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281 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 1 (1952)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0281 and id is 1 raw text is: Conservation in 1952
By STEPHEN RAUSHENBUSH

CONSERVATION is in danger of
becoming a lost cause.
As a cause, rather than a series of
techniques, it started with two ideas.
The first was the concept of a national
patrimony, a God-given heritage and
legacy which was to be handled by re-
sponsible stewards rather than by prodi-
gal and wastrel sons. The second was
that the advantages of our natural re-
sources should be shared by all the citi-
zens of the nation, not used primarily
for the benefit of a few.
Today the emotional content of these
old ideas survives mainly among the
small farmers who love the land which
gives them their living. It is their
group of soil conservationists that holds
that the right to own carries the duty
to conserve. But for most of the rest
of the community, the two moving ideas
of Theodore Roosevelt, Gifford Pinchot,
and the host of great conservationists of
the early part of the century seem to
have lost attractiveness. The cause that
rose from these ideas has been weak-
ened. This is not to say that many
things are not still done in the name
of conservation. It is not to say that
there are few sincere recreationists, or
few people worried about the pressure
of population on land, or few diligent
technicians of soil and forest conserva-
tion. They are all present. They are
all doing valuable jobs of sorts. They
are simply no longer so sure of their
community of interest or so confident
of the national value of their work as
were the old-time leaders.
CONTRARY FORCES
What happened? Some five distin-
guishable forces and events battered
away at the old ideal.
1

First was the peculiar sequence of
war-depression-war-defense that has ex-
tended over the past 38 years. The
war and defense periods drained our re-
sources at rates that were unthought of
in the early conservation days. In those
emergencies there was little possibility
of considering slower rates of use. The
greatest service to future generations
seemed clearly to be that of mobilizing
all our resources as rapidly as possible.
Sandwiched between war emergencies
was an agricultural, coal, and lumber
depression that began in the middle
1920's. Owners and tenants had to
exploit the land, the forests, and the
coal in destructive ways to stay alive.
They had few funds to maintain the
national resource capital. Dust storms
then transported topsoil from the Mid-
west to Washington, and a few starts
were made (the Civilian Conservation
Corps and the Soil Conservation Serv-
ice) toward belated conservation; but
then war and defense claimed the na-
tional surplus. In this whole sequence
of war-depression-war-defense it became
easier to preach conservation than to
achieve it, and easier to ignore it than
to preach it.
Second was the demonstration of the
ability of our applied scientists to
produce substitutes or find alternate
sources. When lumber became scarce,
light metals and useful clay products
were available. When good range for
our sheep became scarce, synthetic sub-
stitutes for wool appeared. As the soil
resources were depleted or eroded, a
host of seed, insecticide, and fertilizer
improvements produced larger crops on
less land. Internal combustion engines
made land available that had previously
been used for the maintenance of horses

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