Trail(er) trash
#501
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Trail(er) trash and Nature *****
Does boredom count?
Earle Horton proclaimed:
> To my knowledge, Mr. Gore hasn't killed anyone yet.
>
> http://netctr.com/iraqdead.html
> http://www.ivaw.net/
> http://cryptome.net/dead/dead-gallery.htm
> http://www.vaiw.org/vet/index.php
>
> Earle
>
> "billy ray" <billy_ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
> news:ded8$4482f3d5$48311525$10923@FUSE.NET...
>
>>There are certainly enough reasons for Al Gore to be considered a 'nut
>
> case'
>
>>although perhaps you are correct that is not the best choice of terms.
>>
>>
>>"XS11E" <xs11eNO@SPAMyahoo.com> wrote in message
>>news:Xns97D84C2B3481Dxs11eyahoocom@70.169.32.36. ..
>>
>>>Jeff DeWitt <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in
>>>news:d3Cgg.37621$Lg.25287@tornado.southeast.rr. com:
>>>
>>>
>>>>I'm sorry, but I'm not going to be bothered by someone being a bit
>>>>unfair to a nut case like Al Gore.
>>>
>>>When you add things someone didn't do or say with things they did, you
>>>weaken your case and give their supporters a reason to disregard your
>>>entire argument.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
Earle Horton proclaimed:
> To my knowledge, Mr. Gore hasn't killed anyone yet.
>
> http://netctr.com/iraqdead.html
> http://www.ivaw.net/
> http://cryptome.net/dead/dead-gallery.htm
> http://www.vaiw.org/vet/index.php
>
> Earle
>
> "billy ray" <billy_ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
> news:ded8$4482f3d5$48311525$10923@FUSE.NET...
>
>>There are certainly enough reasons for Al Gore to be considered a 'nut
>
> case'
>
>>although perhaps you are correct that is not the best choice of terms.
>>
>>
>>"XS11E" <xs11eNO@SPAMyahoo.com> wrote in message
>>news:Xns97D84C2B3481Dxs11eyahoocom@70.169.32.36. ..
>>
>>>Jeff DeWitt <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in
>>>news:d3Cgg.37621$Lg.25287@tornado.southeast.rr. com:
>>>
>>>
>>>>I'm sorry, but I'm not going to be bothered by someone being a bit
>>>>unfair to a nut case like Al Gore.
>>>
>>>When you add things someone didn't do or say with things they did, you
>>>weaken your case and give their supporters a reason to disregard your
>>>entire argument.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
#502
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Trail(er) trash and Nature *****
Does boredom count?
Earle Horton proclaimed:
> To my knowledge, Mr. Gore hasn't killed anyone yet.
>
> http://netctr.com/iraqdead.html
> http://www.ivaw.net/
> http://cryptome.net/dead/dead-gallery.htm
> http://www.vaiw.org/vet/index.php
>
> Earle
>
> "billy ray" <billy_ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
> news:ded8$4482f3d5$48311525$10923@FUSE.NET...
>
>>There are certainly enough reasons for Al Gore to be considered a 'nut
>
> case'
>
>>although perhaps you are correct that is not the best choice of terms.
>>
>>
>>"XS11E" <xs11eNO@SPAMyahoo.com> wrote in message
>>news:Xns97D84C2B3481Dxs11eyahoocom@70.169.32.36. ..
>>
>>>Jeff DeWitt <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in
>>>news:d3Cgg.37621$Lg.25287@tornado.southeast.rr. com:
>>>
>>>
>>>>I'm sorry, but I'm not going to be bothered by someone being a bit
>>>>unfair to a nut case like Al Gore.
>>>
>>>When you add things someone didn't do or say with things they did, you
>>>weaken your case and give their supporters a reason to disregard your
>>>entire argument.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
Earle Horton proclaimed:
> To my knowledge, Mr. Gore hasn't killed anyone yet.
>
> http://netctr.com/iraqdead.html
> http://www.ivaw.net/
> http://cryptome.net/dead/dead-gallery.htm
> http://www.vaiw.org/vet/index.php
>
> Earle
>
> "billy ray" <billy_ray@SPAMfuse.net> wrote in message
> news:ded8$4482f3d5$48311525$10923@FUSE.NET...
>
>>There are certainly enough reasons for Al Gore to be considered a 'nut
>
> case'
>
>>although perhaps you are correct that is not the best choice of terms.
>>
>>
>>"XS11E" <xs11eNO@SPAMyahoo.com> wrote in message
>>news:Xns97D84C2B3481Dxs11eyahoocom@70.169.32.36. ..
>>
>>>Jeff DeWitt <JeffDeWitt@nc.rr.com> wrote in
>>>news:d3Cgg.37621$Lg.25287@tornado.southeast.rr. com:
>>>
>>>
>>>>I'm sorry, but I'm not going to be bothered by someone being a bit
>>>>unfair to a nut case like Al Gore.
>>>
>>>When you add things someone didn't do or say with things they did, you
>>>weaken your case and give their supporters a reason to disregard your
>>>entire argument.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
#503
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Trail(er) trash and Nature *****
Corey Shuman wrote:
> Hehehe, yeah, um okay, maybe you didnt check out my site on the first
> link but I do exploration and preservation as a full time job.
Old mines can be fun to visit but there are already plenty of them and
we don't need more trails and drivers. Mining has always been at odds
with wilderness and I'm glad it's tightly regulated now.
> And I do
> 90% of it by vehicle, maybe you can pack all of your gear into a
> backpack but when you are actually exploring there are a great many
> things that you need and its way too much to put in a backpack. Do I
> think it takes great skill to drive on a dirt trail?? More than you
> obviously have any idea, there is a high degree of skill involved in
> off road driving, granted many are just going by the seat of their
> pants and that lends to a lot of people in ditches and dead down in
> ravines.
Obviously there are situations where you have to drive stuff in. I've
done it and it doesn't take rocket science, just experience and
sometimes a lack of caution! But that's not the real point. You ignore
the population factor and treat a growing imbalance as a stable
situation. Everything's about catering to people instead of questioning
their birthrates and impact.
> The point here isnt your wilderness or nature, its that everyone in
> this country has the freedom to do as they please, some abuse and some
> dont.
