this thread:
"one of my best friends was sentenced in federal court today..."
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x1016087it occurs to me that the news of the sentencing of the two ELF members brings up a lot issues near and dear to DU -- specifically
should corporations be afforded the rights of individuals.
i'm posting this because i think
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x1016087">this thread expected everyone to be conversant and sypathetic to the concept of "ecodefense." Because most Dems aren't conversant with ecodefense, the thread generated more heat than light. I want to provide a resource for discussion because I think it's important for progressives to be able to navigate areas of moral ambiguity with grace, and that means having information at your disposal. If you haven't lived near the timber industry, you prolly aren't aware of ANY of this. If you have lived near the timber industry, you prolly can't imagine anyone NOT KNOWING all this stuff. So, here you go...
FWIW, monkeywrenching was controversial even within the
Earth First movement and there's a history of Earth Firsters being entrapped and
murdered by government interests intervening on behalf of the timber industry.
The main question is -- does "ecodefense" rise to the definition of "terrorism." Maybe it's a matter of degree, where, spiking a tree isn't necessarily a terrorist act, but arson on a large scale is. Maybe economic sabotage should ONLY be treated as a CRIMINAL OFFENSE rather than a crime against humanity. But I think that it's fairly non-controversial that acts of lesser vandalism (such as tree spikinkg) shouldn't be treated as terrorism.
Reading the history of ELF, particularly the case of the two people charged with "terrorism," I'm struck by
the tragedy of "doing bad things for all the right reasons." I knew Earth First enthusiasts in college and understand the trajectory of passion that takes a person down this road -- they've identified a cause worth fighting for -- and when you mix that with the righteousness and immortality of youth, you get kids champing at the bit for a shot at glory (i've observed that it goes away after they have kids).
Eco-warriors have
as their philosophical base.
Deep ecology biospheric egalitarianism — the claim that all living things have the same right to live and flourish.
Proponents of deep ecology believe that the world does not exist as a resource to be freely exploited by humans. The ethics of deep ecology holds that a whole system is superior to any of its parts.
BTW -- the founding principle of "ecodefense" is economic terrorism, by definition. The idea is to remove profit from environmentally destructive acts like clear cutting. We live in a time where corporate entities are afforded more rights than people, and this is an expression of that principle. The question this episode begs of us is, "should economic entities be afforded the same legal protection as people?"
I'd argue that this is a spectacular opportunity to examine the "personhood of corporate entities." This episode tugs at the boundary of this question. No one was hurt, but there was widespread property destruction.
Here's a timeline of ELF actions:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Earth_Liberation_Front_actions
here's some background on the news I'm referring to:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2003719703_ecosentence24m.html
Earth Liberation Front arsonist sentenced to 13 yearsEUGENE, Ore. — Declaring fires set at a police station, an SUV dealership and a tree farm acts of terrorism, a federal judge Wednesday sentenced the first of 10 members of a radical environmental group to 13 years in prison.
snip
Before sentencing, Meyerhoff denounced the ELF, saying its goals of promoting a public discussion about stopping practices that harm the earth actually cut off debate and harmed people.
"I was ignorant of history and economy and acted from a faulty and narrow vision as an ordinary bigot," Meyerhoff read from his four-page handwritten statement, his voice breaking at times. "A million times over I apologize ... to all of you hard-working business owners, employees, researchers, firemen, investigators, attorneys and all citizens whose property was destroyed, whose holidays were ruined, whose welfare was thwarted, and whose sleep was troubled."
here's a story from Seattle Times --
http://archives.seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/texis.cgi/web/vortex/display?slug=terrorist07&date=20060507
Is ecosabotage terrorism?
Who is a terrorist?
After the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people, it was clean-cut Timothy McVeigh, a brooding loner — infused with hatred of the government — who was convicted and put to death for that crime. After 9/11, which claimed the lives of more than 2,900 people, it was the bearded visage of Osama bin Laden.
This year, the Bush administration has touted the arrests of terrorists of a different kind — homegrown militants who have embarked on arson attacks to protest treatment of animals and the environment.
During the past three years alone, FBI counterterrorism agents have conducted at least 190 investigations into property crimes claimed by the Earth Liberation Front (ELF) and the Animal Liberation Front (ALF). None of the crimes injured or killed people.
"Terrorism is terrorism — no matter what the motive," declared FBI director Robert Mueller on Jan. 20, when he announced the indictment of 11 people in an alleged conspiracy that involved 17 attacks. Those include arsons at a ski resort in Vail, Colo., a horse slaughterhouse in Oregon, a federal wildlife research center in Olympia and the University of Washington Center for Urban Horticulture.
Is it terrorism? FBI says yes, even though environmental militants target property, not people. In the post-9/11 era, they say that the word tilts the criminal-justice system against defendants and helps the Bush administration justify a broader infiltration — and surveillance — of groups that protest government policies.
Documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union indicate that the FBI has monitored the activities of some environmental, animal-rights and peace groups. "You couple spying on political dissenters with grand jury subpoenas and a series of arrests, it's had a huge effect," said Alejandro Queral, executive director of the Northwest Constitutional Rights Center. "There is a serious danger of chilling dissenting points of view."
The FBI decision to run these investigations through a counterterrorism branch also has been questioned by its own Office of Inspector General, which in a 2003 report recommended that the cases should be handled by its criminal division.
I'm providing a link to the book, "Ecodefense: a Field Guide to Monkeywrenching" for background. I'm posting the foreward to the book written by Edward Abbey to provide an historical-affective perspective on "ecodefense."
There is no copyright restriction on this material as it is meant to be distributed freely.
It is important to note that Earth First founder Dave Foreman stepped away from the sabotage component of the movement (as he became older and wiser, I imagine).
http://www.omnipresence.mahost.org/inttxt.htm