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ALEXIS
ALVARO
ANDY
CHARITY
CLAUDIA
EULALIO
JACQUELINE
JESSICA
KAK
LEA
ROBERTO
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Many
Wilderness scholars, historians, and managers are concerned
that our increasingly multi-cultural society might not value
wilderness in the future since most of the people that visit
and work in wild places are European-American. Please respond
to this concern from your own perspective. .
THIS
CONCERN
about how diverse the people are who visit the wilderness
should in a way be researched. My family has been coming
to the wilderness for many generations, but as I get to
know people I find out that they have never visited the
wilderness in their whole life. Never going: the snow,
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hiking,
backpacking, and so on are things they just see on T.V.
or [in] movies. The statement about "most of the people
that visit and work in the wild places are European Americans
is such a true statement. It's not bad or wrong, it's just
true and factual. Europeans were the first to make the wilderness
here. So my conclusion to making the area diverse with many
people is to have young students as myself and my class
venture out into the wilderness and explore. They can then
go home and tell their family how beautiful the wilderness
really is.
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