Yet again, you ignore the numbers problem. There are 3 million more
people each year in America wanting more land all the time, and the
land supply is finite. Environmental problems are people problems. This
is not a static "rights" issue, it's a case of demand for land
outstripping supply. Laws are the main reason you enjoy relative
solitude in places that might be mined or logged otherwise. Your Jeeps
would be forced out by gates and semi trucks.
> But your concept of nature doesnt do anything for me. Sure its
> nice and peaceful, but to me, it doesnt hold a candle to coming into an
> old indian site, or a nearly untouched mining camp or mine.
Like all other defenders of perpetual intrusion, your angle is that
people are all that matters. I say enjoy the old camps but don't keep
trying to make new ones! No matter how much space there seems to be, it
all has boundary lines.
> I understand that you are on the Cali side of things and you
> really dont have much wild area to explore and document, but thats your
> own fault. Laws have gotten worse and worse, to where there is not a
> lot of freedom as to what we can do, maybe you would be happier in a
> militaristic society where there is a rule for everything and no one
> deviates, God knows we are heading that way, but for now, there are
> still some freedoms.
Wilderness shrinks because of population growth and California is the
most populous state in the nation. Those laws are the only reason
wilderness isn't completely worked over (at accessible elevations). You
seem to think people "create" wilderness by carving roads and driving
into it. I don't know where you got that ethic but it's not based on
biology. The land was here long before us and doesn't need our
validation.
> But like I said in the last post, your really not doing anything about
> what you concieve to be the problem, whining on the internet is about
> as effective as a taking a subaru into the woods.
Whatever I'm "not doing" is certainly more than you'll ever do to help
the land. Driving into wilderness and demanding more roads is the
opposite of conservation.
> Enjoy the day,
> Corey Shuman
> www.goldrushexpeditions.com
Some old mines are interesting but I like trees, streams and clean
vistas much better. Mining has done major damage and not just at the
mine sites. Hydraulic gold mining silted up rivers in California. Those
methods were finally banned but old mercury lingers in the water today.
The environmental movement started when people got sick of miners and
loggers who didn't care. There's nothing nostalgic about a modern
mining operation on a large scale. The depravity of endless expansion
is what I'm trying to convey here.
R. Lander
> Hehehe, yeah, um okay, maybe you didnt check out my site on the first
> link but I do exploration and preservation as a full time job.
Old mines can be fun to visit but there are already plenty of them and
we don't need more trails and drivers. Mining has always been at odds
with wilderness and I'm glad it's tightly regulated now.
> And I do
> 90% of it by vehicle, maybe you can pack all of your gear into a
> backpack but when you are actually exploring there are a great many
> things that you need and its way too much to put in a backpack. Do I
> think it takes great skill to drive on a dirt trail?? More than you
> obviously have any idea, there is a high degree of skill involved in
> off road driving, granted many are just going by the seat of their
> pants and that lends to a lot of people in ditches and dead down in
> ravines.
Obviously there are situations where you have to drive stuff in. I've
done it and it doesn't take rocket science, just experience and
sometimes a lack of caution! But that's not the real point. You ignore
the population factor and treat a growing imbalance as a stable
situation. Everything's about catering to people instead of questioning
their birthrates and impact.
> The point here isnt your wilderness or nature, its that everyone in
> this country has the freedom to do as they please, some abuse and some
> dont.
Yet again, you ignore the numbers problem. There are 3 million more
people each year in America wanting more land all the time, and the
land supply is finite. Environmental problems are people problems. This
is not a static "rights" issue, it's a case of demand for land
outstripping supply. Laws are the main reason you enjoy relative
solitude in places that might be mined or logged otherwise. Your Jeeps
would be forced out by gates and semi trucks.
> But your concept of nature doesnt do anything for me. Sure its
> nice and peaceful, but to me, it doesnt hold a candle to coming into an
> old indian site, or a nearly untouched mining camp or mine.
Like all other defenders of perpetual intrusion, your angle is that
people are all that matters. I say enjoy the old camps but don't keep
trying to make new ones! No matter how much space there seems to be, it
all has boundary lines.
> I understand that you are on the Cali side of things and you
> really dont have much wild area to explore and document, but thats your
> own fault. Laws have gotten worse and worse, to where there is not a
> lot of freedom as to what we can do, maybe you would be happier in a
> militaristic society where there is a rule for everything and no one
> deviates, God knows we are heading that way, but for now, there are
> still some freedoms.
Wilderness shrinks because of population growth and California is the
most populous state in the nation. Those laws are the only reason
wilderness isn't completely worked over (at accessible elevations). You
seem to think people "create" wilderness by carving roads and driving
into it. I don't know where you got that ethic but it's not based on
biology. The land was here long before us and doesn't need our
validation.
> But like I said in the last post, your really not doing anything about
> what you concieve to be the problem, whining on the internet is about
> as effective as a taking a subaru into the woods.
Whatever I'm "not doing" is certainly more than you'll ever do to help
the land. Driving into wilderness and demanding more roads is the
opposite of conservation.
> Enjoy the day,
> Corey Shuman
> www.goldrushexpeditions.com
Some old mines are interesting but I like trees, streams and clean
vistas much better. Mining has done major damage and not just at the
mine sites. Hydraulic gold mining silted up rivers in California. Those
methods were finally banned but old mercury lingers in the water today.
The environmental movement started when people got sick of miners and
loggers who didn't care. There's nothing nostalgic about a modern
mining operation on a large scale. The depravity of endless expansion
is what I'm trying to convey here.
R. Lander
#504
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Trail(er) trash and Nature *****
Corey Shuman wrote:
> Hehehe, yeah, um okay, maybe you didnt check out my site on the first
> link but I do exploration and preservation as a full time job.
Old mines can be fun to visit but there are already plenty of them and
we don't need more trails and drivers. Mining has always been at odds
with wilderness and I'm glad it's tightly regulated now.
> And I do
> 90% of it by vehicle, maybe you can pack all of your gear into a
> backpack but when you are actually exploring there are a great many
> things that you need and its way too much to put in a backpack. Do I
> think it takes great skill to drive on a dirt trail?? More than you
> obviously have any idea, there is a high degree of skill involved in
> off road driving, granted many are just going by the seat of their
> pants and that lends to a lot of people in ditches and dead down in
> ravines.
Obviously there are situations where you have to drive stuff in. I've
done it and it doesn't take rocket science, just experience and
sometimes a lack of caution! But that's not the real point. You ignore
the population factor and treat a growing imbalance as a stable
situation. Everything's about catering to people instead of questioning
their birthrates and impact.
