The wolf is a decoy: The land-based theory for wolf introduction
Naomi Dobbs
for The Fence Post
for The Fence Post
List of hyperlinks in order of appearance:
1. RMWP website for “The Missing Link” infographic (currently positioned as second graphic): https://www.rockymountainwolfproject.org/infographic-library
2. RMWP website for listing of “Science Advisory Team” (scroll down to see list): https://www.rockymountainwolfproject.org/about-us
3. RMWP website for “Terms of Service”: https://www.rockymountainwolfproject.org/tos-privacy-policy
4. ActBlue website: https://secure.actblue.com/about
5. Colorado Secretary of State:https://www.sos.state.co.us/ccsa/pages/public/summary.xhtml
6. Breitbart News article: https://www.breitbart.com/middle-east/2019/01/30/soros-funded-ngo-uses-disputed-claims-to-demand-tripadvisor-booking-com-boycott-israeli-settlements/
7. Turner Endangered Species Fund website: http://tesf.org/
8. Nature Conservancy website: https://www.nature.org/en-us/
9. The Fence Post article: https://www.thefencepost.com/news/groups-continue-lobbying-to-reintroduce-the-gray-wolf-to-colorado-cca-president-says-gray-wolves-are-recovered/
Editor’s
Note: This if the first of a series of articles examining the money and
motives behind wolf introduction, and implications of this effort in
Colorado.
The
Rocky Mountain Wolf Project is a driving force and organizing entity
behind attempts to bring wolves to Colorado. Six states are included in
the Rocky Mountain Range — Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado and
New Mexico — but Colorado is the main focus of RMWP at this time.
RMWP’s
website includes an infographic which depicts wolves present in all the
Rocky Mountain States except Colorado, and labels Colorado the “missing
link” in the U.S. north to south wolf range. The primary motive of RMWP
appears to be wolf preservation, but the money behind this entity hints
at an alternate objective.
RMWP
boasts a 27-member Science Advisory Team which includes 17 professors,
mostly retired; and the organization claims to “Disseminate
Science-Based Information.” The site offers tools for educators, videos
of wolf advocates, and a library of ebooks which are only accessible by
providing personal information to the organization. The site makes
claims and shares data about wolves, but is remarkably void of reference
to scientific sources other than broad inference connected to their
Science Advisory Team.
Contrary to
RMWP’s public positioning as a resource for facts and science-based
information about the gray wolf, RMWP’s website contains a wholesale
disclaimer and legally worded statement designed to remove liability for
the accuracy of their content. Hidden in their website’s “Terms of
Service,” RMWP discredits itself by divesting the organization of any
accountability for the accuracy or reliability of statements or
materials found on the website. This broad disclaimer and limitation of
liability is covert but fair warning to teachers who use RMWP’s
educational content, and should be an alert to media who rely on this
organization as a quotable source.
Many
of RMWP’s Science Advisory Team sell books and collect income related
to their wolf advocacy. RMWP’s website also provides wolf merchandise
for sale by donation. However, despite claiming to be non-partisan,
income for RMWP’s sale of merchandise is oddly set up to be
tax-deductible through ActBlue. ActBlue is a known left-leaning partisan
organization which provides funding platform and fundraising support to
the Democratic party’s various political campaigns.
TIDES CENTER
At
the bottom of their website, in fine print, RMWP states the following:
The Rocky Mountain Wolf Project is a fiscally sponsored project of The
Tides Center. Initial impression is Tides Center, also referred to as
Tides Foundation, is a primary funder of the RMWP organization. However,
the relationship of RMWP and Tides is not that of a beneficiary
organization and benefactor — The Tides Center is Rocky Mountain Wolf
Project.
According to the Colorado
Secretary of State, the Rocky Mountain Wolf Project is actually: The
Tides Center dba Rocky Mountain Wolf Project. The Rocky Mountain Wolf
Project is a front name for Tides, or as they like to define it, “a
fiscally sponsored project.” Rocky Mountain Wolf Project is not a
stand-alone entity, RMWP is actually Tides which is based in California.
RMWP does not have its own 501(c)3 designation. RMWP doesn’t even
appear to have its own board of directors, which may be the reason for
the emphasis given to the Science Advisory Team.
According
to a recent article in Breitbart News, “Tides is a central funding hub
that distributes donor funds to far-left organizations. Indeed, Tides is
one of the nation’s biggest funders of progressive organizations.”
