Doing a 180 on protecting the rain forest

June 10, 1998

 Ain't it amazing how quickly you can change your tune when something starts affecting you?
 I've come to a change of heart lately concerning a couple of my favorite targets for fun-poking: second-hand smoke and worshipping — er, saving — the rain forest. After a month and a half of whiffing the second-hand smoke drifting hundreds of miles northward from the burning rain forests in Mexico and Central America, I've done a 180-degree turnabout.
 I've always been a fairly tolerant tobacco user. I'm not completely insensitive. I didn't think it too unfair when they started partitioning restaurants and moving smoking lounges outdoors.
 Some people just can't stand the smell of smoke. No problem there. But when people started raising Cain about being actually physically harmed by second-hand smoke, well, I'll admit to insensitivity.
 I mean, I grew up across the street from Shell's big refinery in Deer Park. What harm could there possibly be in extremely-dispersed smoke from a few cigarettes drifting across a crowded room?
 I guess it was when I was coughing the brown stuff from the rain-forest fires out of my lungs that their arguments came back to me. Granted, there's a size difference between trees and cancer sticks, but the end effect isn't that hard to extrapolate.
 Which brings us to the second stanza.
 I've also been a big lampooner of eco-freaks and their "save the rain forest" spiel. Not that I think having nice green trees and weeds is a bad thing, but what did I care about nice green trees and plants in other peoples' countries?
 I've never really understood why anyone would care about someone else's rain forest. After all, the closest thing Americans have to a real rain forest is probably the swamps of Louisiana and Florida, both of which are miles and miles of useless terrain. And you never see anyone moaning and groaning about saving the swamp, except in sci-fi movies.
 And when you see teh canned pictures of rain forests, everything's all nice and arranged; all the little critters live in harmony and amazingly, you almost always see a nice foot-path between the trees.
 I guess the thing that always really irked me most about the rain forest-huggers was the contention that special little critters lived in the jungle, critters that deserved to be saved from man's evil depradations.
 Obviously, those folks haven't spent too much time in the rain forest; I have. They're full of special little critters, to be sure, but most of those special little critters want to have you for dinner, or chew up your gear, or at least leave painful, annoying bite-marks all over you.
 If you ever decide to visit a real rain forest, here's some advice: carry a case of Avon Skin-So-Soft (keeps the bugs away) and take a sword, machete, axe or tank to cut a path.
 Up until now, anyone wanting to chop down, burn up or nuke the rain forests had my vote. After all, the smoke would never bother us, right?
 Cough-cough!
 

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