Friday, 17 of April of 2026

Mike Roselle on Anarcho-Enviro Hate Cliques

http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/10/19/why-do-they-hate-me/
Weekend Edition October 19-21, 2012
An Open Letter to RAMPS
Why Do They Hate Me?
by MIKE ROSELLERock Creek, West Virginia.

I get usually along with most people, at least after I get to know them. Here in Rock Creek, I get along with my neighbors, many of whom are coal miners. The local activists, who are mostly older, many even older than I am,  are a scrappy bunch, don’t always get along with each other, and yet I remain on good terms with pretty much all of them. I even get along with the cops, who have arrested me six times for trespassing on the same mine site, a blast zone that is so close I could walk to the action. But the anarchists who have made their camp here in West Virginia seem to hate me. Why?

Well, I have a few theories. They must think I’m their father, an authority figure. Or maybe it’s my age. Or the fact that they are something of a clique and I dress differently. Or maybe I done them wrong somehow. Perhaps. Whatever it is, there are a number of them going around trying to make the case that I’m a bad guy. It’s character assassination, plain and simple, and it’s being done with malice.

Now if you know your Earth First! history, I was in East Texas in 1985, where I helped set up Earth First! groups in Austin and Nacadoches. Texas EF! waged a bruising and ultimately successful non-violent campaign to stop old growth logging in the Four Notch Wilderness on the Davy Crockett National Forest. This involved occupying the site by locking down to the logging machines, immortalized in Bill Oliver’s great song “Bugis and the Beast”.

I worked on a shrimp boat in Freeport in 1972 and I went to Abraham Lincoln High School in Houston in 1970, and I’ve run the Lower Canyons of Rio Grande twice, launching on New Year’s Day once in zero degree weather.  So I know a little about Texas.

Yet early this month I responded to a call to action, which I’ve done many times over the years (even decades) by offering to risk arrest at the Tar Sands Blockade in East Texas. Now mind you when Greenpeace asked me to go to the Beaufort Sea in April of 2001 I went, and was arrested for stoping work on BP Northstar Pipeline by driving a snowmobile with three other activists on board into the pipeline. (Two of them were in a sled being towed behind.) I totaled the snowmobile, but we dismounted and climbed the world’s largest back hoe. I was charged with a felony.

I hung a banner on a draggling line when they mined the Bisti Badlands in New Mexico for coal back in 1982 during one of the first such EF! demonstrations. I could go on. Yet because I’m being bad mouthed by some disgruntled activists, I’ve been asked to stay away from the tar sands blockade down in Texas. I’ve been told it’s because of “tensions in the coal fields”– yet I’m the only one being sanctioned here.

Naturally, I have a thing or two to say about this. The anarchist group of whichI speak are called RAMPS, which is an acronym for Radical Action for Mountain Peoples Survival. They’ll tell you that they formed by splitting off from Climate Ground Zero, a campaign I have been working on for over twelve years. What they won’t tell you is that when they split, (which was OK by me), they hacked into the CGZ website and sent out a poison pen to all of my subscribers and locked me out of the site. Not content, RAMPS posted the letter on another web site, even before they had shown it to me. It was an ambush.

Here on Coal River the letter went viral.The core group then swiped CGZ property, saying “they” were CGZ, not me. Childish. Some members of the core group continue to circulate this letter, and are making additional accusations that I had mishandled funds, harbored a violent thug, yell a lot and drink too much. Go figure.I have only one thing to say to them: Stop it.

Judy Bari once said the FBI didn’t need to infiltrate and disrupt Earth First! as we were pretty good at doing so ourselves. This behavior is childish. In my opinion, RAMPS are snobs. Two of the people who went to the Hobbit Protest this summer organized by RAMPS posted articles that you can find on the web. I don’t want to bring them into this so you’ll have to search for them. The articles these two seasoned activist posted, one a man, the other a woman, had a few things in common. One: that it was obvious that the core group was running the show, and they were suspicious and secretive and decisions seem arbitrary. Both thought the core group was self important, elitist, even snobbish. And both writers were over 50 years old and dressed and groomed themselves moderately. We used to call these “straight people”. This last mobilization on the Hobbit Mine has left so many bad feelings that RAMPS  have themselves become a controversy here, the subject of many meetings and a least one mediation. I won’t even recount my mediation with RAMPS. That is a story for another day. (Suffice to say that it was a farce).

I did not want to write this letter, much less post it. But enough is enough. I’m asking RAMPS to back off. The only people who benefit from this are the real bad guys. Non violence requires openness and honesty. Eschewing property destruction does not make you non violent. In the end, it’s how we treat each other. Shouldn’t matter if you’re part of the in-crowd, a visitor, the police, the media or a coal miner. We must respect everyone we encounter for non violence to be effective, and this sort of behavior is bad for the campaign to end Mountain Top Removal (MTR). RAMPS has learned a lot about Appalachia and MTR since they arrived on this river two years ago. It’s now time for them to learn some southern manners.

