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July 23, 2001

Open Your Window -- Join the Klamath Outrage

By Jason F. Wright

In the 1976 Oscar winning film "Network", actor Peter Finch plays aging television news anchor Howard Beale. Beale, in the final days of a distinguished career, determines to leave in a blaze of glory by speaking his mind, believing his audience will enjoy the candor.

During one of his final newscasts Beale implores his viewers to say, "'I'm a human being... My life has value!'" He goes on, "So I want you to get up now. I want all of you to get up out of your chairs. I want you to get up right now and go to the window, open it, and stick your head out, and yell, 'I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this anymore!' " It is simply one of the greatest movie quotes of all time.

Lately, farmers in the Klamath Basin on the Oregon and California borders have been taking Beale's advice. They are opening their windows and their mouths and the noise is deafening. But where are the rest of us?

The Klamath Project, formed between these two states in 1902, is home to approximately 1,400 farms and ranches. Many of the farmers in the region are descendants of World War I and World War II veterans who won the right to homestead there from the federal government. Lured to the area in part by guaranteed water rights, farmers created a $300 million dollar market for crops including barley, oats, potatoes, wheat, and sugar beets.

Now, after nearly 100 summers of growth on fields worked by some of the finest men and women America has to offer, small communities in the region have been reduced to dust bowls. This because the Bureau of Reclamation recently decided to stop providing water to 90 percent of the land in the Basin. Instead, they favor the sucker fish in the Upper Klamath Lake and coho salmon in the Klamath River.

Family farms are deteriorating, literally blowing away, while precious water is held back. Farmers with no other source of water have been forced to sell off cattle and watch as pastures and hay die in the sun. The economic losses range from $250-$400 million dollars.

Friends, please don't call the Editor. That is not a misprint. Federal government bureaucrats have misused the mostly dysfunctional Endangered Species Act (ESA) to supersede all other obligations of the Klamath Project. Bureaucrats have determined that these two species of fish have rights greater than of those whose hands have worked the land for generations.

Outraged residents filed suit against the Bureau of Reclamation, but U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken ruled that the bureau had acted legally. "Congress has spoken in the plainest of words, making it abundantly clear that the balance has been struck in favor of affording endangered species the highest of priorities," she wrote in her decision.

Fed up but re-energized by slowly building national media attention, residents of the devastated Klamath Basin gathered on July 4th for a re-opening of the canal. Armed with bolt cutters farmers and their supporters pried open the stubborn head gates and cheered as 5 to 10 cubic feet of water per second escaped government control. Though not enough to save even a single acre of the 240,000 currently affected, on this day they notched a symbolic battlefield win in a war that, to date, they have mostly lost.

Many from that hot afternoon have remained, erecting a temporary camp, sending sometimes hourly updates via the Internet to supporters all over the country. They sing hymns, hear speeches, and re-open the flow of water every time U.S. Marshalls close it down.

Then, on July 20th the Calvary arrived. Over 100 horses and riders appeared above a nearby ridge, most carrying United States flags. Those in attendance say that not a dry eye could be found. Most of these patriots now appear willing to stay indefinitely. Though this season is a total loss, victims demand fair market compensation and a serious recrafting of the Endangered Species Act. And who can blame them?

Family legacies are practically wiped from the map and our federal government stands idly by as those whom it has a constitutional duty to protect, suffer. Yet the people stand firm.

Shouldn't we all be so brave? We should all demand that the head gates be opened, that wrongs be righted, and that promises be kept. We should all be so outraged as to open our windows and yell, "We're mad as hell! And we're not going to take this anymore.`"

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Mr. Wright comes from a small-business background having owned several retail and Internet businesses in the video, wireless, and mail order industries. He joined Frontiers of Freedom in the fall of 2000 after challenging incumbent Rep. Christopher Cannon for the GOP nomination for Congress in Utah's 3rd District. He has served in various leadership roles within the Republican party. Mr. Wright oversees the development of our Internet Web Sites, growth strategies, partnerships and other external affairs. He has appeared on FOXNews and local newscasts around the country. jwright@ff.org

 
 
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