Hard Green: Saving the Environment from the Environmentalists;
                    A Conservative Manifesto
                by Peter Huber.
                Basic Books (New York, New York), 224 pp.,
                $15.00 paper, 1999.
The Greening of Conservative America
                by John R. E. Bliese.
                Westview Press (Boulder, Colorado),
                339 pp., $33.00 paper, 2001.
These two books set out to correct the general public perception
                that conservatism and environmentalism are at odds. Peter Huber’s
                book goes even further. His manifesto argues that modern liberal
                environmentalism is fraudulent. It is akin to a totalitarian
                ideology that actually harms rather than protects the environment.
                John R. E. Bliese’s book is more of an apologia mixed with
                policy analysis. He divulges the reason why the Left has been
                so successful in framing environmental issues and defining the
                terms of debate. It is because conservatives have too often rejected
                environmentalism as a liberal fad and sided with industry against
                the public will on environmental policy. Bliese begins with conservative
                political theory and shows how conservative principles are compatible
                with environmental protection. He then spends the remainder of
                the book examining various environmental policy issues such as
                pollution, global warming, and biodiversity conservation. Current
                policy shortcomings are explained, as are ways to improve policies
                by applying conservative principles. Both authors see excessive
                governmental regulation as a hindrance to good environmental
              policy, and both also advocate a larger role for markets.
Peter Huber is more clearly the market ideologue. While he recognizes
                the importance of governmental intervention in dealing with large-scale
                environmental problems such as industrial pollution and wilderness
                protection, he argues that the government has overstepped its
                authority by trying to micro-manage the economy and people’s
                lives to protect every aspect of the environment. For example,
                by setting standards for waste recycling and energy efficiency,
                the government is engaged in social engineering that not only
                fails to attain environmental goals, but often wastes more energy
                and tax dollars in the process. Resources would be better used
                to set aside more wilderness, rather than trying to regulate
                every aspect of human behavior. He argues that this fixation
                on micromanagement is borne out of a general fear of imminent
                environmental collapse. Liberals believe that ecological catastrophe
                can only be averted by a strong government whose experts alone
                can safely steer society to a greener future. To Huber, this
                form of environmentalism is built upon the same abstract social
                theories that drove Rousseau, Marx and other leftist radicals.
                They were so sweeping and idealistic that they could only be
                implemented by state force. And, despite their grandiose social
                visions, they all failed. 
The same is true of modern liberal environmental ideology. It
                is based on abstract computer models that are so complex and
                produce so many possible scenarios that they cannot be fully
                relied upon to make sound environmental policy. This brand of
                environmental ideology is what Huber calls “Soft Green.” In
                contrast, “Hard Green” is conservative. It relies
                on empirical evidence rather than theories. Its main focus is
                setting aside wilderness, which is the only scarcity that matters.
                All other environmental problems can be successfully dealt with
                through markets and advanced technology. Hard Green believes
                in using “hard energy”—oil, natural gas, coal
                and nuclear—rather than “soft energy” like
                solar and wind power. The former is more efficient and impacts
                less of the earth’s surface area. Huber also argues that
                it is the wealth created by capitalist societies, not poverty
                or forced reductions in consumption, that ultimately limits environmental
                destruction. The rich support conservation because they can;
                the poor do not because they cannot. Huber does not deny that
                there are serious environmental problems; but to change the status
                quo to try to avert them is foolish because the future cannot
                be known. Thus, the conservative proceeds with business as usual,
                and lets market forces and new technologies deal with environmental
                problems as they emerge. 
In his defense of markets and technology, however, Huber seems
                to forget that big government was instrumental in developing
                modern capitalism. Enormous military spending created Internet,
                microwave, and rocket technologies. Governments also seized vast
                amounts of private property under the authority of eminent domain
                to build the infrastructure upon which modern commerce now thrives.
                Curiously, Huber is also an ardent supporter of nuclear power—a
                position that seems contrary to conservative principles. First,
                this industry will always invite massive governmental regulation
                because of its lethal potential. Moreover, the belief in a safe
                nuclear future also requires a fantastic faith in the future—that
                civilization will continue to be stable and produce the necessary
                human skills and technology to support it for at least the half-life
                of the waste material! Finally, Huber creates numerous false
                dichotomies and straw men to make his attacks. Take, for example,
                the division between rich and poor. By painting the lives of
                people in non-capitalist societies as nasty, brutish and short,
                he makes it appear that only enlightened modern capitalists can
                protect nature. But traditional societies provide many examples
                of conservation, not through markets and bettertechnology, but
                through the exercise of social taboos and individual moral restraint. 
