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Felled by green plot

This is the chilling story of how green activists targeted and finally brought down John Gay, the visionary former chairman of the Tasmanian timber company Gunns, damaged the company and helped wreck the state economy.

It contains a clear warning for the rest of Australia of what lies in wait as emboldened environmental activists move on to new bogus campaigns against their next targets: the ''wild rivers'' of Cape York at the expense of indigenous enterprise, the fishing industry, farming or, catastrophically, the coal industry.

In Gay's downfall is everything you need to know about the conscience-less dishonesty of the green movement, and how its war on progress is camouflaged as concern for nature.

''I'm not bitter with the company,'' says Gay, who resigned in May. "I had to leave Gunns because the institutional investors were targeted by the greens and kept pressuring me to resign, and I just wasn't prepared to put my wife and two kids through any more [of the] thuggery in the green movement. They've damaged Tasmania and did their best to damage my credibility.''

The third-generation Tasmanian sawmiller left school at 15 to work with his father, before building his own sawmill and being headhunted at 28 by Gunns, a family-owned timber milling and hardware store business in Launceston then turning over about $10 million a year. He became the managing director, transforming Gunns into a top 50 company with a market capitalisation of $900 million by 2003, when it was one of the best-performing companies on the stock exchange.

Gay bought the company back from the multinational Rio Tinto, becoming a hero of the working people of Tasmania.

But the international green movement and the Australian Wilderness Society fought a relentless campaign to bring the company to its knees and destroy Gay.

They let loose violent feral protesters who chained themselves to trees and sabotaged logging equipment; protesters with placards picketed the ANZ Bank, which had undertaken to finance Gay's proposal for a pulp mill in the Tamar Valley, but pulled out at the last minute.

And they had environmentalists in suits successfully traduce Gay to cowardly institutional investors who earlier this year dumped Gunn's shares, halving the value of the company in a week.

Greenies in suits also went to Japan, destroying Gunn's markets for its woodchips, threatening - in an oh-so-reasonable way - companies which used pulp sourced from Tasmania's forests to make paper.

Afraid their brands would be trashed, Gunns' Japanese customers dropped Tasmania like a hot potato.

Then there was the personal vilification. Gay describes it as ''torture'' for his wife, Erica, and adult son and daughter, with his home under assault two or three nights a week for years - from smoke bombs under the house, stink bombs at the front door, dead possums in the yard, people rattling the gates late at night and screaming abuse from the street.

His wife was spat at in the supermarket and the Tasmanian media sat on the fence as a good man's reputation was destroyed.

''My wife and kids were tormented … I had to put in a security system so my wife could feel safe,'' he says.

Today Gay will say nothing bad about Gunns. But he must view with dismay what has happened since he left, with its wineries and hardware stores sold off at rock-bottom prices, and its capitulation to the green movement.

Like any quasi-religious force, the environmentalists needed an arcadia to save and a demon to fight. The cute island state and the ''rapacious logger'' fitted the bill. Gay was a godsend to them. An unreconstructed working man, who never completed high school and believed in honest work and fair play, he saw the world as rational and straightforward, rather than an insane place of spin, mirage and hidden agendas.

His friend of 45 years, and a former director of Gunns and former Liberal premier of Tasmania, Robin Gray, says: ''John is a very, very decent bloke, very generous, but he's been painted as a dreadful uncaring person.

''People who should know better were influenced … by green activists … who went to the chief executive of the ANZ Bank, which had given commitments to fund the pulp mill … The movement against him finally cost him his job.''

The former premier Paul Lennon says the Tasmanian economy is ''under extreme stress, the timber industry is on its knees''.

''Unemployment in Tasmania is 6.3 per cent. When I was in politics two years ago, it was 4 per cent. And we were one of the fastest-growing places in the country, but Tasmania is small and vulnerable to big shocks. We need projects like the pulp mill to underpin the economy.''

Lennon blames the then environment minister, Malcolm Turnbull, for ''sitting on his hands'' over approval for the pulp mill before the 2007 election, under the onslaught of a campaign in his eastern suburbs Sydney seat of Wentworth by the businessman Geoffrey Cousins, who appeared out of nowhere to wage a virulent campaign against the mill.