> The point here isnt your wilderness or nature, its that everyone in
> this country has the freedom to do as they please, some abuse and some
> dont.
Yet again, you ignore the numbers problem. There are 3 million more
people each year in America wanting more land all the time, and the
land supply is finite. Environmental problems are people problems. This
is not a static "rights" issue, it's a case of demand for land
outstripping supply. Laws are the main reason you enjoy relative
solitude in places that might be mined or logged otherwise. Your Jeeps
would be forced out by gates and semi trucks.
> But your concept of nature doesnt do anything for me. Sure its
> nice and peaceful, but to me, it doesnt hold a candle to coming into an
> old indian site, or a nearly untouched mining camp or mine.
Like all other defenders of perpetual intrusion, your angle is that
people are all that matters. I say enjoy the old camps but don't keep
trying to make new ones! No matter how much space there seems to be, it
all has boundary lines.
> I understand that you are on the Cali side of things and you
> really dont have much wild area to explore and document, but thats your
> own fault. Laws have gotten worse and worse, to where there is not a
> lot of freedom as to what we can do, maybe you would be happier in a
> militaristic society where there is a rule for everything and no one
> deviates, God knows we are heading that way, but for now, there are
> still some freedoms.
Wilderness shrinks because of population growth and California is the
most populous state in the nation. Those laws are the only reason
wilderness isn't completely worked over (at accessible elevations). You
seem to think people "create" wilderness by carving roads and driving
into it. I don't know where you got that ethic but it's not based on
biology. The land was here long before us and doesn't need our
validation.
> But like I said in the last post, your really not doing anything about
> what you concieve to be the problem, whining on the internet is about
> as effective as a taking a subaru into the woods.
Whatever I'm "not doing" is certainly more than you'll ever do to help
the land. Driving into wilderness and demanding more roads is the
opposite of conservation.
> Enjoy the day,
> Corey Shuman
> www.goldrushexpeditions.com
Some old mines are interesting but I like trees, streams and clean
vistas much better. Mining has done major damage and not just at the
mine sites. Hydraulic gold mining silted up rivers in California. Those
methods were finally banned but old mercury lingers in the water today.
The environmental movement started when people got sick of miners and
loggers who didn't care. There's nothing nostalgic about a modern
mining operation on a large scale. The depravity of endless expansion
is what I'm trying to convey here.
R. Lander
> Hehehe, yeah, um okay, maybe you didnt check out my site on the first
> link but I do exploration and preservation as a full time job.
Old mines can be fun to visit but there are already plenty of them and
we don't need more trails and drivers. Mining has always been at odds
with wilderness and I'm glad it's tightly regulated now.
> And I do
> 90% of it by vehicle, maybe you can pack all of your gear into a
> backpack but when you are actually exploring there are a great many
> things that you need and its way too much to put in a backpack. Do I
> think it takes great skill to drive on a dirt trail?? More than you
> obviously have any idea, there is a high degree of skill involved in
> off road driving, granted many are just going by the seat of their
> pants and that lends to a lot of people in ditches and dead down in
> ravines.
Obviously there are situations where you have to drive stuff in. I've
done it and it doesn't take rocket science, just experience and
sometimes a lack of caution! But that's not the real point. You ignore
the population factor and treat a growing imbalance as a stable
situation. Everything's about catering to people instead of questioning
their birthrates and impact.
> The point here isnt your wilderness or nature, its that everyone in
> this country has the freedom to do as they please, some abuse and some
> dont.
Yet again, you ignore the numbers problem. There are 3 million more
people each year in America wanting more land all the time, and the
land supply is finite. Environmental problems are people problems. This
is not a static "rights" issue, it's a case of demand for land
outstripping supply. Laws are the main reason you enjoy relative
solitude in places that might be mined or logged otherwise. Your Jeeps
would be forced out by gates and semi trucks.
> But your concept of nature doesnt do anything for me. Sure its
> nice and peaceful, but to me, it doesnt hold a candle to coming into an
> old indian site, or a nearly untouched mining camp or mine.
Like all other defenders of perpetual intrusion, your angle is that
people are all that matters. I say enjoy the old camps but don't keep
trying to make new ones! No matter how much space there seems to be, it
all has boundary lines.
> I understand that you are on the Cali side of things and you
> really dont have much wild area to explore and document, but thats your
> own fault. Laws have gotten worse and worse, to where there is not a
> lot of freedom as to what we can do, maybe you would be happier in a
> militaristic society where there is a rule for everything and no one
> deviates, God knows we are heading that way, but for now, there are
> still some freedoms.
Wilderness shrinks because of population growth and California is the
most populous state in the nation. Those laws are the only reason
wilderness isn't completely worked over (at accessible elevations). You
seem to think people "create" wilderness by carving roads and driving
into it. I don't know where you got that ethic but it's not based on
biology. The land was here long before us and doesn't need our
validation.
> But like I said in the last post, your really not doing anything about
> what you concieve to be the problem, whining on the internet is about
> as effective as a taking a subaru into the woods.
Whatever I'm "not doing" is certainly more than you'll ever do to help
the land. Driving into wilderness and demanding more roads is the
opposite of conservation.
> Enjoy the day,
> Corey Shuman
> www.goldrushexpeditions.com
Some old mines are interesting but I like trees, streams and clean
vistas much better. Mining has done major damage and not just at the
mine sites. Hydraulic gold mining silted up rivers in California. Those
methods were finally banned but old mercury lingers in the water today.
The environmental movement started when people got sick of miners and
loggers who didn't care. There's nothing nostalgic about a modern
mining operation on a large scale. The depravity of endless expansion
is what I'm trying to convey here.
R. Lander
#505
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Trail(er) trash and Nature *****
Corey Shuman wrote:
> Hehehe, yeah, um okay, maybe you didnt check out my site on the first
> link but I do exploration and preservation as a full time job.
Old mines can be fun to visit but there are already plenty of them and
we don't need more trails and drivers. Mining has always been at odds
with wilderness and I'm glad it's tightly regulated now.
> And I do
> 90% of it by vehicle, maybe you can pack all of your gear into a
> backpack but when you are actually exploring there are a great many
> things that you need and its way too much to put in a backpack. Do I
> think it takes great skill to drive on a dirt trail?? More than you
> obviously have any idea, there is a high degree of skill involved in
> off road driving, granted many are just going by the seat of their
> pants and that lends to a lot of people in ditches and dead down in
> ravines.
