"We shall never understand the natural environment until we see it not as just so much air, water, and real estate, but as a living organism. Land can be healthy or sick, fertile or barren, rich or poor, lovingly nurtured or bled white. Our present attitudes and laws governing the ownership and use of land represent an abuse of the concept of private property. Land is treated like a commodity when it is in fact a trust. Not so long ago our society permitted one human being to own another — to exploit him and even work him to death and not go to jail for it. This is no longer considered acceptable behavior, either by society or by the law. Yet in America today you can murder land for private profit, as is being done, for example, on a vast scale in the southern Appalachians. You can leave the corpse for all to see, and nobody calls the cops. This situation is what is known in history as a "cultural lag." It has occurred because our understanding has not caught up with our technology: a familiar complaint that has become almost a cliché in reference to dramatic modern inventions like the atomic bomb. It is equally true in respect to less spectacular forms of destruction. You can kill land by skinning it alive or by by slowly poisoning it, and it is murder all the same. In the modern world, no one should have life and death control over his land any more than he does over another human being."
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Non-fiction authors from the United StatesEditors from the United StatesScience authors from the United StatesEnvironmentalists from the United StatesHarvard University alumni
Original Language: English
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Sources
The Pursuit of Wilderness (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co, 1971) ch. 1, pp. 13–14
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Paul_Brooks
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Paul Brooks
Paul Brooks (1909–1998) was an American nature writer, book editor, and environmentalist.
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