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A Man's Mission A Man's Mission

A Man's Mission

In a recent blog post I characterized “the hot air emanating from Washington DC” as more dangerous than the smoke from California’s devastating forest fires. (I was talking about some of the tragic proclamations coming from the White House, not the comedy of the even more recent government shutdown.) Because Wild Idea Buffalo Company is first and foremost a conservation minded company, I was, of course, referring to the United States’ abandonment of the Paris Climate Accords, the opening of our public lands to the extraction industries, and the reduction in size of protected lands across the west.

That blog post elicited a thoughtful response from one of our good customers who, I am sure, had our best interests in mind: “…Great products, philosophy, photography and all around company with whom I feel good about supporting. One thought, please let this be a politics-free zone…specifically, statements like “dangerous hot air from Washington” have no place and moreover ruin the tranquility of your brand."

Here is my email response: "Thanks for your support. Sorry if my comment offended you. Certainly don't want to be too political. I respect your comment about keeping things apolitical, but please understand that conservation has been my life for 70 years. I don't consider defending our natural world political, I consider it survival for my grandkids. Very best regards."

I’ve been thinking about that benign exchange for a couple weeks and have grown embarrassed with my weak response. What we do at Wild Idea is not a game of commercial strategy. We feel that we are playing for “ALL the marbles.” We are engaged in a great, existential struggle that none of us can afford to ignore. We are doing, through our actions, what most people can’t do directly or won’t do, and what most of creation has no voice to do. Though it is soothing to think that our brand is tranquil, it is not so. Wild Idea Buffalo Company is about underscoring the destruction that out-of-control capitalism has visited upon the natural world. The suggestion that it is all a marketing strategy is insulting; though I’m sure our valued customer did not intend any such thing. 

Between the time of that initial blog post and now I went to see the movie The Darkest Hour. If you haven’t seen it, go as soon as you can and watch Gary Oldman’s portrayal of Winston Churchill in front of the English Parliament. Churchill is, of course, surrounded by politics as he strains to make England see that opposing Adolph Hitler is much more than a political stance. Notice the look on the face of Ronald Pickup who plays Neville Chamberlain as he realizes that his efforts to appease Hitler have been little more than the a scolding finger in Churchill’s face – the equivalent of saying, “Now, now Winston, let’s keep the language kind and civil.”

Or consider Major Buttric of America’s infant Continental Army. Imagine him in 1775, standing at the Concord Bridge commanding the rag-tag group of common men, much like most of us. On the other side of the bridge stands lines of red-coated invaders. Major Buttric and his men are facing down the most powerful army the world had ever known. If you’ve ever been to the Concord River Valley, you know it is one of the most idyllic and peaceful places imaginable. You also know that even after 250 years, the air is still thick with the tension of that day in 1775. Now imagine Major Buttric turning to the embattled farmers who stand shoulder to shoulder with him and saying, “Now boys, let’s keep this place a politics free zone.” No. What Buttric really said was: “Fire, for god’s sake fellow soldiers – Fire!”

I do not mean to minimize those battles fought to protect our civilization or our freedom. Quite the opposite. I only mean to elevate the importance of defending our environment and to point out that victory often comes through uncomfortable words and actions. The stakes could not be higher. We are fighting for life itself.

77 comments

  • Dan – It is because of great people like yourself and your family that I became passionate about bison, and why I consider myself – not only a wildlife biologist – but a bison biologist. I believe so deeply that we can restore the ecology of our fragmented grasslands by restoring bison to them that I, too, have devoted my life to the restoration of the species and our Great Plains. I see a lot of biologists taking the same route as your commenter, often saying “If you want to keep your job, and be a well regarded scientist, best keep your views to yourself.” I refuse to believe that. As a scientist, if I don’t stand up for what I believe to be true based on the evidence, then I have failed. Bison have walked the prairie’s of North America for at least 130,000 years, and for the last 200 years their mere existence has been part of our political sphere. To stand for the conservation and restoration of our natural heritage is to stand among the great – Roosevelt, Hornaday, Leopold, Muir, and others.

    I stand with you Dan, for the sake of our species and kindred alike.

    -Nic

    Nic McMillan
  • Thanks for sharing, Dan. You always seem to sum up everything in a short but sweet blog. I guess that is why you are such a great writer. Your beliefs (in addition to the great product) is why I respect your business and recommend it to everyone I can. I only wish I could afford to offer financial support to your mission and others of the same ilk. Long live Mother Earth and all she supports!

    Judy W
  • Damn straight, Dan! It’s a flat our war and one need look no further than the Sunday 1.21 NYT follow up story on the Malheur Refuge takeover, sympathetic locals saying things about conservation efforts like “How do we get along with people who are trying to take everything away from us?” and characterizing Yellowstone National Park as two million acres of natural resources gone to waste, the trees too close together because there’s no logging, and, by-the-way, can’t some of those bison be used for meat?

    PC

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