Posted
on January 15, 2015 Written by sweetliberty.org,
From: 21st Century, Fall 1992
Who pulls the strings of environmental groups? The establishment figures who fund and control it — from England’s Prince Phillip and the Netherlands’ Prince Bernhard, to U.S. corporate funders like Robert O. Anderson.
Who pulls the strings of environmental groups? The establishment figures who fund and control it — from England’s Prince Phillip and the Netherlands’ Prince Bernhard, to U.S. corporate funders like Robert O. Anderson.
Far from a grass roots movement, environmentalism is a
big business, funded and directed by the leading families of the U.S. and
European establishments
This article is adapted from Chapter 10 of the Holes in
the Ozone Scare: The Scientific Evidence That the Sky Isn’t Falling, published
in June 1992 by 21st Century and now in its second printing.
Twenty-five years ago, those who believed that Mother Nature
comes first and humankind second were part of an insignificant fringe, considered
radical by most Americans. These environmentalists were visible
mostly at the level of the antinuclear street demonstration, where marijuana
smoke wafted around “Back To Nature” posters on display. Today, however, what
used to be extremist “environmentalist” ideology has become mainstream,
permeating American institutions at every level, from corporate boardrooms
to the Federal Reserve, the Congress, the White House, the churches, homes
and schools.
Official lore from the environmental movement’s publications
asserts that the movement emerged from the grass roots. The truth, however,
is that funding and policy lines comes from the most prestigious institutions
of the Eastern Liberal Establishment, centered around the New York Council
on Foreign Relations, and including the Trilateral commission, the Aspen
Institute, and a host of private family foundations.
No U.N. This network of foundations created environmentalism,
moving it from a radical fringe movement into a mass movement to support
the institutionalization of anti-science, no-growth policies at all levels
of government and public life. As prescribed in the Council on Foreign
Relations 1980s Project book series, environmentalism has been used
against America’s economy, against such targets as high-technology agriculture
and the nuclear power industry. This movement is fundamentally a green
pagan religion in its outlook. Unless defeated, it will destroy not only the
economy, but also the Judeo-Christian culture of the United States, and has
in fact come perilously close to accomplishing this objective already.
The vast wealth of the environmentalist groups may come
as a shock to most readers who believe that these groups are made up of “public
interest”, “nonprofit” organizations that are making great sacrifices
to save the Earth from a looming doomsday caused by man’s activities. In
fact, the environmental movement is one of the most powerful and lucrative
businesses in the world today.
Funding
from the Foundations
There are several thousand groups in the United States
today involved in “saving the Earth”. Although all share a common philosophy,
these groups are of four general types: those concerned, respectively with
environmental problems, population control, animal rights, and land
trusts. Most of these groups are very secretive about their finances, but
there is enough evidence on the public record to determine what they are
up to.
Table 1 lists the annual revenues of a sampling of 30 environmental
groups. These few groups alone had revenues of more than $1.17 billion in
1990. This list, it must be emphasized, by no means includes all of these
enviro businesses. It is estimated that there are more than 3,000 so-called
nonprofit environmental groups in the United States today, and most of them
take in more than a million dollars a year.
The Global Tomorrow Coalition, for example, is made up of
110 environmental and population-control groups, few of which have revenues
less than $3 million per year and land holdings of more than 6 million acres
worth billions of dollars, is just the best known of more than 900 land
trusts now operating in the United States.
Table 2 lists the grants of 35 foundations to two heavily funded
and powerful environmentalist groups — the Environmental Defense Fund
and the Natural Resources Defense Council — for the year 1988.
The data available from public sources show that the total
revenues of the environmentalist movement are more than $8.5 billion per
year. If the revenues of law firms involved in environmental litigation
and of university environmental programs were added on, this figure
would easily double to more than $16 billion a year. This point is emphasized
in Table 3 which lists the top
15 environmental groups receiving grants for environmental lawsuits and
protection and education programs.
To get an idea of how much money this is, the reader should
consider that this income is larger than the Gross National Product (GNP) of
56 underdeveloped nations (Table 4).
The 48 nations for which the latest GNP figures were available have a total
population of more than 360 million human beings. Ethiopia, for example, with
a population of 47.4 million human beings, many starving, has a GNP of
only $5.7 billion per year. Somalia, with 5.9 million inhabitants, has a
GNP that is lower than the revenues of those groups listed in Table 1. Not a
single nation in Central America or the Caribbean has a GNP greater than the
revenues of the U.S. environmental movement.
With these massive resources under its control, it is no
surprise that the environmentalist movement has been able to set the
national policy agenda. There is no trade association in the world with the
financial resources and power to match the vast resources of the environmental
lobby. In addition, it has the support of most of the news media. Opposing
views and scientific refutations of environmental scares are most often
simply blacked out.
Where do the environmental groups get their money? Dues
from members represent an average of 50 percent of the income of most
groups; most of the rest of the income comes from foundation grants, corporate
contributions, and U.S. government funds. Almost every one of today’s
land-trust, environmental, animal-rights, and population-control groups was
created with grants from one of the elite foundations, like the Ford foundation
and the Rockefeller Foundation. These “seed grants” enable the radical
groups to become established and start their own fundraising operations.
These grants are also a seal-of-approval for the other foundations.
The foundations also provide funding for special
projects. For example, the Worldwatch Institute received $825,000 in foundation
grants in 1988. Almost all of that money was earmarked specifically for the
launching of a magazine, World Watch, which has become influential among
policy-makers, promoting the group’s antiscience and antipopulation
views. The Worldwatch Institute’s brochures report that it was created by the
Rockefeller Brothers Fund to “alert policy makers and the general public
to emerging global trends in the availability and management of resources
— both human and natural”.
