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How has the shifting definition of “terrorism” changed the environmental movement since the 1980s?

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How has the shifting definition of “terrorism” changed the environmental movement since the 1980s?

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A. I think a lot of the old-timers, the “rednecks for wilderness”—it’s sort of where Earth First! began, and Sea Shepherd too in a way—might pin a little bit of that expansion of the term “terrorism” on the late ‘80s-‘90s anarchists who came into the scene. Guys like Rod Coronado. They changed things a lot because the original eco-radical[s], like Greenpeace, were sort of mainstream conservation guys—they called themselves conservationists. Mostly they were white men who had parties out in the woods and ate steaks and drank whiskey. They were kind of red-blooded Americans, like the heroes of The Monkey Wrench Gang. And then this whole new contingent, right around 1990, started coming in that was much more about anarchism and identity politics. “What do I believe, and how does that separate me from the rest of the world?” People got into listing their issues. “I not only don’t eat animals, but also I am transgendered and I have these piercings that are very important to me.” Those kind

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