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A Debate over Conservation:Public, Private, or Both?A Conservative Manifesto? Private Conservation Public Conservation We recognize that private fences cannot always conserve the value of the wilderness. Great, wideopen spaces are valuable because they are great and open. A vital part of Yellowstone's grandeur, and our own, is that it belongs not to Wall Street but to America. Value that inheres in citizenship, nation, patriotism: Such values cannot be contained or conserved in any private market. To privatize here is to destroy. Government can play an essential role in husbanding and expanding the wilderness. The point of conservation is to be economically inefficient and unproductive, to retard conventional economic progress, not promote it, to do so in well-designated places, set aside for that specific objective. Conservative government can and should advance these objectives, where private ownership cannot. Excerpted from "A Conservative Manifesto," in Hard Green: Saving the Environment from the Environmentalists, by Peter Huber (Basic Books, 1999, p. 201-202). |