There is a clear case to be made for the connection between ecology  and anarchism.1 Many philosophers, academics, and radicals have  elaborated this over the past two centuries2. But reviewing the history  of this theoretical relationship is not the goal here. The movement  surrounding anarchism in the past 200 years has certainly included its  fair share of theory, yet what has rooted anarchist ideas so deeply in  human society is the prioritization of action. It is this action-based  relationship between the ecological movement and anarchism that we  explore.
How has anarchism inspired and shaped ecological action in recent  history, and how might it continue to? The experience of Earth First!  over three-and-a-half decades embodies the most critical aspects of this  question.
While Earth First! (EF!) has never considered itself to be explicitly  anarchist, it has always had a connection to the antiauthoritarian  counterculture and has operated in an anarchistic fashion since its  inception3. In doing so, it has arguably maintained one of the most  consistent and long-running networks for activists and revolutionaries  of an anarchist persuasion with the broader goal of overturning all  socially constructed hierarchies.
In Oppose and Propose: Lessons From Movement for a New Society, which  covers an under-acknowledged antiauthoritarian history, author Andrew  Cornell makes a case about MNS carrying the legacy of nonhierarchical  radical activism from the civil rights and anti-war era of the ’60s into  the anti-nuke era of the ’80s. Cornell points to MNS essentially  carrying the torch just long enough to spark what would become the  global justice movement of the late ’90s.
A similar case can be made for Earth First!, particularly within the  decade between the formal end of MNS and the 1999 uprising against the  World Trade Organization in the streets of Seattle. Except rather than  formally calling it quits, as MNS did in ’89, EF! stuck around,  stumbling through several waves of internal strife and state repression  to continue into its 35th year as a decentralized,  horizontally-organized, anticapitalist, antistate force to be reckoned  with.4
As many anarchist-oriented projects come and go, it is worthwhile to  explore how and why those efforts that persist over decades are able to  do so. Even more importantly, in this time of global urgency surrounding  an escalation of overlapping ecological crises (extinction, extraction,  climate change, etc.), and the recuperation of environmentalism by a  “green” industrial economy, the story of Earth First!—for all its  imperfections and baggage—has crucial lessons for ecological  revolutionaries.
When Earth First! had its first peak of notoriety in the mid-to-late  ’80s, it was swarmed by academics and journalists looking to study its  motivations, culture and worldview. Countless research papers and  several books surfaced to explore the movement from its infancy to its  initial split. The split, as it has thus-far been presented in the vast  majority of the published history, was between the original  narrowly-focused faction advocating explicitly for wilderness  protection, and an opposing faction oriented towards a broader analysis  focused on challenging the capitalist system along with its pillars of  patriarchy, racism and other forms of domination.
While the latter faction got tagged with the label of being “the  anarchists,” there are plenty of examples of anarchism being a  significant inspiration to both camps. The cause of the split was a  divide between folks with a strongly US-flavored individualist tendency,  à la Ed Abbey,5 and the more classically socialistic  mass-movement-types who might best be represented by the organizing of  Judi Bari.6 On one side was the group rallying around the iconic  identity of the “rebellious redneck,” attempting to capture rural  support in a practical, populist style.7 The other is often credited  with a familiarity with the theoretical writings of Murray Bookchin,  originator of the theory known as social ecology and its political  program, libertarian municipalism.8 Many of this second group came with  the stigma of being “urbanites.”
The record shows the black-clad socialist-leaning end of the  anarchist spectrum as victors over the cowboy-hat-and-belt-buckle rugged  individualists, with a climax at the 1990 EF! Rendezvous, resulting in a  burned American flag and a changing of hands for the movement’s  mouthpiece, The Earth First! Journal. At this time the EF! Journal  shifted hands from co-founder Dave Foreman’s control to a formal  editorial collective. This ushered in a stronger sentiment of autonomy  and decentralization in the minimalist structure of EF!, as there was no  longer a central figure associated with its primary means of  communication.
Yet there are also plenty of examples showing overlap between the two  factions since day one. For example, the frequent use of the pen-name  Leon Czolgosz—the anarchist assassin of US President McKinley—appeared  prominently throughout EF! Journals in the early-to-mid ’80s, and Dave  Foreman’s co-authorship of Ecodefense with the ghost of famed IWW  organizer “Big Bill” Haywood, who was exiled from the US to Russia along  with Emma Goldman in 1917.
While Foreman became a lightning rod in the debate, particularly  highlighting his increasingly conservative views on immigration, his  initial anarchist tendencies that inspired the founding of EF! are  present in passages throughout his autobiography, Confessions of an  Eco-Warrior.9
Unfortunately, most of the well-documented and published research on  EF! ends around the time of this split. Books like Coyotes and Town Dogs  by Susan Zakin, Green Rage by Chris Manes, Eco-Warriors by Rik Scarce,  and essays by academics like Giorel Curran10 and Bron Taylor11 all taper  off in the mid ’90’s. Even books that were published more recently,  such as Treespiker (2009), written by EF! co-founder Mike Roselle, lose  track of the EF! movement by the early ’00s.
Others have opted to ignore EF!’s role in the ecology movement  completely, such as the documentary film by Mark Kitchell A Fierce Green  Fire, released in 2013, and the 2011 book Deep Green Resistance,  co-authored by Derrick Jensen, Lierre Keith and Aric McBay.
Kitchell’s film is an excellent historical overview of the  environmental movement and the influence that direct action has had on  it, including features on Greenpeace, Sea Shepherd and the seldom talked  about Love Canal hostage-taking incident12 that sparked the modern  concept of environmental justice. But the film fails to even mention the  undeniable impact that EF! had in the trajectory of the movement.
