Different Spins on the Same Issue

by Greg Walcher on July 2, 2026

Rodney Page’s first novel, a political thriller called “Powers Not Delegated,” follows a congressman learning how Washington works. He clings to his parents’ advice that “If you never tell a lie, you won’t have to remember what you said.” But eventually he develops “a perverse respect for politicians who had mastered the art of spin… the skill to produce an answer having nothing to do with the question.”

I, too, am often amazed at the skill of various officials who can describe the same issue in completely different terms, easily obscuring even the basic facts about a subject. A classic example is the current debate about an Administration proposal to rewrite regulations based on Section 401 of the Clean Water Act. Most people are more familiar with Section 404, which requires permits from the Army Corps of Engineers for all sorts of projects that impact waterways. You need a “404 Permit” for that.

Fewer people outside government are even aware of Section 401, but it was considered crucial when the law was passed in 1972.  It gives states the power to regulate federally permitted activities that could affect water quality in navigable waterways within state boundaries. In addition to federal permits, states can also determine whether the project complies with state water quality laws. But Section 401 was drafted very vaguely, and its broad authority has been debated ever since, including in dozens of court cases.

Worse, it has become a tool for states to deny permits to projects that have nothing to do with water. Starting in 2016, when New York denied Section 401 certification to a natural gas pipeline, it has become a tool for climate activists to deny permits to pipelines, transmission lines, and other infrastructure. That has happened in a number of states. So now, legislation is pending in Congress, and a reform of the 401 rules has been proposed by the Administration.

The spin doctors are hard at work now, on Capitol Hill, at the EPA, in the environmental industry, and in the media. And taking each side at face value, one might think all were writing about entirely different issues.

The EPA has touted its “reform” proposal as a rule “to Streamline Permitting, Unleash Economic Growth, and Protect America’s Waterways.” What it would actually do is tell states they must stop trying to use Section 401 to regulate pipelines and other infrastructure that has nothing to do with water. EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin called for “restoring the Clean Water Act to its intended purpose… and ending the weaponization of the law that has been  obstructing infrastructure and energy projects vital to our nation’s economy.” That’s what this is really about – the Clean Water Act has nothing to do with climate change. But that’s just one spin.

An environmental writer at the Breakthrough Institute argues that Congress is attempting to “regulate in the dark,” having no idea what it is doing and no idea how Section 401 works. He says, “Sound analysis requires clean, high-level data that lets us see and understand Section 401 decision-making – the kind of information that reveals the scale and scope of repairs the program actually needs.” What he really wants, of course, is for Congress to leave the program alone, but he can’t defend the abuses of some states. Hence that spin.

Congressional leaders argue that the reform bill is designed simply to re-establish the original congressional intent, preserve the federal-state balance, and ensure an efficient permitting system. A bill the House passed is called the “Improving Interagency Coordination for Pipeline Reviews Act.” It would remove any state certification requirement for natural gas pipelines entirely, reserving that function to the federal government. What sponsors really want is to reign in rogue states, but pipelines can be controversial, so politicians must be careful how they explain the problem.

In yet another spin, some strategists point out that many environmentalists worry about transmission lines to connect solar and wind farms also being delayed by permitting problems. They suggest a deal essentially trading one against the other and thus easing permit delays for both. A plan every side hates.

In “This Town,” Mark Leibovich wrote, “To cover politics in Washington allows you to live in the very, very wide gap between what the actual truth is, and how people are trying to manipulate the truth. They speak in the language of spin, obsequiousness, obfuscation.” It would help the rest of us if all the players would at least stick to the same spin.

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Decline of the Aspen – a Prophetic Report

by Greg Walcher on June 24, 2026

German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer wrote that “Truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as self-evident.”

Twenty-eight years ago, in the summer of 1998, the Club 20 Research Foundation published a report called “Decline of the Aspen: A Special Report on the Health of National Forests in Colorado.” It attracted substantial media coverage, widespread opposition to its recommendations, and even ridicule from some environmental industry groups that considered themselves superior experts on forest management.

The Report suggested a growing crisis in Western Colorado’s aspen forests. Then-State Forester James Hubbard was quoted saying, “If the U.S. Forest Service policy remains on its current course, the State of Colorado will lose most of its famed aspen trees within 40 to 50 years.” One of the report’s conclusions said, “continuing the status quo in the West means large portions of Colorado’s colorful aspen will continue to decline, resulting in an unhealthy forest ecosystem,” which will be further exacerbated by “the unhealthy presence of disease and insects throughout the forests.” The prediction has aged remarkably well, though many dismissed it as unlikely at the time.

The report relied heavily on the work of forest experts, including Hubbard, who later served as Deputy Chief of the Forest Service for State and Private Forestry, and eventually as the Undersecretary of Agriculture for Natural Resources (the office that oversees the Forest Service). It was also influenced by an analysis from the Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station published in the journal Rangelands and titled “Decline of Quaking Aspen in the Interior West: Examples from Utah,” explaining the science behind the demise of vast stands of aspen trees. The decline was a direct result of the suppression of fire’s natural role over the decades, which resulted in conifers replacing aspens over time.