Obviously there are situations where you have to drive stuff in. I've
done it and it doesn't take rocket science, just experience and
sometimes a lack of caution! But that's not the real point. You ignore
the population factor and treat a growing imbalance as a stable
situation. Everything's about catering to people instead of questioning
their birthrates and impact.
> The point here isnt your wilderness or nature, its that everyone in
> this country has the freedom to do as they please, some abuse and some
> dont.
Yet again, you ignore the numbers problem. There are 3 million more
people each year in America wanting more land all the time, and the
land supply is finite. Environmental problems are people problems. This
is not a static "rights" issue, it's a case of demand for land
outstripping supply. Laws are the main reason you enjoy relative
solitude in places that might be mined or logged otherwise. Your Jeeps
would be forced out by gates and semi trucks.
> But your concept of nature doesnt do anything for me. Sure its
> nice and peaceful, but to me, it doesnt hold a candle to coming into an
> old indian site, or a nearly untouched mining camp or mine.
Like all other defenders of perpetual intrusion, your angle is that
people are all that matters. I say enjoy the old camps but don't keep
trying to make new ones! No matter how much space there seems to be, it
all has boundary lines.
> I understand that you are on the Cali side of things and you
> really dont have much wild area to explore and document, but thats your
> own fault. Laws have gotten worse and worse, to where there is not a
> lot of freedom as to what we can do, maybe you would be happier in a
> militaristic society where there is a rule for everything and no one
> deviates, God knows we are heading that way, but for now, there are
> still some freedoms.
Wilderness shrinks because of population growth and California is the
most populous state in the nation. Those laws are the only reason
wilderness isn't completely worked over (at accessible elevations). You
seem to think people "create" wilderness by carving roads and driving
into it. I don't know where you got that ethic but it's not based on
biology. The land was here long before us and doesn't need our
validation.
> But like I said in the last post, your really not doing anything about
> what you concieve to be the problem, whining on the internet is about
> as effective as a taking a subaru into the woods.
Whatever I'm "not doing" is certainly more than you'll ever do to help
the land. Driving into wilderness and demanding more roads is the
opposite of conservation.
> Enjoy the day,
> Corey Shuman
> www.goldrushexpeditions.com
Some old mines are interesting but I like trees, streams and clean
vistas much better. Mining has done major damage and not just at the
mine sites. Hydraulic gold mining silted up rivers in California. Those
methods were finally banned but old mercury lingers in the water today.
The environmental movement started when people got sick of miners and
loggers who didn't care. There's nothing nostalgic about a modern
mining operation on a large scale. The depravity of endless expansion
is what I'm trying to convey here.
R. Lander
> Hehehe, yeah, um okay, maybe you didnt check out my site on the first
> link but I do exploration and preservation as a full time job.
Old mines can be fun to visit but there are already plenty of them and
we don't need more trails and drivers. Mining has always been at odds
with wilderness and I'm glad it's tightly regulated now.
> And I do
> 90% of it by vehicle, maybe you can pack all of your gear into a
> backpack but when you are actually exploring there are a great many
> things that you need and its way too much to put in a backpack. Do I
> think it takes great skill to drive on a dirt trail?? More than you
> obviously have any idea, there is a high degree of skill involved in
> off road driving, granted many are just going by the seat of their
> pants and that lends to a lot of people in ditches and dead down in
> ravines.
Obviously there are situations where you have to drive stuff in. I've
done it and it doesn't take rocket science, just experience and
sometimes a lack of caution! But that's not the real point. You ignore
the population factor and treat a growing imbalance as a stable
situation. Everything's about catering to people instead of questioning
their birthrates and impact.
> The point here isnt your wilderness or nature, its that everyone in
> this country has the freedom to do as they please, some abuse and some
> dont.
Yet again, you ignore the numbers problem. There are 3 million more
people each year in America wanting more land all the time, and the
land supply is finite. Environmental problems are people problems. This
is not a static "rights" issue, it's a case of demand for land
outstripping supply. Laws are the main reason you enjoy relative
solitude in places that might be mined or logged otherwise. Your Jeeps
would be forced out by gates and semi trucks.
> But your concept of nature doesnt do anything for me. Sure its
> nice and peaceful, but to me, it doesnt hold a candle to coming into an
> old indian site, or a nearly untouched mining camp or mine.
Like all other defenders of perpetual intrusion, your angle is that
people are all that matters. I say enjoy the old camps but don't keep
trying to make new ones! No matter how much space there seems to be, it
all has boundary lines.
> I understand that you are on the Cali side of things and you
> really dont have much wild area to explore and document, but thats your
> own fault. Laws have gotten worse and worse, to where there is not a
> lot of freedom as to what we can do, maybe you would be happier in a
> militaristic society where there is a rule for everything and no one
> deviates, God knows we are heading that way, but for now, there are
> still some freedoms.
Wilderness shrinks because of population growth and California is the
most populous state in the nation. Those laws are the only reason
wilderness isn't completely worked over (at accessible elevations). You
seem to think people "create" wilderness by carving roads and driving
into it. I don't know where you got that ethic but it's not based on
biology. The land was here long before us and doesn't need our
validation.
> But like I said in the last post, your really not doing anything about
> what you concieve to be the problem, whining on the internet is about
> as effective as a taking a subaru into the woods.
Whatever I'm "not doing" is certainly more than you'll ever do to help
the land. Driving into wilderness and demanding more roads is the
opposite of conservation.
> Enjoy the day,
> Corey Shuman
> www.goldrushexpeditions.com
Some old mines are interesting but I like trees, streams and clean
vistas much better. Mining has done major damage and not just at the
mine sites. Hydraulic gold mining silted up rivers in California. Those
methods were finally banned but old mercury lingers in the water today.
The environmental movement started when people got sick of miners and
loggers who didn't care. There's nothing nostalgic about a modern
mining operation on a large scale. The depravity of endless expansion
is what I'm trying to convey here.
R. Lander
#506
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Human footprint maps
Tom "Greening" wrote:
> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless without the
> legend of what the colors actually mean.
(http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the claim
that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green areas are
the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green areas are
veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is always
under more pressure.
At http://nationalatlas.gov/ you can map layers of different land
types. It's interactive so I can't post a static link. Go to Map-Maker,
choose "Boundaries" and "Wilderness..." to see how sparse it is. Check
out the "Agriculture" zones, too. All of it disproves your mythology of
endless bounty.
