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	     Every year that I am able I pay a visit to Big Sur, California, one
	of my favorite places since I was very small. I love the scenic drive
	up the rugged coast on the winding WPA-era highway One through the
	land where the mountains meet the sea. You've seen it in car
	commercials, and the famous chase scene from North by Northwest, and
	the picture in your mind, no doubt, is of the azure Pacific waters
	glistening in the sun as waves lap the rocky coast line below sloping
	Emerald meadows. As a kid I took all of this for granted, but I
	gradually came to realize that the ribbon of highway isn't the only
	feature there that is foreign to the natural landscape. The fact is
	that those brilliant swaths of Green shouldn't be there – and they
	wouldn't be were it not for the small herds of cows that regularly
	scour the fenced-in private ranches, allowing grasses to flourish
	where once there were coastal prairies and thickets of woods. The
	fact is  that the Big Sur we have all seen in pictures and post cards
	for as long as we can remember is, in reality, a severely altered
	landscape, some of whose most iconic features are the result of large
	scale human-caused damage. In that sense, Big Sur, as we know it, is
	a perfect metaphor for the much larger environmental crisis facing
	the American prairies of the South and MidWest , and the way we have
	grown to accept the destructive agricultural practice known as
	“ranching” as an immutable facet of the American identity.
	      As the motley hoard of rogue ranchers in cheap Stetsons,
	camo-Carharts and guns inhabit an unguarded bird sanctuary in rural
	Oregon, net-savvy citizens have been quick to point out the obvious
	double-standard with regard to the way law enforcement has handled
	the secessionist stand-off as opposed to the violent crackdowns
	meted out in Ferguson or Baltimore, New York, and Minneapolis in
	response to Black Lives Matter protests. We have ridiculed these
	inarticulate Marlboro men with apt monikers like “Y'all Queda”, and
	“Vanilla Isis”. I've called them “Bundymentalists”, owing to the
	fact that their chief instigators are members of the Bundy clan from
	Nevada, infamous for an earlier armed stand-off sparked by Federal
	officials attempts to collect more than a Million dollars in
	delinquent cattle-grazing fees owed by the self-appointed patron
	saint of illegal grazing, Cliven Bundy. Folks have observed that the
	Bundy's, and, indeed a great many cattle ranchers, are dependent on
	subsidies from the very same government the Bundy Bunch and their
	fan club so vehemently decry. Ranchers whose properties abut Federal
	lands depend on being able to graze their cattle on public  acreage
	in accordance with leases they obtain from the Bureau of Land
	Management. But the Bundy's want to enjoy this privilege without
	having to pay for it, and that, indeed, is the message they've
	brought to Oregon.
	     Under the banner of “returning the land” the Bundy's and other
	Libertarian extremists would like to see all Federal lands opened up
	to private commercial exploitation – not just by ranchers, but by
	loggers and drillers, and surface miners as well. And there is a
	danger in being too cavalier in dismissing the Bundy Bunch antics in
	Oregon too flippantly, as they are, in fact, one facet ( albeit a
	tragically comical one) of a larger and more ominous threat. The
	Bundy's, perhaps unwittingly, are philosophically allied with every
	extractive or polluting industry that seeks immunity for laws that
	protect the commons. Where the Bundy's have their paltry snacks and
	rifles, fuzzy mittens and even fuzzier rhetoric, the mining giants
	and oil barons have powerful lobbies and bottomless pockets. There
	may be no chance that the Malheur nature preserve in Oregon will be
	ceded to state control ( a strategy  that would surely result in
	cash-strapped states selling or leasing such lands to private
	interests)  there IS a chance that a Republican-controlled Congress
	might approve the proposed mining operations in or around the Grand
	Canyon. Less than two years ago Arizona Senator John McCain added a
	rider to a budget bill that will allow a rare and pristine
	publicly-owned wilderness area East of Phoenix to become the site of
	one of the world's largest open-pit Copper mines. *Open-pit mining is
	like Mountain Top Removal  in reverse. Instead of blowing up the top
	halves of mountains to get at thin seams of Coal, giant holes are
	dug, the size of inverted mountains to get at the toxic ores deep
	below. And, just as the Oregon preserve is the ancestral land of the
	Paiutes, who still have a nominal claim there, the Oak Flats region
	in Arizona is shared by several bands of the Dine and Apache people,
	many of whom live just a few miles away on the San Carlos
	reservation.  For many Native Americans mining leases and grazing
	contracts on federally managed properties consecrate the theft of
	those lands from their original inhabitants and stewards. Indeed, the
	760 acre Malheur preserve is all that remains of the original Malheur
	reservation which once spanned 1.5 Million acres.
	But what of the ranchers' claims? After all, many of them have held that
	profession for generations. It's a way of life, and it's a living. No one
	disputes that it takes a lot of work to operate a ranch, and some
	impressively long hours, too. And anyone who has had dealings with the
	Bureau of Land Management knows that the traditionally industry-friendly
	agency can be heavy-handed and downright obtuse. The BLM was created in
	1946 by an executive action by President Truman. It's “mixed-use” mandate
	was a refinement of the more open-ended grazing policies created more than
	a decade earlier under the Taylor Grazing Act. The Grazing act itself was
	intended as a necessary stop-gap to prevent federal lands from being
	completely ruined by over-grazing as Western ranchers replaced the great
	Buffalo herds with their European imports. Even in 1934 it was abundantly
	evident that ranching (grazing vast numbers of cattle) was degrading the
	land. The Grazing act divided Federal lands adjacent to private ranches in
	to grazing alotments and placed limits on the number of cattle allowed on
	the leased land and the duration of their permitted occupancy. A small
	per-head fee was imposed, but , thanks to pressure from the ranching
	industry, funding was cut, making enforcement nearly impossible. With the
	creation of the BLM, Timber and Minerals were added to the agency's
	purview, and, in some places, grazing alotments were truncated to make
	room for mines and drilling. A common criticism of the BLM is that it
	appears to exist primarily to facilitate commercial access to Federal
	lands (much like many state agencies such as the Ohio Department of
	Natural Resources which permits fracking and waste disposal wells in state
	parks, and administers clear-cuts in Ohio's remaining public forests). But
	that is not the ranchers' beef. The Bundy's vision, to remove all federal
	authority from these public lands, would produce a veritable gold-rush of
	ranchers, miners, and drillers alike, surpassing the level of such
	activities traditionally allowed by the BLM.
	
