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National Park Service has new land-grabbing tool
Washington Examiner ^ | 12/29/11 | Ron Arnold

Posted on 12/30/2011 5:22:06 AM PST by markomalley

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To: Carry_Okie
You'd see a "park industry" in short order and it would be better maintained because they would have to compete for customers.

We'd have Steinwehr Avenue.

I live in DC. Northern Virginia's idea of historic preservation is a sign in a mall parking lot ... and that's only if someone else pays for the sign.

41 posted on 12/30/2011 9:02:03 AM PST by sphinx
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To: CodeToad
Interesting ~ one of my ancestors was the land agent who sold almost all the land in Indiana for Lee, Clark and the US government ~ and the state government.

The territory was created about 1804 ~ by the FOUNDERS ~ and United States land patents authorized to pay Revolutionary War soldiers were purchased from those soldiers and their heirs, consolidated into large tracts, and approved for sale by the Confederation Congress ~ and that practice continued on through Statehood. The last public lands (owned by the United States and the State of Indiana) in Indiana were located in the Limberlost region (a massive wetland South of Fort Wayne).

They were surveyed and sold in the early 1900s, nearly a century later!

The clauses I just cited for you secured the United States ownership of its own lands (which for all you knew might have already been pledged to somebody else, e.g. a Revolutionary War vet) and also the ownership of state lands.

42 posted on 12/30/2011 9:06:41 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: CodeToad
Most of the Western United States were property of the United States via the Louisiana Purchase and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The United States also purchased Alaska.


43 posted on 12/30/2011 9:10:09 AM PST by Doe Eyes
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To: sphinx
Northern Virginia's idea of historic preservation is MOUNT VERNON, etc. There's a lot of great river front where I could live but it's tied up in "historic preservation".

Several other colonial mansions are preserved, even a Frank Loyd Wright usonian house. Then there's Bull Run Park (which protects the flanks of the Manassas Battlefield).

Arlington National Cemetery is in northern Virginia, as are Fort Belvoir and Fort Myer, the Pentagon, National Airport's main concourse building, ............

44 posted on 12/30/2011 9:10:52 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: CodeToad
BTW, when a state is admitted to the union under the provisions of a law passed by Congress there are clauses that protect federal lands ~ Alaska, the last state admitted, had clauses preserving various sorts of federal property, native property, existing civilian property, and future state property.

Your argument leads off into a state being created and all other land titles being extinguished. I'm sorry ~ that just doesn't happen. Not now. Not then. Not ever if we can help it.

45 posted on 12/30/2011 9:17:05 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: sphinx; GladesGuru
We'd have Steinwehr Avenue.

I'll see your Steinwehr Avenue and raise you Deseret Ranch (275,000 acres of the best land management you'll probably never see).

Your apparent preference of stewardship is forcing others to pay for your idea of it at gunpoint. And of course, you'll make sure that said "stewardship" is in fact effective, won't you? If you really understood the disastrous consequences of such "management" in the National Parks (and not the National Geographic agitprop) you wouldn't be so flippant. I have numerous examples of it in the West, but I'm pinging GladesGuru to tell you how that works in Florida.

The very existence of greed like yours is why there is no economic value in historic or environmental management. I suggest a little light reading.

46 posted on 12/30/2011 9:19:08 AM PST by Carry_Okie (The RNC would prefer Obama to a conservative nominee.)
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To: CodeToad

A lot of the state land around here was property that was foreclosed on during the depression according to the old timers. Lots of old house and barn foundations all over the place out there.

There are even a few abandoned roads out there. The old timers say they just closed them 30 or 40 years back and they became overgrown. I only knew about them because I found a few old road signs standing out in the middle of nowhere.


47 posted on 12/30/2011 9:19:26 AM PST by cripplecreek (Stand with courage or shut up and do as you're told.)
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To: markomalley

"Land, see 'Snatch'"

48 posted on 12/30/2011 9:22:39 AM PST by dfwgator
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To: muawiyah
BTW, when a state is admitted to the union under the provisions of a law passed by Congress there are clauses that protect federal lands ~

Which is a complete violation of the Equal Footing Doctrine.

