💾 Archived View for spam.works › mirrors › textfiles › politics › sanddolr.lft captured on 2023-06-16 at 20:04:58.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
"SAND DOLLARS" A Libertarian Outlook by Gerald Schneider, Ph.D. Byron G. Norton bemoaned exploitation of "sand dollars" in a Washington Post Magazine article in June of 1986. Sand dollars are sea urchins whose flat disklike skeletons imprinted with "starfish" designs are collectable. The article concerned a girl, about 8, gathering live sand dollars at a beach for her mom. Her mother would bleach the sand dollars, turn them into decorative items, and sell extras to craft stores. "Commercialism" Upset by this "commercialism"--trading live animals for craft projects--Norton wrote: "No industrial operation can be expected to exercise self-restraint when there are profits to be made. The family was only transforming sand dollars into monetary dollars." He went on to say of the little girl: "As a novitiate in the order of capitalism, she was already acting as if sand dollars were merely commodities." Norton also implied that commercialism of nature leads to overharvesting of species and endangerment of their future survival. A Problem of Ownership But Norton was wrong! Capitalism and commercialism are not at fault when it comes to catastrophic abuse of nature. Ownership of natural resources and nature is the problem. The beach involved in his story was government "owned," and belonged to no one in particular and to everyone. It received the same lack of public respect I described for the Chesapeake Bay in another article. Government ownership produces little incentive for exercise of self-restraint in the use of the beach's (or nature's) treasures. Ecologist Garrett Hardin called this dilemma "the tragedy of the commons" in his 1968 essay with that title. Economists would say that this is what happens when external costs are not internalized. Private Ownership is Better If the beach were privately owned, for example, by some naturalist organization, preservation would be practiced. If sand dollars helped attract people to the beach, private owners with commercial interests would protect sand dollars from overharvest. It would be to the private, commercial owner's advantage to ensure sustained yield of sand dollars. She would want to keep the public coming back for more year after year. Getting beaches away from government and into private ownership by persons who value sand dollars for their own sake or for the sake of ecology should be the conservationist's goal. Ditto for all of nature and natural resources. Study the Record People still unconvinced about the superiority of private over government ownership of the environment should study the record. Just compare land and water bodies owned by environmental organizations (e.g. The Nature Conservancy) to federal government property. Federal government agencies, "pork barrel" politicians, and timber and livestock interests shape environmental policies on "public" (federal government) property. These special interests are referred to as the "iron triangle" by land economist, John Baden. He has documented how these interests combine to cause Americans to "subsidize the destruction of their environment." Reprinted from THE WHEATON NEWS of Wheaton, Maryland, Sept. 3, 1987. For a one year subscription to Mr. Schneider's biweekly "Libertarian Outlook" column, send $15 to: Gerald Schneider, 8750 Georgia Ave., Suite 1410-B, Silver Spring, MD 20910. Copyright 1987 Gerald Schneider, Ph.D. (This is the text of one of a series of eight topical Libertarian outreach leaflets produced by the Libertarian Party of Skagit County, WA. The leaflets have a panel with National LP member- ship information, with a space for other LP groups to stamp their own address and phone number. Samples and a bulk price list/ order form are available from: Libertarian Party of Skagit County, P.O. Box 512, Anacortes, WA 98221.)