	The BLM's mandate has shifted, however, in response to the dwindling
	percentage of natural habitat. Regulations on grazing have tightened,
	somewhat, as the BLM slowly shifts its focus toward conservation, and
	grazing fees have increased, provoking some ranchers to complain that they
	are being driven out of business. Well good. Yes, I said it. It is high
	time that we take a hard critical look at ranching and its impacts.
	
	There's a lengthy article circulating from a blog called “The American
	Conservative” that chronicles the history of the conflict in Oregon
	leading up to the 2016 standoff. It portrays the area's first ranchers,
	dating back to the early 1900's as defenders of the wilderness. The state
	government in Oregon, had, indeed encouraged commercial and agricultural
	development in some horridly ruinous ways, allowing lakes and streams to
	be drained and forests razed for cropfields. The scene of the occupation,
	the Malhuer Nature Preserve, may have suffered such a fate were it not for
	the objections of ranchers who depended on its watershed to irrigate their
	herds. The article claims, however, that the ranchers, who converted
	wetlands to dry grazing grounds previously made the place fertile and
	increased wildlife abundance. The article refers to several “secret public
	documents” that allegedly report increases in wildlife diversity on their
	ranches over and above the levels of diversity observed in the preserves.
	At first glance the article appears scholarly, even if its unsubstantiated
	conclusions seem rather improbable. More recent and not-so-secret
	documents paint a vastly different picture.
	