The Jensen, et al, Deep Green Resistance (DGR) book, which inspired a  parallel organizational effort, also left EF! out of their narrative.  While there is much content of interest, Deep Green Resistance  essentially presents a revisionist history of ecological struggles,  painting DGR as the only radical option in the environmental movement,  and further indicating the strong Maoist influences that anarchists have  suspected of the organization since its inception.
For these reasons alone, an EF! movement overview from a grassroots  perspective, particularly highlighting the past decade-and-a-half, is  much needed.
Thoughts on EF! Strategy and Context
EF! has often been lumped in with non-violent movements, even though  “nonviolence” has never been a guiding tenet (with the exception of a  very few EF! groups.)
The most often discussed example of this was in the midst of  anti-logging campaigns in Northern California, where famed organizer  Judi Bari made headway in bridging the interests of working class  loggers and anti-corporate environmentalists by convincing EF!ers in the  region to swear off tree spiking, and embrace a rhetoric of  non-violence.
But the larger debate has manifested in a much more general way, most  visible in the chosen tactics of EF! affinity groups. The overwhelming  number of EF!-affiliated actions involve classically executed civil  disobedience, where EF!ers establish blockades or occupations in which  people depend on the police to react with a certain amount of restraint  and caution in the process of evictions, resulting in quite predictable  arrests. Often, small-scale property damage and disruptions of the less  civil sort also occur publicly, but these tend to be peripheral to the  planned actions.
This approach can seem strange for people who live in countries where  engagement with the state tends to occur on much different terms.  Perhaps it is this reason that organizing under the EF! banner has been  seen primarily in “first world” countries.
EF! affinity groups have shown that blockades can be an effective  form of resistance because they take a financial toll on industrial  opponents, not only in the form of forced work stoppages, but also in  significant costs associated with increased security and insurance  premiums and most of all, the expense of dealing with negative public  relations.
There are other important aspects of this form of resistance as well.  For one, it allows an opportunity to attract a broader base of public  support. Even in places and times where militant revolutionary sentiment  is not present, EF!’s style of resistance allows space for a larger  spectrum of allies, particularly from impacted local communities and  mainstream environmentalists who are receptive to the need for direct  action. In many cases, these groups may lack the courage, skills or  privileges that allow for effective action, but will contribute towards  campaigns in many other ways: food, supplies, monetary assistance, and  so on.
And perhaps most importantly, the civil disobedience style of action  that EF! is most known for allows deeper relationships of affinity to  form through shared experiences of public confrontation. Time and again,  we have heard stories of these relationships in the streets or the  backwoods giving birth to stronger affinity groups capable of greater  organized attacks that do not rely on civility and expectations of  arrest, as in the case of the Earth Liberation Front (ELF), which grew  almost simultaneously in the 1990s from the anti-roads occupations in  the UK and anti-logging blockades in the US.
Ironically, another example of the issues surrounding nonviolence  rhetoric can be seen in the guidelines adopted by the organized factions  of the ELF.
The connections between EF! and the ELF are quite clear. Though the  organizing of each occurred independently, we still see much crossover  in culture and attitude, including strategy, tactics and philosophy. Yet  while the ELF presents a more militant approach, they also take the  rhetoric of nonviolence more seriously than EF! has, articulating a  definition of violence (essentially, direct impacts to living beings)  and a position against engaging in it. All printed materials produced by  ELF cells, their support groups and their press offices stress not  intentionally harming living things. This language did not come from  EF!, but from the animal liberation movement, specifically the Animal  Liberation Front (ALF).
It’s at this juncture where we can see another significant cross-pollination between the modern anarchist movement and EF!
Earth First! and Animal Liberation
Since the earliest days of EF!, there have been both staunch vegans  and committed hunters involved. But there has been sufficient  commonality, and a shared rejection of anthropocentrism, to avoid much  conflict. As a result, the nuances and contradictions—such as  prioritization of sentient animals over the integrity of whole  ecosystems13—have gone unexplored, perhaps in an attempt not to upset  the tenuous dynamic.
But there are some noteworthy challenges over the last couple of  decades. As Judi Bari’s anti-capitalist analysis increased EF!’s appeal  to crowds of college students and anarcho-punks, the prominence of  animal liberation activists co-mingling with EF!ers increased.
And just as Bari herself didn’t fit the label of the  urban-dwelling-university-Marxist, neither did some of the anarchists  who brought animal liberation into EF! circles. The most prominent of  these was Rod Coronado, a Native American of the Pascua Yaqui Nation,  who participated in EF! gatherings during the ’80s and gained notoriety  for acts of sabotage that sunk half the Icelandic whalers fleet costing  them $2 million, in addition to an arson at Michigan State University  which caused $125,000 worth of damage and destroyed 32 years of fur  industry research as part of the ALF’s “Operation Bite Back.”
Coronado’s roots in the animal liberation movement are illustrative  of the movement itself. Coronado got started by sabotaging trophy  hunters with other anarchists while visiting the UK. Similar hunt  sabotages in the ’70s are how the ALF began. His specific involvement in  these actions make up a large part of the initial cross-pollination  between anarchism, animal liberation and Earth First!
Through the ’90s and ’00s, these overlapping movements became a  prominent force in direct action struggles. In the US, the FBI  identified each of them as constituting significant “terrorist” threats,  though none had actually caused bodily harm, only economic damage.
While the ambitious direct action culture surrounding the ALF can be  credited with lending inspiration and courage to radical  environmentalism, and EF! specifically, valuable questions should also  be asked about this relationship. Such as:
Does the philosophy of animal liberation contradict biocentrism by  prioritizing sentient animals over plants, mountains, rivers, etc.?