Foundation grants in the range of $20 to $50 million for
the environmental cause are no longer a novelty. In July 1990, the Rockefeller
Foundation announced a $50 million global environmental program. The specific
purpose of the program is to create an elite group of individuals in each
country whose role is to implement and enforce the international environmental
treaties now being negotiated.
Kathleen Teltsch reported in the New York times (July
24, 1990):
“As an initial step, the five-year program will assist hundreds
of young scientists and policy makers in developing countries to create
a worldwide network of trained environmental leaders, who will meet regularly
at workshops, sharing information and discussing strategy.
“Through the international network, the foundation
wants to encourage efforts to build environmental protection into governments’
long-range economic planning. Other major elements would promote the drafting
of international treaties to deal with forest, land, and water preservation,
and hazardous waste disposal”
The foundations are run by America’s top patrician families.
These families channel billions of dollars into the organizations and
causes they wish to support every year, and thereby exert enormous political
clout. By deciding who and what gets funded, they determine the political
issues up front in Washington, which are then voted on by Congress. It is
all tax free, since the foundations are tax-exempt. The boards of directors
of the large foundations are made up of some of the most powerful individuals
in this country, and they always overlap with power brokers in government
and industry.
One such individual was Thornton F. Bradshaw, who, until
his recent death, was chairman and program director of the MacArthur foundation
and a trustee of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the Conservation Foundation.
At the same time, Bradshaw was chairman of the RCA Corporation and a director
of NBC, the Atlantic Richfield corp., Champion International, and first
Boston, Inc. Bradshaw was also a member of the Malthusian Club of Rome and
director of the Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies, organizations
that have played a critical role in spreading the “limits to growth” ideology
of the environmental movement.
Another individual perhaps better known to readers is
Henry A. Kissinger, former U.s. secretary of state and a trustee of the Rockefeller
Brothers Fund. For years Kissinger was the director of the fund’s special
Studies Project, which was in charge of special operations.
Corporate
Contributions
Another huge source of contributions to the environmental
movement is private corporations. Unlike tax-exempt foundations, however,
corporations are not required by law to report what they do with their
money, so it is difficult for an independent researcher to estimate the
level of funding for the environmentalist movement from business and
industry. There are watchdog groups, however, that have investigated these
money flows and come up with startlingly large figures.
For example, the April 1991 newsletter of the Capital
Research Center in Washington, D.C., which monitors trends in corporate
giving, scathingly denounces those corporations it has discovered financing
the environmentalists. The newsletter states that oil companies “are
heavy financial supporters of the very advocacy groups which oppose activities
essential to their ability to meet consumer needs”.
Further, it reports, “The Nature Conservancy’s 1990 report
reflects contributions of over $1,000,000 from Amoco, over $135,000 from
Arco, over 4100,000 from BP Exploration and BP Oil, more than $3,200,000 (in
real estate) from Chevron, over $10,000 from Conoco and Phillips Petroleum and
over $260,000 from Exxon”.
From the scant information publicly available (largely
annual reports from the major environmental groups), one can conservatively
estimate that corporations contribute more than $200 million a year to
the environmentalist movement.
This should come as no surprise. Over the past 20 years,
giant corporations have discovered that by using environmental regulations
they can bankrupt their competition, the small– and medium-sized firms that
are the most active and technologically innovative part of the U.S.
economy.
Compliance with environmental regulations is also
big business. According to official figures from the federal government’s
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), it costs the U.S. economy $131 billion
today to comply with environmental regulations. That figure will have
risen to more than $300 billion a year by the year 2000. The expenditures
are a net drain on the economy, but while the nation is bankrupted, someone
is profiting from the services and equipment sold. A look at classified
advertisements in the papers today reveals that companies involved in environmental
compliance are growing fast. Many of these corporations are contributing
to the environmental movement.
Funds from
the U.S. Government
There is a third area of funding for the environmental
movement: the U.S. government itself. As reported in detail by Peter Metzger,
former science editor of the Rocky Mountain News, there are now thousands
of professional environmentalists ensconced in the U.S. government.
These environmentalists channel hundreds of millions of dollars in
grants and favors to environmentalists and environmental groups under
all kinds of guises. In a 1991 newspaper series, columnist Warren Brookes
exposed how the federal Bureau of Land Management [BLM] used the Nature Conservancy
as a land broker, giving the antigrowth organization handsome profits.
The EPA doles out huge amounts of money to environmental
groups to conduct “studies” of the impact of global warming and ozone depletion.
President Bush has made the Global Climate Change program a priority, so
while the Space Station, vaccinations for children, and other crucial
projects have been virtually eliminated from the budget, $1.3 billion is
available for studies of how man is fouling the Earth. Similarly, scientists
who challenge global warming and ozone depletion as hoaxes do not receive a
penny in funding, while those who scream doomsday receive tens of millions
in research grants from the “climate change” program.
How much funding do the environmentalists receive from
the federal government? Officially, the U.S. government gives away more
than $3 billion a year in grants to support environmental groups and
projects. The actual total, however, is impossible to estimate. A
top-ranking official of the department of Energy who spent two years attempting
to cut off tens of millions of dollars in “pork barrel” grants going to environmentalist
groups, discovered that for each grant she was eliminating, environmentalist
moles in the department added several new ones. The official resigned in
disgust.
The environmentalist capture of Washington, which was
consolidated during the Carter administration, produced radical
changes in the Washington, D.C. establishment. This process of subversion
was described by [Peter] Metzger in a speech given in 1980, titled “Government-funded Activism: Hiding Behind
the Public Interest.”