For the Earth.

MIKE ROSELLE is Campaign Director of Climate Ground Zero and author of Tree Spiker!. He can be reached at: mikeroselle@hotmail.com


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Another Repost: How does poetry relate to Earth First!?

by Dennis Fritzinger

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How has it related?

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In Susan Zakin’s Coyotes and Town Dogs, the only biography of Earth First! so far, Susan mentions Dave Foreman’s discovery of a poem about a ball of masonry that  summed up Dave’s world view.

This poem by Stephen Crane is why Dave wrote, “Where would the anti-war movement have been without its poetry and songs?”

So there was a deliberate attempt on Dave’s part to tie Earth First!’s fortunes to music and poetry. Wisely so. A movement without the arts never becomes a movement.

Poets and musicians get inspiration from everyday events, as well as other poets and musicians. They’re practiced in communicating ideas in a language that is both memorable and rememberable. Poets influence musicians, who in turn influence poets. This naturally works better when you have a critical mass of musicians and poets. And the poets and musicians inspire everyone else.

So Earth First! is, essentially, a movement led by artists. Even Dave Foreman, when he was around, was an artist–he excelled at oratory, which is basically speech and poetry rolled up together.

And as the artists leave, the movement loses steam and becomes directionless. Or new artists sign on, and change the direction of the movement.

You can see this happening if you compare “The Li’l Green Songbook” with “The Earth First! Songbook” and the later “Hootenanny”. There is a definite change–both of focus and of style. The threads that were everywhere in “Li’l Green” are scarcely present in “Hootenanny”, which has a much wider and softer focus–Women’s Issues, Prisoner Issues & Animal Lib. & Gender Issues outnumber more traditional EF! issues like habitat, wilderness, and wild.

In the midst of this, the warrior poets society has remained firmly on course. Poetry submissions do occasionally come with gender and prisoner issues (or animal rights) as their subject, but since the poetry page has an editor (unlike a stage, demonstration, or, alas, the Journal) it is easy to refuse to run them.

My attitude is, when all the endangered species, habitat, ecosystems, wilderness & the wild have been saved, then we’ll have room for other issues. Earth First!

 


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Repost of One of Our Earliest Posts: David Orton – A Life as a Poem

(1934-2011)

Orton

—————

Hello,

I have written an account of David’s burial for those who could not attend, with input from a few close participants. In death, as in life, David wanted to show an alternative way. It was David’s last action “For the Earth”. You can read “A deep green burial” at: http://home.ca.inter.net/~greenweb/A_deep_green_burial.pdf

Regards,
Helga Hoffmann-Orton

————————-

For The Earth – David Orton (1934-2011)


David’s death occurred on the morning of Thursday, May 12th, 2011 at his home in Watervale, Pictou County. David was born in Portsmouth, England on January 6th, 1934.

He lived in Canada since 1957. David was an activist and deep green philosopher, who dedicated his life to developing the theory of Left Biocentrism within the Deep Ecology movement.

He was uncompromising in his fight for the Earth and set a high standard for others to follow. David believed in living simply, where the richness of human life was defined not in material values, but within a deeper spiritual relationship with the Earth.
A green burial will take place at a later date.

His body of work can be found on the Green Web:

http://home.ca.inter.net/~greenweb/index.htm


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A Repost of One Of Our Very First Posts

Here’s a video that gives a sense the most popular Rendezvous, an event that saw not hundreds but over a thousand…

1987 Grand Canyon Round River Rendezvous & Uranium Mine Action

Andy Caffrey the Virtual Candidate | Myspace Video

Andy Caffrey: “This is the one video clip that probably means the most to me, and I didn’t shoot it. I did record audio of the Sagebrush Patriots Rally that year and release a 96-minute cassette of that music a year later, “Battle Cries From The North Rim.” But I think these four clips were a big inspiration for me to go to video in 1988. Hollenhorst liked us, and the four clips almost make a single “How to take over a uranium mine” how-to video. And I thought that was pretty cool!

Later, I thought, people 180-feet up in redwoods, might make inspiring video. And I even got used in several places, raising a fist among the marchers wearing a blue monkeywrench bomber long sleeve t-shirt that “we” gave to Don Hodel at Hetch Hetchy Damn a few months later when we couldn’t fiind any clean ones to give to him and Dianne Feinstein. And then Michelle Miller, Janaka (who would come back two years later with Bodhi Seed as Emu and tour Turtle Island as The Wallys) and I sing Bill Oliver’s song “Holes” with Bill and Glen Waldeck, a shot they used over and over!