Does this philosophy create limitations on EF!’s long-term biocentric  goals by encouraging rigid guidelines on violence and sentience?
Does it lessen EF!’s connection to land-based communities by  dismissing the interests of animal farmers and hunters that are often at  the forefront of threats from industrial expansion?
These are subjects with plenty of gray areas. Yet, these topics have  also been increasingly divisive among those engaged in eco-resistance.  The divisions have been fueled in large part by DGR co-author Lierre  Keith’s other book, The Vegetarian Myth. Unfortunately Keith’s  authoritarian attitude and anti-transgender position have stifled what  could have been a much more productive discussion resulting from her  book.
Yet it is possible to explore disagreements between animal liberation  philosophy and EF!’s biocentrism, while continuing to deepen  commitments to fighting together on common goals.
A Review of Insurrectionist Tendencies in Earth First!
The rise of insurrectionary anarchism has been one of the most  frequent crossovers between EF! and the anarchist movement over the past  decade.
At the 2013 Earth First! Rendezvous in North Carolina, a small  pamphlet addressed to Earth First! was circulated under the title “The  Issues Are Not the Issue: A letter to Earth First! from a Too-Distant  Friend,” credited to the pseudonym ST (an author affiliated with  CrimethInc.) A discussion group accompanied the pamphlet on the topics  addressed by the writer, who acknowledged that “none of this [was]  particularly new,” hearkening back primarily to the essay “Earth First!  Means Social War,” a popular but rambling piece of prose published by  the EF! Journal in 200714. The “Issues” essay can be summed up as: EF!  spends too much effort on organized campaigns and not enough on  fomenting general revolt.
While there is merit to this idea, the critical tone is played out.  At its worst, it’s dangerous to those aiming to sustain an ecological  resistance—not dangerous as in exciting (as are many of CrimethInc.’s  rants15) but dangerous as in potentially dragging EF! back through the  mud, which played a negative role in periods of stagnation and  repression, and worse, paved the way for blunders like the development  of the cult of DGR.
The sentiment in “Issues” actually predates the “EF! Means Social  War” article by seven or eight years. ST makes a vague reference to  similar critiques that surfaced earlier in British EF! circles. These  references point to another essay, called “Give Up Activism,” which  circulated as a pamphlet, and was later published, ironically, in the  Earth First! Journal.
In the following years, the influence of Green Anarchy (GA), both as  an ideology and a publication, also coming to the US via the UK, began  reshaping Earth First! The GA movement and its magazine contributed  significantly to developing the theory that surrounded EF!’s basic  tenets. But it also included GA folks attending EF! gatherings to  convince other participants to abandon activism and organizing, which  people affiliated with Green Anarchy view as perpetuated by a civilized  mindset.16
Green Anarchy attempted to narrow the definition of direct action to  militant acts of sabotage, either carried out by underground groups or  by mobs, opposing any efforts at publicly organized resistance, calling  it “Leftist.” While many insurrectionary anarchists might balk at a  claim that they are influenced by GA, they would be hard-pressed to deny  its influence.
“Issues,” “Social War,” and Green Anarchy were all also predated by  another similar trend and its accompanying publication, Live Wild Or Die  (LWOD). Like the others, it was militant, anarchist, anti-Left, and  anti-civilization. It was also well-circulated at EF! gatherings. Rumor  has it that it may have actually been edited and produced by anonymous  collective members of the EF! Journal. Unlike the others, it wasn’t  trying to coax people away from organized campaigns, sustained road  blockades, and Earth First!’s unique activist culture in general, but  rather hoped to accentuate these.
In the years following the circulation of LWOD, when EF! was at its  peak, the Earth Liberation Front flared up across the US—often in tandem  with public ecodefense campaigns. Much of the anti-globalization  movement that gridlocked urban streets during the trade summits of this  time also descended from regional EF! campaigns. Not to mention Ted  Kaczynski, dubbed the Unabomber by the government for his targeting of  university professors involved in questionable technological research,  made use of LWOD’s published target list, as well as drawing inspiration  from articles in the EF! Journal.
In comparison, a couple years into the publication of Green Anarchy  magazine, the ecological movement experienced a lull accompanied by the  most severe repression it had experienced. Unfortunately, folks had  created a movement that was learning how to skin roadkill, dream of  insurrection, and cheer for indigenous uprisings in faraway lands, but  was too ideologically isolated and marginal to effectively withstand the  wave of FBI repression that hit among key players in the rising  ecological resistance efforts of the mid-2000s.
The median age range of participants in EF! dropped by nearly a  decade in those years. By the 2007 Round River Rendezvous (EF!’s annual  summer gathering in the US), also the year “EF! Means Social War” was  published, there was hardly a person over thirty in attendance. The  following year, at the Rendezvous in Indiana, there was a well-attended  discussion led by young anarchists out of the insurrectionist milieu on  whether or not EF! should continue to exist at all. Earth First! endured  two hard blows over the last ten years: many newer activists became  convinced it wasn’t as cool as it had been in the ’90s; and many older  activists became convinced that affiliation with it wasn’t worth the  surveillance and repression.
As a result, with the exception of a few groups and campaigns across  the US and UK, very few were using the Earth First! banner. In its  place, myriad groups became more prominent, further fragmenting what was  left of EF!. Examples include Cascadia Forest Defenders and Mountain  Justice in the early 2000s; Root Force and Rising Tide in the mid-2000s;  and Tar Sands Blockade and Appalachia Resist! in the last few years.
