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-   -   Gaylord Nelson RIP (http://www.fishingbanter.com/showthread.php?t=18120)

George Cleveland July 4th, 2005 07:16 AM

Gaylord Nelson RIP
 
One of the good guys has gone.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N03681870.htm

http://www.wilderness.org/AboutUs/Ne...TopLevel=About

http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/du...s/12049058.htm

The fish in the Wisconsin River that I catch are there because of him
and his work on the Clean Water Act. The fact that I can go to the
Wild and Scenic Rivers in my state (or any other state) is
attributable to his efforts. His contributions to the life we
fishermen live today are legion.

"We stand on the shoulders of giants."


g.c.



Wolfgang July 4th, 2005 03:57 PM


"George Cleveland" wrote in message
...
One of the good guys has gone.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N03681870.htm

http://www.wilderness.org/AboutUs/Ne...TopLevel=About

http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/du...s/12049058.htm

The fish in the Wisconsin River that I catch are there because of him
and his work on the Clean Water Act. The fact that I can go to the
Wild and Scenic Rivers in my state (or any other state) is
attributable to his efforts. His contributions to the life we
fishermen live today are legion.

"We stand on the shoulders of giants."


Amen.

Muir, Leopold, Nelson........nothing more than pure coincidence that three
such giants should all have such a strong connection to one particular
place.....but one that we can nevertheless revel in.

Gonna be a tough act to follow.

Wolfgang



vincent p. norris July 5th, 2005 01:43 AM

Muir, Leopold, Nelson........nothing more than pure coincidence......

You don't think it might be more than coincidence?

Not possibly to some extent the influence of the culture of the state,
a consequence of the kinds of folks who emigrated there?

vince

George Cleveland July 5th, 2005 02:06 AM

On Mon, 04 Jul 2005 20:43:00 -0400, vincent p. norris
wrote:

Muir, Leopold, Nelson........nothing more than pure coincidence......


You don't think it might be more than coincidence?

Not possibly to some extent the influence of the culture of the state,
a consequence of the kinds of folks who emigrated there?

vince

They came from fairly diverse personal backgrounds. They did all have
close ties with the UW Madison.

g.c.

Wolfgang July 5th, 2005 02:12 AM


"vincent p. norris" wrote in message
...
Muir, Leopold, Nelson........nothing more than pure coincidence......


You don't think it might be more than coincidence?

Not possibly to some extent the influence of the culture of the state,
a consequence of the kinds of folks who emigrated there?


Possible? Sure, in a broad sense. As for these particular individuals,
Muir's family came to Wisconsin as homesteaders when he was a small boy,
Leopold came in 1924 as the result of a transfer within the U.S Forest
Service, and Nelson was born here. Nothing in Muir's biographical
information suggests that his father was the least bit interested in any
sort of nascent environmental movement (even assuming there was any such
thing), and Leopold's arrival appears to have been purely for professional
reasons. His stature within the movement may have derived from, or at least
been enhanced by, his later association with the University of Wisconsin
and/or like minded individuals within the state....including the Muir
legacy, I suppose, but I've seen no evidence of it. I don't know anything
about Nelson's family background. There may be something that suggests more
than coincidence is at work....or not.

I'd be very interested in any evidence for the notion that there is more to
it than that. I assume your question was meant in a broad philosophical
sense and that you didn't have any specific evidence in mind with respect to
Muir, Leopold and Nelson.......or?

Wolfgang



vincent p. norris July 6th, 2005 04:23 AM

Not possibly to some extent the influence of the culture of the state,
a consequence of the kinds of folks who emigrated there?


Possible? Sure, in a broad sense. As for these particular individuals....


I was thinking "in a broad sense," not about individual family
backgrounds that you and George mentioned. Wasn't Wisconsin settled to
a large extent by Scandinavians and Germans of socialist political
leanings?

If those settlers brought with them atitudes about nature, the land,
public stewardship, etc., that found their way into the churches,
schools, and so forth, they would have some effect on the attitudes of
kids growing up in those states, wouldn't they?

Although we soak up a lot of our personal values from our parents, we
also assimilate a lot from the culture of the society around us. I
think I'm very different from what I would be had I grown up in
Brooklyn or Boston or Dallas instead of the little hick town of
Scottdale, PA.

I'd be very interested in any evidence for the notion that there is more to
it than that. I assume your question was meant in a broad philosophical
sense and that you didn't have any specific evidence in mind with respect to
Muir, Leopold and Nelson.......or?


Right, Wolfgang; I have no evidence. Just the notion, derived from my
dipping into sociology and anthropogy over the years, that we all--and
especially the young--are influenced by our social surroundings.

I gather that the concept of "national character" has been the subject
of numerous books and is widely accepted among social scientists .
Why could there not be an analogous "state culture" in a country as
diverse as the U.S.?

vince

Wolfgang July 6th, 2005 02:47 PM


"vincent p. norris" wrote in message
...
Not possibly to some extent the influence of the culture of the state,
a consequence of the kinds of folks who emigrated there?


Possible? Sure, in a broad sense. As for these particular
individuals....


