June 27, 2003, 7:00 a.m.
Exposing
Eco-Hypocrisy
Eugene Lapointe is on point.
co-quiz question: How many whales swim the
oceans?
a) hundreds
b) thousands
c) millions
If you have been listening to Greenpeace,
or other eco-activist/animal-rights organizations and their friends in the
media, you probably answered a or b. The correct answer is c.
Today, swimming in the oceans, you will
find: 25,000 gray whales, more than before commercial whaling began; one
million minke whales; close to a million pilot whales and beluga whales;
and well over one million sperm whales. Of the 75 species of cetaceans,
only 5 are endangered. The North Atlantic right whale, of which there are
less than 1,000, are the most threatened. Other endangered whale species
are the blue (10,000 to 14,000), the humpback (10,000 to 15,000), and the
bowhead (8,000 12,000).
You can read the real story about whales
— rather than another tale of eco-dishonesty — in Eugene Lapointe's
important new book, Embracing The World’s Resources: A Global
Conservation Vision (Sherbrooke, Quebec: Editions du Scribe, 2003, $27).
This book should be required reading for every student studying
conservation and ecology, and every decision-maker trying to fashion
sustainable resource-use policy.
Eugene Lapointe has unique credentials to
write a book on sustainability. He is the current president of IWMC World
Conservation Trust, a global coalition of experts and wildlife managers
promoting sustainable resource use guided by science. An attorney who grew
up in the woods of Quebec, Lapointe served fourteen years in the Canadian
government before becoming the Secretary General of CITES, the Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, from
1982 to 1990. CITES is the international trade commission overseeing the
multi-billion-dollar-a-year commerce in wild animals and their products.
Lapointe left his post at CITES
dramatically on November 2, 1990, when he was dismissed by UNEP executive
director Mostapha Tolba. The campaign to remove him was led by a handful of
U.S. officials and 28 major NGOs, who, according to Lapointe, "claimed
I had become the worst criminal on the planet." His crime was
advocating a sustainable-use philosophy that allowed for scientifically
directed hunting of whales, elephants, and other animals, especially in
situations that respect local cultural values.
Thirty months later, a Panel of Judges at
the United Nations described Lapointe’s dismissal as "capricious and
arbitrary," resulting from "the worst case of character
assassination in the history of the United Nations." In a unanimous
decision, the judges vindicated Lapointe, awarded him financial
compensation, ordered his reinstatement, and forced the U.N. secretary
general to write a letter stating that Lapointe "had fulfilled his
duties and responsibilities in every way and in a highly satisfactory
manner."
In 167 passionate pages, Lapointe lays out
his pragmatic philosophy of sustainable use, and he also presents
considerable data on the actual state of many wild animals — data that
seldom appear in the media. His defense clearly shows why poverty is the
biggest force working against conservation. Then he describes the attack on
him and the organizations that did it.
Lapointe takes after the extremist NGOs,
whose real green quest is the pursuit of the greenback. He explains why his
pragmatic approach to conservation runs into conflict with green
fundamentalists. His method does not generate the crises necessary for
their fundraising. It soon becomes clear that this is why Lapointe got the
hatchet.
Based on decades of watching environmental
and animal rights groups squeeze their way into CITES, Lapointe distills
their common approach to fundraising:
| 1) |
Pick campaigns that can be
publicized with graphic, shocking and gory photos. |
| 2) |
Develop simple, catchy
slogans, "Save The Whales," "Don’t Buy Ivory." |
| 3) |
Identify a human villain
Norwegian or Japanese whalers; big game hunters. |
| 4) |
Launch an emotional appeal,
versus a scientific one; humanizing animals and dehumanizing people. |
| 5) |
Always include the threat
that this will decrease the quality of life or threaten ecosystem
stability, etc. of people and the world. |
According to Lapointe, eco/animal-rights
NGOs, such as the Species Survival Network, a coalition of over 60 NGOs who
claim to be "committed to the promotion, enhancement, and strict
enforcement of [CITES]," perpetuate many misconceptions about animals
and may actually be a threat to whales and endangered species.
Lapointe’s book harpoons myths. What is
the biggest threat to blue and right whales? Lapointe suggests it may not
be whalers, but an overabundance of minke whales that compete with blue and
right whales for the same food, as well as killer whales, which ruthlessly
prey in packs, or pods, on young leviathans.
Lapointe also points out that tooted and
baleen whales consume three-to-six times the combined 90-million ton annual
seafood catch of all the world’s commercial fisheries. How often have you
ever heard the media suggest that an overabundance of some species of
whales is a contributing factor to the decline of some stocks of fisheries?
Lapointe argues that controlled whaling, for meat, could help restore
ailing fisheries.
This book will destroy false media images
of the financially well-heeled and so-called environmental groups, as well
as the governments who support them. For example, Lapointe says that
"Greenpeace is a typical example of a multi-million dollar business
concern that is entirely non-productive. It creates no wealth for society,
but instead plays upon the gullibility of well-meaning individuals,
insidiously undermining the technological basis that create wealth in the
first place." Lapointe is on point.
The X-Files promoted the idea that
"The truth is out there." One of the places you can find it is in
Embracing the Earth’s Wild Resources. Read this book and you will learn
more about ecology and resource management than you will by reading the
endless stream of urgent appeals and tabloid newsletters written by the
green fundamentalists who drove Eugene Lapointe out of his leadership post
at CITES. 
— James
Swan is a contributing editor of ESPNOutdoors.com.
He also writes for the Outdoor Channel’s Engel’s Outdoor Experience,
which just won a Golden Moose for the category "Best Waterfowl Shows
2002." |
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