CONCEPT
Fire Suppression
The century-long U.S. Forest Service policy of eliminating wildfire that produced lush, dense, catastrophically vulnerable forests — the ecological parable for what happens when well-meaning adults eliminate cognitive difficulty from developing minds.
For most of the 20th century, the U.S. Forest Service suppressed wildfire in the national forests. The motivation was reasonable: fire destroyed timber, threatened communities, looked from the seasonal perspective like pure cost. The suppression was effective. The fires stopped. The forests grew dense and green. The metrics of forest health improved. The forests were dying. The periodic low-intensity fires that had burned through the understory every ten to twenty years had been performing functions the suppressors did not perceive. When fire finally came, as fire always does, it was not a ground fire the forest could absorb — it was a crown fire that killed everything. The pattern applies directly to the suppression of cognitive difficulty in developing children.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The fires had been clearing accumulated fuel that, left to accumulate for decades, would feed catastrophic crown fires no suppression effort could control. They had been maintaining the open parklike structure that shade-intolerant species required for regeneration. They