I was thinking "in a broad sense," not about individual family
backgrounds that you and George mentioned. Wasn't Wisconsin settled to
a large extent by Scandinavians and Germans of socialist political
leanings?


My knowledge of the political history of Wisconsin is shamefully scanty. I
do know that Milwaukee had a couple of popular socialist mayors early in the
20th century. Presumably their election reflected, to a more or less high
degree, the sentiments of the state's urban population but I have no idea
whether the predominantly rural citizens outside the Lake Michigan/Fox
valley corridor shared their political or economic views.

If those settlers brought with them atitudes about nature, the land,
public stewardship, etc., that found their way into the churches,
schools, and so forth, they would have some effect on the attitudes of
kids growing up in those states, wouldn't they?


Absolutely.

Although we soak up a lot of our personal values from our parents, we
also assimilate a lot from the culture of the society around us. I
think I'm very different from what I would be had I grown up in
Brooklyn or Boston or Dallas instead of the little hick town of
Scottdale, PA.

I'd be very interested in any evidence for the notion that there is more
to
it than that. I assume your question was meant in a broad philosophical
sense and that you didn't have any specific evidence in mind with respect
to
Muir, Leopold and Nelson.......or?


Right, Wolfgang; I have no evidence. Just the notion, derived from my
dipping into sociology and anthropogy over the years, that we all--and
especially the young--are influenced by our social surroundings.

I gather that the concept of "national character" has been the subject
of numerous books and is widely accepted among social scientists .
Why could there not be an analogous "state culture" in a country as
diverse as the U.S.?


As I'm sure you know, there are all sorts of problems with the notion of
"national character," not the least of which is that insofar as any such can
be reliably identified at all, they are subject to change over time. That
said, I really don't have any trouble accepting any of what you say above.
Call it national character, zeitgeist, or whatever you will, there can be no
doubt that despite individual differences there are characteristic themes
and moods that run through populations of various compositions in geographic
and political units of all sizes.

I'd like to be able to say that the Muir, Leopold, Nelson lineage is
indicative of a particularly keen and widespread environmental consciousness
here in Wisconsin, or at least commensurate with one. Unfortunately, I just
don't see it. I have no reason to believe that our environmental record and
its concomitant reflection on our citizens is any WORSE than that of other
states in general but, despite some encouraging successes in recent decades
(George's example of the rehabilitation of the Wisconsin river prominent
among them), I don't have much reason to thinks it's any better either. We
have our fair share of intractable environmental problems, made all the more
troublesome by widespread indifference as well conflicting agendas.

Wolfgang
who would bet a shiny new nickel that the identities of muir, leopold and
nelson are a complete mystery to most of the state's residents.



BJ Conner July 6th, 2005 06:12 PM

This month is the 100 th anniversary of the US Forest Service. Neither
Teddy Roosevelt or Gifford Pinchot is from Wisconsin.

Wolfgang wrote:
"George Cleveland" wrote in message
...
One of the good guys has gone.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N03681870.htm

http://www.wilderness.org/AboutUs/Ne...TopLevel=About

http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/du...s/12049058.htm

The fish in the Wisconsin River that I catch are there because of him
and his work on the Clean Water Act. The fact that I can go to the
Wild and Scenic Rivers in my state (or any other state) is
attributable to his efforts. His contributions to the life we
fishermen live today are legion.

"We stand on the shoulders of giants."


Amen.

Muir, Leopold, Nelson........nothing more than pure coincidence that three
such giants should all have such a strong connection to one particular
place.....but one that we can nevertheless revel in.

Gonna be a tough act to follow.

Wolfgang



Wolfgang July 6th, 2005 07:01 PM


"BJ Conner" wrote in message
oups.com...
This month is the 100 th anniversary of the US Forest Service.


There was a "National Geographic Radio Expeditions" piece about a research
project under the auspices of the USFS on public radio this morning.....to
be continued tomorrow.

http://www.npr.org/templates/topics/...p?topicId=1023

Neither Teddy Roosevelt or Gifford Pinchot is from Wisconsin.


Somewhat surprisingly, perhaps, lots of people are not from Wisconsin.
Rabindranath Tagore and Dag Hammarskjöld, for example, come readily to mind.

Wolfgang
and don't even get me started on the maoris! :(



BJ Conner July 6th, 2005 07:14 PM


I suspected they were not. I have never been sure of Ole and Lena
however?
Wolfgang wrote:
"BJ Conner" wrote in message
oups.com...
This month is the 100 th anniversary of the US Forest Service.


There was a "National Geographic Radio Expeditions" piece about a research
project under the auspices of the USFS on public radio this morning.....to
be continued tomorrow.

http://www.npr.org/templates/topics/...topicId=3D1023

Neither Teddy Roosevelt or Gifford Pinchot is from Wisconsin.


Somewhat surprisingly, perhaps, lots of people are not from Wisconsin.
Rabindranath Tagore and Dag Hammarskj=F6ld, for example, come readily to =

mind.
=20
Wolfgang
and don't even get me started on the maoris! :(




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