Gephardt whose only purpose for existing was to run attack ads against Howard Dean. The leftist anti-environmentalist Betsy Hartmann calls herself a "progressive". If they're progressives, I guess that makes me a liberal instead.
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Now let's look, instead, at who the five that Groundswell endorsed are, and why Groundswell might have picked those five. First, Groundswell raised a big stink about an alleged outside takeover, but then they endorsed five candidates and purposely excluded the other three nominated candidates from their endorsement. They did this once the big stink had already been raised and the media had bought into it.
And what do those three nominated candidates that Groundswell didn't endorse - Ed Dobson, Michael Dorsey, and Chad Hanson - have in common? Past affiliation with the John Muir Sierrans, that's what! Furthermore, the Groundswell leaders are the very same people who several years ago circulated letters in opposition to Dorsey, Hanson, and other JMS people getting elected to the board, and they used the same scare tactics that they used today: An "outside takeover", "extreme concern for the viability of the club", and so on. Groundswell Sierra is beginning to look a lot more like a pathetic attempt to use immigration and SUSPS as a cover for their real agenda, which is to go after their real target, the John Muir Sierrans, and exclude *any* group representing a dissident viewpoint within the club, whether JMS, SUSPS, Sea Shepherd, or anyone else, from leadership positions in the club.
Here are the five people that Groundswell did endorse, and the years they joined the club: Lisa Renstrom - 1994 Dave Karpf - 1995 Nick Aumen - 1988 Sanjay Ranchod - 1994 Jan O'Connell - 1976
Notable that every single one of these candidates except for Jan O'Connell joined the Sierra Club *after* I did, and yet the candidates I support, which I see as taking the genuine ecological positions that I *thought* the Sierra Club was solid on when I joined, are supposed to be an "outside takeover"? I find it preposterous that people who joined the club after I did, and are now running for the BOD so they can advocate for positions and alliances that I oppose, are going to try and dictate to me who the outsiders are, especially in light of this:
Roy van de Hoek - joined 1992 David Pimentel - joined 1992 Frank Morris - joined 1998 Dick Lamm - first joined in the 1960s, rejoined 2003 after a lapsed membership
Which is the real outside takeover here?
Sanjay Ranchod has been to two Sierra Club meetings in his entire life, and those two was so he could solicit support for his campaign for the BOD. Anyone who brings up that Pimentel, Lamm, and Morris haven't been to Sierra Club meetings should be aware of that fact.
Nick Aumen and fake candidate Phil Berry were behind the attempt in 1999 to gut club democracy by making it more difficult for members to get resolutions on the ballot. This move was rightly opposed by many club leaders and reformers including David Brower, and was rightly rejected by the membership. That was unforgivable and speaks volumes about Aumen's fitness for club leadership.
Dave Karpf to Karyn Strickler: "I'm embarassed to even be on the same ballot as you." That tells me that Dave Karpf is an elitist, a snob with a sense of "entitlement" to be on the BOD. I would exclude him from consideration on that basis alone, regardless of the Groundswell endorsement.
One thing is certain, even if all the Groundswell candidates wind up getting elected this year, we will have won, because the behavior of Carl Pope, Larry Fahn, Lawrence Downing, and others during this election, and the use of many chapter newsletters to publish the Drusha Mayhue article in violation of club by-laws, has given us more than ample reason to see that they are removed from leadership in the club. And that is exactly what is going to happen once the media hoopla has died down and the election is over, no matter who wins.
As you yourself have undoubtedly seen on the Sierra Club email lists, there are a lot of people in the club angry at Groundswell for claiming to be a grassroots movement to fend off an outside takeover, while in reality using that as a cover for a stealth campaign against JMS. It's too bad MoveOn cannot see that and retract their endorsement of Groundswell. You're one of the few people within the club who is still defending them.
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