“I DESIST!” — Walla Walla approved logging 12,000 acres of old growth in the watershed that gives 90% of the city unfiltered drinking water
*Speaker:* Paul Lynn
*Creator:* @_fungaia
*Source:* “I DESIST!” on YouTube
*Context:* Walla Walla City Council voted to allow 12,000+ acres of industrial logging in the protected watershed that supplies 90% of the city’s unfiltered drinking water. Full deep-dive: “A Message from the Blue Mountains” + WallaWallaWatershed.com
*Transcript below. All credit to Paul Lynn / @_fungaia for the speech and activism:*
Good evening, Council. City staff.
Two weeks ago, around Earth Day, private contractors began felling some of the last remaining old-growth Ponderosa pine in the world, just a few miles upstream of this City Hall.
I do not stand before you today to convince you to stop the logging in the municipal watershed. Because the deeper I dig through public records, the more I find the City was not just aware from the beginning, but an active and even eager participant in this publicly funded, multi-million-dollar cash grab — explicitly describing our drinking water source as a case study for dangerous, untested forest management experiments.
I do not stand before you to convince you that your primary duty is to your constituents, not industry interests and their federal grant partners. Because, for months on end, hundreds of the citizens you swore an oath to serve have written letters, made comments, and shown up repeatedly to beg you for prudence, for caution, for an EIS — with not even a symbolic gesture of regard to show us that you heard our pleas. You gave us nothing.
Nor do I stand before you merely to berate you for your negligence. I have no illusion that my words will fall as anything more than vitriol on callous ears.
No. I stand here tonight as the harbinger of consequence — of drought and floods, of faster fires and scorched earth and wells run dry. Because forests make rain. And filter, store, and slow the release of water. When you remove them, the land dries up. It’s that simple.
I stand here tonight for the voiceless — for the soil and the fish and the rain and the birds. I stand for the fungus and the old trees that have watched over this land for centuries before the white man came with his insatiable lust for timber and land.
I stand for the future ones who will inherit this parched, degraded watershed, and be left to toil for generations to restore the rain and slowly rectify the greed of lusty imperialists and the folly of their political puppets who casually wave away their children’s birthright without decorum nor decree.
Council, I stand here tonight to haunt you with the specter of dissent. Because democracy does not die at the ballot box. It lives in the voice of the people. Governments derive their authority from the consent of the governed in theaters like this one.
And I desist.
I stand here for you, my kindred spirits watching this. There are a million assaults on decency and good sense. Choose your battles wisely, then fight them with every fiber of your being, and every tool justice allows. Overwhelm public meetings. Demand public records. File petitions in the courts. We must be relentless. We must flood the halls of power and thrash the gears of the machine of bureaucratic dominion with demands of justice.
Because the walls of the Empire will tremble before the united voice of the people.
It is time. We must stand up for our Earth Mother. She has given us everything, and still we take more.
Water is life.