http://earthfirstnews.wordpress.com/2012/07/01/rewilding-the-west/
by Russ McSpadden
Earth First! Journal Tucson field office
Most of the heroes of the Wild West, the rootin’ tootin’ movie cowboys,
sheriffs, miners, ranchers, saloon owners and cavalry generals, had a real
knack for replacing all the wild land they got a hold of with profiteering
schemes. These are the folks that actually killed the Wild West, bought it
up, fenced it in, murdered and incarcerated many of its indigenous people,
destroyed its communities with alcoholism, stripped its land, averted and
drained its waters, blasted its mountains, decimated its wildlife, made
extinct its wolves and jaguars and generally can be thanked for the Bone-Dry
SuburbanTame West of today. I’m saying, as far as wild goes, these boys
paved the way for the wild-ass time you are having right now working your
service job slinging coffee to hipsters.
No, the real heroes of the
Wild West would have to actually fight to keep the place wild. They’d want
to burn the banks and the miner camps, fend off the encroachment of a
domesticating middle-class culture and take pot shots at the troops from the
Dragoons. They might even take a bullet for a mountain lion.
Not too long
ago we had just such a fellow out here in Tucson, and seeing as its his
birthday on July 3rd it might be nice to remember this real Wild West hero
for some of the amazing and crazy shit he did to fight for what wild we got
left out there,and inside of ourselves as well.
Rod Coronado, who is
turning 47 this year, is a Yaqui Pascua Indian, a writer and poet, a father,
lover of nature and animals, felon and eco-anarchist. He’s the kind of guy
that could tell you all about the native flowers growing out of the cracks
in the sidewalk and how to make rudimentary bombs, though he’s done with the
latter these days. Akin to the wily, earth loving and dangerous characters
in Edward Abbey’s novel The Monkeywrench Gang, [and remember, Abbey was also
a Tucson local] Coronado was a real outlaw for the wild, not a violent human
in terms of hurting people, but also not afraid to utterly destroy any
non-sentient instrument of oppression.
In his heyday of the late ’90s
and early into the next millennium, while Coronado was a Tucsonan, he was an
Earth First! Journal editor, a hunt saboteur, a vocal proponent of the
Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and the Earth Liberation Front (ELF)—both
considered domestic terrorist cells by the FBI—and an indigenous rights
activist. These were the days of high stakes environmentally-motivated
arsons across the country, from torched Hummers and SUVs to ski-resorts and
animal testing labs. Even Tucson saw its share. In 2001 the ELF took credit
for burning luxury homes encroaching on sensitive habitat in the Catalina
Mountains and in 2003 the ELF and ALF claimed responsibility for the
torching of an area McDonald’s which cause a half million bucks in damages.
And Rod Coronado was certainly a proponent of militant action. He spent
much of his early activist years as a member of the Sea Shepherd Society,
the organization made famous later through the television show Whale Wars.
Coronado took the murder of whales, and their defense, very seriously. In
1986 he and another activist traveled to Iceland where they sank two whaling
vessels, the Havalur 6 and Havalur 7, dismantling one half of the country’s
entire fleet only after inflicting two-million bucks worth of damage to the
whaling station itself. He got away with that one and has even written
fondly of it in an article he published in the magazine No Compromise.
In 1995 Coronado was convicted on felony charges for an arson attack on
a Michigan State University animal research facility, part of a string of
facilities targeted by the ALF in their campaign duly titled “Operation
Bite-Back.” He was sentenced with 56 months but the damages to the fur
industry were substantial. Aside from the direct impacts of the action he
was imprisoned for, he has been credited for research and inspiration which
lead to many more actions, freeing thousands of animals—mink, fox,
coyotes—who actually have a fighting chance to re-wild themselves and
survive upon release. Not to mention millions of dollars lost to economic
sabotage, dealing a crippling blow to the whole industry.
In 2001,
Coronado visited the site of the Little Bighorn battle in Montana and stole
a cavalryman’s journal during his visit, a defiant act in retaliation for
the theft of hundreds of indigenous histories throughout the West and as, in
his own word, “a reminder of indigenous discontentment with the treatment of
our heritage and culture by the u.s. [lowercase his] government.”
In
2004, he was indicted on felony charges for an Earth First! hunt-sab in
Sabino Canyon just outside of Tucson where he dismantled a lion trap, spread
lion urine to confuse the hunting dogs, and was found guilty of felony
conspiracy to disrupt a forest officer. He got 8 months for that.
Following felony charges for a speech he gave in 2003 in which he answered
an audience question about how he had once used a plastic jug, gasoline and
an incense stick to make an incendiary device , Coronado took a plea deal in
2007 and was sentenced to one year in prison but received an early parole.
Subsequently, in 2010 he was sentenced to another four months in federal
prison for violating the terms of probation because of a “friend” request by
Earth First! co-founder and former EF! Journal editor Mike Roselle on
Facebook.
Coronado is now out of prison. As early as 2006 he had begun an
important transition many warriors take, from the front-lines to family. In
A Statement from Prison which he wrote while still incarcerated in 2006, Rod
had this to say:
“As a warrior I used to think that having children
was an impediment to any struggle for peace and justice. Never could I have
been more wrong. I believe our creator chose me to be a parent of my son
because I was a warrior…. Raising a child requires a parent to practice the
very principles you seek to teach your children…. If we live in peace and
teach our children well, they might inherit a world better than ours. Maybe
I’m just getting old, or finally thinking about the legacy I will leave
behind, but I still have much to give…. Don’t ask me how to burn down a
building. Ask me how to grow watermelons or how to explain nature to a
child. That is what I want to grow old doing.”
Coronado now lives in
Michigan, and any return to Tucson would be difficult because his probation
forbids him from communicating with others who have been involved in
environmental or animal rights actions. His role as both underground
militant and public figure have taken their toll, both on his enemies and
himself. Many of his militant actions, which I consider part of a historic
indigenous resistance movement long buried by white colonial histories and
corporate media, and scorned by white liberal activists, are still highly
controversial in environmental and social justice movements.
Much of
Rod’s early actions took place just before the eruption of intense FBI hunts
for “domestic eco-terrorists,” a fear mongering term elevated by State and
corporate media following the rise of the ELF. But in a West rapidly laid
bleak with concrete, undergoing an extinction crisis and climate convulsion,
overcrowded with bland, consumerist culture and the boredom of timid human
engagement, Coronado stands as a figure, all the more heroic, and absolutely
quintessential to the promise of a re-Wilded West.