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#11
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i am sorry but i have to ask... what is up with leaving the o out of god?
janet "D Kat" wrote in message ... This is in fact one of my hot button issues. As I said, I lived on a mountain side that fed the water supply to the thousands of people in the area. It was a hassle working around the issue of where we could put our septic system but entirely understandable and I was more than willing to do my part. If the bath water you are washing the baby in is dirty, you throw out the bath water NOT the baby. Any system of law is going to have injustices. You have to fix it, not give up on it. Anything once it turns into a bureaucracy develops serious flaws. The idea behind the laws is correct - if we don't take care of the earth, we in the end will be the ones to suffer most. It is the implementation that has a problem. Part of it is that people who end up being the ones that hold the power either they don't care, they don't have the leeway or they don't have the knowledge to make these things work. It is critical that we protect our wetlands from human development. The majority of sea life begins in estuaries. Our water is purified going through wetlands. It is one of the riches habitats on the earth. Don't blame the protection of what all of us need because of those making and implementing the laws. I don't believe in public religious discussions but since this administration is insisting on putting religion as something that belongs in public I will say this. What most amazes me is those who claim to be "people of G~d" who are happy to take a piece of art work of G~d and graffiti it and putting their own creations above the worth of those of G~d. As I said - a hotbutton topic for me so this is the last I will say on it. DKat "Offbreed" wrote in message ... D Kat wrote: If you have an intake pipe, are you not diverting water as well? I don't know how it is with this administration (have the rescinded all environmental protections yet?) but at one time you had to go through the EPA if you even thought about such things. DKat Water rights are state jurisdiction, water channel changes, such as making a pond under the described conditions is Army Corps of Engineers. Considering that your lawn can be declared "wetlands" and under Army Corps of Engineers jurisdiction as "Navigatable waterways" if rain or melting snow causes the soil to be saturated, I certainly hope some of the environmental protections get tossed out. BTW, farmers have lost control of their fields, some under cultivation for many years, because the soil was saturated during the spring. It's little stretch to apply the same to lawns. (I'm still gloating about the trapping laws mess in Washington State. The yuppies cannot trap gophers or moles messing up their lawns, because of a law *they* shoved down the throats of the farmers and trappers. The rural people are refusing to budge on allowing a partial repeal unless it all goes. They have the numbers to block it, when combined with the loony left.) Laws and regulations have no relationship to sanity, nor do they need to actually accomplish their proported purpose. As an example, a farmer was notified he could not work his fields any more, because an endangered kangaroo rat lived in those fields. He stopped working them, the brush grew up and changed the habitat, and the rats died out. They cannot survive in thick brush, and that farmer's field was the only habitat for them in the area. Another species a little closer to extinction due to foolishly written or enforced laws. Excuse me, but you punched one of my "hot buttons". I won't go into a zinc mine sterilizing a river in Tennessee, or British Petroleum getting a special deal on oil in the Elk Hills (an environmentally sensitive area in SoCal), as both involve a prior administration. |
#12
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Jewish way of doing things... It is disrespectful to say or write the
name... it demeans it ... hard to explain but part of why I find flag waving and casual references to G~d as offensive. Why in my way of viewing things I find the Amish, Seven day Adventist, and others far more religious and respectful of G~d then I do people like Jerry Falwell, Swagger, Baker, etc. When someone who doesn't know me in a way that would allow them to do so and they say G~d bless you or the like to me it is akin to some stranger coming up and sticking their tongue down my throat. This is my view of the world and not how I think others should be. DKat "janet" wrote in message ink.net... i am sorry but i have to ask... what is up with leaving the o out of god? janet "D Kat" wrote in message ... This is in fact one of my hot button issues. As I said, I lived on a mountain side that fed the water supply to the thousands of people in the area. It was a hassle working around the issue of where we could put our septic system but entirely understandable and I was more than willing to do my part. If the bath water you are washing the baby in is dirty, you throw out the bath water NOT the baby. Any system of law is going to have injustices. You have to fix it, not give up on it. Anything once it turns into a bureaucracy develops serious flaws. The idea behind the laws is correct - if we don't take care of the earth, we in the end will be the ones to suffer most. It is the implementation that has a problem. Part of it is that people who end up being the ones that hold the power either they don't care, they don't have the leeway or they don't have the knowledge to make these things work. It is critical that we protect our wetlands from human development. The majority of sea life begins in estuaries. Our water is purified going through wetlands. It is one of the riches habitats on the earth. Don't blame the protection of what all of us need because of those