Dave Foreman, who advocated for, wrote about and fought for wild nature his entire adult life, died at 74 on Sept. 19 in New Mexico, where he lived. He left an enormous legacy of work and writings, and had a major impact on the modern environmental movement over the course of half a century.
After working for, and becoming fed up with, the Washington DC-based wilderness groups, he and several people including Mike Roselle, Howie Wolke, Susan Morgan and others, co-founded Earth First! in 1980. This deliberately radical, direct action environmental group would go on to change the face of environmental advocacy.
Foreman laid out his intentions in a 1981 article for Progressive magazine—in order to set a radical philosophical and tactical tone that would avoid the pitfalls of compromise, the Earth First! co-founders crafted an agenda of throwing the blankets off the conservatism of mainstream groups like the Sierra Club, to bring “vigor, enthusiasm and joy” to the tired environmental movement, to provide a “productive fringe,” inspire acts “straight from the pages of The Monkeywrench Gang, and fight with uncompromising passion for Mother Earth.”
EF! co-founders Howie Wolke, Mike Roselle and Dave Foreman at the 1987 Round River Rendezvous on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. Photo by kp
Foreman published the book, Ecodefense: A Field Guide to Monkeywrenching, in 1985—a how-to manual that created an uproar and probably contributed to Dave being arrested by the FBI in 1989. Undercover agents set up a group of activists in the desert of Arizona with equipment, funding and encouragement in an act of sabotage to a transmission tower delivering power to the Central Arizona Project, bringing water to the lawns and golf courses of Phoenix. Dave was not part of these actions, but was charged with conspiracy nonetheless because of his notoriety and the Ecodefense book, which undercover agent Michael Fain bought a signed copy of from him. This case of the “Arizona 5,” was the first of what later became known as The Green Scare.
Documents revealed in court included a recording of Fain saying “(Foreman) isn’t really the guy we need to pop – I mean in terms of an actual perpetrator. This is the guy we need to pop to send a message. And that’s all we’re really doing… Uh-oh! We don’t need that on tape! Hoo boy!”
Foreman was a controversial figure. He could be a crusty sob, and was not always enlightened socially, particularly in his views surrounding immigration and pandemics, but he was one of the most motivating orators and passionate people to speak out on behalf of other species. He didn’t coin the term biocentrism, but he turned countless people on to the concept by way of thinking outside the anthropocentric box. Dave had the style of a preacher, and his religion was biocentrism; his church, the wild outdoors.
Dave and Nancy’s wedding under the maypole, at the 1986 EF! Round River Rendezvous in Idaho. Photo by kp
Dave and Earth First! parted ways into its second decade, and he went on to found the Wildlands Network in 1991 and the Rewilding Institute in 2003, both with a mission of identifying, restoring and protecting wildlife habitat and corridors.
But as one of Dave’s closest friends said to me in 2021, after Dave’s partner Nancy died, “In the end, I think we old EF!ers all share nearly all of the most important goals, even if our styles were different.” True, that.
Dave’s proposal for a statement of principles of the nascent Earth First! in 1980 defined his ideas:
Wilderness has a right to exist for its own sake
All life forms, from virus to the great whales, have an inherent and equal right to existence
Humankind is no greater than any other form of life and has no legitimate claim to dominate Earth
Humankind, through anthropocentrism, industrialization, excessive energy consumption/resource extraction, state capitalism, father-figure hierarchies, imperialism, pollution and natural area destruction, threatens the basic life processes of Earth.
All human decisions should consider Earth first, humankind second
The only true test of morality is whether an action, individual, social or political, benefits Earth
Humankind will be happier, healthier, more secure, and more comfortable in a society that recognizes humankind’s true biological nature and which is in dynamic harmony with the total biosphere
Political compromise has no place in the defense of Earth
Earth is Goddess and the proper object of human worship
He went on to further define his ideas and explain his perspective on the environmental movement’s history, biocentric philosophy and wilderness defense strategy in his autobiography, Confessions of an Eco-Warrior, published in 1991. He also published Rewilding North America: A Vision for Conservation in the 21st Century in 2004 and wrote or co-authored several other books.