Conservatives will appreciate many of Huber’s criticisms
                and welcome his market-centered policy suggestions. But, despite
                his harsh and often histrionic attack on liberal environmentalism,
                the book is really not a “Conservative Manifesto”,
                as the subtitle claims. It would better be labeled a “Libertarian
                Manifesto.” Huber is a trained engineer and lawyer who
                writes for Forbes magazine. His intellectual hero is Adam Smith,
and his favorite environmentalist is T. R. Roosevelt, neither
                of whom can be considered authentic conservatives. Moreover,
                while he makes a few token references to God and religion at
                the end of his book, it is clear he believes that moral restraints
                imposed by religious teaching can no more control human appetite
                and ambition than can government controls. The market is the
                only effective allocator of social “goods” and “bads.” As
                such, it is the only social arrangement that can effectively
                deal with environmental problems. To Huber, protecting the environment
                is not done out of moral responsibility; it is done purely for
                aesthetic reasons. Traditional conservatives feel differently.
                Religion teaches morality, prudence and reverence. It is what
                guides personal behavior and should guide social policy as well.
                So, when Huber makes declarations like “consumption itself
                has nothing to do with anything,” he is mistaken. With
                respect to energy flows in an ecosystem this is true, but from
                a human moral standpoint it is not. Excess consumption is called
                greed, which is a deadly sin. Similarly, the wanton destruction
                of the environment, as Russell Kirk pointed out, is nothing less
                than sinful. 
John Bliese’s conservatism rejects this fixation on individuals,
                markets and technology. Although he uses Frank Meyer’s “fusionist” definition
                of conservatism, as a movement comprising both libertarians and
                traditionalists, Bliese identifies more with the latter. He draws
                upon the writings of Edmund Burke, Richard Weaver, and Russell
                Kirk to define the major tenets of this older brand of conservatism.
                He also engages in a substantial refutation of the belief that
                Judeo-Christian values are antithetical to environmental values
                and insists that the religious ideals of piety and prudence are
                critical in developing an environmental consciousness. Like libertarians,
                traditionalists do prefer market solutions over governmental
                ones, but they will also accept governmental authority to protect
                the common good, including collective environmental goods like
                clean air and water. Bliese also respects the scientific community
                and scientific consensus, rather than simply dismissing much
                of it as ideology. In the end, his lengthy and well-documented
                analysis of various environmental policy issues succeeds in demonstrating
                that conservative principles do support environmental policy.
                The book is even more significant in that it broadens the average
                reader’s understanding of conservatism. It demonstrates
                that there is a branch of conservative philosophy that goes beyond,
                and is even antithetical to, the fanatical marketculture that
                has done a great deal of damage to the environment. 
The excesses of the market have also caused serious damage to
                human cultures, and it is ironic that traditional conservatives,
                who have spent much of their intellectual energy decrying this
                destruction, have not yet understood that the destruction of
                culture and the destruction of nature are one and the same. When
                Nietzsche declared that God is dead, he should have added that
                Nature is dead as well. While this is an exaggeration, the point
                is that the juggernaut of modernization has clearly made life
                difficult for traditional (religious) societies and the natural
                world with which they co-exist. In other words, when nature is
                destroyed, the intimate human contacts with nature—which
                are the foundation of all culture—are also destroyed. The
                result is that traditional human societies, which are bound to
                specific ecological cycles and places, become distorted, weakened
                or die completely. Nature and the cultures that are associated
                with them are always subject to change, but they cannot readily
                adapt to an urban-industrial milieu that violently and totally
                replaces natural cycles with artificial ones. Such “systems” create
                tremendous wealth, but in the process obliterate native cultures
                and the ecosystems with which they co-exist. More significantly,
                this artificial milieu systematically devalues every human activity
                that is bound to the cycles of nature—farming, hunting,
                fishing, mothering, and all forms of physical labor. To modern
                urbanites like Huber, nature is removed from the intimate patterns
                of life itself. It is reduced to either an economic resource
                or pristine wilderness that serves as an aesthetic or recreative
                outlet. 
Unfortunately, neither of these books ever delves deeply into
                the cultural aspects of environmental policy and thought, especially
                the intimate relationship between environmental destruction and
                cultural decline. More importantly, this relationship has never
                been fully examined by any of the dominant environmental schools
                of thought. In most environmental discourse, nature is defined
                in material terms—as ecological systems comprised of air,
                water, soil, plants, animals etc. As such, environmental policy
                is concerned with maintaining the stability and vitality of these
                systems and their various components. But, to traditional conservatives,
                nature consists of more than various arrangements of matter.
                Nature is also spiritual—it is Creation. And, since human
                beings are a part of Creation, the way we live individually and
                collectively has both physical and spiritual consequences. Perhaps
                the next wave of environmental thinkers will be conservatives
                who will examine the environmental question from a perspective
                that goes beyond the constructs given by natural science and
                stress moral, intellectual, and aesthetic factors. In order for
                conservation to be truly conservative, it must seek to protect
                our culture as well as the physical environment in which that
                culture grows and thrives.
Tobias Lanz teaches political studies
                at the University of South Carolina in Columbia.