Late Tuesday afternoon, with the subtlety of a wrecking ball and the morality of a foreclosure notice, the Trump administration announced the most devastating attack on the U.S. Forest Service in the agency’s 121-year history. Not a budget cut. Not a policy shift. Not a “reorganization.” An execution.

They’re ripping the headquarters out of Washington and shipping it to Salt Lake City, Utah — the beating heart of the anti-public-lands movement in America. They’re shuttering every single one of the ten regional offices that have governed this agency since Gifford Pinchot built the system over a century ago — and with them, the career professionals who spent entire lifetimes earning the expertise and the authority to push back when politicians came calling with bad ideas and worse motives. They’re destroying more than fifty research facilities across thirty-one states, labs that house decades of irreplaceable long-term science, the kind you literally cannot restart once it’s gone. And they’re replacing all of it — the offices, the scientists, the institutional knowledge, the professional independence — with fifteen political appointees called “state directors,” embedded in state capitals alongside the very governors, legislators, and industry lobbyists who have spent their careers demanding that the Forest Service log more, protect less, and get out of the way.

  • turmacar@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Expanding on what the curated language of the press release actually means for the Forestry Service is not wild claims. It’s context.

    “This is just streamlining” is the bias. This is ‘streamlining’ in the same vein of what happened to USAID.

    • CanIFishHere@lemmy.ca
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      3 hours ago

      It certainly isn’t clear. I’m not going to accept a story from a source I’ve never heard of without scrutiny.

      There’s a part of me that wants it to be true because I truly despise this administration, but it still deserves a critical eye.