While most of the local or issue-specific manifestations that  spiraled out of EF! were tamer and media-friendly, most noteworthy  Rising Tide, an opposite effect also occurred. A glimpse of this could  be seen in the short-lived Root Force project. Root Force, birthed  through the EF! Journal in 2006, sought a more targeted movement  strategy focusing on stopping the expansion of key global infrastructure  projects. The project was modeled on Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty  (SHAC), an animal liberation campaign targeting companies affiliated  with vivisection giant Huntingdon Life Science (HLS), which successfully  applied pressure via direct action to sever contracts that supported  the operation of HLS.
Inspired largely by Derrick Jensen’s Endgame books, Root Force’s  ambitious, militant rhetoric resulted in a semi-vanguardist organizing  approach that soon faded into a scaled back effort, and eventually  became just a website offering anti-infrastructure news, strategy and  analysis.
Enter Deep Green Resistance
While tension between EF! and Deep Green Resistance (DGR) has  primarily concerned criticism of DGR’s rigid structure, represented most  clearly by a mandated rejection of transgender people,17 there is  something deeper.
In several ways, EF!ers participated in allowing DGR to develop, some  even subtly nurturing it in hopes that it might be able to fill the  niche that was left by what appeared to be EF!s fading, perhaps pushing  the no-compromise envelope even further than EF! had been able to.18
But that’s no longer the case—EF! no longer appears on its way out,  and DGR does not appear to be growing, at least not outside of Facebook.  Still, seeing the success that DGR enjoyed momentarily leaves one  guarded of critiques like the ones in “Issues.”19 Not because EF! is too  thin-skinned to be criticized, but because the organizing that appears  in the vacuums that we leave is, at least in part, on us.
A Voice for the Underground and for Caged Warriors
One of the things that sets EF! apart from other eco-groups is the  consistent vocal support for incidents of ecological armed struggle  around the world, including the US.
While most environmental groups have generally shied away from  militant actions, dismissed them—or worse, falsely accusing them of  being done by state provocateurs—EF! has consistently stood up for  militant underground groups’ actions, celebrating their attacks and  publishing their communiqués.
Since the inception of the Earth Liberation Front, which appeared in  the early ’90s, first in the UK, then in the US, it has always had ties  to EF!. Essentially, EF! operated as an aboveground support network and  mouthpiece for ELF actions. The same can be said to an extent for the  ALF, though it was initiated in the late ’70s, prior to the existence of  EF!, and has always maintained a larger base of support among the  mainstream animal rights movement.
In the wake of the Green Scare—a phrase used to describe a series of  events in which both underground and aboveground Earth and animal  liberation activists were arrested and accused of terrorism—the stories  of individuals from active cells of the ELF have become public  knowledge. The relationship between the ELF and EF! was exposed by these  cases to be very strong, with direct connections between people who  were involved simultaneously in major EF! blockades, the EF! Journal and  some of the most notorious instances of ELF sabotage.
One take on this situation is that this relationship was too close,  and that people involved in underground actions should have avoided the  aboveground movement entirely. But a more realistic assessment of the  Green Scare is that while many major ELF actions seemed to be undertaken  by superheroes of fictional proportions, they were actually carried out  by small groups of normal people, just like anyone else. In many cases,  they may have once stood next to us at a campfire or protest.
We now know that many of those indicted for ELF crimes knew each  other from their participation in aboveground direct action campaigns or  participation on the Earth First! Journal collective, where they built  enough trust and respect for each other to undertake attacks that caused  over a hundred million dollars in damages to corporate and government  targets in over 1,000 reported actions in the US alone.
The largest of known ELF cells, what the media referred to as “The  Family,” operated with more than a dozen active members, torching a  lumber company headquarters, a US Forest Service office, genetic  engineering test sites, a ski resort and a slaughterhouse, among others.  Members of the cell were only arrested after it had disbanded and one  of the members with a heroine addiction, Jake Fergusen, became a  government informant.
Despite the wave of indictments, grand juries, new laws aimed at  Earth and animal activists, and accusations of terrorism, the ELF  continue their strikes to this day, claiming recent actions in the US  and in several other countries, including Russia, Mexico, Indonesia,  England and Germany.
In communiqués from ELF cells in these other countries, it has not  been uncommon in the last few years that an action will be claimed by  both the ELF and another explicitly anarchist group, most commonly an  ad-hoc faction of the Federation of Informal Anarchists (or FAI in the  Italian acronym).
There are countless peasant and indigenous groups who choose the path  of armed self-defense and rebellion around the world that get direct  support from people involved with EF! or coverage in the pages of the  EF! Journal and Newswire. Even considering strategic and ideological  differences, EF! continually offers these groups a public voice to  amplify the feelings of urgency and anger that their actions express,  particularly in the moments when members of these groups have been  captured by the state.
Eco-Prisoner Support
While prisoner support has been a long-standing tradition of  anarchists worldwide, EF! is one of the few environmental groups to  acknowledge the existence of ecological political prisoners. It has been  a source of support for many ecologically oriented prisoners over the  past 30 years by publishing addresses and stories to encourage  correspondence and circulating the EF! Journal to prisoners around the  world.
In the past decade, the numbers of these prisoners has spiked,  resulting from the increase of state resources and policies directed at  labeling ecological saboteurs as terrorists. This is done partly at the  behest of industrial corporations profiting from creating ecological  crisis, as we have seen in the agenda of the American Legislative  Exchange Council (ALEC).20
This repression is not only targeting underground activists. For  example, ALEC is responsible for creating and lobbying for laws to  generalize the criminalization of dissent, such as the Animal Enterprise  Terrorism Act (AETA21) which sent six members of the SHAC group to  prison on charges related to their aboveground organizing.
While this sentiment is very strong in the US, we are seeing it  spread to other countries as well, such as in the Il Silvestre cases of  Swiss and Italian eco-anarchists accused with the legal language of  terrorism for planning to attack a nanotech laboratory owned by IBM. The  trend has also spread to Latin America, where environmentalists are  working with indigenous groups to resist industrialization.
