To: Libloather
These critters apparently managed to return from the verge of extinction without government intervention. Are they allowed to do this?
3 posted on
05/06/2018 2:15:28 PM PDT by
centurion316
(Back from exile from 4/2016 until 4/2018.)
To: centurion316
These critters apparently managed to return from the verge of extinction without government intervention. Are they allowed to do this? Are you kidding? What do you call the government halting private industry, the use of private land by its owners and the confiscation of private land to protect a basically useless creature?
I want the Gaia worshipers to show exact how different the eco system was with and without this rat and how it was worth all the money and disruption of private property owners.
16 posted on
05/06/2018 2:36:20 PM PDT by
Mastador1
(I'll take a bad dog over a good politician any day!)
To: centurion316
Hate to tell you this, but back in the 70's my father showed me a dead kangaroo rat in Carson, CA (NOWHERE NEAR THEIR HABITAT ZONE) that apparently died inside a garage. I saw it with my own eyes and it looked identical to that shown in the article.
These critters are probably scattered throughout southern areas of California, BEYOND THAT WHICH RESEARCHERS DISCUSS HERE.
21 posted on
05/06/2018 2:47:10 PM PDT by
CivilWarBrewing
(Get off my back for my usage of CAPS, especially you snowflake males! MAN UP!)
To: centurion316
Only if a federal judge in Hawaii okays it.
29 posted on
05/06/2018 3:16:22 PM PDT by
glasseye
("24 hours in a day, 24 beers in a case. Coincidence? I think not." ~ H. L. Mencken)
To: centurion316
.
>> “Are they allowed to do this?” <<
No!
And if you do anything to help them without a guvvermint lie-sends its a serious felony.
.
42 posted on
05/06/2018 3:56:25 PM PDT by
editor-surveyor
(Freepers: Not as smart as I'd hoped they'd be)
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