“For the first time in history, a presidential administration
is funding a political movement dedicated to destroying many of the
institutions and principles of American society. Activist organizations,
created, trained, and funded at taxpayers’ expense, and claiming to represent
the public interest, are attacking our economic system and advocating its
replacement by a new form of government. Not only is this being done by
means already adjudicated as being unconstitutional, but it is being done
without the consent of Congress, the knowledge of the public, or the attention
of the press.
It all began when President Carter hired individuals
prominently identified with the protest or adversary culture… the appointment
[by the Carter administration] of several hundred leading activists to
key regulatory and policy-making positions in Washington resulted in
their use of the federal regulatory bureaucracy in order to achieve their
personal and ideological goals.
Already accomplished is the virtual paralysis of new federal
coal leasing, conventional electric generating plant licensing in many
areas, federal minerals land leasing and water development, industrial
exporting without complex environmental hearings, and the halting of
new nuclear power plant construction…
The consequences of those sub-cabinet appointees having
then made their own appointments, and those having then made theirs, so that
now, there are thousands of [environmentalist] representatives in
government…”
According to Metzger, this new class,
“enshrined in the universities, the news media, and especially
the federal bureaucracy, has become one of the most powerful of the special
interests.”
Two Case
Studies
Let us consider two case studies of how foundation-funded
environmentalist organizations have virtually taken over national
policy.
The Washington, D.C.-based Environmental Defense Fund
(EDF) was created in 1969. The cover story is that it sprang from America’s
grass roots, after a group of Long Island citizens began having coffee
clatches to discuss the threat of toxic chemicals. The truth is that EDF was
created by grants from the leading Eastern Establishment foundations and
these foundations have continued to support it.
The Ford Foundation gave EDF its seed money in 1969. In
1988, EDF received $500,000 from the ford Foundation, $1,000,000 from the
William Bingham Foundation, $75,000 from the Joyce Foundation, $150,000
from the Mott Foundation, and $25,000 from the Carnegie Foundation, among others.
Today, EDF has seven offices nationwide, more than 150,000 members, and an
annual operating budget of $17 million.
The EDF made its name in the fight to ban DDT, which it
accomplished with the help of Natural Resources Defense Council litigation
in 1972 — and with the cooperation of the EPA’s administrator, William
Ruckelshaus. Ruckelshaus ignored the scientific evidence presented during
seven months of EPA hearings on DDT, and he ignored the decision of the EPA’s
hearing examiner not to ban DDT; instead, for what he admitted were political
reasons, he banned this life-saving insecticide that was turning the tide
on malaria. Thus “public perception” became established as more important
than scientific evidence in environmental decisions.
In 1986, EDF helped to draft California’s first sweeping
environmental regulations in the form of the ballot initiative known
as Proposition 65, which restricted the use of dozens of chemicals in industry
and agriculture and has cost the California economy billions.
EDF’s goals for the 1990s include: defending against the
so-called greenhouse effect; saving sea turtles and porpoises by shutting
down the fishing industry; banning CFCs worldwide by the year 2000; saving
the world’s rain forests; passing legislation to prevent so-called acid
rain; setting aside Antarctica as a permanent wildlife reserve; extending
the chemical bans in California’s Proposition 65 to the entire nation; and
recycling all household and industrial waste material.
The Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), one of several
of the legal arms of the environmentalist movement, was founded in 1970
with a massive infusion of funds from the Ford Foundation. Together with
the Legal Defense Fund of the Sierra Club and the National Audobon Society,
the NRDC took to the courts, filing dozens of lawsuits to block dams, shut
down nuclear power-plant construction, and derail highway development projects.
The NRDC and its cohorts also targeted federal regulators
in the Environmental Protection Agency and other offices, forcing tightened
controls on pollution and demanding the enforcement of statutory rules
for clean air and rivers. The Clean Air
Act of 1970 was a first fruit of these efforts.
Who funds these multi-million-dollar court battles? In
1988, the NRDC received grants of $75,000 from the Educational Foundation
of America, $600,000 from the MacArthur Foundation, $165,000 from the W.
Alton Jones Foundation, and $850,000 from the Beinecke Foundation.
A good chunk of this money ends up in the expense accounts
and salaries of the Eastern Establishment bigwigs who run the environmentalist
advocacy groups — or in the pockets of their lawyers. A 1990 cover story in Forbes
magazine reports that the organizational network of consumer and environmentalist
activist Ralph Nader is worth close to $10 million and receives ardent support
in its anti-industry lawsuits from a circle of plaintiff attorneys with
multi-million-dollar annual incomes (see Brimelow and Spencer 1990)
Nader himself lives very well off the publicity stirred
up from court cases. “Oh, God, limousines and nothing but the best hotels”, Forbes
quotes a former state Trial Lawyers Association official. “We got quite a
bill when he [Nader] was in town”. Nader lives in a $1.5 million townhouse in
Washington, D.C. (owned by his sister) and commands up to five-figure fees
each for between 50 and 100 speaking appearances per year.
(Photo caption) The National Wildlife Federation’s Jay
Hair, like other leaders of environmental empires, commands a six-figure
salary — $200,000. However, his actual income is much higher because it
includes earnings from his membership on the boards of corporations and
other environmental groups. On average, environmental executives have
salaries in the range of $150,000 to $200,000 a year, excluding benefits and
income from other sources.