The practice of political prisoner support has also seen friction  between Earth First! and anarchists on several occasions. In one  example, the long-standing Anarchist Black Cross (ABC) Federation was  hesitant to accept eco and animal prisoners onto their national listing  of prisoners to support, starting with the imprisonment of Rod Coronado  in the mid-90s. When the Green Scare hit in 2005, this tension  resurfaced and ultimately, the culture of the ABC network shifted, with  many supporters of eco-prisoners taking active roles in the  organization.
Eco-Liberation Against Oppression
While EF! gained a reputation in the ’80s as beer-swilling macho  guys, in part rightly so, there is certainly more to the story. The  women involved at that time also speak of a powerful feminist  presence.22 And there is ample evidence that expressing active  solidarity with indigenous and land-based communities has been a  priority for many EF!ers since day one.23
Still, along with much of the early environmental conservation  movement, EF! came out of largely white, middle-class, single-issue  oriented activism. That’s left a lot of baggage to unpack. EF! has had  rocky moments in its history, namely with xenophobia and racist  misanthropic ranting about population control.
Today, the movement’s most prominent organizers have worked to  confront that history as well as more recent manifestations of similar  attitudes, and worked to strengthen EF!’s affinity with marginalized  communities and individuals with whom they share basic values.
In the past decade, groups like Trans’ and Women’s Action Camp (TWAC)  and Rising Tide, both beginning as offshoots of EF!, continue to have  much crossover with the organization. These groups represent an  important piece of EF!’s recent history, and they also point to the  likely future of EF! and the broader ecological resistance movement.
TWAC formed as a pro-feminist, queer-and-trans-positive space outside  of the patriarchy and gender norms that often surfaced at EF!  gatherings and actions. Beginning in 2004, TWAC was initially an “all  womyn’s24 affinity groups and action camp” established in forest defense  campaigns in the Pacific Northwest. In the following years, the name  TWAC appeared and spread from the Pacific Northwest to Florida, with  TWAC-oriented affinity groups also appearing at all recent EF!  gatherings.
Along with providing more inclusive spaces for discussion and action  trainings, TWAC actions can also be credited with pushing back the  boundaries of conventional activist media strategy, coordinating actions  that use the language of anti-oppression prominently. In a way, this  has succeeded in demystifying public discourse around liberatory  language.
Rising Tide also surfaced in the mid 2000s, first in the UK, then in  the US. The US group, which started as the Earth First! Climate Caucus  in 2006, soon became Rising Tide North America (RTNA), including  contacts in Mexico and Canada. The group focuses primarily on supporting  environmental justice struggles of communities on the front lines of  issues related to climate change and carbon extraction, with a secondary  focus on exposing false solutions to climate change, in particular the  market-based approach of making carbon offsets into a capitalist  commodity.
Some initial concerns were raised regarding Rising Tide drawing  people and energy from EF!. While that did happen to a certain extent,  there have also been benefits, including increased movement building and  organizing experience with frontline communities. Rising Tide reaches  people that EF! has historically had less successful relations  with—namely the environmental justice movement, led by people of color  and low-income folks. Today, there may be more people from EF!  organizing as Rising Tide than EF!
Disappointment with DGR
When Deep Green Resistance (DGR) came on the scene, it was not  uncommon to hear EF!ers expressing high hopes that they would bring new  energy and strategic thinking … and boy was that a let down!
The people at the top of DGR consistently disrespect potential allies  in transgender, anarchist25 and animal rights circles, then preach ad  naseum against “horizontal hostility” (meaning the denigration of other  activists’ efforts) whenever they were challenged.
In 2013, the EF! Journal Collective adopted a position explicitly  taking issue with the persistent anti-transgender attitude of Keith and  Jensen, and the policies they enforce for DGR, using their influence as  renowned authors. DGR’s position against trans people stems from  adherence to a theoretical trend of second wave feminism. This view  thinks that if gender is a social construct designed to repress women,  any expression of gender is therefore an affront to women. While EF! has  long held a critique of patriarchy, seeing it as having cleared a path  for industrialism, it takes more than the absence or presence of a penis  to maintain patriarchy. The controlling and dominating behavior  exemplified by DGR’s authority figures is a far greater concern than the  fabricated threat of transgender people against a particular sect of  feminism.
Thankfully the debate surrounding DGR has presented another  opportunity for today’s anarchist and ecological resistance movements to  clarify and strengthen its position of solidarity with trans people.  Making strides towards the queering of activist counter culture has  become a priority for many EF! organizers.
Despite the disappointment with DGR, the primary reason that people  were drawn to it—a desire for deeper strategic thinking— remains largely  unsatisfied. Sadly, DGR has lost all the credibility it may have had.  Even Aric McBay, the primary author of the strategy sections in the book  upon which the movement is based, parted ways with the organization,  citing frustration with the group’s anti-transgender policy.26
An Image from the Future of Ecological Resistance
Around the world, both ecological consciousness and rebellion against  the state are becoming more the norm. In the last year, uprisings in  Turkey, Brazil, Bulgaria, Ukraine and Ferguson28 (to name but a few)  have at times dominated news’ headlines. Two years prior, capitol  squares were occupied in Spain and Greece, riots occurred in England,  and First Nations’ blockades erupted across Canada. Even glimmers of  revolt in the belly of the US Empire, with the Occupy encampment on Wall  Street, an attempt at a general strike to shut down Oakland’s ports,  and over 400 Occupy-related direct action camps in public spaces across  the country. And shortly before that, of course, was the Arab Spring.
