BOOKS: The War Against The Greens

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1995:

The War Against The Greens, by David Helvarg. Sierra Club
Books (100 Bush Street, San Francisco, CA 94104), 1994. 502 pages,
hardback, $25.00.
David Helvarg brought to The War
Against The Greens a background as a war
correspondent in Northern Ireland and
Central America. It serves him well as he
explains how unwitting followers of Che
Guevarra organize in logged-out U.S.
forests, revering not Karl Marx but Ronald
Reagan. Their hatred of “greenies” and
“yuppies” is a paradigm of class struggle,
pitting themselves as workers against bour-
geois “preservationists,” yet they remain as
blind to their own manipulation by rich for-
eign interests as the Marxists of decades past
were to manipulation by Moscow.
The War Against The Greens lives
up to the cover promise that it will expose,
“The ‘wise use’ movement, the new right,
and anti-environmental violence,” docu-
menting a staggering number of attacks––far
more, for instance, than the mere 313 inci-
dents, more than half of them petty vandal-
ism, that the FBI attributes to animal rights
activists over the past 15 years. Many of the
anti-green attacks also go well beyond any
deed of “animal rights terrorists” in degree
of violence toward human beings. Yet
except for the apparent murder of Karen
Silkwood as she tried to expose radiation
hazards at the Kerr-McGree uranium pro-
cessing plant in Oklahoma, anti-green
attacks have rarely drawn media attention.
For example, though I interviewed Vermont
and New Hampshire Earth First!ers Jeff
Elliot, Jamie Sayen, and Michael Vernon
several times between mid-1989 and mid-
1991, following up on stories that made the
regional news wires, I was previously
unaware that all three were burnt out of their
homes by arson during the same interval.
Strangely, Helvarg ignores vio-
lence against animal rights activists––and
takes no note of the Fran Trutt case, perhaps
the best-documented example of an alleged
corporate act of false provocation in many
years. In November 1988, Trutt was arrest-
ed while placing a pipe bomb in the U.S.
Surgical Corporation parking lot. A long-
time target of protest over use of dogs in
demonstrations of surgical staples, U.S.
Surgical publicized the deed as an act of
“animal rights terrorism,” but Trutt turned
out to have only peripheral involvement with
animal rights; was given the money to buy
the bomb and driven to the site by Marc
Mead, an undercover agent for a private
security firm employed by U.S. Surgical;
and was actively encouraged in the plot
since the preceding April by Marylou
Sapone, another agent of the same firm.
Earlier, Sapone had tried unsuccessfully to
interest a variety of other animal lovers,
anarchists, Earth First!ers, and just plain
nuts in bombing U.S. Surgical.
Helvarg’s omission of this and
other animal-related cases is ultimately as
disturbing as his recitation of attacks on peo-
ple addressing land use conflicts and toxic
waste disposal. It seems to signify that the
wise-users have convinced mainstream envi-
ronmentalists to disassociate themselves
from animal people even when animal peo-
ple take the heat for environmentalist goals
and tactics, as in many conflicts involving
endangered species.
“To date the Wise Use / Property
Rights backlash has been a bracing if dan-
gerous reminder to environmentalists that
power concedes nothing without a demand,”
Helvarg concludes. “Only in the cynical
argot of Washington where ‘perception is
realtiy’ could a corporate-sponsored envi-
ronmental backlash successfully sell itself as
a populist movement. Despite an intimidat-
ing combination of local thugs and national
phone/fax guerillas, the anti-enviros lack
the broad middle, either ideologically or in
terms of real numbers.”
Yet since The War Against The
G r e e n s appeared, the anti-enviros at least
think they’ve captured Congress. Helvarg
may be right that the public will ultimately
reject Wise Use, but now it’s open season
on the Endangered Species Act. One hopes
the enviros won’t consider it as expendible
as they apparently consider the animal pro-
tection movement.

REVIEWS: Cats of Practical Books

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 1995:

The Definitive Anthology of Distinguished Feline Verse: Immortal Poems by the Cats of
the Major Poets, by Henry Beard. Villard Books (201 East 50th St., New York, NY 10022), 1994.
96 pages, illustrated. $12.95.
That Henry Beard! The author of French for
Cats, a mini-masterpiece that every cat-lover surely knows
well, Beard has just outdone himself, and everyone else,
and undone anyone who attempts to read his latest aloud
without cracking up. He has rollicked through the classic
poems of the English language with the abandon, the non-
chalance, the grace and distinction turned to a sort of dig-
nified whoopee of the sedatest of cats romping through a
catnip field. Beard would have us believe the poems in
Poetry For Cats were written by the cats of major men and
women of letters. Perhaps. I mean, purrhaps. In that
case, however, the poets purloined the styles of their pets.
Surely.