> Looking at you pretty coloring book would have us believe that almost
> the entire eastern US is literally covered in people. Your world map is
> no different. What do the color graduations signify?
Of course it's not literally covered with people but the land is highly
appropriated. Most of the East was cleared of major forests to
introduce agriculture. Online satellite galleries offer definitive
proof if you don't trust maps. Then again, it's impossible to convince
an anthropocentric that any of it matters. All evidence will be met
with "who cares - it's all about people and money."
> Let's take India for example, you CAN pick it out without resorting to a
> world atlas can't you?
I'm the uneducated one around here? An error like "75 million" (below)
shows that population/land-use is not something you think about much.
> Based on colors alone one might believe that
> India is absolutely covered in humanity, and population numbers might
> lead you to think the same thing. After all, their population is right
> on a par with China at around 2 billion souls, give or take a few
> hundred million. The thing is, I've BEEN to India and I've seen a fair
> portion of it, and while the cities themselves can be absolutely
> crawling with people, the biggest hunk of the country is pretty much
> free of significant numbers of them.
That's because much of it is used to grow crops to feed them, and much
is desert or high mountains. They also don't have the consumption
footprint of the average American (but they're working on it,
unfortunately). People have taken over just about all land that offers
easy living and ample water. When land is truly empty it's usually for
lack of water or harsh climate and terrain.
This is what's really happening in India:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/indiaenv.html
"India's ongoing population explosion has placed great strain on the
country's environment. This rapidly growing population, along with a
move toward urbanization and industrialization, has placed significant
pressure on India's infrastructure and its natural resources.
Deforestation, soil erosion, water pollution and land degradation
continue to worsen and are hindering economic development in rural
India, while the rapid industrialization and urbanization in India's
booming metropolises are straining the limits of municipal services and
causing serious air pollution problems."
> The US is approximately 3.5 million square miles with a population of
> approximately 75 million people which works out to about 78 people per
> square mile.
75 million was surpassed back in the 1890s! The U.S. population will
reach 300 million by 2007, with ~3 million added annually (census.gov).
Average density matters less than the type of land and how many
resources are taken from it. Many areas are already overburdened and
must draw water and food from great distances. That's why you keep
seeing news about water shortages, fishery declines and old growth
facing the axe. Go ahead, pretend none of it matters. It would fit
right in with your general myopia.
> A fair number of those are actually concentrated in the
> major cities so that makes their density greater, but the density of the
> rest of the country less. I'm betting a fairly substantial portion of
> the city folk never get any closer to nature than the zoo and local
> water park, so their impact on the environment is minimal, not counting
> the emissions from their mini-vans.
Again, it takes a lot of land to support city infrastructure. Over 90%
of U.S. forests have been worked over to that end. Agriculture occupies
huge swaths of land. People keep wanting more of what's left for
recreation and blaming everyone but themselves for crowds therein.
> Their indirect impact based on resources used in their behalf and
> what-not might be a bit harder to judge, but unless you're willing to be
> the first in line to be euthanized to minimize the impact to poor mother
> earth I'd suggest you shut up about population issues.
Have you ever heard of birth control? Every time this issue is bought
up, some high-school dropout/Catholic assumes population control means
genocide. You cited the U.S. population at a quarter of its actual
size. How many other facets of this issue don't you understand?
> There are about 4 million miles of roads in the US. For the sake of
> argument lets say 1 mile of road for every square mile of real estate in
> the country. If you laid them all end to end and side by side...well,
> you should get the picture. A road isn't all that wide compared to a
> mile of real estate is it? I'd guess the real estate is about, ohhh,
> 5,200 feet and change wider. IOW the overall impact of a road, on the
> land, is pretty negligible.
Roads are significant because they bring more impact and break the land
into smaller sectors. Once you build a road (paved or dirt) an area is
never the same. Millions of dead animals don't appreciate them, either.
I don't want to abolish roads but I'd like to see an end to new
construction. We might actually have time to fix potholes.
> And besides which, what is your point? Do you seriously think there is
> anything, short of total global sterilization, that man can do to this
> planet that is going to make any kind of lasting impact? Man, and
> whatever impact we might have is going to be less than blip on the radar
> that is the life cycle of this planet.
That's another bogus argument (we can't destroy the whole thing,
therefore we're harmless). Man-made damage is extensive compared to
what once existed in terms of pristine land, now-extinct species and a
lack of pollution. If you keep lowering the bar for acceptable damage,
you can excuse almost anything.
R. Lander
> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless without the
> legend of what the colors actually mean.
(http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the claim
that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green areas are
the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green areas are
veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is always
under more pressure.
At http://nationalatlas.gov/ you can map layers of different land
types. It's interactive so I can't post a static link. Go to Map-Maker,
choose "Boundaries" and "Wilderness..." to see how sparse it is. Check
out the "Agriculture" zones, too. All of it disproves your mythology of
endless bounty.
> Looking at you pretty coloring book would have us believe that almost
> the entire eastern US is literally covered in people. Your world map is
> no different. What do the color graduations signify?
Of course it's not literally covered with people but the land is highly
appropriated. Most of the East was cleared of major forests to
introduce agriculture. Online satellite galleries offer definitive
proof if you don't trust maps. Then again, it's impossible to convince
an anthropocentric that any of it matters. All evidence will be met
with "who cares - it's all about people and money."
> Let's take India for example, you CAN pick it out without resorting to a
> world atlas can't you?
I'm the uneducated one around here? An error like "75 million" (below)
shows that population/land-use is not something you think about much.
> Based on colors alone one might believe that
> India is absolutely covered in humanity, and population numbers might
> lead you to think the same thing. After all, their population is right
> on a par with China at around 2 billion souls, give or take a few
> hundred million. The thing is, I've BEEN to India and I've seen a fair
> portion of it, and while the cities themselves can be absolutely
> crawling with people, the biggest hunk of the country is pretty much
> free of significant numbers of them.
That's because much of it is used to grow crops to feed them, and much
is desert or high mountains. They also don't have the consumption
footprint of the average American (but they're working on it,
unfortunately). People have taken over just about all land that offers
easy living and ample water. When land is truly empty it's usually for
lack of water or harsh climate and terrain.
