Kurt Meyer writes a weekly column for the Nora Springs – Rockford Register and the Substack newsletter Showing Up, where this essay first appeared. He served as chair of the executive committee (the equivalent of board chair) of Americans for Democratic Action, America’s most experienced liberal organization.
John Muir, among our nation’s earliest and most passionate conservationists, died on Christmas Eve, 1914. Yet I swear I can hear his voice, crystal clear, responding to President Donald Trump’s recent actions.
Earlier this month, Trump directed federal agencies to seek ways environmental regulations could be circumvented with plans of increasing timber production in 280 million acres of national forests and other public lands. He signed an executive order allowing the U.S. to bypass Endangered Species Act protections.
National forests; public lands. Simply stated, these trees belong to you and me.
Encompassed in the executive order is an investigation into whether other countries are dumping lumber into the U.S. On again, off again tariffs imposed on Canadian lumber—in 2023, the U.S. imported $11.5 billion in wood products from Canada—is obviously one arrow in our “trade quiver”. Worth noting: we also export forestry products to Canada, $2.23 billion in 2024.
In this fluid environment, with clashing interests pointed in many different directions, it seems appropriate to search for guideposts. Muir himself grasped how interrelated matters are, observing, “When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe.” (Okay, maybe not everything in the Universe… still a statement that merits reflection.)
I contend Muir’s early years in Wisconsin, from 1849 to 1863, age 11 to 25, grounded him. In these formative years, Muir’s curiosity and his love of nature emerged. For all our current president’s traits, both good and bad, curiosity and love of nature don’t make the list. So, it seems inevitable that Muir‘s and Trump’s thinking would clash.

A Wisconsin boyhood predated Muir’s efforts to create Yosemite
John Muir isn’t available to debate these issues; nevertheless, his words live on. In 1897, Muir penned an essay for The Atlantic Monthly entitled, “The American Forests,” almost 4,000 carefully chosen words. Long, glorious paragraphs, pared down below to capture key points.
The forests of America, however slighted by man, must have been a great delight to God; for they were the best he ever planted. The whole continent was a garden, and from the beginning it seemed to be favored above all the other wild parks and gardens of the globe.
Everywhere, everywhere over all the blessed continent, there were beauty, and melody, and kindly, wholesome, foodful abundance. … In the settlement and civilization of the country, bread more than timber or beauty was wanted; and in the blindness of hunger, the early settlers, claiming Heaven as their guide, regarded God’s trees as only a larger kind of pernicious weeds.
Accordingly, with no eye to the future, these pious destroyers waged interminable forest wars; chips flew thick and fast; trees in their beauty fell crashing by millions, smashed to confusion, and the smoke of their burning has been rising to heaven more than two hundred years.
Surely, then, it should not be wondered at that lovers of their country, bewailing its baldness, are now crying aloud, ‘Save what is left of the forests!’ Clearing has surely now gone far enough; soon timber will be scarce, and not a grove will be left to rest in or pray in. … Every other civilized nation in the world has been compelled to care for its forests, and so must we if waste and destruction are not to go on to the bitter end, leaving America as barren as Palestine or Spain.
Any fool can destroy trees. They cannot run away; and if they could, they would still be destroyed, – chased and hunted down as long as fun or a dollar could be got out of their bark hides, branching horns, or magnificent bole backbones. Through all the wonderful, eventful centuries since Christ’s time – and long before that – God has cared for these trees, saved them from drought, disease, avalanches, and a thousand straining, leveling tempests and floods; but He cannot save them from fools, – only Uncle Sam can do that.
Thank you, John Muir, for articulating a defense of forests. Is Muir’s statement still applicable? And if so, might he now contend that Uncle Sam is the fool?
Top photo of Superior National Forest in Minnesota, viewed from the summit of Eagle Mountain, is by Yinan Chen, available via Wikimedia Commons.
4 Comments
Thank you, Kurt Meyer
Muir reflected now-outdated views in claiming that American forests were better than any others. But his basic message remains on target.
The Trump attack on national forests is one of many nature-destroying plans that, other than climate change, are not getting a lot of general coverage. It’s easy to understand why. Already-beleaguered journalists face a huge avalanche of Trump awfulness.
But the Trump attack on nature is multi-faceted, and much, much more is ahead. I won’t try to post links on BH after what happened last time, but here are three of many recent headlines.
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Trump Quietly Plans To Liquidate Public Lands To Finance His Sovereign Wealth Fund
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Trump orders likely to drive species’ extinction, wildlife advocates warn
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‘Cataclysmic’: environmentalists fear effects of Trump cuts on Great Lakes
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Etc. etc. etc.
PrairieFan Tue 18 Mar 3:13 PM
Thank you Kurt
Some of John Muir’s thoughts are outdated, but his love of nature is still relevant and guides the Sierra Club that he founded. The Iowa Chapter of the Sierra Club has to continually protect Iowa’s few forested areas from the Iowa Legislature, and even from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. It has been so long since agriculture erased Iowans’ memory of what Iowa’s natural environment was like that it is difficult for Iowans to care about forests and other aspects of our natural heritage.
Wally Taylor Thu 20 Mar 4:20 PM
Muir is outdated sorry
Old growth forest are not near as productive as selective and managed timber harvest. Those are facts. California’s massive wildfire? Can you say totally mismanaged forestry plans and crazy laws and permit applications to clean up tons and tons of dry ignition all over California!!!!
You see you can have both and our timber industry has show that great forest mamangemt and worry about the environment. Go to the black hills of South Dakota they have an active forests program and yet millions travel their annually for the beauty and yes the trees. .
Pine beetles have killed off millions of acres across the US and where is the outcry? Thinning and removal of dead tress is paramount to keeping wildlife suppression down and opening up the ground to the sun to bring life back into a forest. Mono. Habitat doesn’t support nest the wildlife or flora again another fact.
We can have great forest management with harvest and a long term goals of a healthy virabrant forest for all. It’s been done for decades . Again facts .
Midwestconservative Thu 20 Mar 9:18 PM
Speaking of facts....
…of course logging can be done carefully and sustainably. The question is whether the Trump administration will expand national-forest timber production carefully and sustainably. That, given everything else the Trump administration has been doing, seems unlikely.
The big sustainability questions regarding logging are largely where, how, and why. Trump has already indicated, in regard to national forests and other areas, that his administration is more than willing to sacrifice endangered species, for a start. That’s a giant red flag.
And speaking of facts, here’s a headline from a story about a 2023 research paper: “Old Forests Store More Carbon than Young Ones—and That Matters for US Climate Goals.” And there was a good documentary on PBS this week about how to prevent the kind of massive house destruction caused by the L.A. wildfires. Solutions need to include modifying houses and their immediate surroundings. Nothing else will be effective. The facts and realities presented in the documentary made that very clear.
PrairieFan Fri 21 Mar 1:55 PM