This news was often side-by-side with stories of the rise of the  global hydraulic fracking industry; the nightmare of expanding and  exporting tar sands oil; the boom in pipeline construction and  subsequent spills or explosions; poisoned water from mining disasters;  outrage against Monsanto’s biotech mega-farms; failure after failure in  UN and other international bodies’ attempts at addressing the crises  surrounding climate change, etc.
The relations between these uprisings and these harsh ecological  realities have been peripheral at best (except for Turkey, where the  rebellion was spurred from the clearing of trees in a public park). But  the potential for drawing out these connections is staring us in the  face. The vast majority of Earth First! campaigns stem from a microcosm  of the same power dynamics that tend to spark rebellions around the  world: greed, corruption, land and power grabs, resource control, and  brutal repression that often fan the flames of resistance.
Earth First!, with all its affiliates and offshoots, clearly has a  contribution to make in that discussion, but there are other places  outside of EF! worth a look as well, especially regarding the  relationships between mass movements and affinity groups, and more  specifically, aboveground and underground participants.
The following is only a brief glimpse of some recent campaigns and  social struggles that deserve the attention of movement strategists.
Anti-Gold Mining Resistance in Greece
Over the last 10 years,  opposition to the construction and expansion of gold mining operations  in northern Greece has shown instructive examples of community-led  militancy. Villages in the mining region, in particular Skouries, have  led the struggle with a series of road blockades, conflicts with the  police and large-scale acts of sabotage. Part of the recent history of  the anarchist movement’s relations to anti-gold mining struggles goes  back to an underground action in the late 1990s by Nikos Maziotis, a  well-known figure today who was arrested in 2011 in connection to the  armed anarchist group Epanastatikos Agonas.29 Along with underground  support, the effort to stop the gold mines has generated widespread  support, connecting itself with the mass movement opposing the greed and  corruption associated with social cuts and austerity measures being  pushed by the European Union.
The ZADists of France 
 Out of a decades-long effort by local farmers  to stop an airport from clearing around 4000 acres of farms and  forests, an anarchist-led occupation of the land turned into an  inspiring model of ecological resistance. ZAD, a play on the airport  project’s acronym, was a village-scale squat. After a series of eviction  attempts in 2012 – 2013, where farmers would arrive at the protest camp  using their tractors to prevent excavators from destroying the squatter  camps, the project was delayed. The spirit of the ZAD has since been  revived in an occupation of a site slated for dam construction. The most  recent occurrence at this site was the murder of a ZADist during a  confrontation with police attempting an eviction, which sparked an  international outpouring of solidarity actions.
Defending Land from Coal Mining in Germany and Scotland 
Once again,  a long-term community-led struggle gives way to anarchist land defense  camp offering a glimpse of the potential for militant ecology. In two  recent cases, the Hambach forest occupation in Germany and the Mainshill  camp in Scotland, anarchist and environmental organizers showed an  ability to embrace a wide range of tactics in resisting coal, an issue  which has become a worldwide hot button over the past decade due to the  climate crisis. In the case of Mainshill, a compiled list of action  between 2009 – 2010 includes a dozen acts of sabotage intermixed with  roadblocks, home demos and community organizing. The Hambach campaign,  which is fighting the largest coal mining operation in Europe, has seen a  similar range of tactics.
Fifteen Years of Resistance to Shell in Ireland 
Before pipeline  resistance became all the rage in North America, the folks from the  Rossport area of County Mayo, Ireland, were setting the stage. A mix of  community activists who trace their roots to anti-colonial Irish  struggle and young anarchist climate justice organizers combined to  inspire on ongoing opposition to pipeline and refinery construction  which has been able to embrace acts of sabotage in broad-daylight  against surveying and construction materials, amidst months of ongoing  daily road blockades, all the while expressing solidarity with Shell’s  worldwide opposition, namely those resisting the oil and gas industry in  the Niger Delta.
Anti-Road Forest Defense: Khimikhi in Russia 
Amazing accounts of a  forest defense in 2010 against a road between Moscow and St. Petersburg  boasted of blockades, tree spiking and arson to construction equipment,  where anti-fascist groups got involved to confront the fascist thugs  brought in to support the development company’s security. The resistance  seemed to climax at a solidarity protest in which masked anarchists  trashed the local city hall building—in the middle of the day—where the  construction was approved.
Anti-Pipeline Fights in Canada 
The last several decades of  collaboration and crossover between anarchists, ecologists and  Indigenous communities in the occupied territory of Canada has offered  inspirational guidance to the direction of a revolutionary, militant,  non-authoritarian environmental movement. While there has been many  examples to cite, especially amidst the anti-2010 Winter Olympics  campaign and the 2012 explosion of Idle No More organizing, a specific  case which stands out is the fracking resistance in Elsipogtog, where  Mi’kmaq warriors from the First Nations in what is known as New  Brunswick fought against plans with a full spectrum of tactics,  including the confiscation and arson of company equipment, along with  barricades where cops cars were set on fire during a stand-off in 2013.
There are many more examples as well, all around the world,30 of  underground actions effectively running concurrent with aboveground  movements—some with explicit ecological aims, others with general  anti-system rage. Most of these actions go underneath the radar of  people not reading the dozens of communiqués posted online at  international anarchist and insurrectionary sites like ContraInfo or  325.NoState. (Worth noting is that for every person arrested in relation  to underground activity, actions multiply in their honor.)
While few, if any, of these groups embrace a strict policy relating  to the use of violence, their actions tend to target property, not  people.
The skills, experience and culture of groups such as EF!, who  straddle the line of aboveground and underground action, can play a  significant part in creating contexts where things like anti-industrial  blockades and office occupations occur in tandem with generalized  uprisings, providing inspiration and social space for militant attacks  and strategic sabotage to also take place.