Read more

BOOKS: The Dog I.Q. Test

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1995:

The Dog I.Q. Test, by Melissa
Miller. Penguin Books (375 Hudson
St., New York, NY 10014), 1994.
175 pages, paperback. $7.95.
You probably don’t need to give
your dog an I.Q. test to know he’s no rocket
scientist––but because I’m not a rocket sci-
entist either, I tested the test by completing
Miller’s questionaires for each of our three
dogs and myself. Our German shepherd,
Tasha, predictably outscored 85% of all
dogs, while our lab/spaniel mix, Francesca,
scored dimmer than 85%. Our husky mix
Zooky, however, scored just one point
below Tasha, which probably explains why
I’m not smart enough get her to obey any
command but “Come eat the cat puke.”
Meanwhile, I learned I am supposed to be
smart enough to handle huskies, but not to
handle a shepherd. Fortunately Tasha dis-
agrees. She thinks throwing a ball takes the
same genius as rocketry.

BOOKS: The Animal Rights Movement In The United States, 1975-1990

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1995:

The Animal Rights Movement
In The United States, 1975-1990:
An Annotated Bibliography, by Bettina Manzo. Scarecrow Press (POB
4167, Metuchen, NJ 08840), 1994. 306 pages, $39.50 hardcover.
The evolution of mass movements
is defined by bibliography. By organizing
the literature of a cause over a specified
timespan, bibliographers create landmarks:
works included become a canon, while
works overlooked tend to elude historical
notice.

Read more

REVIEWS: Children’s books

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1995:

From Simon & Schuster (1230 Ave. of the Americas, New York, NY 10020):
Animals Under Cover, by Stephen Savage. $10.95 hardcover.
My First Pop-Up Book of Prehistoric Animals,
illustrated by Roma Bishop. $12.95 hardcover.
Nature by the Numbers With Pop-Up Surprises,
by Lynette Ruschak, art by G.B. McIntosh. $12.95 hardcover.
Wetlands, by Downs Matthews, photos by Dan Guravich. $15.00 hardcover.
From Scholastic (555 Broadway, New York, NY 10012):
All About Alligators, written and illustrated by Jim Arnosky. $14.95 hardcover.
Bats: Night Fliers
by Betsy Maestro, illustrated by Giulio Maestro. $14.95 hardcover.
Fur, Feathers, and Flippers: How Animals Live Where They Do,
by Patricia Lauber. $16.95 hardcover.

Read more

BOOKS: So, You Love Animals: An Action-Packed, Fun-Filled Book To Help Kids Help Animals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1995:

So, You Love Animals: An Action-Packed,
Fun-Filled Book To Help Kids Help
A n i m a l s, by Zoe We i l. Animalearn (c/o The
American Anti-Vivisection Society, 801 Old York
Road, #204, Jenkintown, PA 19046-1685), 1994.
190 pages, paperback, $14.95.
It is generally agreed that reaching young people
with a humane message is among the most important goals
of the animal protection community. Unfortunately and
inexplicably, proportionate resources are not directed into
humane education by either national or local humane organ-
izations. Because of this, materials intended for general
distribution to children and teenagers are of special utility.
So, You Love Animals is just such a tool. One
needn’t wait for a humane education program to materialize
in the local elementary school: you can simply donate a
copy of So, You Love Animals to the school library. Along
with Ingrid Newkirk’s Kids Can Save The Animals, it ought
to be in all libraries.

Read more

BOOKS: True scary elephant tales

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1995:

Animals In Peril: How “Sustainable Use” Is
Wiping Out The World’s Wildlife, by John A.
Hoyt, Avery Publishing Group (distributed by Humane
Society International, 2100 L St., Washington, DC
20037), 257 pages, $10.95 paperback.
Everything You Should Know About
Elephants, by The Performing Animal Welfare
Society (POB 849, Galt, CA 95632), 32 pages,
paperback, donation requested.
Time was when the only scary elephant tales
involved Winnie the Pooh’s heffalumps and the moonshine
nightmares of Timothy Mouse and Dumbo. That was before
“sustainable use” theory ran amok across Africa, helping
stoke the poaching boom of the 1980s, while abuse of captive
elephants came to light with sickening frequency.

Read more

BOOKS: Circus of the Wolves & Tano & Binti

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1994:

Circus of the Wolves, by Jack
Bushnell, illustrated by Robert
Andrew Parker. William Morrow &
Co. Inc. (1350 Ave. of the Americas,
New York, NY 10019), 1994. 34 pages,
with 16 full-page illustrations. $15.00.
Tano & Binti: Two Chimpanzees
Return to the Wild, by Andy and
Linda DaVo l l s. Clarion Books (215
Park Ave. South, New York, NY
10003), 1994. 28 pages, with 12 double-
page illustrations. $14.95.

Read more

1 85 86 87 88 89 95