Posted on 02/11/2013 8:58:49 AM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
I think this one was covered on “How the states got their shapes”. Its less than 200 yards if I recall.
I just checked it out on Google maps. It’s like 100 feet from the Georgia border.
Looks like Georgia is basically arguing that inacruacies of setting where the 35th paralel is should be fixed - 200 years after the fact. Good luck with that.
Georgia has a HUGE source of water available to them. It’s called ‘the Atlantic Ocean’. If water is so important to them then desalinate it.
Yup.
Last time I checked, Georgia has access to the Atlantic Ocean. It’s called REVERS OSMOSIS filtration gumbas!
Alabama almost got it too.
They’ve also been trying to take all the water from the Chattahoochee for decades.
Fortunately for Alabama, the Tennessee River runs through the Northern portion of the state. As someone who lives near the river, I hope Tennessee fights tooth and nail to keep Georgia from siphoning this water to Atlanta.
Only a boundary agreement can change an existing boundary. There are special rules for meanders. Need more info.
I’m a greedy Michigan waterbaron so I’d dig that cove to within 6 inches of Georgia just to taunt them.
IIRC, Texas is going through this water rights stuff all the time. Meanders are nasty.
All your water are belong to us!
Great! Just what we need; Atlanta to continue to grow into an even bigger libtard relocation center than it ever was. The city of Atlanta now sucks the life out of the rest of the 5 county Metro area. Its a sea of blue in a red state.
The story cites the need for water in Atlanta...would water from here really make its way to Atlanta? Without being pumped over several mountains?
This whole thing reminds me of what I learned back in 1980 in commercial real estate: The more money that is at stake, the more likely people are going to try to find some weak and hetherto unknown interpretation of law to get their hooks into it. In this case, money=water.
Imagine selling a part of your property to someone and, after agreeing to the exact location of the property line and two days after the sale is complete, your new neighbor digs up a chest with 50 lbs of gold in it two feet on his side of the property line?
Many people would desperately attempt to make a case that either the sale was not final or the property line was not quite right. Frankly, many do that sort of thing and end up with courts giving them a pound or six of the gold. Happens all the time.
The book, The Testament, is an excellent example of just that.
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