October 8, 2002
By Tom DeWeese
The massive rally in Collier County, Florida, known as the "Sawgrass
Rebellion" to support property rights, imploded and was cancelled in
the face of a determined effort to deny it the right to meet anywhere.
Desperate and determined, property rights activists could only manage
to obtain a yard sale permit from the county government in order to hold a
small rally for local activists and supporters who arrived from around the
nation via caravan. You could almost hear the cheering in the offices of
the Sierra Club, the Nature Conservancy, the Army Corp of Engineers, the
Fish and Wild Life Service and the National Park Service.
Will the juggernaut of environmental organizations and federal
government agencies that have mounted an attack on the most fundamental
right of an American citizen, the right to own property, succeed?
If it does, then the Fifth Amendment which asserts and protects
property rights for all Americans, will have been undermined and, with it,
many other rights will have been effectively negated. The Greens inside
and outside government believe that a citizen’s property rights movement
will soon grow tired of complaining about their "Sustainable
Development" agenda to restructure America.
The planned rally was the result of the pain the Greens and their
fellow travelers have inflicted on thousands of Americans. They’re
people who lost their property and their jobs. That’s what happens when
the government shuts off the water to your farm or denies grazing rights
to your ranch. That’s what happens when sawmills are forced out of
business as vast areas of forest are put off limits to protect a single
"endangered" species. That’s what happens when a planned gold
mine is denied permission to operate because it is "close" to a
national park. That’s what happens when homeowners discover their
property in part of a "view shed" and are told to become
"willing sellers" to their government.
All across America millions of acres are being put off limits to any
use by Americans. They are being declared national monuments, heritage
sites, buffer zones. This is spelled out in The Wildlands Project, an
environmental plan to deny Americans access and use of fifty percent of
the nation’s landmass. It is the plan, too, behind the "Sustainable
Development" agenda heralded this summer by a United Nations
conference in South Africa.
The Grand Army of Sustainable Development deems those who would protest
to save their homes, their farms, their ranches, their businesses
insignificant. Quietly, relentlessly, they have done their job well,
creating a wall of laws and regulations intended to anticipate and thwart
their every action.
Their army is composed of the bureaucrats who have the power to issue
or deny permits for building and construction, for repairs, for the color
you can paint your door. They control landscaping. They control public
gatherings. They control sanitation and outdoor lighting. They can decide
how many cars can be parked. Their generals are the politicians who have
sold out their constituents for the campaign funding provided through a
network of Green organizations. It is they who account for why virtually a
third of all federal laws and regulations today are devoted to
"protecting the environment."
For over 200 years we have prospered because we have operated under a
rule of law designed to protect the individual’s right to pursue his own
life in the way he chooses. To work, to play, to invest, to own property
and use it in the way that best suits his needs. This defines citizenship
in America.
The government, by the mandate of our Constitution, has the
responsibility to protect these rights and, from the very beginning,
private ownership of the land was granted as a right of the people.
Government’s job was to make sure that no one could unjustly take that
land or control how it was used or trespass over it against the owner’s
will.
Americans are only a few laws and regulations away from the day when
the advocates of Sustainable Development will be able to completely ignore
our right to free speech and free assembly. The "Sawgrass
Rebellion" will not be held as planned, but its loss has galvanized
more than 700 property rights organizations around the nation.
It is said that love of money is the root of all evil, but the assault
on property rights demonstrates the real evil is uncontrolled government
power.