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Title: Nature to Get Legal Rights in Bolivia
Source: wired
URL Source: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2 ... 4/legal-rights-nature-bolivia/
Published: Apr 18, 2011
Author: Brandon Keim
Post Date: 2011-04-18 22:12:22 by A K A Stone
Keywords: None
Views: 5004
Comments: 17

After decades of exile to environmentalism’s legal fringes, the notion that natural systems could have legal rights is receiving serious attention.

Bolivia’s Law of Mother Earth is set to pass. On Wednesday the United Nations will discuss a proposed treaty based on the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth (.pdf), which was drafted by environmentalists last year. Both mandate legal recognition of ecosystems’ right to exist.

It’s highly unlikely that the United Nations would pass any such treaty in the foreseeable future, and the discussion has been criticized as a time-wasting political maneuver. But the intellectual argument for nature’s rights isn’t necessarily a patchouli-soaked Gaia fantasy translated into legalese. Some say it’s a practical extension of ecological insight.

“It has to happen. We have to be able to give legal protection and consideration to the rest of the natural world,” said Patricia Siemen, executive director of the Center for Earth Jurisprudence. “It’s in the human best interest, as well as the larger natural world’s.”

The first principle of Bolivia’s law — here translated roughly into English (.pdf) from the original Spanish — calls for human activities to “achieve dynamic balance with the cycles and processes inherent in Mother Earth,” with Mother Earth defined as “a unique, indivisible, self-regulating community of interrelated beings that sustains, contains and reproduces all beings.” A ministry of Mother Earth will be established, and an ombudsman appointed to hear disputes.

That the law would emerge from Bolivia is unsurprising. As the Guardian notes, the law was influenced by nature-embracing Andean spiritual traditions. Less abstractly, Bolivia is experiencing drastic environmental upheaval. Thanks to climate change, glaciers that provide fresh water to most Bolivians are drying up; parts of the country, including the capital, will likely become wasteland before the century’s end. The line between protecting nature and protecting people is very thin.

In the United States, the idea of legal rights for nature was planted by a 1972 article in the Southern California Law Review, entitled “Should Trees Have Standing?” (.pdf). Its author, University of Southern California law professor Christopher Stone, noted that established legal traditions recognized many non-human entities, from corporations to ships, as full-fledged people for legal purposes.

“To say that the natural environment should have rights is not to say anything as silly as that no one should be allowed to cut down a tree,” wrote Stone. But in his view, it was just as silly to think humans had inalienable rights to destroy communal entities like streams and forests. He proposed that people be allowed to claim guardianship of threatened natural resources, much as family or friends become guardians of loved ones unable to represent their own interests.

Stone’s claim would ultimately influence Supreme Court justice William O. Douglas, who in his dissent in Sierra Club v. Morton for legal recognition of “valleys, alpine meadows, rivers, lakes, estuaries, beaches, ridges, groves of trees, swampland, or even air that feels the destructive pressures of modern technology and modern life.”

“Each time there is a movement to confer rights onto some new ‘entity,’ the proposal is bound to sound odd or frightening or laughable,” wrote Stone. “This is partly because until the rightless thing receives its rights, we cannot see it as anything but a thing for the use of us.”

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#1. To: All, cz82, yukon, murron (#0)

Tbey just gave trees rights

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-18   23:19:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: A K A Stone (#1)

They just gave trees rights

Yea I know, I seen this 4-5 days ago, thought about posting it but figured Happy Quanzaa was gonna do it..... (crying trees posts)....

They will use this as another way to control you, say you can't use trees to build houses, make paper and other such silly bullshit..... Or, if you still can use them you will have to pay a "Premium price" and the money would somehow find it's way into the Libta(u)rds coffers.....

They aren't totally stupid, just crazy.... and others are even "crazier" if they let this happen.....

"I love the 45 caliber M1911, I respect the 9MM M9 Beretta but I only carry a CZ for my own personal protection". Quote courtesy of Lt Col John Dean Cooper, recognized as the Father of Modern Handgunning

CZ82  posted on  2011-04-19   6:51:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Ferret Mike (#0)

I think I found the perfect country for you if you should ever feel the need to flee America once the tea party takes over.

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-19   17:36:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: A K A Stone, Ferret Mike (#0)

Who interprets for the plants and animals how the want their 'representative' to vote? Nonsense aside, who gets to decide what's best for nature?

See what I'm talking about? Faux constituencies that get used for emotional blackmail.

Rudgear  posted on  2011-04-19   17:50:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Rudgear (#4)

Is walking on the grass now forbidden? I mean that might hurt.