I met John Hollenhorst at the rendezvous, and hung out with him quit a bit, pointing him to good interviews, and straightening him out on things like biocentrism, Deep Ecology, Miss Ann Thropy’s “Hooray AIDS!” letter, “No Compromise,” etc. So after the RRR I contacted the southern Utah news stations, who put me in touch with copying services, and $80 later I had these four clips. Unfortunately those tapes were destroyed in the 1991 Oakland Firestorm.

But I had made a copy as part of a compilation to show in the reception area at a Portland EF! event, and that copy was part of the tapes I rescued from the fire. This and over 300 hours of similarly invaluable video of Earth First! culture that I have shot and collected since 1985 is now very aged and at risk of becoming unplayable. This is the single greatest archive of its kind in the world.

In fact, there is nothing at all like it in the world. Most of it is now over twenty years old on tapes that deteriorate at fifteen years. I am trying to professionally digitize it all. If you would like to help me with that effort, please let me know. If you can help with a contribution of money or expertise, you can also reach me at Andy Caffrey P.O. Box 324 Redway, CA 95560″


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The Way of Poetry by Dennis Fritzinger

There are people who think poetry makes nothing happen, and they’re right — it doesn’t build dams, make nuclear weapons, start wars, kill rhinos for their horns or elephants for their ivory, harpoon whales, or spread disease.

What poetry does do (the list is long) is — put a grumpy child to sleep, comfort a bereaved parent or spouse, make us laugh, entertain us, give us something to hold onto, enrich our lives.

Poetry is a way of seeing the world, it gives us a personal vocabulary for expressing what we want to say but can’t find words for, it is a kind of karate that overthrows a much bigger opponent with one quick move.

Poetry can even remind us that we are not alone or isolated, that the whole planet is here with us, and the fact that we are born confers membership in the entire scheme of life.

What we do with our membership is up to us, of course, and not without its challenges, but not without its rewards either. And poetry is a way of knowing that.


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Comments like these keep Warriorpoets Alive

Christinawulf

See the full presentation of the above mentioned poem here:
http://armedwithvisions.com/category/ef-warrior-poets/christina-wulf/


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Help promote Warriorpoets with QR codes…

Hey folks…

Please help promote our website!

If you know anyone who has a
bar code reader app on their phone…

Armedwithvisions

Have them scan this code…
It will send them to our website in one click!

Make copies of this code and spread it around!


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RIP Louis Simpson

March 27, 1923 – September 14, 2012

Tumblr_lipryu5t451qzrkvzo1_400

American Poetry

BY LOUIS SIMPSON

Whatever it is, it must have
A stomach that can digest
Rubber, coal, uranium, moons, poems.

Like the shark it contains a shoe.
It must swim for miles through the desert
Uttering cries that are almost human.

======================

“Simpson has followed a path lined with signposts sunk so deep in our nation’s poetic terra firma that they’ve practically become part of the landscape. Those signposts declare that a poet born in or around the 1920’s should (1) begin his career writing witty, ironic formal poems bearing the stamp of Eliot and Auden; then (2) abandon that formalism for a more ‘natural’ free verse approach, while (3) dabbling in surrealism; until (4) finally settling on social, conversational poems in the manner of a man speaking to men.” While Simpson’s early books like The Arrivistes (1949) and A Dream of Governors (1959) show the influence of Auden, they also speak to his horrific experiences in World War II, where he served in the 101st Airborne Division and saw active duty in France, Belgium, and Germany. Simpson’s intense formal control, at odds with the visceral details of soldiering, also earned him comparisons toWilfred Owen. At the End of the Open Road (1963) won the Pulitzer Prize and marked a shift in Simpson’s poetry as well. In this and later volumes, like Searching for the Ox(1976) and The Best Hour of the Night (1983), Simpson’s simple diction and formally controlled verses reveal hidden layers of meaning. From http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/louis-simpson


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Best Salesman Of Our Society: River Princes

Perhaps not intentionally, the Brothers Ridell, winners of YouTube Internet Icon have come up with a spontaneous comedic presentation that sums up the state of our civilization. They’re great salesman… Indirectly, they’re good at explaining what became of the natural world…


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Dana Lions Uploaded A New Video Against King Coal Today

While coal mining is not creating much blight or mountain loss in the Pacific Northwest, King Coal is coming after our ports and we aim to stop ’em. And longtime Earth First! troubador Dana Lyons explains what it’s gonna take to get the job done!
 

 
“Sometimes” (the Coal Train Song) is written about the proposed coal export train which would carry 100 million tons of coal a year from Wyoming and Montana to ports in Washington and Oregon, and then shipped to Asia to make electricity.

Sometimes is written by Dana Lyons,. The video was directed by Gary Washington

Copyright 2012 by Dana Lyons
Lyons Brothers Music, BMI

For more info see http://www.cowswithguns.com


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