Originally posted by JLinder
Which brings me to my next piont... Kids, say no to crack!
Seriously, if you have never used a sheet of paper and your house is built from pine cones and badger balls then you can say that. Otherwise, you can't. By purchasing wood products and paper products you are supporting the very industry you would just as soon have die. Shouldn't you be hugging a tree some place?
Let me take his argument away. The favorite argument is this: That it was capitalists who forced the market to sell only wood from trees to build houses with. Had the markets been run by CARING people, we'd all live in (insert your favorite totally unworkable scheme here) houses. Thus, they escape any personal responsibility for driving SUV's, living in houses made of dead trees, using fertilizer on the lawn and insecticide on the roses... "It's thier fault, they forced me into it, by not allowing 'alternative' ideas. "
The fact is, most of the people on these environmental quests desperately want people to realize just how much more caring and righteous they are for saying all the right things, but need excuses for not "walking the talk" and so have to create reasons why someone else is entirely to blame for thier own environmental sins.
By the way, I'm not really sure what that means. I didn't know that PW had a monkey. What's his name? Do you spank him?
I have no idea, really, but I'm guessing it's supposed to mean that even a pet monkey would know better and more than me and be more "consciencious" about it's politics or morality or something and could lecture me on my failings - mostly, I'm to presume, in the "hypocrisy" department.
Just to address one minor issue... The USFS has mandated clear cuts - it did so here, all over Eastern Oregon, and did so in Montana. It wasn't in response to industry, however. It was, actually, in response to environemental pressures. The USFS was supposed to get a more "scientific" method of management. So, it mandated everything, rather than allowing each district or region to make thier own decisions. It used to be that the USFS local office maintained maps and charts to show what was growing where, and what was most suitable for harvest. When the time came for that area, generally, the people in charge went out, looked it all over, and figured out what to do. Sometimes they did clear-cut, more often than not, it was a designated tree sale, where either "leave" or "take" trees were marked, and then the sale was offered up for bids.
In all our time logging in Montana, we never participated in any clear-cutting. Generally, none of the independent loggers would do clear cuts. It was just too labor intensive and often not financially feasible to be stuck with large amounts of too-small-to-be-useable lumber. The bigger companies would take it and turn it into chips to become manufactured wood or paper. Smaller loggers simply had no means of getting rid of the smaller stuff unsuitable for boards. There simply was no economically feasible market for it. Still isn't.
Also, once you were "done" cutting the trees and removing them, you generally needed a sizeable crew of guys to go do the "slash" work and some machinery to clean the area of slash and brush. THEN, you had to bulldoze up all the stumps, burn it, and in many cases, replant. I saw a crew work for weeks attempting to "burn" a clear-cut to the USFS satisfaction. It was simply too wet, and they could not sustain fire. They actually brought out a fuel truck and sprayed fuel around to MAKE it burn.
This WAS, of course, the management plan the USFS made in response to criticism it had no "comprehensive" plan and "scientific" method of doing stuff.
Those clear cuts are still nothing but bushes, 20 to 30 years later. Some of them slid downhill every spring, taking out the trees at the bottom of the slope, blocking the road, etc. But, that WAS mandated. Either you did what they told you, or you lost your bond, your ability to bid on any more sales, AND they would then charge you for hiring a contractor to come in and do whatever it was you didn't.
Of course, that reality doesn't lend itself to demonizing loggers as the evil destroyers of the forest... It was the government instead. And it was in the name of "improving the environment". Most of the small logging outfits lived in and did thier recreation in the same place they worked. There was no stomach for creating a hideous mess the public (your friends and neighbors) could see and carp at you about.