Other environmentalist organization leaders also
maintain an expensive lifestyle. In August 1983, reporter Nancy Shute gave a
colorful description of the environmentalists-turned-establishment who had
taken over Washington. Under the headline “Bambi Goes to Washington”,
Shute writes in National Review:
“On December 1, 1982, barely two years after Ronald
Reagan’s election, hundreds of Washington lawyers and lobbyists munched
pears and cheese and sipped Bloody Marys under the sparkling crystal chandeliers
at the Organization of the American States (oas.org) headquarters, just
two blocks from the White House. The conversation turned to politics, as
do all Washington cocktail-party conversations.
“But the women in pearls and men in dark suits who shouted
to be heard over the seven piece dance band represented not Exxon or U.S.
Steel or General Motors, but the nations’ environmental lobby, celebrating
the tenth birthday of the Environmental Policy Center, an influential
Washington lobbying group and research institute.
“In the 13 years since Earth Day, the environmental presence
in the capital has grown from a ragtag band dedicated to saving trees and
whales to a formidable Washington institution.
“Much of the environmental windfall has been spent on
sleek new offices, on high-profile lobbyists like former senator Gaylord
Nelson and Carter Administration Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus… on
high-priced economists and lawyers, and on millions of direct-mail pleas for
more cash…” [p.924]
These environmentalists are unabashed about their affluence.
Their conferences have become notorious for their plush locales (Switzerland,
Beverly Hills, Sundance and Aspen, for example).
The Campaign
against CFCs
Both the EDF and NRDC played a leading role in the propaganda
and legal campaign to ban CFCs.
In June 1974, Sherwood Rowland and Mario Molina’s doomsday
paper claiming CFCs would deplete the ozone layer was published in Nature.
At that moment, however, the hottest topic in the news media was that chlorine
emissions from the Space Shuttle would wipe out the ozone layer. It was not
until September 1974, that articles on the CFCs threat started to appear.
In November 1974, the Natural Resources Defense Council
joined the ozone debate, calling for an immediate ban on CFCs. In June 1975,
the NRDC sued the Consumer Products Safety Commission for a ban on CFCs
used in aerosol spray cans. The lawsuit was rejected by the commission in
July 1975, on grounds that there was insufficient evidence that CFCs harm
the atmosphere.
At that point, EPA administrator Russell E. Train intervened
on behalf of the NRDC and proponents of the ozone depletion theory, calling
for all nations to cooperate in establishing worldwide guidelines on CFCs
to avoid environmental disaster. Today Russell E. Train is head of the
World Wildlife Fund/Conservation Foundation, a trustee of the Rockefeller
Brothers Fund, and a top-ranking member of both the Trilateral Commission
and the New York Council on Foreign Relations.
For the next two years, debate raged on the future of CFCs,
with the NRDC, lavishly funded by the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations,
playing a major role. While President Ford’s top science advisers said the
evidence was still not strong enough for an immediate ban on CFCs, other members
of the administration moved to implement such a ban. Once of them was Russell
W. Peterson, chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality,
who worked for a ban on the use of CFCs in aerosol cans as a first step toward
the total banning of CFCs. Peterson made it clear that it did not matter
that there was no scientific evidence against CFCs. According to Sharon
Roan in Ozone Crisis, Peterson told the press:
“I believe firmly that we cannot afford to give chemicals
the same constitutional rights that we enjoy under the law. Chemicals are
not innocent until proven guilty” (p. 83).
Peterson today is the head of the National Audubon Society.
In October 1978, CFCs used as propellants in aerosol cans
were banned in the United States.
The CFCs issue lay dormant for the next several years,
until November 1984, when the NRDC started a new phase on the assault on CFCs
with a suit against the EPA. The suit sought to force the EPA to place a cap on
overall CFC production, as mandated under the EPA’s Phase Two proposals.
The NRDC argued that under the Clean Air Act, the EPA was required to regulate
CFCs if they were deemed harmful to the environment. The group claimed the
EPA had acknowledged this in its 1980 proposed regulations, which had not
been implemented during the first four years of the Reagan administration.
As the NRDC relaunched its campaign against CFCs, a major
political change was taking place in Washington, D.C. The leading proponents
of technology, the space program, and economic development in the Reagan
administration had been ousted by a series of media-orchestrated scandals
== Interior Secretary James Watt, NASA Administrator James Beggs, and EPA
Chief Anne Burford. Burford was replaced by the multimillionaire corporate
environmentalist, William Ruckelshaus, his second term as EPA
administration.
There was still no credible scientific evidence against
CFCs; supposedly this changed in May 1985 with the publication of Joseph
Farman’s doomsday ozone-hole paper in Nature magazine. This article enabled
the environmental lobby to start creating hysteria about CFCs once more,
which set the wheels into motion that led to the signing of the Montreal Protocol
in 1987.
In September 1986, the DuPont
Company announced its support for the banning of CFCs. By summer 1987, the environmental onslaught against
CFCs was in full gear under the leadership of the well-funded NRDC. It was at
that moment that the World Resources Institute received a $25 million grant
from the MacArthur Foundation. According to Sharon Roan’s book, Ozone Crisis
(page 204):
“Economist Daniel J. Dudek of the Environmental Defense
Fund provided a study on the cost of reducing ozone depletion… At the World
Resources Institute and Worldwatch Institute, studies were completed to
alert Americans to the effects of various ozone control policies. The
Environmental Defense Fund, Friends of the Earth, and Sierra Club initiated
public education campaigns and began pressuring industry to own up to
its responsibility.”
In September 1987, the Montreal Protocol was signed,
calling for a 50 percent ban on CFCs by the year 2000.