Tides is essentially wholly funded by radical-left philanthropist George
Soros, and it is a companion organization to the Soros Open Society
Foundation.
According to Tide’s own
website, this mega funder is not specifically focused on wolves or even
wildlife. Tides is focused on achieving “a world of shared prosperity
and social justice” with global giving in 2016 of $223.6 million per the
Tides website. Under the heading of “Impact Investing” Tides
acknowledges making direct land purchases on the auspice of protecting
lands. Tides Center dba Rocky Mountain Wolf Project is notably supported
by three other heavy-hitters of environmental activism: Turner
Endangered Species Fund, Sierra Club, and the global Nature Conservancy.
Both
the Turner Endangered Species Fund and Sierra Club are actively
lobbying and fundraising to import Canadian wolves to Colorado, despite
the Colorado Parks and Wildlife service’s opposition. The Nature
Conservancy’s role is to also serve as the funding source for wolf
depredation compensation in Colorado. At the Durango Wolf Symposium held
Nov. 29, 2018, at Fort Lewis College, several representatives of RMWP’s
Science Advisory Team hinted wolf depredation compensation in Colorado
would not come from taxes, and FLC professor Andrew Gulliford later
clarified the Nature Conservancy is the entity which will supposedly
compensate Colorado farmers for livestock losses from wolves.
Turner
Endangered Species Fund: Mike Phillips is the TESF’s executive
director, he is also on the Rocky Mountain Wolf Project’s Science
Advisory Team and is a lead figurehead for RMWP. The focus of TESF, and
companion organization Turner Biodiversity Divisions, is not just wolves
and not just endangered species either. Per their own website, the
Turner Endangered Species Fund is, “dedicated to conserving biological
diversity by ensuring the persistence of imperiled species and their
habitats with an emphasis on private land.”
The
Sierra Club: Currently, every page of their website contains the
header: “Fight back: Protect America from Trump.” This partisan
organization recently promoted itself as a fundraising vehicle for RMWP
by establishment of the “The Colorado Gray Wolf Restoration Fund”
managed under the Sierra Club Foundation. This national foundation’s
first two goals are 1) solve the climate crisis, and 2) secure
protections for public lands. The Colorado chapter of the Sierra Club
has a 600-person executive committee referred to as the Headwaters Group
which is focused on escorting wolves into Colorado, and creating new
wilderness areas in Colorado’s Continental Divide. This land-based goal
is now expressed in legislation recently proposed by two Democratic
congressmen from Colorado titled the Colorado Outdoor Recreation and
Economy (CORE) Act. According to the Pew Trust, the act “combines
several conservation proposals that local advocates have championed for
years, (and) would safeguard roughly 400,000 acres (in Colorado) as
public land and create the first national historic landscape.”
Nature
Conservancy: The conservancy’s stated priorities are: 1) climate
change, 2) land and water, 3) food and water sustainability, and 4)
healthy cities. Wolves are not on their list. Despite the Nature
Conservancy’s important fiduciary role for RMWP, a search on the
conservancy’s website under the term wolf or wolves yields 36 articles
none of which are focused on the subject of wolves. Instead, this
specific search of their science-based work using the subject of wolves
results in articles focused on preserves and refuges. Rather than
wolves, the entity credits itself with preserving millions of miles and
millions of acres of land. The conservancy’s donation portal leads with
“every acre we protect” — not “every wolf we save.”
These
three mission-aligned nonprofits which support the Tides Center’s Rocky
Mountain Wolf Project — Turner Endangered Species Fund, Sierra Club,
and Nature Conservancy — share features of social justice and
environmental activism. They’re definitely not uniformly focused on
wolves, although the wolf does appear to be a useful tool in their joint
mission. So, what exactly is the joint mission, what is the motive if
not wolf preservation? From an aerial view there is a tangible, and
overarching unifying theme more specific than just nature or the
environment — land.
Habitat, refuge,
park, landmark, forest, range, scenic byway, viewshed, historic
landscape, preserve, private property… Acquiring and exerting influence
and control over land is a high priority for this organizational
triumvirate which is operating in tandem to support the Rocky Mountain
Wolf Project. The alternate objective of the money behind RMWP appears
to be land. Further examination of this land-based theory for wolf
introduction will be covered in the next article in the series: The Wolf
is A Decoy. ❖
— Dobbs is a freelance writer from southwest Colorado. She’s focused on
topics impacting rural communities including land use and property
rights; and farming, ranching and hunting concerns.
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