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G_j

(40,366 posts)
Thu Jan 14, 2016, 04:45 PM Jan 2016

Public lands already belong to “the people.” And we have a he-man Republican rancher to thank for it

http://www.onearth.org/earthwire/malheur-national-wildlife-refuge-theodore-roosevelt#.VpgEgilmJ20.facebook

News flash: Our public lands already belong to “the people.” And we have a he-man Republican rancher to thank for it.

BY JEFF TURRENTINE


Teddy Roosevelt in Rough Rider uniform in 1898, from Harper's Pictorial History of the War with Spain

Teddy Roosevelt in Rough Rider uniform in 1898, from Harper's Pictorial History of the War with Spain
Given that the armed occupiers of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge have holed themselves up in the facility’s visitor center for almost a week—and given that they’ve indicated their willingness to remain there indefinitely, according to the group’s spokesmen—perhaps they should take advantage of the many entertaining and educational diversions to be found in the visitor center’s gift shop.

Should any biographies of Theodore Roosevelt happen to be on hand amid all those 2016 wall calendars and wooden bird whistles, the protesters might well enjoy reading about their fellow cattleman, arguably the manliest of manly-man Republican icons in our nation’s history: a lawman, a navy man, a cavalryman, and a hunting man, in addition to our 26th president. A man who once captured and stood guard over a band of boat thieves for nearly 40 hours until law enforcement arrived, reading Tolstoy to himself in order to stay awake. A man who once gave a 90-minute speech with a newly lodged bullet in his chest before going to the hospital.

During his presidency, Roosevelt created the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in 1908, turning unclaimed government property into one of more than 50 “bird reservations.” In previous centuries, the stewards of this land were the Paiute people, who had been ordered to leave in the 1870s as more and more settlers came to the area. These vast tracts of pristine land, which had never been owned privately, would eventually become the physical foundation for our current, 150-million-acre National Wildlife Refuge System. In May of that same year, he called a number of the nation’s governors to the White House for a pivotal conference in which he eloquently articulated the case for placing large parcels of undeveloped rural land under federal protection.

His pitch to the assembled governors included this statement:

We have become great because of the lavish use of our resources, and we have just reason to be proud of our growth. But the time has come to inquire seriously what will happen when our forests are gone; when the coal, the iron, the oil, and the gas are exhausted; when the soils shall have been still further impoverished, and washed into the streams, polluting the rivers, denuding the fields, and obstructing navigation.


This rhetorical line of “inquiry” was in reality the policy rationale for a sweeping set of acts and executive orders that would, in the aggregate, end up protecting nearly 230 million acres of land comprising hundreds of national forests, bird and game preserves, national parks, and national monuments. It also informed the mandate of the fledgling U.S. Forest Service, which had been established only three years earlier under Teddy Roosevelt’s direction. By the end of his administration, America’s 26th president had placed more land under federal protection than every one of his 25 predecessors combined.

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Public lands already belong to “the people.” And we have a he-man Republican rancher to thank for it (Original Post) G_j Jan 2016 OP
The word "people" doesn't mean the same thing to thugs like the Bundys phantom power Jan 2016 #1
Accustomed (as most of us are) to the more portly images we've seen closeupready Jan 2016 #2
The repugs always whine about saddling future generations with debt central scrutinizer Jan 2016 #3
exactly G_j Jan 2016 #4
Roosevelt may have seen one of the last wild flocks of passenger pigeons. hunter Jan 2016 #5
Imagine if he had not lived out West, in the badlands and range country of the Dakotas L. Coyote Jan 2016 #6

phantom power

(25,966 posts)
1. The word "people" doesn't mean the same thing to thugs like the Bundys
Thu Jan 14, 2016, 04:58 PM
Jan 2016

and other conservatives. In their world, "the people" means "me and mine." Or maybe "white Christians" if they're extra open-minded.

 

closeupready

(29,503 posts)
2. Accustomed (as most of us are) to the more portly images we've seen
Thu Jan 14, 2016, 05:04 PM
Jan 2016

of him in history books, I found it quite shocking that as a young man, he was actually really, really attractive - "he-man"? Not in my view. More dandy, or maybe 'gentleman', definitely 'a man's man'. Anyway, he did so many tremendous public good works.

If he were alive today, he'd definitely be a Democrat.

central scrutinizer

(11,648 posts)
3. The repugs always whine about saddling future generations with debt
Thu Jan 14, 2016, 05:45 PM
Jan 2016

Far worse is to allow a few to take all of the shared wealth out of the land.

hunter

(38,310 posts)
5. Roosevelt may have seen one of the last wild flocks of passenger pigeons.
Thu Jan 14, 2016, 07:00 PM
Jan 2016
Passenger pigeons were often described as blackening the skies when their colossal flocks passed overhead. The pioneering ornithologist John James Audubon claimed to have seen a flock take three days to pass by. The birds appeared inexhaustible and were treated as such. Each year over the course of several decades, hundreds of thousands of passenger pigeons were killed and trapped. They were shot for sport, commercially hunted, and even captured for use as live trapshooting targets. However, by the late 19th century the great flocks had disappeared and the last confirmed report of a wild passenger pigeon occurred on March 24, 1900, in Pike County, Ohio. The bird had been shot and killed by a young boy.

Passenger pigeons likely remained in the wild, but all subsequent sightings were unconfirmed. One person who claimed seeing the now rare species was bird watching enthusiast and President of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt. The Roosevelts owned a rustic cabin in Albemarle County, Virginia, known as Pine Knot. During a stay in May 1907, Roosevelt saw what he believed to be a small flock of passenger pigeons, the first he had seen in twenty-five years. He had cataloged a specimen as a boy and was able to compare the birds to some nearby mourning doves. Roosevelt was confident in his sighting and wrote to naturalist John Burroughs about it. At Burroughs’ suggestion, Roosevelt was even able to collect at least one statement of corroborative evidence from an Albemarle County neighbor...

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http://www.theodorerooseveltcenter.org/Blog/2013/August/09-Passenger-Pigeons.aspx




Roosevelt knew birds and wildlife, that's why he was so adamant about protecting lands such as the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.

L. Coyote

(51,129 posts)
6. Imagine if he had not lived out West, in the badlands and range country of the Dakotas
Thu Jan 14, 2016, 07:20 PM
Jan 2016

or experienced the West at all, what would we have preserved today?

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