[CDR Note: In 1995 Arizona State
Legislature passed a bill (HB 2236) — a one pager — which allowed the possession,
use, manufacture, purchase, installation, transportation and sale of
chloroflurocarbons (namely freon), while prohibiting any penalty, fine or
retaliatory action against any person or political subdivision (local
government) of the state who or which did any of the above. Governor Fife
Symington signed the bill into law on April 15, 1995 and very shortly thereafter
was out of office on alleged charges of misuse of campaign funds, or some
silly nonsense.
According to a report we’ve obtained, scientific studies
have debunked the theory that CFC’s from freon were responsible for the hole
in the ozone layer. The hole is caused from lack of sunlight at the polar
areas during the long-night season. When the sun returns, the hole repairs
itself. It is a repetitive process. The studies claim that CFCs from volcanoes
and other natural phenomena are released into the atmosphere at a much higher
rate than those [CFCs] released by freon.
It is most probable that since DuPont’s patent on freon
was about to expire — at which time any company could manufacture freon —
the timed release of the ozone-hole scare played a two-fold role; that is, forwarding
the environmentalist movement and catering to the interests of the
transnational DuPont company. We understand that the new coolant approved
for use is also a DuPont patented product; was never tested for environmental
safety; is much less efficient; uses more electricity to cool; is caustic
to equipment, reducing the life of equipment; and cannot be used in present
equipment so will ultimately cost homeowners and businesses billions to
modify or change out equipment.]
The First
Earth Day
First demonstrators who put spotted owls first, environmentalists
define people as the enemy.
At the same time that the environmental organizations
were becoming a well-funded big business, their propaganda output was used
to create popular support for the environmentalist cause in the United
States. A turning point in the transformation of the environmentalist
fringe into a radicalized mass movement was Earth Day 1970.
On April 22, 1970, thousands of college students and curious
onlookers turned out to participate in the widely publicized Earth Day
festivities in dozens of major U.S. cities. Fold music, antinuclear slogans,
“Love Your Mother Planet Earth” posters and college students were everywhere.
On the surface it appeared to most observers that the nationwide rallies represented
a grass roots movement to protest “the destruction of the environment”.
Nothing could be further from the truth. The Earth Day publicity stunt was
part of a highly coordinated effort to create a climate of sympathy for
Malthusian zero growth, where none yet existed in the United States.
Earth Day was partly bankrolled by a $200,000 personal
grant from Robert O. Anderson, at the time the president of Atlantic Richfield
Oil Corporation, the president of the Aspen Institute for Humanistic
Studies, and a personal protégé of University of Chicago zero-growth ideologue
Robert Maynard Hutchins. Anderson and the Aspen Institute played a crucial
role in the launching of a worldwide environmentalist movement, and
Earth Day was a big step along the way.
Coincident with the Earth Day effort, The Progressive,
a 70-year-old publication of the U.S. branch of the Fabian socialist movement
of H.G. Wells, Bertrand Russell, and Julian and Aldous Huxley, devoted its
entire issue to a special report on “The Crisis of Survival”. Among the environmentalist
ideologues who contributed to this special issue were Ralph Nader and Paul
Ehrlich. Denis Hayes, a Stanford University graduate who would later
become the environmentalist-in-residence at the Worldwatch Institute, wrote
the keynote article on Earth Day. He stated:
“April 22 is a tool — something that can be used to focus
the attention of society on where we are heading. It’s a chance to start getting
a handle on it all; a rejection of the silly idea that bigger is better,
and faster is better, world without limits, amen.
“This has never been true. It presumes a mastery by Man
over nature, and over Nature’s laws. Instead of seeking harmony, man has
sought to subdue the whole world. The consequences of this are beginning to
come home. And time is running out.”
In 1970, most Americans would have summarily rejected
this pessimistic view. But, by the time the organizers of Earth Day 1970
were planning 20th anniversary celebrations of the event for 1990, the
environmentalist hoax had been sold to the population of the United
States. In the months before Earth Day 1990, every elementary and secondary
school in the nation was provided with a special Earth Day preparation curriculum
from the environmental Protection Agency. EPA spokesmen toured the nation.
Television, magazines, and newspapers from the national to local level
reported and editorialized on the event. State and town governments promoted
it with public funds.
On Earth Day 1990, according to a spokesman for Friends of
the Earth (a leading arm of the environmentalist lobby also financed by
Robert O. Anderson), “one of the largest demonstrations ever” was held in
Washington, D.C. and tens of thousands of people, representing “all
types of environmental groups from all over the United States and internationally”
were there. Smaller celebrations were held in literally thousands of
state capitals, towns, and cities across the United States. A mass movement
against science, technology, and economic growth had been consolidated
in the United States.
Next Comes
Genocide
In 1989, Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak estimated that
500 million people in the Third World had starved to death in the decade of
the 1980’s; current estimates by the United Nations Children’s Emergency
Fund (UNICEF) are that 40,000 children under the age of five starve to death
every day. Most of these deaths can be attributed directly or indirectly to
debt service and “technological apartheid”, policies that prevent modern
technologies — such as water treatment plants, nuclear energy, refrigeration,
mechanized agriculture, pesticides, and fertilizers — from being used
in Third World countries. These policies were considered colonialist in past
decades; today, they are promoted by environmental groups in industrialized
nations, under the guise of saving the
Earth from pollution.
[CDR Note: See related article:
Toxic Wastes ‘Recycled’ As Fertilizer Threaten U.S. Farms — Food Supply
Many environmentalists have no idea of the consequences
of their belief system for the people of the Third World, but it is clear
that those at the top of the environmentalist movement are witting in
their advocacy of policies that ultimately kill people. We know this is the
case because many of the environmentalist policy-makers say so publicly.