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-19   17:51:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: A K A Stone (#5)

Who knows where this nonsense ends? It means what they want it to mean when they want it. That's the whole point of the radical movement. Legislating tyranny for the good of all. This has nothing to do with stewardship, which is what environmentalism should be about.

Rudgear  posted on  2011-04-19   17:54:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: A K A Stone (#5)

The philosophy of Deep Ecology does not stop logging. It recognizes that same trees have the inalienable right to live out their lifespans, because any species has a right to exist for their worth and value unto themselves.

Walk on that grass all you want. But in doing so, reflect that if the Willamette Valley in Oregon that supplies much the world's grass seed were devoted to growing hemp, we would have much more valuable products being produced on very rich farmland.

Industrial hemp produces oil, food, paper, building materials, and many things simple grass seed production on the same land does not.

#1. To: Goldi-Lox (#0) I used the wrong link. yukon posted on 2011-03-27 1:40:47 ET

Ferret Mike  posted on  2011-04-19   18:01:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Ferret Mike (#7)

Go burn one Mike. I don't care.

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-19   18:03:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: A K A Stone (#8)

Industrial hemp hurts cannabis production, as the pollen from these plants that don't get you high ruin the potency of plants being cultivated indoors. Ever try to keep all pollen out?

#1. To: Goldi-Lox (#0) I used the wrong link. yukon posted on 2011-03-27 1:40:47 ET

Ferret Mike  posted on  2011-04-19   18:06:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Ferret Mike (#9)

Do you grow your own weed? Is this how you know all about it?

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-19   18:08:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: A K A Stone (#10) (Edited)

Stone..... I am an Earth First!er. I an an activist for Deep Ecology. I also know about the study of the ecosystem soil is and raise earth worms on coffee grounds, but that doesn't mean I smoke myself stupid on over priced green plants.

I know many tings on this general topic because that is my main focus.

Cannabis is a huge cash crop here, but I don't have the mindset of a player in that particular clique. I actually take care of myself and don't even drink alcohol.

I also look and am more fit than the 57 I will be in a few short weeks. Funny how that works, huh?

#1. To: Goldi-Lox (#0) I used the wrong link. yukon posted on 2011-03-27 1:40:47 ET

Ferret Mike  posted on  2011-04-19   18:19:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Ferret Mike (#11)

I pick up worms when it rains at night. I throw them into my small pond to feed the Coy and Blue Gill.

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-19   18:21:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: A K A Stone (#12)

We have people here who raise worms of particular species they dry and grind into a high protein powder you can bake with. Many homes here have compost spots in their backyard, usually near the chicken coop.

Some of use have trained the coffee shops to give us their ground we then use to grow worms in.

You might be surprised at how much rotting ground full of healthy earthworms goes for just selling them to people who have large gardens and animals in their back yards. I take coffee grounds and worms and make money. Yet I am still an environmentalist. Gee, I guess the secret communist leadership ruling the enviro movement should ban me because I've done capitalist things, huh?

#1. To: Goldi-Lox (#0) I used the wrong link. yukon posted on 2011-03-27 1:40:47 ET

Ferret Mike  posted on  2011-04-19   18:29:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Ferret Mike (#13)

Making money with worms. Nothing wrong with that. They go for more then a porterhouse steak by the pound.

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-19   18:30:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: Ferret Mike (#13)

Gee, I guess the secret communist leadership ruling the enviro movement should ban me because I've done capitalist things, huh?

No, but they should be drawn and quartered for trying to outlaw home gardens and small livestock keeping at the beginning of the Barry Soetoro regime. Nothing wrong with RESPONSIBLE STEWARDSHIP. Everything wrong with THE GOVERNMENT TRYING TO REGULATE EVERYONE'S WAKING MOMENT WITH BULLSHIT LAWS.

Sorry. Just needed to get that off my chest.

Carry on with worm coffee.

Rudgear  posted on  2011-04-19   18:34:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Rudgear (#15)

Envirocycle Compost Bin

Vermicompost Right in Your Garden - Make a Worm Bucket46;. Because home gardens are a thriving business, and they are never going to ban them.

Coffee ground never stink badly as they break down and are a great fertilizer. So, whe you offer this soil mulch complete with worms, people love it for their gardens and it transports easy.

You do enough of those little money making things one can embed into their life with not to much trouble, it's easier to have the income to survive.

#1. To: Goldi-Lox (#0) I used the wrong link. yukon posted on 2011-03-27 1:40:47 ET

Ferret Mike  posted on  2011-04-19   18:53:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Ferret Mike (#16)

Nothing wrong with income derived from industry. Keep looking for better ideas on improving production, since there is clearly a market for the product.

Rudgear  posted on  2011-04-19   19:09:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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