	Observations and measurements of ranching's destructive impacts date back
	more than a century, but the dynamics of that impact play out on a
	landscape that is already altered. Ranching has typically followed logging
	and subsequent short-term cultivation. Once a healthy forest is destroyed
	by logging, the newly cleared land is exploited for crop production.
	Without the renewal of nutrients the forest creates, however, the land is
	quickly exhausted as the soil is depleted. Left fallow, opportunistic
	native grasses re-colonize, making the land attractive for grazing.
	Grazing, however prevents the natural succession of plants, creating a
	cycle of regeneration and attrition that perpetuates  grassland ecoculture
	and precludes the forest from re-establishing itself. Animal and plant
	species alike that previously inhabited forests are permanently displaced
	and the prairie-like ecosystem that replaces them is not balanced or
	sustainable. When cattle suppress taller native plants less cover is
	provided for prey species, which, in turn, leads to a surge in predator
	populations. Ranchers then hunt the predators – some to extinction, or to
	the brink of it. Species interdependency becomes so disrupted that species
	like Prairie Dogs, Ferrets, Tortoises, and ground-nesting birds are
	decimated, while hares and rabbits proliferate disproportionately. A study
	by researchers at Oregon State University in Corvalis in cooperation with
	the U.S. Forest Service and the Department of Fish and Wildlife and
	published in the journal Environmental Management focused on a region in
	Oregon not far from the Malheur refuge. It  showed that once ranching was
	no longer allowed in the study area for a period of 20 years, native
	grasses and chaparral and early succession trees in riparian corridors
	rebounded, with increases in some grasses approaching 400% .
	Soil errosion is another by-product of grazing. With a more diverse system
	of flora suppressed. the land loses its capacity to retain rain water.
	Rivers and streams become choked with silt and grow shallower and broader,
	while falling lower below the surrounding grade when seasonal torrents
	create higher-than-normal flow rates. The particular grasses and trees,
	like Willows that are ideally suited to riparian corridors suffer
	disproportionate decline as cows tend to congregate in those areas as
	well, resulting in less erosion control along the banks  Nitrogen-rich
	manure enters the waterways, disrupting aquatic life there as well.
	Conservation biologist Thomas Fleischner , in his landmark 1994 report
	titled Ecological Costs of Livestock Grazing in Western North America
	summarized the ecological impact of cattle grazing, as causing;
	     “(1) Alteration of species composition of communities, including
	decreases in density and biomass of individual species. Reduction of
	species richness, and changing community organization.
	      (2) Disruption of ecosystem functioning, including interference in
	nutrient cycling and ecological succession.
	      (3) Alteration of ecosystem structure, including changing vegetation
	stratification, contributing to soil erosion and decreasing
	availability of water to biotic communities.
	
	
	
	The 2016 Oregon standoff , ironically, was in response to the sentencing
	of two local ranchers, Dwight and Steven Hammond for two separate acts of
	arson, one of which burned 139 acres of the preserve. The Hammonds have
	claimed, variously, that they were using fire to eradicate invasive plant
	species, or to create a fire break to stop the advance of an encroaching
	forest fire. But numerous studies have shown that cattle grazing actually
	increases the intensity , and thus the destructiveness of fires in
	surrounding forest lands by suppressing fires in the adjacent prairies. A
	report from the Oregon Natural Desert Association, a conservation group
	working to increase environmental protections on public lands notes that
	many forest ecosystems depend on frequent low-intensity fires to prevent
	the over-growth of trees and woodlands brush species. Forests that are
	thick with undergrowth, sometimes called “doghair thickets” are
	susceptible to fires that burn longer and hotter than normal, and which
	can thus threaten larger trees. Federal agencies have responded with a
	strategy of “controlled burns”, with mixed success, but these isolated,
	deliberately set fires occasionally become uncontrolled, like the one in
	Ohio's Shawnee State Forest where a 233 prescribed burn by the Ohio
	Department of Natural Resources expanded to consume nearly 3,000 acres.
	
	With the damaging effects of cattle grazing being so well documented for
	so long, one may wonder why the practice is still allowed on public lands.
	The Bureau of Land Management allows grazing on around 155 Million acres
	out of the 247 Million acres it manages, according to the U.S. Department
	of the Interior.  This represents just under 20,000 grazing leases. The
	fees charged by the BLM, based on each month of grazing for an individual
	cow and calf-pair, or an equivalent grouping of sheep, are far below the
	costs of maintaining those animals on private lands, thus incentivizing
	ranchers, according to Interior Department fiscal year reports, to utilize
	leased public lands more often and more intensively than private lands.
	The Congressional Accounting office reports, however, that the cost to the
	public of BLM grazing leases in 2005 was $144 Million, while revenues from
	those leases amounted to just $21 Million. That's a $123 Million public
	subsidy to the ranchers, and it does not take in to account the cost of
	environmental remediation, if such a program were to be initiated. The
	General Accounting Office reports also show a steady decrease in grazing
	fee rates which, in 2012 were less than 25% of the rate assessed in 1952.
	Furthermore, the total number of cows grazed on public lands represents a
	tiny fraction of the over-all number of cattle raised annually in the U.S.
	In 2004 there were only 27,000 ranchers with federal grazing leases (3% of
	the total number of ranchers), and that number has steadily declined over
	the last decade. Their output accounts for less than 3% of the total
	amount of beef generated by U.S. producers. The Department of the Interior
	estimates that only about 17,000 jobs may be directly attributable to
	grazing on public lands whereas there are close to 400,000 people employed
	in the service of recreational and other uses of public lands, not
	including extractive industries.
	