It is not simply that the ban on CFCs will kill people and that the top environmentalists
know that it will kill people.
The fact is that the top ozone depletion propagandists
at the World Wildlife Fund, the Club of Rome, the Population Crisis
Committee/Draper Fund, and other elite bodies want it to kill people. Depopulation
is one of the reasons they devised the ozone hoax in the first place. By scaring
the general population with stories of imminent catastrophe, these
policy-makers intend to justify adoption of stringent measures that will
curtail economic growth and population. The ozone hole is just one of several
such scare stories.
On July 24, 1980, the U.S. State Department unveiled the Global
2000 Report to the President. It had been in preparation by the White
House Council on environmental Quality and the State Department, employing
scores of government personnel and hundreds of outside consultants
since the early days of the Carter administration — an administration dominated
by elite members of David Rockefeller’s Trilateral Commission. The report
was a long-inded proposal that “population control” — a euphemism for
killing people — be made the cornerstone of the policies of all U.S. presidents
from that time forward.
Pervading the report and several companion documents
were lurid predictions: crises in
water resources, severe energy shortages, shortfalls in strategically
vital raw materials — all blamed on “population growth”.
The report argued that without countervailing action, by
the year 2000 there will be 2 to 4 billion people too many. Therefore, the
report said, it is required that government implicitly direct all policies
domestic and foreign toward the elimination of 2 to 4 billion people by
the year 2000.
The rationale for proposing a crime of such great magnitude
is the simple — and totally wrong — Malthusian ideology that claims population
growth inherently exhausts “natural resources” and there are, therefore,
“limits to growth”, as the Club of Rome has insisted.
In the real world of human production of the means of
human existence, there is no correlation between “natural resources” and
human population potential, for the simple reason that resources are not
really “natural”. The resources for human existence are defined by human science
and technology, and the development of science and technology defines
whole new arrays of “resources” for the societies that avail themselves of
such progress. For example, oil was there “naturally”, but if did not exist
as a resource for humankind until the technology — combustion engines, and
so on — existed to make it a resource. Before that, it was a black mud that usually
meant ruination of farm fields.
This means two things. First, there are no “limits to
growth”. There are only limits within the confines of a given array of technology.
So, unless scientific and technological progress were stopped dead, there
could never be an absolute limit to “resources” for human life. There can never
be such a thing as absolute “overpopulation” of the human species.
Second, were modern agricultural and industrial capabilities,
even as they exist in industrialized nations today, diffused throughout
the Third World, we would discover that not only do we have ample resources
for year-2000 population levels, but we also have too few people to operate
advanced agro-industrial facilities at optimum capacity. If we took account
of in-sight technological advances, we would discover that underpopulation
is the main problem we face.
The Global 2000 Report, however, assumed no diffusion
of modern agro-industrial capabilities to the Third World. Instead, it
assumed that the Third World would be denied even available forms of
technology.
In addition, it assumed no progress beyond existing scientific
and technological arsenals. The over population forecast follows
neatly from these assumptions: The report assumes that science and technology
have been forced to come to a stop, in order to assert that by the year 2000,
there will be 2 to 4 billion more people than the world economy can sustain.
The report neglects to point out that if science and technology were not to
be forced into stagnation, the globe’s population would have much brighter
prospects.
In other words, the Global 2000 Report is simply a
statement of policy intent for genocide, not a scientific forecast at
all. It reveals in a unique way the depopulation aims of those also behind
the ozone-depletion hoax.
By the time Global 2000 was issued, whole sections
of the U.S. government existed solely to implement its recommendation:
depopulation. The role of Richard Elliott Benedick, who negotiated the Montreal
Protocol for the United States, must be emphasized again. Benedick has spent
most of his government career as head of the State Department Population
Office, promoting policies to reduce the size of the world’s population.
Lest the skeptical reader think we exaggerate, listen
to Thomas Ferguson, a Benedick colleague and head of the Latin American
desk at Benedick’s Office of Population Affairs. Ferguson made these comments
on State Department policy toward the civil war in El Salvado (as reported
by Executive Intelligence Review, 1981, p. 43):
“Once population is out of control, it requires authoritarian
government, even fascism, to reduce it. The professionals are not interested
in lowering population for humanitarian reasons… In El Salvador,
there is no place for these people — period. No place.
“Look at Vietnam. We studied the thing. That area was also
overpopulated and a problem. We thought that the war would lower rates, and
we were wrong. To really reduce population quickly, you have to pull all the
males into the fighting and you have to kill significant numbers of fertile
age females. You know, as long as you have a large number of fertile females,
you will have a problem…
“In El Salvador, you are killing a small number of males
and not enough females to do the job on the population. The quickest way to
reduce population is through famine, like in Africa, or through disease.,
like the Black Death.
“What might happen in El Salvador is that the war might
disrupt the distribution of food: The population could weaken itself,
you could have disease and starvation. Then you can successfully create a
tendency for population rates to decline rapidly… but otherwise, people
breed like animals.”
Ferguson’s level of moral depravity is not unique among government
policy-makers. Listen to William Paddock, an adviser to the State Department
under both Henry Kissinger and Cyrus Vance. In spring 1981, Paddock told a
Georgetown University seminar that 3.5 million of El Salvador’s 4 million
people should be eliminated, and would be, provided that there was “continuous
turmoil and civil strife, which is the only solution to the overpopulation
problem.”
Paddock continued:
“The United States should support the current military
dictatorship, because that is what is required… But we should also open up
contacts with the opposition, because they will eventually come to power.