A report much later (2013) from the Colorado Forest Restoration Institute and Colorado State University tracked the progression. “Following the drought of 1998-2002, large-scale dieback of aspen forests began occurring throughout Colorado. Termed Sudden Aspen Decline (SAD), the phenomenon prompted the concern of forest managers, researchers, and the general public.”

While some Club 20 critics dismissed the 1998 report, one frequent but fair critic, Ed Quillen of the Salida Mountain Mail, praised the document as a “rather sensible” approach. He explained the process succinctly. “Aspen love sunshine and open, disturbed land – the sort of zone produced by a forest fire. Minimize the forest fires, and you reduce the places where young aspen groves can thrive. Meanwhile, the aspen provide shade for evergreen saplings, which will grow and eventually crowd out the aspen by taking away their sunshine… Fire-suppression does not preserve a mountain forest like some outdoor museum diorama. Instead, fire-suppression will, over time, produce a different forest – one heavy with fir and spruce, bereft of aspen.” Precisely what has happened in the decades since.

In addition to the aesthetic disappointment of losing miles of aspen trees and their famous fall colors, we now know the transition also has a devastating impact on water flows, one of the West’s most appalling predicaments.

Hydrologists, botanists, biologists, foresters, land managers, and others now agonize over how to restore stream flows in the Colorado, Rio Grande, and Snake River Basins, refill the Great Salt Lake and the major reservoirs. They increasingly recognize that allowing conifers to replace aspen was a major factor in reducing water supplies.

Historically, the Western U.S. had 20-25 million acres of aspen trees, once considered North America’s most common tree species. But in many parts of the Rocky Mountain West, nearly half of historic aspen stands have been replaced by conifers. Conifers (evergreens) use water 365 days a year, and up to 40 percent of the snow that falls on their branches evaporates before it gets to the ground, much less the rivers. Aspens, because they are deciduous, lose their leaves in winter, passing nearly all the moisture to the ground and the streams.

Millions of acre feet of water are at stake in forest management decisions. Club 20 knew that even in the 1990s, though many ignored its warnings.

In 1893, John Wesley Powell cautioned that the American West was too arid to support the vast settlements envisioned by eastern politicians and shady land promoters. He argued that western development would ultimately be constrained not by land but by water. He was ignored, even mocked. But the intervening decades have vindicated the accuracy of his predictions. Club 20 was ahead of its time, too.

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Why We Build Fences – And Dams

June 22, 2026

A Montana friend reminded me of an old cowboy adage: “Before you take down a fence, you ought to pause long enough to ask why it was put there.” It’s a principle called “Chesterton’s Fence,” coined by writer G.K. Chesterton who cautioned against acting rashly. He wrote, “a “modern reformer” says of the fence, “I […]

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Improving the Environment, One Plant at a Time

June 10, 2026

In a popular Substack publication called Asterisk Magazine, a California physicist named Casey Handmer wrote a great piece titled “It’s 2024 and Drought is Optional,” about desalination technology. But he also touched on an even more fundamental point about how people don’t want to think about the importance of infrastructure. “The past century of prosperity […]

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Climate Future Not What it Used to Be

June 3, 2026

In 1937 the French poet and philosopher Paul Valéry published Reflections on the World Today, in which he originated one of literature’s great lines: “The problem with our times is that the future is no longer what it was.” The line was perfected later by Yogi Berra, who said simply, “The future is not what […]

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Turn Down the Volume on BLM

May 29, 2026

This week the Senate finally confirmed the new Director of the Bureau of Land Management, former New Mexico Congressman Steve Pearce. The firestorm surrounding his nomination a few weeks earlier has not yet cooled and probably won’t. The volume is louder than the situation justifies, though, and the vast western sky above BLM land is […]

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Is the Southwest’s Water Problem Serious Enough Yet?

May 22, 2026

One month after proposing to put a man on the moon, JFK said getting drinking water from the ocean would be “one of the great breakthroughs of history” that would “dwarf any other scientific accomplishments.” Californians have worried about water for decades. The Colorado River, upon which the entire Southwest depends, is dying. The region’s […]

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California Could Finally Get Serious About Water

May 15, 2026

The Wall Street Journal headline said “San Diego Now Has So Much Water That It’s Selling It.” The article said San Diego generates enough water to rescue Arizona, though that’s jumping the gun just a bit. No such deal has actually been finalized yet, but the fact that the conversation is underway marks a new […]

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Is Every Government Employee a Cop Now?

May 2, 2026

I don’t know anyone else who tracks the number of federal cops, but the watchdog group Open the Books occasionally reports on the burgeoning number of federal agencies with law enforcement divisions. The latest report, “The Militarization of Federal Bureaucracy” detailed the astonishing scope of federal police power. There are over 200,000 federal officers with […]

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Passing the Bill to Find Out What’s In It

April 29, 2026

The Colorado legislature can only meet for 120 days a year, every legislator can only introduce five bills, bills must be passed by the 90th day, new programs must have a sunset clause, all meetings must be public and documents available for everyone to read. Except for the exceptions. Forty states have similar constraints, because […]

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