Probably Greenpeace could qualify for that one.Wait, who were the original Ecofascist?
I encountered Suzuki in person once, in a hotel elevator about 30 years ago. Once was enough. He was surly, rude, and unpleasant to people who were merely trying to show appreciation for the interesting work he'd done on various tv programs. I've had a hard time taking him seriously since.
I've been reading environmental doomsday claims since 1970, starting with another biologist, Dr. Paul Ehrlich. Nobody's been close to being right yet. According to Ehrlich's 1970 book, Population, Resources, Environment, the environment should have collapsed some time toward the end of the 1980s, because we didn't do what he said we should to prevent it. I think most of these doomsayers are right about only one thing: there are too many people on the planet, and that's the real root of most environmental problems. In simple terms, it's perfectly okay to crap in the woods and streams, every other critter that lives there does it, and nature has provided assorted insects and bacteria and fungi to recycle it. But when you get 6 billion people crapping in the same woods and streams the natural recycling processes are overwhelmed and the place begins to stink.