This is what's really happening in India:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/indiaenv.html
"India's ongoing population explosion has placed great strain on the
country's environment. This rapidly growing population, along with a
move toward urbanization and industrialization, has placed significant
pressure on India's infrastructure and its natural resources.
Deforestation, soil erosion, water pollution and land degradation
continue to worsen and are hindering economic development in rural
India, while the rapid industrialization and urbanization in India's
booming metropolises are straining the limits of municipal services and
causing serious air pollution problems."
> The US is approximately 3.5 million square miles with a population of
> approximately 75 million people which works out to about 78 people per
> square mile.
75 million was surpassed back in the 1890s! The U.S. population will
reach 300 million by 2007, with ~3 million added annually (census.gov).
Average density matters less than the type of land and how many
resources are taken from it. Many areas are already overburdened and
must draw water and food from great distances. That's why you keep
seeing news about water shortages, fishery declines and old growth
facing the axe. Go ahead, pretend none of it matters. It would fit
right in with your general myopia.
> A fair number of those are actually concentrated in the
> major cities so that makes their density greater, but the density of the
> rest of the country less. I'm betting a fairly substantial portion of
> the city folk never get any closer to nature than the zoo and local
> water park, so their impact on the environment is minimal, not counting
> the emissions from their mini-vans.
Again, it takes a lot of land to support city infrastructure. Over 90%
of U.S. forests have been worked over to that end. Agriculture occupies
huge swaths of land. People keep wanting more of what's left for
recreation and blaming everyone but themselves for crowds therein.
> Their indirect impact based on resources used in their behalf and
> what-not might be a bit harder to judge, but unless you're willing to be
> the first in line to be euthanized to minimize the impact to poor mother
> earth I'd suggest you shut up about population issues.
Have you ever heard of birth control? Every time this issue is bought
up, some high-school dropout/Catholic assumes population control means
genocide. You cited the U.S. population at a quarter of its actual
size. How many other facets of this issue don't you understand?
> There are about 4 million miles of roads in the US. For the sake of
> argument lets say 1 mile of road for every square mile of real estate in
> the country. If you laid them all end to end and side by side...well,
> you should get the picture. A road isn't all that wide compared to a
> mile of real estate is it? I'd guess the real estate is about, ohhh,
> 5,200 feet and change wider. IOW the overall impact of a road, on the
> land, is pretty negligible.
Roads are significant because they bring more impact and break the land
into smaller sectors. Once you build a road (paved or dirt) an area is
never the same. Millions of dead animals don't appreciate them, either.
I don't want to abolish roads but I'd like to see an end to new
construction. We might actually have time to fix potholes.
> And besides which, what is your point? Do you seriously think there is
> anything, short of total global sterilization, that man can do to this
> planet that is going to make any kind of lasting impact? Man, and
> whatever impact we might have is going to be less than blip on the radar
> that is the life cycle of this planet.
That's another bogus argument (we can't destroy the whole thing,
therefore we're harmless). Man-made damage is extensive compared to
what once existed in terms of pristine land, now-extinct species and a
lack of pollution. If you keep lowering the bar for acceptable damage,
you can excuse almost anything.
R. Lander
#507
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Human footprint maps
Tom "Greening" wrote:
> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless without the
> legend of what the colors actually mean.
(http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the claim
that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green areas are
the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green areas are
veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is always
under more pressure.
At http://nationalatlas.gov/ you can map layers of different land
types. It's interactive so I can't post a static link. Go to Map-Maker,
choose "Boundaries" and "Wilderness..." to see how sparse it is. Check
out the "Agriculture" zones, too. All of it disproves your mythology of
endless bounty.
> Looking at you pretty coloring book would have us believe that almost
> the entire eastern US is literally covered in people. Your world map is
> no different. What do the color graduations signify?
Of course it's not literally covered with people but the land is highly
appropriated. Most of the East was cleared of major forests to
introduce agriculture. Online satellite galleries offer definitive
proof if you don't trust maps. Then again, it's impossible to convince
an anthropocentric that any of it matters. All evidence will be met
with "who cares - it's all about people and money."
> Let's take India for example, you CAN pick it out without resorting to a
> world atlas can't you?
I'm the uneducated one around here? An error like "75 million" (below)
shows that population/land-use is not something you think about much.
> Based on colors alone one might believe that
> India is absolutely covered in humanity, and population numbers might
> lead you to think the same thing. After all, their population is right
> on a par with China at around 2 billion souls, give or take a few
> hundred million. The thing is, I've BEEN to India and I've seen a fair
> portion of it, and while the cities themselves can be absolutely
> crawling with people, the biggest hunk of the country is pretty much
> free of significant numbers of them.
That's because much of it is used to grow crops to feed them, and much
is desert or high mountains. They also don't have the consumption
footprint of the average American (but they're working on it,
unfortunately). People have taken over just about all land that offers
easy living and ample water. When land is truly empty it's usually for
lack of water or harsh climate and terrain.
This is what's really happening in India:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/indiaenv.html
"India's ongoing population explosion has placed great strain on the
country's environment. This rapidly growing population, along with a
move toward urbanization and industrialization, has placed significant
pressure on India's infrastructure and its natural resources.
Deforestation, soil erosion, water pollution and land degradation
continue to worsen and are hindering economic development in rural
India, while the rapid industrialization and urbanization in India's
booming metropolises are straining the limits of municipal services and
causing serious air pollution problems."
> The US is approximately 3.5 million square miles with a population of
> approximately 75 million people which works out to about 78 people per
> square mile.
75 million was surpassed back in the 1890s! The U.S. population will
reach 300 million by 2007, with ~3 million added annually (census.gov).
Average density matters less than the type of land and how many
resources are taken from it. Many areas are already overburdened and
must draw water and food from great distances. That's why you keep
seeing news about water shortages, fishery declines and old growth
facing the axe. Go ahead, pretend none of it matters. It would fit
right in with your general myopia.
> A fair number of those are actually concentrated in the
> major cities so that makes their density greater, but the density of the
> rest of the country less. I'm betting a fairly substantial portion of
> the city folk never get any closer to nature than the zoo and local
> water park, so their impact on the environment is minimal, not counting
> the emissions from their mini-vans.
Again, it takes a lot of land to support city infrastructure. Over 90%
of U.S. forests have been worked over to that end. Agriculture occupies
huge swaths of land. People keep wanting more of what's left for
recreation and blaming everyone but themselves for crowds therein.