It’s not exactly a new formula for subverting society. And contrary  to common sentiment among cynical US anarchists, it’s not something that  only happens outside the US. That is illustrated by a 2013 document  leaked by the FBI, Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) and Pennsylvania  State Police.31 In the document, a presentation intended to profile  groups seen as threats to fracking companies, the JTTF creates a  timeline of regional opposition to fracking in which several EF!  blockades and tree sits are interspersed with a drive-by shooting and  multiple alleged attempts at incendiary device attacks on fracking  sites, between July 2012 and May 2013.
The future of ecological resistance is not something that needs an  elaborate blueprint, rigid structure or dizzying intellectual dogma.  It’s not some fantastical super hero comic book or bad movie plot (where  you have to share a communal meal in straightjackets with the mates in  your clandestine cell to prepare for the jam, as depicted in the film  The East 32).
In short, we need to continue doing much of what we’ve been doing. We  have the basic elements for fomenting ecological rebellion. It’s the  scale of our opposition that is lacking. As we’ve been seeing in recent  uprisings around the world that can all change very quickly. With this  in mind, the following questions are offered to those desiring to take  steps toward heightened ecological, anti-authoritarian struggle.
How do we amplify ourselves further? How do we make our actions more easily replicated?
And perhaps most importantly, how to we personally move our  relationships from acquaintances at a protest to co-conspirators in  ecological resistance?
These are questions that anarchists have grappled with over the course of the past 150 years in the movement’s modern history—a history that essentially paralleled the rise of industrialism. Viewed in that context, the ambitions of Earth First! can easily be seen as a continuation of anarchist ambitions, as there is little doubt that the coming generation of struggle for a free society will need to be more deeply rooted in ecology.
Panagioti Tsolkas has been an EF! organizer and on the EF! Journal’s  Editorial Collective since 2010, though he is currently taking a hiatus.  He has been a part of both Earth First! and anarchist movements in the  US since the mid ’90s. He grew up in a Greek-American immigrant family  and currently lives in the Everglades bioregion of sub-tropical south  Florida. He’s never attended university and believes credibility in  presenting an analysis of a movement should come primarily from lived  experience rather than deskbound study.
Details about EF! gatherings, contact info for local groups, updates  from actions, and general news/analysis can be found at:  earthfirstjournal.org
Posted by Perspectives on Anarchist Theory (anarchiststudies.org/perspectives/ ) on the Institute for Anarchist Studies website ( anarchiststudies.org).
Notes
1 The perspectives presented come from a first-hand perspective. The  author has no credentials in academia. On the contrary, he doesn’t have a  High School diploma.
2 A few familiar, albeit very Eurocentric, examples might include:  Kropotkin’s Mutual Aid; the writings of French geographer Elisee Reclus,  transcendentalists like H.D. Thoreau and Romantics such as William  Blake; Emma Goldman’s naming of her publication Mother Earth; the  earlier experiences of the Diggers, Luddites and other rurally-based  radical movements, and more recently, the writings of Murray Bookchin  who has been explicitly exploring anarchist theory and social ecology  since the 1960s.
3 This is the case particularly in the US, UK and Australia. Although  there is a history of EF!-affiliated activity in other countries,  including Japan, The Philippines, Sierra Leon, Poland, France, the  Netherlands, Iceland, Italy and France, I have found much less  background information in these places to make as clear a case.
4 The Center for Consumer Freedom and the FBI has considered EF! a  primary domestic threat for many years. As recent as Oct 2013, the US  Army has released a manual listing Earth First! as terrorist threat.  Source: http://earthfirstjournal.org/newswire/2013/10/14/u-s-army-lists-earth-fi…
5 Abbey was the author of cult classic The Monkeywrech Gang, a  fictitious book that inspired environmentalists in the ’70s to rally  around sabotage as a tactic, spurring the start of EF! While Abbey was  consistently anti-authoritarian in most of his views, he also dabbled in  some questionable rhetoric regarding immigrants and borders. In  particular, an essay on immigration included in a collection of his  work, entitled One Life At A Time Please, has been frequently referenced  by notoriously bigoted right-wing xenophobes affiliated with the racist  John Tanton network in attempt to maintain a foothold of influence and  credibility in the environmental movement.
6 Bari was best known for her staunch position as an IWW labor  organizer who brought loggers and environmentalists together to fight  the Maxxam corporation, a multinational company which was liquidating  its “assets” (jobs and trees), after getting caught up in the Savings  & Loans scandal. She wrote a popular booklet “Revolutionary Ecology”  calling for a more thorough anti-capitalist analysis from EF! She was  later injured in a car bomb that pointed to FBI involvement, and died in  1997.
7 Ironically, this group was also more deeply embracing of the  hippy-esque spirituality of Deep Ecology, perhaps imagining themselves  capable of tapping into the religious fervor of rural Baptists.
8 This clash manifested in a book, Defending the Earth, which was  co-authored by Bookchin and EF! co-founder Dave Foreman in 1991.
9 Take this example of Foreman’s thoughts on borders and bioregions:  “One of the key concepts of bioregionalism is that modern political  boundaries have no relationship to natural ecological provinces.  Bioregionalists argue that human society—and therefore, politics and  economics—should be based on natural ecosystems. They find affinity with  Indian tribes and with Basque, Welsh, and Kurdish separatists, and have  no sympathy with the modern nation-state, empire, or multinational  corporation.” From Confessions of an Eco-Warrior. (Harmony Books. NYC,  1991. pp. 43)
10 Curran’s 2006 book 21st Century Dissent: Anarchism,  Anti-Globalization and Environmentalism includes several chapters  regarding EF! and its offshoots
11 Taylor’s recently wrote “Resistance: Do the Ends Justify the  Means” published by Worldwatch Institute in their State of the World  2013 book
12 Two government representatives from the EPA were held hostage in  New York, May 1980, by low-income homeowner who were being poisoned from  the dumping of toxic chemicals. Two days later, their demands were met.
