The Battle Changed Terrain: “There Is a Battle for America”
By Dana Tibbitts
May 2026
Source https://www.nwasolution.org/
A few days ago, I opened an old cabinet record player that had belonged to my grandparents. Sitting on the turntable, exactly where it had apparently been left decades ago, was a thin flexi-disc record from 1984.
The title stopped me cold: There Is a Battle for America.
The recording featured former Interior Secretary James Watt speaking during one of the most politically charged periods in modern public lands history — a time when fierce debates were already underway over the future of America’s forests, resources, federal lands, and national direction.
The truth is, the battle James Watt was speaking about was already creeping into America’s public lands, forests, resources, and competing visions of stewardship. Forty years later, those same landscapes now bear the visible scars of that unresolved conflict.
Today it is hard not to see that the battle never ended. It simply changed terrain.
Destroying watersheds. Erasing wildlife habitat. Devastating communities. More than 100 million acres of America’s forests already dead, dying, or burned to a crisp. Yet Americans are still being told that increasingly destructive fires are “natural,” inevitable, or somehow beneficial.
The truth is, many of the men and women now fighting to protect and restore America’s forests and public lands have already spent decades in the trenches of this battle — long before catastrophic megafires became national headlines, long before entire states disappeared beneath smoke for months on end, and long before evacuation failures and collapsing forests became impossible to ignore. They were there warning that policies disconnected from measurable outcomes would eventually collide with reality.
And now they have.
Forty years after that flexi-disc call to action, the forests themselves have become the evidence —not of successful long-term stewardship, but of failed federal policy and practice on a grand scale. Entire forests that once defined the American landscape are now staggering under unsustainable fuel loads, struggling to regenerate anything but thorns and thistles.
This is not resilience. It is collapse.
At the National Wildfire Alliance, we believe the first responsibility remains simple: first put out the fire. Not after it becomes a megafire. Not after entire towns are threatened. Not after forests are converted into moonscapes. Immediately, aggressively, and competently. Now.
This does not mean abandoning science or active forest management. It means returning to measurable reality. Healthy forests cannot survive endless high-intensity fire. Communities cannot survive permanent evacuation conditions. Public trust cannot survive policies whose outcomes are plainly visible in the ashes left behind.
America’s forests are not disposable. They are watershed, habitat, infrastructure, inheritance, and the living foundation of countless communities across the American West. Once destroyed, many will never recover within our lifetime.
For this reason, the National Wildfire Alliance continues to advocate for rapid response capability, transparent science, accountable land management, realistic evacuation planning, and restoration rooted in measurable outcomes instead of ideology.
Because the land itself is now rendering the verdict.
And perhaps that old flexi-disc left one final reminder worth hearing: every generation inherits a battle it did not choose. But every generation must still decide whether it will stand and fight for what remains.