> Their indirect impact based on resources used in their behalf and
> what-not might be a bit harder to judge, but unless you're willing to be
> the first in line to be euthanized to minimize the impact to poor mother
> earth I'd suggest you shut up about population issues.
Have you ever heard of birth control? Every time this issue is bought
up, some high-school dropout/Catholic assumes population control means
genocide. You cited the U.S. population at a quarter of its actual
size. How many other facets of this issue don't you understand?
> There are about 4 million miles of roads in the US. For the sake of
> argument lets say 1 mile of road for every square mile of real estate in
> the country. If you laid them all end to end and side by side...well,
> you should get the picture. A road isn't all that wide compared to a
> mile of real estate is it? I'd guess the real estate is about, ohhh,
> 5,200 feet and change wider. IOW the overall impact of a road, on the
> land, is pretty negligible.
Roads are significant because they bring more impact and break the land
into smaller sectors. Once you build a road (paved or dirt) an area is
never the same. Millions of dead animals don't appreciate them, either.
I don't want to abolish roads but I'd like to see an end to new
construction. We might actually have time to fix potholes.
> And besides which, what is your point? Do you seriously think there is
> anything, short of total global sterilization, that man can do to this
> planet that is going to make any kind of lasting impact? Man, and
> whatever impact we might have is going to be less than blip on the radar
> that is the life cycle of this planet.
That's another bogus argument (we can't destroy the whole thing,
therefore we're harmless). Man-made damage is extensive compared to
what once existed in terms of pristine land, now-extinct species and a
lack of pollution. If you keep lowering the bar for acceptable damage,
you can excuse almost anything.
R. Lander
> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless without the
> legend of what the colors actually mean.
(http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the claim
that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green areas are
the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green areas are
veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is always
under more pressure.
At http://nationalatlas.gov/ you can map layers of different land
types. It's interactive so I can't post a static link. Go to Map-Maker,
choose "Boundaries" and "Wilderness..." to see how sparse it is. Check
out the "Agriculture" zones, too. All of it disproves your mythology of
endless bounty.
> Looking at you pretty coloring book would have us believe that almost
> the entire eastern US is literally covered in people. Your world map is
> no different. What do the color graduations signify?
Of course it's not literally covered with people but the land is highly
appropriated. Most of the East was cleared of major forests to
introduce agriculture. Online satellite galleries offer definitive
proof if you don't trust maps. Then again, it's impossible to convince
an anthropocentric that any of it matters. All evidence will be met
with "who cares - it's all about people and money."
> Let's take India for example, you CAN pick it out without resorting to a
> world atlas can't you?
I'm the uneducated one around here? An error like "75 million" (below)
shows that population/land-use is not something you think about much.
> Based on colors alone one might believe that
> India is absolutely covered in humanity, and population numbers might
> lead you to think the same thing. After all, their population is right
> on a par with China at around 2 billion souls, give or take a few
> hundred million. The thing is, I've BEEN to India and I've seen a fair
> portion of it, and while the cities themselves can be absolutely
> crawling with people, the biggest hunk of the country is pretty much
> free of significant numbers of them.
That's because much of it is used to grow crops to feed them, and much
is desert or high mountains. They also don't have the consumption
footprint of the average American (but they're working on it,
unfortunately). People have taken over just about all land that offers
easy living and ample water. When land is truly empty it's usually for
lack of water or harsh climate and terrain.
This is what's really happening in India:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/indiaenv.html
"India's ongoing population explosion has placed great strain on the
country's environment. This rapidly growing population, along with a
move toward urbanization and industrialization, has placed significant
pressure on India's infrastructure and its natural resources.
Deforestation, soil erosion, water pollution and land degradation
continue to worsen and are hindering economic development in rural
India, while the rapid industrialization and urbanization in India's
booming metropolises are straining the limits of municipal services and
causing serious air pollution problems."
> The US is approximately 3.5 million square miles with a population of
> approximately 75 million people which works out to about 78 people per
> square mile.
75 million was surpassed back in the 1890s! The U.S. population will
reach 300 million by 2007, with ~3 million added annually (census.gov).
Average density matters less than the type of land and how many
resources are taken from it. Many areas are already overburdened and
must draw water and food from great distances. That's why you keep
seeing news about water shortages, fishery declines and old growth
facing the axe. Go ahead, pretend none of it matters. It would fit
right in with your general myopia.
> A fair number of those are actually concentrated in the
> major cities so that makes their density greater, but the density of the
> rest of the country less. I'm betting a fairly substantial portion of
> the city folk never get any closer to nature than the zoo and local
> water park, so their impact on the environment is minimal, not counting
> the emissions from their mini-vans.
Again, it takes a lot of land to support city infrastructure. Over 90%
of U.S. forests have been worked over to that end. Agriculture occupies
huge swaths of land. People keep wanting more of what's left for
recreation and blaming everyone but themselves for crowds therein.
> Their indirect impact based on resources used in their behalf and
> what-not might be a bit harder to judge, but unless you're willing to be
> the first in line to be euthanized to minimize the impact to poor mother
> earth I'd suggest you shut up about population issues.
Have you ever heard of birth control? Every time this issue is bought
up, some high-school dropout/Catholic assumes population control means
genocide. You cited the U.S. population at a quarter of its actual
size. How many other facets of this issue don't you understand?
> There are about 4 million miles of roads in the US. For the sake of
> argument lets say 1 mile of road for every square mile of real estate in
> the country. If you laid them all end to end and side by side...well,
> you should get the picture. A road isn't all that wide compared to a
> mile of real estate is it? I'd guess the real estate is about, ohhh,
> 5,200 feet and change wider. IOW the overall impact of a road, on the
> land, is pretty negligible.
Roads are significant because they bring more impact and break the land
into smaller sectors. Once you build a road (paved or dirt) an area is
never the same. Millions of dead animals don't appreciate them, either.
I don't want to abolish roads but I'd like to see an end to new
construction. We might actually have time to fix potholes.
> And besides which, what is your point? Do you seriously think there is
> anything, short of total global sterilization, that man can do to this
> planet that is going to make any kind of lasting impact? Man, and
> whatever impact we might have is going to be less than blip on the radar
> that is the life cycle of this planet.
That's another bogus argument (we can't destroy the whole thing,
therefore we're harmless). Man-made damage is extensive compared to
what once existed in terms of pristine land, now-extinct species and a
lack of pollution. If you keep lowering the bar for acceptable damage,
you can excuse almost anything.