As we do that, we should work with their opposition, because we will need to
bring them to power. That is what our policy is, that is what it must be… an
endless cycle.”
Readers are encouraged to seek out and read the documentation
for themselves in official government documents. For example, National
Security Study Memorandum 200: Implications of Worldwide Population
Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests, a recently declassified
memo written by National Security Advisers Brent Scowcroft and Henry
Kissinger in 1974, states specifically that population growth in the developing
sector is a national security threat to the United States, and must be
curtailed as a matter of America’s foreign policy. Under the rubric of this
document, the United States has worked internationally to cut the growth
and overall size of the darker-skinned peoples of the Third World — an explicitly
racist policy.*
Notes______________________________
This policy against the Third World and “less advantaged
populations” is being implemented on a scale never seen before but, in
fact, it is nothing new. Historian Anton Chaitkin documented recently that
the policy-makers gathered around George Bush, the family of the President,
and the Anglo-American financial establishment behind the Bush administration,
are the same group of people who put the racist Adolf Hitler into power and
copied his eugenics policies in practice in the United States. The continue
to promulgate the policy of Hitlerite “eugenics” or race purification
under the new label of population control and in the name of “saving the
environment”.
Bush’s work for population control goes back to the
1960s, when he was the first congressman to introduce national
population-control legislation. Bush was also a conspicuous activist for
population reduction when he was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations
from 1971 to 1972. In 1972, prodded by Bush and others, the U. S. Agency for
International Development (AID) began funding the Serilization League
of America to sterilize nonwhites.
In his introduction to the 1973 book The World Population
Crisis: The U.S. Response, by Phyllis Piotrow, Bush wrote that “one of the major challenges of the 1970s…
will be to curb the world’s fertility”.
In 1988, U.S. AID made a new contract with the Sterilization
League, committing the U.S. government to spend $80 million over five
years. This contract is not listed in the public U.S. AID budgetary literature,
yet the group says that 87 percent of its foreign operations are funded by
the U.S. government.
The sterilization program is based on deception.
The U. S. AID tells Congress and the public, that since
the Reagan and Bush administrations have been opposed to abortions, tax
money that would have funded abortions in foreign countries has been
diverted to “family planning activities”. They fail to explain that in addition
to buying 7 billion condoms, the program funds surgical sterilization
of growing numbers of the Third World Population.
References________________________
Peter Brimelow and Leslie Spencer, 1990. “Ralph Nader,
Inc.”, Forbes (9–17) pp 117–122 (cover story)
Anton chaitkin and Webster Tarpley, 1992. George Bush;
The Unauthorized Biography. In Press.
Council on Environmental Quality, 1980. “The Global
2000 Report to the President: Entering the Twenty-first Century”, Washington D.C.
Executive Intelligence Review, 1981. The Conspiracy
Behind the Trilateral Commission, New York.
Joseph Farman et al. 1985. “Large losses of total ozone
in Antartica reveal seasonal CLOx/NOx Interaction”, Nature, Vol.
315 (Jan 24), pp 207–210.
Peter Metzger, 1980. “Government-Funded Activism: Hiding
behind the Public Interest”. Present at the 47th Annual Conference of
the Southwestern Electric Exchange in Boca Raton, Florida (March 26).
Mario J. Molina and F.S. Rowland, 1974. “Stratospheric
sink for chlorfluromethanes: chlorine atomic-atalysed {sic} destruction of
ozone”, Nature, Vol. 249 (June 28), pp 810–812.
Kathleen Murphy, 1979. “The 1980s Project: Blueprint
for ‘Controlled Disintegration’ “, Fusion (October), pp. 36–47.
National Security Study Memorandum 20, 1974, Implications
of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests,
Washington, D.C.
William Paddock, 1981. “The Demographic and National
Security Inplications of the Salvado Revolution”. Washington, D.C.;
Georgetown Center for Strategic and International Studies Seminar
(Feb. 27).
Sharon Road. 1989. Ozone Crisis: The 15-Year Evolution
of a Sudden Global Emergency. New York; John Wiley &
Sons, Inc.
Lydia Schulman, 1981. “Global 2000: Will the
Zero-Growthers capture the White House?” Fusion Magazine (May),
pp. 18–19.
“The State Department’s Office of Population Affairs:
Depopulating by ‘War and Famine’ “, 1981. Fusion magazine
(June), pp. 20–23.
Nancy Shute, 1983. “The Greening of James Watt”, National
Review (Aug 5), pp 924–928
Kathleen Teltsch, 1990. “Rockefeller Foundation
Starts Ecology Effort”, The New York Times, July 24.
Table 1
Environmental Groups
(U.S. dollars, 1990, 1991)
Organization Revenues
African Wildlife Foundation $ 4,676,000
American Humane Association 3,000,000
Center for Marine Conservation 3,600,000
Clean Water Action 9,000,000
Conservation International 8,288,216
The Cousteau Society 14,576,328
Defenders of Wildlife 6,454,240
Earth Island Institute 1,300,000
Environmental Defense Fund 16,900,000
Greenpeace International 100,000,000
Humane society 19,237,791
Inform 1,500,000
International Fund for Animal Welfare 4,916,491
National Arbor Day Foundation 14,700,000
National Audobon Society 37,000,000
National Parks Conservation Assoc. 8,717,104
National Wildlife Federation 77,180,104
Natural Resources Defense Council 16,926,305
Nature Conservancy 254,251,717
North Shore animal League 26,125,383
Planned Parenthood 383,000,000
Population Crisis Committee 4,000,000
Rails-to-Trails Conservancy 1,544,293
Sierra club 40,659,100
Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund 8,783,902
Student Conservation Association, inc. 3,800,000
Trust for Public Land 23,516,506
Wilderness Society 17,903,091
Wildlife Conservation International 4,500,000
WWF/Conservation Foundation 60,000,000
Zero Population Growth 1,600,000
Total $1,177,656,571
_____
Sources: Buzzwork, September/October 1991– Chronicle of
Philanthropy March, 13, 1992
TABLE 2
WHO OWNS THE ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT?
