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Undue Influence: Wealthy Foundations, Grant Driven Environmental Groups and Zealous Bureaucrats That Control Your Future
 
 
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Undue Influence: Wealthy Foundations, Grant Driven Environmental Groups and Zealous Bureaucrats That Control Your Future (Paperback)

by Ron Arnold (Author) "It is not about the environment..." (more)
Key Phrases: rural cleansing, prescriptive foundations, babbitt letter, Alton Jones Foundation, Sierra Club, New York (more...)
3.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

From The Washington Post
Arnold warned that unless the environmental movement is brouht to heel, "public hysteria is going to destroy industrial civilization."

Review
Ron Arnold's new book "Undue Influence" reveals the threat to industrial civilization posed by environmentalism. The amount of money being spent from such an unpublicized direction is cause for alarm by itself. What it's being used for -- dismantling roads, dams, logging, mining, ranching, farming, fishing -- is truly frightening. This book should galvanize the public to action. -- David Ridenour, National Center for Public Policy Research, Washington, D.C.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 344 pages
  • Publisher: Free Enterprise Press; 1st Paper, 1st Printing edition (October 1, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 093957120X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0939571208
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #259,141 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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31 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Boldly exposes what goes on behind Washington politics!, March 1, 2000
By Ted Miller (Gorham, NH) - See all my reviews
In what may be his best work yet, in his book "Undue Influence", Ron Arnold exposes the most powerful forces in Washington, DC. Unregulated, unelected and accountable to no-one, a handful of well-positioned elitists control billions of dollars held by the nations most wealthy foundations and environmental groups. Routinely sculpting studies to show public opinion as they wish it shown, and able to afford the votes they need or otherwise do an end-run around Congress in order to get laws passed or policies enacted, these pretenders have become skilled masters of using the environment as a cover for their own special interests. For rural Americans or anyone who really wonders who the real power brokers are, and why their rights as guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States are being trashed by Washington's politicians, "Undue Influence" is a must read.
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37 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Modern Day Muckraker, April 13, 2000
By Robert Huberty (Washington, DC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
...Like the journalists of the Progressive era in the early 1900s, he aims to show how the rich and powerful selfishly promote their interests. Like them, he is a reporter whose stories express moral outrage: he wants to describe the tactics of modern-day "malefactors of great wealth" who succeed through manipulation and trickery.

But the early Progressives and Arnold appear to have different enemies. The Progressives attacked the producers of oil, steel and beef. Arnold attacks the patrons of environmentalism. Progressives wanted to destroy industrial trusts. He wants to expose those who put legal limits on natural resource production. They targeted John D. Rockefeller. His sights are on the Rockefeller Family Fund.

Arnold has scoured web-sites and tracked down IRS Form 990s to identify green grantmakers. More importantly, he explains that many of them do much more than just write checks: these "prescriptive foundations" use the power of the purse to dictate to their grantees. They set up nonprofits and push them into coalitions; they select their tactics, venues and personnel. Foundations of this type are not shy about getting what they want, and if something doesn't exist they use their philanthropic dollars to create it.

Arnold reminds us that the Ford Foundation provided the start-up money to establish the litigious National Resources Defense Council. The Rockefeller Family Fund organized the Environmental Grantmakers Association and put Donald Ross, a Fund retainer, at the head of it. With some 180 members, the EGA helps funders combine their dollars to advance common strategies that they then push, take-it-or-leave-it, onto green groups. The Pew Charitable Trusts and other foundations put up million[s] to create a new public relations group, now called the National Environmental Trust, to mobilize activists and shape public opinion. Lately it's been promoting global warming. Teresa Heinz, widow of one U.S. senator and wife of another, has used the Howard Heinz Endowment and the Heinz Family Foundation to endow several new environmental think-tanks and research centers. And then there's the Tides Foundation, which itself takes money from Pew and the Alton Jones Foundation. It provides financial oversight and management training for 260 (!) green projects that it funds. It also gives many of them office space in a former military base, San Francisco's lush and historic Presidio. Come again? Arnold recalls that Congress had declared the beautiful park-like base, which overlooks the Pacific Ocean's entrance into San Francisco Bay, to be surplus military property. It was then turned over to the National Park Service, and subsequently set up as a public-private trust whose board members are appointed by President Clinton and Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt. Fortunately for Tides, the trust was pleased to lease them the Presidio's historic buildings.