The delay, Lennon says, stopped the pulp mill in its tracks. Gunns is now in closed-door negotiations with the Wilderness Society over whether it will be allowed to continue with the mill.

''Who is actually going to believe that environmental management is going to be better in Indonesia or Malaysia,'' Lennon says. The campaign ''exposes the real agenda of Greens''.

''The Greens believe in shrinking the economy. We've found in Tasmania [that] they always find a way to oppose projects - they always try to slow down growth.''

One Tasmanian political insider says Gay's failure was that he was ''out of touch with the way to operate a modern business''.

''He's a lovely bloke but he didn't have the skills or the layers of bureaucracy, or the PR people you need to manage the campaign for the pulp mill.

''He just thought a pulp mill was a good idea for Tasmania. It would create jobs, and he was going to build the best, most environmentally friendly one in the world. He couldn't understand why people were putting obstacles in his path.''

Gay thought truth would win out. Now he lies in bed at night and worries about the logging contractors he couldn't save, who borrowed money to buy equipment and have lost their livelihood.

Gay refused to kowtow to irrational green bullying, and his demise stands as an object lesson.

What the green movement has done to Tasmania's timber industry, it will do to the rest of the country. Those purported 13 per cent of people planning to vote for the Greens on Saturday had better understand exactly what they are voting for. It's not about saving trees. It's about ''moving backwards'' to the dark ages.

devinemiranda@hotmail. com

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
John Gay cannot blame the greens activists for destroying his credibility., everyone is in control of themselves. the greens only objective was and is to put an end to the pulp mill, and it isnt only the greens etc that do not want this, and calling people who are passionate about their environment ferel is wrong , everyone has something they stand for and believe in, and good on the ANZ back for seeing sense and pulling out, if we didnt have the greens to try and put an end to terrible destruction where would our country be...it would be destroyed.
Posted by susan goebel, 19/08/2010 10:05:16 AM
who wrote this crap?
Posted by Pete, 19/08/2010 10:16:51 AM
Go Greens should be more of you.
Posted by Green through and through, 19/08/2010 11:53:33 AM
Miranda, have you got kids? Do you want them to have a planet to grow old in? Old growth forests are an asset that is for everyone, not for pulp mills and woodchips. Our economy is based around growth and chewing up limited resources and it needs balancing. We can't eat or breathe money!!! If overseas companies want pulp and woodchips they should plant their own plantations and leave our forests alone. Oh, I forgot they've already cut down all their trees!!
Posted by surfer, 19/08/2010 12:09:14 PM
Wow, that's the most bizarre piece of spin I have read in a long while. Perhaps a little research into the thuggery that was condoned under Gay and the corruption condoned by the ex Premier Lennon may be useful for Miranda. As for the hundreds of millions wasted trying to keep the industry alive? Perhaps your next piece will be Reds under our Beds or The Vilification of Hitler by the Jews?
Posted by tswanson`, 19/08/2010 1:31:31 PM
Miranda Devine has lost much credability in writing this fictional piece. I have watched Gunns over 20 years, destroying much of the Tasmanian wilderness for their own greed, manipulating the State Government and making themselves filthy rich.
Posted by John, 19/08/2010 9:02:42 PM
The Greens are the only viable choice at this election, as shown in this story. They are the only ones who can sort this country out properly at this moment of time and they deserve a stint in power to see how they go. Can not be worse than the miseries we're being offered by the 2 majors.
Posted by Pete, 20/08/2010 2:28:11 AM
Is this a joke? Or a lesson in re-writing history ! Is this woman REALLY a journalist??? I have lived here for many years and I don't recognise ANY of this. Oh well, maybe better vote GREEN after all. Thanks for helping me decide Miranda,
Posted by Tassienanna, 20/08/2010 8:14:34 PM
It was penned by Miranda Devine, a columnist for the Sydney Morning Herald. I always thought she was a bit of a leftie .--- obviously I cuold be wrong.
Posted by bob, 20/08/2010 10:20:29 PM
That would have to be the biggest load of crap I have ever read. John Gay lying in bed worrying about contractors? Bahahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by Leah, 20/08/2010 10:46:55 PM
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Miranda Devine How green activists targeted and brought down John Gay, the former chairman of Gunns
Miranda Devine How green activists targeted and brought down John Gay, the former chairman of Gunns

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