making and implementing the laws. I don't believe in public religious discussions but since this administration is insisting on putting religion as something that belongs in public I will say this. What most amazes me is those who claim to be "people of G~d" who are happy to take a piece of art work of G~d and graffiti it and putting their own creations above the worth of those of G~d. As I said - a hotbutton topic for me so this is the last I will say on it. DKat "Offbreed" wrote in message ... D Kat wrote: If you have an intake pipe, are you not diverting water as well? I don't know how it is with this administration (have the rescinded all environmental protections yet?) but at one time you had to go through the EPA if you even thought about such things. DKat Water rights are state jurisdiction, water channel changes, such as making a pond under the described conditions is Army Corps of Engineers. Considering that your lawn can be declared "wetlands" and under Army Corps of Engineers jurisdiction as "Navigatable waterways" if rain or melting snow causes the soil to be saturated, I certainly hope some of the environmental protections get tossed out. BTW, farmers have lost control of their fields, some under cultivation for many years, because the soil was saturated during the spring. It's little stretch to apply the same to lawns. (I'm still gloating about the trapping laws mess in Washington State. The yuppies cannot trap gophers or moles messing up their lawns, because of a law *they* shoved down the throats of the farmers and trappers. The rural people are refusing to budge on allowing a partial repeal unless it all goes. They have the numbers to block it, when combined with the loony left.) Laws and regulations have no relationship to sanity, nor do they need to actually accomplish their proported purpose. As an example, a farmer was notified he could not work his fields any more, because an endangered kangaroo rat lived in those fields. He stopped working them, the brush grew up and changed the habitat, and the rats died out. They cannot survive in thick brush, and that farmer's field was the only habitat for them in the area. Another species a little closer to extinction due to foolishly written or enforced laws. Excuse me, but you punched one of my "hot buttons". I won't go into a zinc mine sterilizing a river in Tennessee, or British Petroleum getting a special deal on oil in the Elk Hills (an environmentally sensitive area in SoCal), as both involve a prior administration. |
#13
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Well, this is a touch disjointed because I cut most of it, and have to
get a couple things done, off the net. I think we agree on most basics, but not on who we trust. You trust some, I don't trust anyone in politics. (They keep insisting on silly stuff, like I can't keep a knife at someone's throat, just because he's a politician.) D Kat wrote: Anything once it turns into a bureaucracy develops serious flaws. The idea behind the laws is correct - if we don't take care of the earth, we in the end will be the ones to suffer most. It is the implementation that has a problem. Part of it is that people who end up being the ones that hold the power either they don't care, they don't have the leeway or they don't have the knowledge to make these things work. I fully agree with every bit of the above. People also gain power by claiming to be "the environmental candidate", when they are more accurately called "the anti-environmental candidate". "The devil can quote scripture for his own purposes." Too many of the previous administration were (and are) simply riding the "environmental horse" as a means of gaining power and wealth. Trusting them is no wiser than trusting the present bunch, IMO. I made a study of confidence games back a long time ago when I realized I was falling for too many of them for my health. Most of the "environmental" groups are demonstratibly long con's. It is critical that we protect our wetlands from human development. The majority of sea life begins in estuaries. Our water is purified going through wetlands. It is one of the riches habitats on the earth. This gets into location. As an example, the entire state of Alaska can be considered "wetlands", according to the definitions *needed* in most of the US. Pretty much the whole darn state squishes underfoot, unless it's frozen. It's a bit too much of a good thing, as several diseases thrive under these conditions, and the wetlands here are actually a major source of pollution to the streams. (shrug) most people in the lower 48 don't realize this, and, well, they get told a lot of lies by people who want power and money, and we end up with laws that are a good laugh at best, destructive of the environment at worst. The *laws* might work in parts of the lower 48, or might not. A law or regulation gets passed that is micromanagement proper for one place, is applied to a huge number of other locations, and does harm in some of them, as in Alaska. The people who want the power and money tell the voters that the people who actually live in the country want to destroy the environment, but, who really wants to live in the midst of environmental devastation? I don't miss a koi pond, because there is a lovely, natural pool at the mouth of a ravine next to where I work. It'd take a major fortune to manufacture something like that. Serene, peacefully, a series of small waterfalls lead into it and out, surrounded by tall hemlock, eagles and raven overhead, and occasional mink or weasel bouncing past. The bowl faces the evening sun and is, well, great. Okay, it would stand a few more fish, something other than a handful of brook trout. As I said - a hotbutton topic for me so this is the last I will say on it. DKat Believe it or not, we are pretty much on the same side in what results we want. |
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