To: *calgov2002; snopercod; Grampa Dave; Carry_Okie; SierraWasp; Gophack; RonDog; ElkGroveDan; ...
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Imperial County's belligerence...Since when is a refusal to be the fall guy considered belligerent? The Orange County Register is letting its big government petticoat show from beneath its libertarian skirt.
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Some environmentalists are gleeful over the situation. They understand that water is an essential part of growth, and that less water might mean fewer new homes and less urban sprawl.
... As prices of water rise, people will be more apt to conserve water, such as by planting drought-tolerant vegetation. Unfortunately, environmentalists have resisted new water storage and desalination proposals. Environmentalists have also resisted genetically modified plants, plants that have been genetically modified to tolerate drought.
6 posted on
01/03/2003 2:24:20 PM PST by
Frohickey
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
"...could have left the district on the hook for maintaining adequate water in the Salton Sea for environmental purposes..."The Salton Sea is an accident, it's dead, it smells, and it must be artificially maintined or simply allowed to evaporate.
If there is an ecological arguement, it is that any effort to maintain the thing is upsetting natural processes.
But I guess it sounds good to be 'saving' something.
7 posted on
01/03/2003 2:51:10 PM PST by
norton
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
The farming folk in the Imperial Valley have legal title to their water.
Builders, realtors, bankers, and many other people have insisted upon growth despite their inability to provide adequate water to support it.
Now they insist on taking the farmers water because they can't find any more anywhere else.
The farmers think that's wrong. Therefore they're selfish and anti-social. That's why environmentalists are evil.
Does that make sense?
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach
Welfare chiseler millionaire farmers own the water
of the Colorado in perpetuity.
City dwellers should have to PAY PAY PAY the FULL
Market Value of the water to the chiseler-farmers.
When the Imperial Irrigation Districts gets its water
for $10 @acre-foot, it should sell the water to the cities at not less than $500 @ acre-foot, thus ensuring that
the owners of the Colorado, or their decendants, are
justly compensated.
g.
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