Monkeywrenching

Monkeywrenching is economic warfare by sabotage, often by illegal means, used to slow down or halt an undesired government-sanctioned activity. In the United States the term is most often used in the context of ecodefense. Monkeywrenching is therefore the destruction of earth-moving equipment such as bulldozers, skip loaders, knuckle loaders, logging equipment, and road building equipment. It also includes the removal of road survey markers, billboards, certain bridges, certain power lines, certain power poles and towers, and certain roads. The object of this destruction is generally limited to equipment that supports destructive logging, mining, and hunting activities. This means that targets are well-chosen: it is not random vandalism. Many monkeywrenchers feel they are highly ethical, and that their destructive activities are not merely justified, but laudable and necessary. Monkeywrenching is usually an unorganized activity. Many monkeywrenchers do not know any other monkeywrencher, and perform monkeywrenching alone. The term "Monkey-wrenching" comes from Edward Abbey's novel The Monkey Wrench Gang.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
john davies of hereford
reading rainbow
london international airport
dorothy day
roderick haig brown
ghetto house
jonas savimbi
claire harris
horus: prince of the sun
goosebumps: the haunted mask
colchester
hooper's store
movie encyclopedia
paddy donegan
a special sesame street christmas
marjorie harris
dick spring
shirt
pat rabbitte
mary harney
october 2001
ecodefense
september 2001
august 2001
april 2001
pekeapoo
klm uk
billboarding
akc
tree pinning
roman lyashenko
washington and lee university
david kennedy
elisabeth harvor
archimedean property
archimedean group
peter hook
hackers (movie)
bernard sumner
mandola
prison sexuality
huntly, new zealand
treaty of gruber de gasperi
colposcopy