FOUNDATION GRANTS TO EDF
AND NRDC
(U.S. dollars, 1988)
Foundation EDF NRDC
Beinecke foundation, Inc. 850,000
Carnegie Corporation of New York 25,000
Clark Foundation 150,000
Columbia Foundation 30,000
Cox Charitable Trust 38,000
Diamond Foundation 50,000
Dodge Foundation, Geraldine 75,000 10,000
Educational Foundation of America 30,000 75,000
Ford Foundation 500,000
Gerbode Foundation 50,000 40,000
Gund Foundation 85,000 40,000
Harder Foundation 200,000
Joyce Foundation 75,000 30,000
MacArthur Foundation 600,000
Mertz-Gilmore Foundation 75,000 80,000
Milbank Memorial Fund 50,000
Morgan guaranty charitable Trust 5,000 6,000
Mott Foundation, Charles Stewart 150,000 40,000
New Hope Foundation, Inc. 45,000
New York Community Trust 35,000
Noble foundation, Inc. 20,000 35,000
Northwest Area foundation 100,000
Packard Foundation 50,000 37,000
Prospect Hill Foundation 45,000
Public Welfare Foundation 150,000
Robert Sterling Clark Foundation 50,000 40,000
Rockefeller Brothers Fund 75,000
San Francisco Foundation 50,000
Scherman Foundation 40,000 50,000
Schumann foundation 50,000
Steele-Reese Foundation 100,000
Victoria Foundation 35,000 35,000
Virginia Environmental Endowment 25,000
W. Alton Jones Foundation 100,000 165,000
Wallace Genetic Foundation 80,000 65,000
William Bingham Foundation 1,000,000 150,000
Total* 2,885,000 3,236,000
_____
*The total includes some smaller foundation grants not
listed here.
Source: The Foundation Grants Index — 1989, 1990
TABLE 3
TOP 15 RECIPIENTS IN ENVIRONMENTAL
LAW, PROTECTION, AND EDUCATION
Recipient Foundation Grant in $
World Resources Institute MacArthur Foundation 15,000,000
World Resources Institute MacArthur Foundation 10,000,000
World Resources Institute MacArthur Foundation 10,000,000
Nature Conservancy R.K. Mellon Foundation 4,050,000
Nature Conservancy Champlin Foundations 2,000,000
Oregon Coast Aquarium Fred Meyer Charitable Trust
1,500,000 International Irrigation Mgmt Inst. Ford Foundation 1,500,000
Open Space Institute R.K. Mellon Foundation 1,400,000
Internat’l Irrigation Mgmt. Inst. Rockefeller Foundation
1,200,000
Chicago Zoological society MacArthur Foundation
1,000,000
Native American Rights Foundation Ford foundation
1,000,000
Wilderness Society R.K. Mellon Foundation 800,000
World Resources Institute A.W. Mellon Foundation 800,000
University of Arkansas W.K. Kellogg Foundation 764,060
National Park Service Pillsbury Co. Foundation 750,000
National Audobon society A.W. Mellon Foundation 750,000
_______
SOURCE: Environmental Grant Association Directory, 1989
TABLE 4
Underdeveloped Nations Whose
Gross National Product (GNP) Is Less Than
The Annual Revenues of U.S.
ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS (1990)
Country GNP (billions $ Population
Bhutan 0.25 1.4
Laos 0.70 3.9
Lesotho 0.71 1.7
Chad 0.86 5.4
Mauritania 0.91 1.9
Somalia 1.00 5.9
Yemen 1.03 2.4
Central African Republic 1.10 2.9
Botswana 1.21 1.2
Burundi 1.22 5.1
Togo 1.26 3.4
Malawi 1.36 8.0
Mozambique 1.49 14.9
Benin 1.72 4.4
Burkina Faso 1.70 8.5
Mali 1.84 8.0
Congo 1.91 2.1
Madagascar 1.96 10.9
Maurilius 1.96 1.1
Rwanda 2.14 6.7
Niger 2.19 7.3
Zambia 2.20 7.6
Guinea 2.32 5.4
Haiti 2.39 6.3
Jamaica 2.57 2.4
Papua New Guinea 3.00 3.7
Nepal 3.24 18.0
Gabon 3.27 1.1
Bolivia 3.03 6.9
Tanzania 3.95 24.7
Trinidad and Tobago 4.02 1.2
Honduras 4.13 4.8
Uganda 4.54 16.2
Senegal 4.55 7.0
Costa Rica 4.56 2.7
El Salvador 4.70 5.0
Paraguay 4.72 4.0
Panama 4.88 2.3
Dominican Republic 4.97 6.9
Ghana 5.60 14.0
Ethiopia 5.69 47.4
Jordan 5.85 3.9
Sri Lanka 6.97 16.6
Oman 7.00 1.4
Uruguay 7.66 3.1
Guatemala 7.83 8.7
Kenya 8.29 22.4
Ivory Coast 8.62 11.2
Figures were not available for Afghanistan, Kampuchea,
Liberia, Sierra Leone, Angola, Lebanon, Nicaragua and Vietnam. Source: World
Development Report 1990: Poverty, The World Bank (New York, London, Oxford
University Press, 1990
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