	There have been efforts to end grazing on public lands. Federal
	recognition of  threatened species such as  the Southwestern Willow
	Flycatcher under the Endangered Species Act has forced changes in grazing
	policies, reducing grazing allotments on lands managed by both the BLM and
	the U.S. Forrest Service. Researchers at the University of Oregon in
	Corvalis published a report in 2012 citing the compounding effects of
	climate change on the damage done by grazing, which called for massive
	reductions in grazing leases, and even hinted at their elimination
	altogether. In 2003 a group of Arizona environmentalists, and even some
	cattle ranchers brought a proposal to Congress to create a Federal program
	to buy-out grazing leases, thus compensating ranchers in exchange for the
	leases being permanently retired. In New Mexico, environmentalists managed
	to buy a grazing lease so as to assure that little to no grazing would
	occur on one particular 550 acre plot. Even as early as 1993, a survey by
	Utah State University professor  Mark Brunson showed public sentiment
	somewhat in favor of ending all grazing on public lands.
	
	But if public support for cattle ranching seems slow to wither, it may be
	due to decades of romanticizing of the profession by Hollywood which has,
	since the early days of film portrayed the rancher as the epitome of
	rugged (white) individualism and tireless work ethic. Though ranchers have
	always been a tiny fraction of the working population, their
	larger-than-life presence in the iconographic panorama of American popular
	culture has assured them  permanency as a personification of  (white)
	national identity. The Bundy ranch stand-off two years ago may have
	created a crack in that Rushmoric mantle, as the world saw a decidedly
	different picture of ranchers, or at least their most vocal sub-set.
	Cliven Bundy's own public statements, which conveyed no small measure of
	disdain toward people of color, and the addition of semi-organized white
	supremacists to his bunkered brigade highlighted both the monochromatic
	nature of the ranching profession as well as the yersteryear political
	persuasions of some of those who practice it. Jump ahead to the 2016
	stand-off where the Younger-Bundies and their allies have been seen coming
	and going from the Malheur preseve in their pickup trucks sporting signs
	that read “No BLM” Presumably they refer to the government bureau, but on
	the long drive home to Nebraska or Texas or Arizona they'll likely pass
	through parts where the acronym stands for the latest iteration of the
	civil rights movement. The Bundy clan's antics have brought to light their
	financial dependency on the government's largesse – yet another thing they
	have in common with the oil, gas , timber and coal industries, This comes
	at a time when a cavalcade of candidates for state and national office are
	drumming up resentment over government programs that benefit anyone but
	the wealthiest elites. The rough-and-tumble self-sufficient riders of the
	range may soon be seen as Western welfare whiners whose bumbling
	statements to the press  sound more like hyperbole than hyper-masculinity.
	
	There is, of course, a minority of ranchers who do practice some level of
	stewardship, as an article in this month's Atlantic reveals, but global
	demand for meat and dairy are also on the decline. The USDA, in their
	December 2015 Livestock , Dairy and Poultry Outlook report projects a
	decline of 8% in the price of beef in 2016 over the previous year's value,
	so the Bundy's, in their quest for national attention, may have just given
	themselves, and their whole chosen profession a bit of a shiner, turning
	their own anti-government and anti-conservation backlash to whiplash,
	hastening the retirement not only of subsidized grazing but of the
	manufactured mystique that has served as their principle asset and
	justification.  So as the Sons of Bundy are silhouetted by the setting
	sun, and riding tall in the saddle grows long in the tooth the world may
	welcome an era of healing over herding, no longer at the mercy of hoofed
	locusts and calloused cowboys gone silly with greed.