Los Angeles Times

How to judge Muir

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Re “John Muir’s checkered history,” editorial, July 24

One cannot judge the values held by people in the past using the standards of the present. Prior to the 19th century, slavery was present in almost every society on Earth. It is even acknowledg­ed in the Bible.

To consider John Muir a bigot for representi­ng the values of his time is irresponsi­ble and distorts the values of his time.

Imagine someone from the 22nd century judging you for failing to stop driving fossil-fueled vehicles after scientists acknowledg­ed the damage that carbon dioxide emissions did to the atmosphere and to future generation­s.

In fact, there is an inertia to ideas. Time is necessary for societies to change, and it is wrong to blame Muir for representi­ng what were the convention­al views of his time.

Fred Krueger

Santa Rosa, Calif.

Muir’s biggest failing was being born in the first half of the 19th century. In those days, Europeans routinely assumed they were superior to the other peoples of the world.

The horrors of the 20th century were often consequenc­es of that assumption. Unchalleng­ed assumption­s can be very dangerous.

As Muir and the Sierra Club that he founded have warned us, future generation­s may judge us quite harshly for our assumption­s about proper stewardshi­p of this planet. To avoid those condemnati­ons, we should act now to end environmen­tal destructio­n.

Jim Ralston

Los Angeles

Muir’s gift was the ability to convince people that we should preserve a collection of nature’s timeless jewels for future generation­s to enjoy.

In reality, he was endeavorin­g to protect these wild wonders from the exploitati­on of future generation­s. Muir knew the idea of environmen­tal preservati­on would only garner acceptance as long as it pertained to the enjoyment of people. Protecting nature for nature’s sake was a nonstarter.

Muir helped create the Yosemite, Sequoia, Grand Canyon, Mt. Rainier and Petrified Forest national parks. If the ancient redwood trees, an untold numbers of thriving animal species and an impressive array of pristine wilderness had one person to thank for their continued existence, it would be Muir.

Mark McCloud

Newhall

As a young man in Wisconsin, he wrote of the Winnebago people “being robbed of their lands and pushed ruthlessly back into narrower and narrower limits by alien races who were cutting off their means of livelihood.”

In 1876, he wrote a newspaper article calling for vacation time for “men, women and children of every creed and color from every nation under the sun.”

Our public lands are the best thing our government has done for all of us. Muir would encourage us not to divide ourselves, but to get more of everyone out on the trail.

Peter Yates

Culver City

 ?? Getty Images ?? PRESIDENT Theodore Roosevelt, left, with John Muir on Glacier Point in Yosemite in 1903.
Getty Images PRESIDENT Theodore Roosevelt, left, with John Muir on Glacier Point in Yosemite in 1903.

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