13 The most glaring example: are the lives and freedom of mink caged  for fur worth the immediate risk posed to the populations of songbirds  and other small prey by large, sudden releases of predators into an  area?
14 The author of “EF! Means Social War” went on to publish Politics  is Not A Banana in 2009, making the EF! Social War piece seem dry and  textbook-like.
15 The CrimethInc. magazine Rolling Thunder, for example, calls itself “a journal of dangerous living.”
16 This occurred most notably during the EF! Round River Rendezvous  of 2005, in the Mount Hood area of Oregon, ironically the same time and  location where the FBI began Operation Backfire, later known as a  starting point of the Green Scare (see below), by sending a wired  informant to secure evidence against ELF participants.
17 “[M]y group and the other [DGR] chapters were presented with a choice: put up with trans phobia or hit the road.” Source: http://www.decolonizingyoga.com/how-derrick-jensens-deep-green-resistanc…
18 For example, the EF! Journal published a section of the DGR book  in its pages in 2012, and EF! organizers of the 2012 Winter Rendezvous  in Utah invited discussions from DGR organizers.
19 During the writing of this essay, a new publication inspired by  GA, entitled Blackseed, released a first edition featuring an  all-too-familiar slam of EF!, this time focusing on a hollow position  that EF! is allegedly fortifying the rhetoric of nonviolence to pacify  ecological resistance.
20 ALEC is an alliance of politicians and businesses formed to lobby the government for right wing and capitalist interests.
21 Leaked documents from ALEC show that this law was initially  intended to have an even broader scope as the “Animal and Ecological  Terrorism Act,” but it ended up being tested out on animal activists  first, likely for fear that broadly including environmentalists may have  triggered a stronger backlash.
22 Karen Pickett and Karen Coulter, both prominent organizers  involved with EF! since the early ‘80s, often speak to this at EF!  gatherings.
23 The first EF! action on record involved erecting a monument to  Apache warriors who raided a mining camp. In 1980 Earth First! erected a  monument dedicated to Victorio for his successful raid on Cooney and  the killing of Cooney and his men. It read, in part, “ This monument  celebrates the 100th anniversary of the great Apache chief Victorio’s  raid on the Cooney mining camp near Mogollon, New Mexico, on April 12,  1880. Victorio strove to protect these mountains from mining and other  destructive activities of the white race. The present Gila Wilderness is  partly a fruit of his efforts…
24 The spelling “women” was initially used by the organizers in this  group, though most TWAC organizers have opted to drop the “y” spelling,  as it has come to be associated with anti-trans sentiments of a second  wave feminist trend.
25 Jensen: “The Black Bloc spends more time attempting to destroy  movements than they do attacking those in power…” “The anarchists are  liars. It’s what anarchists do.” Sources: http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_cancer_of_occupy_20120206 http://vancouver.mediacoop.ca/blog/insurgent-g/17597
26 McBay: “I find these transphobic attitudes to be disgusting and deeply troubling”. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Green_Resistance.
28 As this article goes to print, the US is experiencing a nationwide  response to multiple racist police killings, including riots and road  blockades in many states simultaneously, going on for several months  sparked by the uprising in Ferguson, MO.
29 The case of Epanastatikos Agonas (EA) is one of the clearer recent  examples of the potential for aboveground and underground resistance as  part of a mass revolutionary movement influenced by anarchism. For  instance, as an October 2011 trial date approached for members of EA  facing charges related to a decade of attacks on government and  corporate targets, nearly 3,000 supporters reportedly marched down  central Athens in solidarity with the imprisoned members chanting “The  State is the only terrorists! Solidarity with the guerrilla fighters!”  Their widespread support was visible all over the country in  demonstrations, graffiti, posters and postings on dozens of websites.  The EA members were eventually released on a technicality in 2012, and  fled underground. Maziotis has since resurfaced and been returned to  prison. The Earth First! Journal and newswire covered struggles in  Greece extensively over the last several years.
30 Mexico, China and Indonesia all come to mind as places where  recent militant environmental movements, indigenous struggles and  anarchist groups (above and under ground) have been able to open space  for what may be the future of environmentalism and anti-capitalism.
31 Source:earthfirstjournal.org/newswire/2014/02/15/leaked-pennsylvania-jttf-presentation-profiles-earth-first/
32 Yes. This scenario really happens in the terrible 2013 eco-terror  thriller film The East. And yes, they call their actions “jams.”
source: Institute for Anarchist Studies
http://anarchiststudies.org/2015/03/31/no-system-but-the-ecosystem-earth-first-and-anarchism-by-panagioti-tsolkas-1/ 
About the IAS
The Institute for Anarchist Studies (IAS), a nonprofit foundation  established in 1996 to support the development of anarchism, is a  grant-giving organization for radical writers and translators worldwide.  To date, we have funded some ninety projects by authors from countries  around the world, including Argentina, Lebanon, Canada, Chile, Ireland,  Nigeria, Germany, South Africa, and the United States. Equally  important, we publish the Anarchist Interventions book series in  collaboration with AK Press and Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, the  online journal Perspectives on Anarchist Theory, and the new Lexicon  pamphlet series as well as organize the Renewing the Anarchist Tradition  conference and offer the Mutual Aid Speakers List. The IAS is part of a  larger movement to radically transform society as well. We are  internally democratic and work in solidarity with people around the  globe who share our values.
 
                             
                             
                             
                     
                     
                             
                             
                            