Equal-Footing Doctrine is a principle of Constitutional law that mandates that new states be admitted to the Union as equals of the existing states, in terms of power, sovereignty, and freedom. States must be admitted on an equal footing in the sense that Congress may not exact conditions solely as a tribute for admission, but it may, in the enabling or admitting acts or subsequently impose requirements that would be or are valid and effectual if the subject of congressional legislation after admission.

How is a State equally sovereign if 90% of ITS land belongs to the national government? They are forced to police it and deal with its liabilities without compensation.

Your contention is also adverse to the very principal of a United STATES in FEDERATION. Gad what an obsessive self-interest you express!

The acceptance of federal lands as a condition of admission is an illegal contract entered into under duress. The elements of contracts that are illegal are void.

Your argument leads off into a state being created and all other land titles being extinguished. I'm sorry ~ that just doesn't happen. Not now. Not then. Not ever if we can help it.

First of all, this claim of consequence is patently and historically false, which is why so many States admitted after the Constitution was ratified and before the Civil War have very little in the way of "Federal Lands."

And just whom would be this royal "we" besides your usual load of statist crap.

49 posted on 12/30/2011 9:33:45 AM PST by Carry_Okie (The RNC would prefer Obama to a conservative nominee.)
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To: Carry_Okie
The Federal government bought the land ~ it made a contract with somebody else ~ usually with a treaty.

The Treaty is the Supreme Law of the Land, Contracts are Sacred, states are erected WITHIN some territory, or even another state, land titles are always secured in the United States because we are not some Ottoman satrapy out in the Gobi, etc.

The "doctrine" you argue about is of lesser consequence than treaties, land titles, and property rights of individuals already there.

On the other hand, that means you get Senators and Representatives on an equal basis with other states. NOBODY ever said Rhode Island should also have as much land as Texas!

50 posted on 12/30/2011 9:39:54 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Carry_Okie
"We" in that case is the "We" in "We the People". You guys just want to get something for free ~ MY PROPERTY IN FACT.

Stake your claims, find the gold and silver, do something, and BUY IT FROM THE GUB'MNT.

Some of it is still for sale.

As far as Eastern States not having been affected by a federal government landgrab, Virginia lost a good 90% of its claims to the federal government ~ that's not as good as the deal Alaska got!

Then there's poor Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia ~ with SEA TO SEA CLAIMS!

You are sitting on parts of their claims that were simply TAKEN FROM THEM without another thought and handed over to your state.

51 posted on 12/30/2011 9:50:43 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: Carry_Okie

muawiyah can’t help it. It also beleives in the Rossi “cold fusion” scam and defends it to the hilt.


52 posted on 12/30/2011 10:08:45 AM PST by CodeToad (Islam needs to be banned in the US and treated as a criminal enterprise.)
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To: Carry_Okie
I dunno. I visited Yellowstone and Grand Tetons this summer and they have done a pretty remarkable job of balancing the need for human amenity with the natural scenic beauty. Then again I saw a documentary on the original development of Yosemite when it was basically in private hands--pretty squalid outcome.

The simple fact about Natural Parklands is that most will be in the West, because that is where the open land is. Yellowstone is three times the size of Rhode Island--the scales in the East are just different.

We should be discriminating too in our alarm about "master plans." Yellowstone had a master plan approved in 1972, to remove all auto traffic, replace roads with "people movers," and the like. None of that ever happened.

53 posted on 12/30/2011 10:33:30 AM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: hinckley buzzard; Carry_Okie

>> “Yellowstone had a master plan approved in 1972, to remove all auto traffic, replace roads with “people movers,” and the like. None of that ever happened.” <<

.
It will.

For Yosemite, they plan to block out all cars, and there is no plan for parking at the entrance either.


54 posted on 12/30/2011 11:47:09 AM PST by editor-surveyor (No Federal Sales Tax - No Way!)
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To: cripplecreek

From what I understood of that era was that some lands were homestead claims that reverted to the State and that I can understand.


55 posted on 12/30/2011 8:30:25 PM PST by CodeToad (Islam needs to be banned in the US and treated as a criminal enterprise.)
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