--(I'll play your game you rogue)
12/8/2010 8:16:02 AM
freedom to have a car without seatbelts
12/8/2010 8:36:30 AM
National parks and forests?
12/8/2010 9:00:59 AM
No, the wouldn't ban them . . . they just wouldn't fund them.
12/8/2010 9:04:00 AM
but they would probably cease to exist though, right? I'm guessing they would be auctioned off to the highest bidders since a small government shouldn't own public land. Would the same be true for memorials in DC?
12/8/2010 9:12:03 AM
the original parks and most park land is donated to the state by wealthy groups and individuals. I doubt they'd disapear even if they got defunded (which i doubt anyone would bother trying seeing as how the park service is such a tiny piece of the budget.)
12/8/2010 9:44:50 AM
12/8/2010 10:57:59 AM
^Well I think its safe to assume that the land would go to the highest bidder, since that would be the only fair way to divy up the land to private owners. I think its also safe to assume that if wealth could be extracted from the land in the form of mineral, water, development or timber then some other institution with deeper pockets would easily jump in front of land conservancies. I think that leaves very few parks that could be saved.^^some park land was donated, but I'm pretty sure not any where close to a majority of public federal lands were donated, in some cases imminent domain was even used to acquire certain parts of parks.[Edited on December 8, 2010 at 11:10 AM. Reason : .]
12/8/2010 10:59:57 AM
The majority of public lands were never in private hands. The government has had title to it since the nations founding. But, this was most often not for a lack of trying: no private entity was willing to own it for any purpose because the land in question, while beautiful, was no where near lines of trade with civilization, rendering it useless. Most of this land would still today be valueless if not for the roads the government paid to build. Even then, the land is only useful at a tourist attraction. So, if we replayed history without government ownership of this land, it would either still be inaccessible, and therefore undeveloped for any purpose even tourism, or held by the Sierra Club which built roads so people could come see the beauty and pay park admission fees. Remember, the nation existed for well over a hundred years before anyone ever heard of a national park. [Edited on December 8, 2010 at 11:11 AM. Reason : .,.]
12/8/2010 11:08:27 AM
12/8/2010 11:14:00 AM
12/8/2010 11:16:51 AM
^stop lying. No one ever made a dime in timber.
12/8/2010 11:18:13 AM
Keep in mind, the nation existed for well over a hundred years before anyone ever heard of a national park. And yet, the land did not fall to agriculture, timber, or mining, all for the exact reason I said: without transportation, land is useless. Useless land is cheap land. Cheap land that is beautiful, it seems to me, should find itself in the hands of environmental groups eager to protect it. As such, when transportation arrives well into the 20th century, we as a people are already ready, willing, and able to pay $1 an acre to do nothing with it. That we ultimately let people in that pay admission, money that is used to later buy even more land to charge admission, is just a bonus.Lumex, you have that backwards. Transportation is expensive. It does not come just because someone owns the land. People did not want to pay the taxes, so no one owned land without transportation. [Edited on December 8, 2010 at 11:24 AM. Reason : .,.]
12/8/2010 11:22:27 AM
That's because the land was owned by the People of the United States and held in the collective interest by the government and not by private entities. It took acts of Congress to open up tracts of land for settlement. The lack of access to transportation didn't stop Oklahoma settlers from lining up at the border in 1889 waiting for that precise moment allowed by law in which they could flood into Oklahoma and stake land claims. The lack of access to transportation didn't stop Oregon settlers from heading west, didn't stop homesteaders in Kansas. The only thing that slowed the expansion of the United States citizenry into unspoiled land was governmental refusal to do a carte blanche enclosure. It was also through enclosure that the United States managed to pay off debts and fund other projects. The land was never sitting there ownerless rife for the taking. Do libertarians understand the concept of the commons?[Edited on December 8, 2010 at 11:36 AM. Reason : .]
12/8/2010 11:29:06 AM
^^ for those hundred years before national parks the population of america was also less than 100 million people. America grew bigger in number and she grew out to distant lands.
