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Ecology scapegoated in Southern California disaster
Submitted by Bill Weinberg on Thu, 10/25/2007 - 03:35.
Predictably, a front-page Wall Street Journal story Oct. 25 bashes native plant advocate Richard Halsey of the California Chaparral Institute as a culprit behind the devastating Southern California fires that have left half a million displaced. The article also approvingly cites LA County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky blasting the California Coastal Commission for adopting Halsey's sentimental ideas. Writes the Journal: "In the 15 or so wildfires that have ravaged hundreds of square miles in Southern California in the past few days, chaparral has been the primary fuel. Whipped by strong winds, the fire has spread across this vegetation, consuming some 1,500 homes along the way." Well yes, that is precisely the point. Fire is an intrinsic part of the ecology of Southern California—a fact extensively documented by Mike Davis in his 1998 book Ecology of Fear, with its cleverly entitled chapter "The Case for Letting Malibu Burn." An excerpt online at the Radical Urban Theory website cites wildfire after wildfire in what is now upscale Malibu, going all the way back to the Spanish era. Writes Davis: "Fire in Malibu has a relentless, staccato rhythm. The rugged coastline is scourged by a large fire, on average, every two and a half years, and at least once a decade a blaze in the chaparral grows into a terrifying firestorm consuming hundreds of homes in an inexorable march across the mountains to the sea... And it will only get worse. Such periodic disasters are inevitable as long as private residential development is tolerated in the fire ecology of the Santa Monicas." For Davis, rather than a hopeless quest to obliterate the fundamentals of the locale (which would entail obliterating countless native species even if it were possible), the answer lies in restraints on development. This seemingly radical idea was raised by figures far more revered than the contemporary Professor Davis after the devastating Decker Canyon fire of 1930 (which was small potatoes compared to the current maelstrom). Davis writes:
The Chaparral Myths page on Halsey's site makes a similar point in response to the anti-chaparral hysteria that followed the 2003 Cedar fire:
The current fires have devoured nearly 493,000 acres (about 770 square miles). (AP, Oct. 26) The terrifying augmentation of a natural cycle—in this case, the unprecedented level of destruction wrought by the fires that have always been periodic in the region—appears to be replicating itself in diverse locales across the nation and the planet. From an Oct. 24 AP report on the drought in Georgia:
Meanwhile, for a second time this year, storms have left thousands displaced in Central America, and brought down mountainsides in Colombia. (Hurricane Felix, which flattened Indian villages in Nicaragua last month, barely made a dent in public consciousness in Gringolandia.) These are signals of a system going increasingly out of wack. Those who seek to restore natural biota are helping move things back towards sustainability and stability. Those who hopelessly insist that nature must conform to arbitrary human designs are—even if they don't realize it—on the side of entropy and ever-greater disaster... See our last post on global climate destabilization. |
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