Green Gone Wild: Elevating Nature Above Human RightsGreen Gone Wild takes an in depth look at government confiscatory regulation of private property in the name of protecting so-called endangered plant and wildlife species that trample on Fifth Amendment guarantees. This book shines a spotlight on the extreme green movement that has cost many Americans their lives, jobs, and homes while saving only a handful of species. |
Contents
Authors Preface | 1 |
From Conservation to Exclusion from DDT to | 9 |
The Endangered Species Act of 1973 | 77 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
acres agencies American areas Army Corps attorney bald eagle biological birds bison California cancer cited Committee Congress conservation costs County court critical habitat designation delisted District dollars Domenigoni eagle economic Endangered Species Act enforcement environmental ESA's exclusionist organizations expenditures extinction farm federal government Federal Register fire firefighters Fish and Wildlife Forest Service funding FWS biologists Gordon Edwards habitat Hetchy homes human Hurricane Ibid impact implementation Interior jumping mouse k-rat Klamath River land Lear levees listed as endangered listed species litigation malaria meadow jumping mouse million Muir National NOAA Fisheries numbers Pacific Legal Foundation PERC percent Perdido Key pesticides population Preble's preservation President property owners protect Rachel Carson Ramey recovery red-cockaded woodpecker result salmon scientific scientists Secretary Senate Shabecoff Sierra Club Silent Spring snail darter spotted owl subspecies Tellico Dam threatened species timber tion wild wildfires wildlife species