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Show The National Enterprise , July 14, 1976 Page three The Environmentalist-Labo- r Bloody murder, environmentalists when thriteen ducks and an egret mistakenly landed in an oil sump pond belonging to Equity Oil Company in the Ashley Creek Field in Uintah County, Utah. And the com- pany, even though it had taken precautions to avoid the unfortunate occurrence by scare erecting frighten birds forced to pay The target of similar cases numbering in the thousands, business and the concept of free enterprise have never before faced such formBut the idable artillery. innocent bird watcher or nature lover is not the enemy leveling the attack. Rather, the nations business faces heavy guns of newly enacted laws, the EPA, Councils on Environmental Quality, ten thousand bureaucrats, and one hundred thousand federal and state regulations. Couple with the forces of organ- ized Labor, and the system simply hasnt got a chance, Especially when the allies sights are aimed at nothing than total annihilation of capitalism. Says Eugene Guccione, editor, Mining Engineering, The only conflict between labor and the environmental ists is about tactics; both agree totally on strategy: the -- ideology of the labor inventing' a new form of ment is just as socialistic as Had we treated the crime that of the environmentof pollution as la violation of an alists. An article on the individuals right to land, air, alliance and water, rather protecting it appeared in the New York under the collectivist term of the common good, or the Times, May 4, 1976, page 18, describing how Leonard public interest, we wouldnt Woodcock, president of the be in the kind of regulatory United Automobile Workers mess were in today, where and Dr. Barry Commoner, technology lags far behind the type of environmental protec- -' Washington University five-day tion required by the bureau- ecologist, organized a national conference in Black crats, Guccione contends. . And the ideology of colLake, Michigan, for 300 top union leaders and ecology lectivism, he points out, is the activists. very basis of socialism. But since the late 19th century, when the effects of air polluNew Form of Socialism tion wrere far worse than Woodcock admitted in the today, the courts invariably article, "We dont see eye to held in favor of the polluters eye with the environmental and denied the suits of victims community in its opposition to of pollution on the grounds nuclear power, but we that the need of society for d the inthoroughly supported legisla- factories tion to regulate strip mining. dividuals right to property. At the joint meeting he said, Water pollution was similarly We havent agreed with ignored because no one ow'ned them on banning nonreturn-tha- t the rivers except the comable containers, but were munity whose interest the with them in seeking national state interpreted to be factorland use legislation. ies, and not the protection of Following those remarks, the individual rights of those ecologist Commoner sug-les- s who owned riverfront propgested that the solution lies in erties or who drank the water. a reorientation of the nation's Burden on the Judiciary economy: We face a big debate on how were going to devote is What needed, resources for the common Guccione said, is to uphold the basic rights of the individual good rather than profit. to Theres a whole question of land, air, and water, and environ-mentalist-lab- $70,000. Alliance or get the law to think of pollu- tion as a violation of individual rights. To do that does not The leaders of the called environmental move- ment who were all closet the require onslaught of socialists a few years ago environmental protection laws have recently come out of the and bureaucrats It merely closet and have explicitly requires of the Judiciary identified Branch the proper application of the tort law of trespass, nuisance and negligence, he said. But for our interest in the common good, we are themselves as avowed, dedicated socialists; and have made no secret of the fact that what they are after is the elimination of the free enterprise system, or what is left of it. Guccione with leaders said. plagued As evidence, he points to masquerading as environmentalists, who do not, in the environmental bible, The fact, give a damn about the Environmental Handbook, environment or about the edited by Garret De Bell. De improvement in the human Bell says in the preface, Our condition. continued on page ten oo O O oo i out-ranke- - . O O NOT INTERESTED? 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The company's other R V operations are the Mallard Coach division which has manufacturing facilities in West Bend, Wisconsin and Hudson, Massachusetts, and the red dale division, acquired earlier this year, which is located in Longmont, Colo. you Covered With over 1600 stock quotations, news articles, earnings reports, corporate profiles, market columns and feature stories, the National Enterprise covers the OTC securities market from coast to coast. behind closed doors of make it our business to know what's going on in the industry--froWe'll and laws securities rooms keep you posted on the to changing regulations. corporate board latest developments and abreast of current trends. We m The National Enterprise gives your investments the kind of coverage they deserve. Please send me a one-yea- r subscription to the National Enterprise. Enclosed is $24.00. ZIP- - oo oo Q tures travel trailers, pick-u- p truck campers, and fifth wheel recreational vehicles which are marketed under the names Roadrunner ? writers and comments. De Ciccio indicated that from Maine to California. HUDSON, Mass. The Entwistle of this latest acquisition will Entwistle is also a leading Company - s -- You Entwistle Achieves Western Market Expansion with Acquisition m. Mail to: THE NATIONAL ENTERPRISE P.O. BOX 11778 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 84147 |