Letter From the President: The Marines who met that first night in Crotonville, New York were mainly recreational and commercial fishermen and crabbers on the Hudson River. Similarly, Rick Dove, after 26 years in the Marine Corps, retired to become a commercial fisherman and crabber on the Neuse River. He also saw his fishery being destroyed. By 1994 most of the Neuse River’s fish stocks were collapsing. The fish were covered with lesions. Fishermen contracted debilitating respiratory infections and skin eruptions that wouldn’t heal, and even brain damage. Rick contracted the lesions himself. The sickness, caused by exposure to Pfiesteria, was killing fish by the millions and leaving people with brain damage. Rick helped trace the disease to the untreated waste from hundreds of thousands of hogs pouring into the river. In Rick’s view, the billionaire hog barons were literally stealing the river from the people of North Carolina. Rick was the first person to confront the hog industry in that state and anywhere else in the nation. In his soul he was still a Marine. He was still fighting for democracy. The
best measure of how a democracy functions is how it distributes the
goods of the land, the public trust assets, the commons, the air
and the water. These are things that by their nature cannot be reduced
to private property. They are owned by all the people and held in
trust for future generations. They are community assets: part of our
commonwealth. How are these resources distributed? Are they maintained
in the hands of the public or do we have a government that allows them
to be captured, privatized and consolidated by large corporate entities?
That’s
the whole battle of Waterkeeper Alliance and that’s why the
whole environmental movement is really a battle to save democracy.
Rick Dove saw this fight in these terms from day one and he’s
kept the movement on track by teaching people what it means to
be a Waterkeeper. Rick started the battle against these
companies and executed it like a military operation. He helped start
11 Riverkeeper programs on all the major rivers and estuaries on the
east coast of North Carolina. He organized an air force of 22 airplanes
that fly over the hog fields to document their practices. This is, without any doubt, a battle to save American democracy. And Rick pitched it as that to the public from the very outset. We are not here to protect the fishes and the birds simply for their own sake; Waterkeepers recognize that nature is the infrastructure of our communities. If we want to meet our obligations to our children, we must provide them with the same opportunities for dignity, enrichment, safety and democracy as our parents gave us. We must start by protecting our environmental infrastructure by going to war against the big corporations who want to plunder our country. I’ll say one more thing about this democracy. Corporations, under our law, can’t practice true philanthropy, or altruism. They do not take control of government officials to protect our democracy. They don’t want democracy and they don’t want free markets. They want profits. And the best way for them to get profits is to use our corrupt campaign finance system – which is essentially a system of legalized bribery – to get their hooks into a public official and then use that public official to dismantle the market by giving them competitive advantage and privatizing the commons. All they want is plunder, and under our laws, that’s the only thing they are legally entitled to want, because if they want something else, their shareholders can sue them. Rick Dove saw this flaw and said this
is an enemy that I am very familiar with, because it is an enemy of
democracy. This is a man who gave 26 years of his life to protect our
country. He risked his life in Vietnam. He went because of his idealism,
because he loved our country, because he loved democracy. And
when he retired, he came to work with us. If you know Rick,
you know he uses military imagery all the time and I deeply
appreciate that. Waterkeeper is a band of brothers and sisters,
fellow warriors, and Rick Dove is number one among us who is
willing to fight and has dedicated his life and enormous energies
to protect our shared environment. |
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. |