One of the strengths of Undue Influence is that Arnold is a good detective and story-teller. He appreciates tales of outrageous political manuevering -- even when he condemns their outcome. Besides the Tides story, he traces how out-of-state foundations decided to fund a Montana ballot initiative that would have prohibited corporations from making comparable contributions to ballot issue campaigns. He recounts the comeuppance of Vice President Gore who unsuccessfully tried to plant a story with ABC News correspondent Ted Koppel that smeared a respected climate scientist, Fred Singer, who did not accept the vice president's opinions on global warming. And he describes how an ambitious presidential advisor, Kathleen McGinty, talked the Interior Department into having President Clinton invoke the Antiquities Act of 1906 to justify declaring 1.7 million acres of southern Utah as a "national monument" without Congress' approval. (Earlier presidents used the act's grant of executive authority to preserve Indian cliff-dwellings and other precious sites of natural importance.) McGinty then made the land grab legally exempt from a lengthy environmental review by creating a phony paper trail so that it looked like this was the President's initiative, not something she and Interior cooked up. (Arnold's endnotes cite White House e-mails disclosing McGinty's underhanded tactics, but he doesn't reveal how he got them.

One weakness of Undue Influence is Arnold's style of heavy-handed sarcasm. Particularly toward the book's end, Arnold tends to fall back on snorts of derision as he describes yet another foundation or government scheme. But the anger masks a greater sadness. Arnold is reporting what he calls "a silent scandal" affecting rural America. He is outraged that "no one sees, no one cares" about the ranchers and miners, the lumbermen and saw mill operators who are falling victim to the politics of environmentalism. They are living in a suburban leisure-loving, dot.com country that forgets that people like them still earn their living working the land. They are paying a heavy price for their countrymen's indifference to their plight.

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29 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing exposure of the wealth and power of green groups, January 10, 2000
By A Customer
Arnold follows the money used by mega foundations to fund this special interest community. Urban versus rural is happening. Urban based greenies driving their SUVs with little concern and less action for urban pollution are damaging the livlihood and lives of rural American. Driving force are organizations like the Nature Conservancy with over $1 billion in assets who position themselves as concerned about ecology. Concern is about control...their control of public and private land. Get this book.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars Blatant disregard for logic or accuracy
As a professional scientist working in a biological discipline, I can assure you that this book is neither accurate nor even logical at times. Read more
Published on April 10, 2006 by D. P. Duran

4.0 out of 5 stars I get it now...
As an oil and gas explorer, I am well acquainted with the amazing seemingly irrational bureaucratic impediments invented nearly daily to halt oil and gas development. Read more
Published on May 21, 2004 by Allen Gilmer

1.0 out of 5 stars Five percent logic, 95 percent nonsense
Ron's right, there are a few instances where the enviro-nuts have gone overboard and just don't make sense. Read more
Published on February 19, 2004

1.0 out of 5 stars Selfish liars who want to eat up the earth
It is digusting to see these kinds of books that tell lies about what is happening to the planet and about the people who are trying to save it. Read more
Published on October 29, 2000

1.0 out of 5 stars Vague and sloppy logic
Undue influence is good if you are a a fan of red scare McCarthyism. This book demonizes people who place the health of communities and ecosystems above the profit motives of... Read more
Published on September 9, 2000 by Maxwell Durbin

1.0 out of 5 stars Another Anti-Environmental Rant
Ron Arnold has made a career out of attacking people who want to leave to the next generation an intact, beautiful, natural world. Read more
Published on August 10, 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars Undue Influence
"Undue Influence" by Ron Arnold is an excellent must have reference book for anyone attempting to stay current with what is happening with land control actions by... Read more
Published on February 26, 2000 by Rachel Thomas

5.0 out of 5 stars Today's Coercive Utopians Are Green
Ron Arnold's book, "Undue Influence: Wealthy Foundations, Grant-Driven Environmental Groups, and Zealous Bureaucrats That Control Your Future," reminds one of another... Read more
Published on February 26, 2000 by Richard Jefferson

5.0 out of 5 stars Masterpiece
Ron Arnold has completed the circle or, in his example, the triangle in his brilliantly researched masterpiece, "Undue Influence". Read more
Published on January 22, 2000 by Roger W. Ek

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