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22 March 2010 By
Dave Lindorff I cannot claim to be
an expert on Stewart Udall, who died this week at the
age of 90. I can say, from
personal experience though, that the former Arizona
congressman and interior secretary under Presidents
Kennedy and Johnson, a conservationist and supporter
of environmentalist cassandra Rachel Carson, was a
breed apart from the money-grubbing, corporate
ass-kissing, Washington cocktail circuit, elitist pigs
who have headed up federal government departments in
the days and years since Richard Nixon, in 1969,
inaugurated the "Imperial Presidency." Back in 1968, as a
19-year old college student, I was deeply involved in
the anti-war movement against the Indochina War. At
the end of my freshman year, I spent a summer
traveling across the US. With a friend, Albee Baker, I
hitch-hiked from Connecticut to Seattle, where we
worked at odd jobs, managing to save up a few hundred
dollars each. Toward the end of that summer, we bought
a '46 Dodge pickup truck from a Seattle cop, and began
a road trip home, driving down the Coast Highway as
far as San Francisco, before turning east for the
transcontinental trek home to begin our next year of
college. Short of cash, we paid
for our gas (and oil--the old truck had a leaky front
engine seal and was running through a quart of oil
every 100 miles) by stopping at promising spots where
I would pop open my guitar case, which featured a sign
saying "gas money" on the inside of the lid, and would
play and sing folksongs in return for donations from
listeners. In places like Portland, San Francisco, San
Jose and elsewhere along the Coast, we collected
plenty of money this way, but as we turned eastward
and contemplated the nation's vast, conservative Bible
Belt, we knew the pickings would get pretty slim for a
couple of long-haired hippies. We had wanted to see
Yosemite National Park, and when we drove down into
the main valley there, we realized that it would
probably be a great place to earn one last pile of
money before facing the long dry stretch through
Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Nebraska, where we
imagined, correctly it turns out, that busking would
not prove too popular. So while Albee dozed in the
truck bed, I popped open my guitar case, took a seat
on the running board of the truck in the middle of the
main parking lot and began to play. People started
walking over from all directions, stood around and
listened, sometimes making requests, and the money was
really pouring into the case. Suddenly an old ranger
drove up. He told me I had to stop, and looking a
little embarrassed, said he had to arrest me for
panhandling. At that point, Albee sat up in the truck
bed, rubbing his eyes. He was promptly arrested too. I
had never heard the term panhandling, and objected
that we had not been passing around a pan or anything,
but the ranger explained that the term meant begging.
Again I protested. We hadn't been begging. I had been
playing music, and far from bothering anyone, people
had been coming over to me to listen. But the ranger
wouldn't accept my argument. He took us to the main
ranger station (where I noted that there were a couple
of jail cells), and began filling out our tickets.
While he labored over
the paperwork, there was a loud bang outside the
building. Seconds later, a young ranger who looked
more like a marine than a naturalist, ran in and
yelled, "Where's the first aid kit? I just shot a kid
who I arrested for drugs. He tried to run away as I
was bringing him in." He ran back out with the medical
kit, leaving me and Albee a little more subdued and
anxious about our situation. When he finished with
our tickets, the ranger handed them to us. I looked
down and saw the fine: $500.00 each! "Don't try to
skip out on those fines," the ranger said as we left.
"It's a federal offense, and the FBI will come after
you if you don't pay." $500! That was more
than we'd earned all summer between us. The tickets
cast a pall on the rest of the trip home. When I finally made it
back to Connecticut, I decided to protest my fine. Not
expecting much, I typed up a letter to Interior
Secretary Stewart Udall. In it, I described how my
friend and I had been earning our way across the
country by performing folk music on the street, and
explained that in the Yosemite parking lot, I had been
entertaining people, not harassing them for money. I
did not, I wrote, think it was fair for the government
to be fining someone $500 who was just trying to make
a few bucks to get by. (I also objected to the
shooting of a fleeing drug suspect by a ranger.) I was
stunned when, a few weeks later, I got my letter back,
with a hand-written note on it, written in red ink. "I
agree. Forget the fine," the note said. It was signed:
Stewart Udall. I'm just trying to
imagine Ken Salazar, the current secretary of the
Interior Department, a friend of big oil, a defender
of Bush Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, and an ally
of Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, writing a letter
like that. In the decades since
1968, the Interior Department has become more and more
an advocate of huge corporate extractive industries.
Even the Parks Service has become increasingly a
business operation. More significantly, the whole US
government has become less and less connected with the
ordinary citizen. The idea of a member of the
president's cabinet personally writing back to a
citizen--much less a citizen who had been arrested and
fined for a legal transgression--is at this point
almost inconceivable. And yet there was
Secretary Udall, in 1968, at the height of the student
anti-war movement, writing a note to a hippie
folksinger, vacating a fine he had received from the
Park Service for violating a park ordinance. Stewart Udall did a
lot of great things during his career. He oversaw the
establishment of four major national parks--Canyonlands,
Redwood, North Cascades and Guadalupe Mountains--six
national monuments, nine national recreation areas and
eight national seashores--often over significant local
opposition from real estate and corporate interests.
Earlier, as a private attorney, he successfully
represented thousands of uranium miners, nuclear
industry workers, and ordinary citizens or Utah and
Nevada who had been exposed to radiation by the US
nuclear program (he won in federal court but the
decision was overturned on appeal). But to me, Stewart
Udall represented something else: a public servant who
never felt he was so important that he didn't have to
pay attention to the ordinary citizen--even one who
had broken the law. In these days when government has
become obsessed with "law and order," when police have
become para-military enforcers, and when elected
officials and government executives and bureaucrats
have come to see themselves as elevated in importance
way beyond the teeming masses they rule, it's
important to remember that it wasn't always like that. Nor does it have to
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