12/8/2010 11:32:32 AM
^^ Not true. For almost a century all the land owned by the Federal Government could be had at a statutory minimum price. For some periods of time and some regions, land owned by the Federal Government could be had at a price of zero, all you had to do was use the land for any purpose. And, yet, after a century of trying to get rid of it, the Federal Government still owned 1/4th of the country. But I fear we are getting distracted by tangents. the fact is, even with the government securing a huge share of the natural world, the Sierra Club and World Wildlife Fund still exist with the historically stated goal of buying land to NOT develop it. That these organization exist and raise money in a world where the government does most of the conservation is proof they would both exist and do even more in a world where the government does not divert societies conservation efforts into lobbying.
12/8/2010 11:37:24 AM
12/8/2010 11:44:23 AM
====================================================================The latest federal park, the Flight 93 Memorial, is 2,200 acres, cost $58 million, and required the use of eminent domain to seize property from landowners that didn't want to sell. ====================================================================
12/8/2010 11:48:50 AM
^^ By activity, not by statute. It was still the law of the land for any land to be put to public auction with request. This is how the great northern railroad managed to buy all the land around its proposed route and innumerable lumber companies to buy up the whole of the northeast.^ Understand, I am not arguing that every acre within a public park today would still be lock up for preservation. Of course not. Why does it take 2000 acres to build a memorial? I am arguing that "but they would probably cease to exist though, right?" was wrong. We have conservation organization as it is, and certainly they (namely us) would put our conservation efforts where they would do the most good, securing whatever it is we find most worthy of conservation. [Edited on December 8, 2010 at 11:56 AM. Reason : .,.]
12/8/2010 11:50:12 AM
12/8/2010 11:52:15 AM
12/8/2010 11:52:25 AM
LoneSnark, this is what happens when you don't qualify your statements. You essentially made the following ridiculous implications:-Nobody has ever wanted land that didn't have a road to it-Parks exist because no one wanted to develop the land, ever-The Sierra Club competes financially with private companies to buy land
12/8/2010 11:55:47 AM
12/8/2010 12:48:55 PM
12/8/2010 12:59:59 PM
12/8/2010 4:29:23 PM
-EPA-CDC-food safety regulations-puppies-US Department of Education-publicly support health insurance for poor kids-anti-segregation laws-pragmatism
12/8/2010 4:43:26 PM
12/8/2010 4:58:39 PM
But very few of those private entities are going to allow recreation on their landand the point still stands that a conservation group is unlikely to be able to raise enough funds to form a park that is as meaningful in size as those preserved by the government
12/8/2010 5:15:13 PM
12/8/2010 11:02:24 PM
For all of those thinking that conservation groups can stop private entities just with funds and without government assistance, there have been many instances when money (or power) would have or did win. - Hetch Hetchy Dam in Yosemite after the park was established- Logging in in the Smokies as conservationists were gathering funds to pay for the land- Damming the Grand Canyon- Logging the Redwoods- Mining in Canyonlands- Urban development in the EvergladesIf you look at the history of many parks, many were only saved because conservation groups could purchase the land AND got the government involved before private ventures purchased them instead. You also have to consider to properly protect an ecosystem or habitat, you have to consider affects outside of just that tract of land; something that cannot be controlled without owning the land or government assistance.
12/8/2010 11:28:03 PM
12/9/2010 8:43:18 AM
12/9/2010 9:37:47 AM
12/9/2010 11:35:01 AM
12/10/2010 8:10:36 AM
Government is a slow lumbering machine something like completely eroding protections for public lands would take time and people would stop it. getting 51% is tough enough already
12/10/2010 6:54:53 PM
No doubt lots of wilderness would remain.Redwoods would almost certainly be extinct pretty quickly though.Also, while private conservation groups might be able to buy land, could they afford to protect it without government assistance? From those who would want to poach the land or do illegal logging?
12/10/2010 11:02:55 PM
It's easy to brag about your party not banning things when your candidates never get elected into a position where they are able to.
12/10/2010 11:35:40 PM
12/11/2010 1:37:37 AM
12/11/2010 9:47:54 PM