R. Lander
#508
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Human footprint maps
Tom "Greening" wrote:
> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless without the
> legend of what the colors actually mean.
(http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the claim
that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green areas are
the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green areas are
veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is always
under more pressure.
At http://nationalatlas.gov/ you can map layers of different land
types. It's interactive so I can't post a static link. Go to Map-Maker,
choose "Boundaries" and "Wilderness..." to see how sparse it is. Check
out the "Agriculture" zones, too. All of it disproves your mythology of
endless bounty.
> Looking at you pretty coloring book would have us believe that almost
> the entire eastern US is literally covered in people. Your world map is
> no different. What do the color graduations signify?
Of course it's not literally covered with people but the land is highly
appropriated. Most of the East was cleared of major forests to
introduce agriculture. Online satellite galleries offer definitive
proof if you don't trust maps. Then again, it's impossible to convince
an anthropocentric that any of it matters. All evidence will be met
with "who cares - it's all about people and money."
> Let's take India for example, you CAN pick it out without resorting to a
> world atlas can't you?
I'm the uneducated one around here? An error like "75 million" (below)
shows that population/land-use is not something you think about much.
> Based on colors alone one might believe that
> India is absolutely covered in humanity, and population numbers might
> lead you to think the same thing. After all, their population is right
> on a par with China at around 2 billion souls, give or take a few
> hundred million. The thing is, I've BEEN to India and I've seen a fair
> portion of it, and while the cities themselves can be absolutely
> crawling with people, the biggest hunk of the country is pretty much
> free of significant numbers of them.
That's because much of it is used to grow crops to feed them, and much
is desert or high mountains. They also don't have the consumption
footprint of the average American (but they're working on it,
unfortunately). People have taken over just about all land that offers
easy living and ample water. When land is truly empty it's usually for
lack of water or harsh climate and terrain.
This is what's really happening in India:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/indiaenv.html
"India's ongoing population explosion has placed great strain on the
country's environment. This rapidly growing population, along with a
move toward urbanization and industrialization, has placed significant
pressure on India's infrastructure and its natural resources.
Deforestation, soil erosion, water pollution and land degradation
continue to worsen and are hindering economic development in rural
India, while the rapid industrialization and urbanization in India's
booming metropolises are straining the limits of municipal services and
causing serious air pollution problems."
> The US is approximately 3.5 million square miles with a population of
> approximately 75 million people which works out to about 78 people per
> square mile.
75 million was surpassed back in the 1890s! The U.S. population will
reach 300 million by 2007, with ~3 million added annually (census.gov).
Average density matters less than the type of land and how many
resources are taken from it. Many areas are already overburdened and
must draw water and food from great distances. That's why you keep
seeing news about water shortages, fishery declines and old growth
facing the axe. Go ahead, pretend none of it matters. It would fit
right in with your general myopia.
> A fair number of those are actually concentrated in the
> major cities so that makes their density greater, but the density of the
> rest of the country less. I'm betting a fairly substantial portion of
> the city folk never get any closer to nature than the zoo and local
> water park, so their impact on the environment is minimal, not counting
> the emissions from their mini-vans.
Again, it takes a lot of land to support city infrastructure. Over 90%
of U.S. forests have been worked over to that end. Agriculture occupies
huge swaths of land. People keep wanting more of what's left for
recreation and blaming everyone but themselves for crowds therein.
> Their indirect impact based on resources used in their behalf and
> what-not might be a bit harder to judge, but unless you're willing to be
> the first in line to be euthanized to minimize the impact to poor mother
> earth I'd suggest you shut up about population issues.
Have you ever heard of birth control? Every time this issue is bought
up, some high-school dropout/Catholic assumes population control means
genocide. You cited the U.S. population at a quarter of its actual
size. How many other facets of this issue don't you understand?
> There are about 4 million miles of roads in the US. For the sake of
> argument lets say 1 mile of road for every square mile of real estate in
> the country. If you laid them all end to end and side by side...well,
> you should get the picture. A road isn't all that wide compared to a
> mile of real estate is it? I'd guess the real estate is about, ohhh,
> 5,200 feet and change wider. IOW the overall impact of a road, on the
> land, is pretty negligible.
Roads are significant because they bring more impact and break the land
into smaller sectors. Once you build a road (paved or dirt) an area is
never the same. Millions of dead animals don't appreciate them, either.
I don't want to abolish roads but I'd like to see an end to new
construction. We might actually have time to fix potholes.
> And besides which, what is your point? Do you seriously think there is
> anything, short of total global sterilization, that man can do to this
> planet that is going to make any kind of lasting impact? Man, and
> whatever impact we might have is going to be less than blip on the radar
> that is the life cycle of this planet.
That's another bogus argument (we can't destroy the whole thing,
therefore we're harmless). Man-made damage is extensive compared to
what once existed in terms of pristine land, now-extinct species and a
lack of pollution. If you keep lowering the bar for acceptable damage,
you can excuse almost anything.
R. Lander
> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless without the
> legend of what the colors actually mean.
(http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the claim
that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green areas are
the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green areas are
veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is always
under more pressure.
At http://nationalatlas.gov/ you can map layers of different land
types. It's interactive so I can't post a static link. Go to Map-Maker,
choose "Boundaries" and "Wilderness..." to see how sparse it is. Check
out the "Agriculture" zones, too. All of it disproves your mythology of
endless bounty.
> Looking at you pretty coloring book would have us believe that almost
> the entire eastern US is literally covered in people. Your world map is
> no different. What do the color graduations signify?
Of course it's not literally covered with people but the land is highly
appropriated. Most of the East was cleared of major forests to
introduce agriculture. Online satellite galleries offer definitive
proof if you don't trust maps. Then again, it's impossible to convince
an anthropocentric that any of it matters. All evidence will be met
with "who cares - it's all about people and money."
> Let's take India for example, you CAN pick it out without resorting to a
> world atlas can't you?
I'm the uneducated one around here? An error like "75 million" (below)
shows that population/land-use is not something you think about much.
> Based on colors alone one might believe that
> India is absolutely covered in humanity, and population numbers might
> lead you to think the same thing. After all, their population is right
> on a par with China at around 2 billion souls, give or take a few
> hundred million. The thing is, I've BEEN to India and I've seen a fair
> portion of it, and while the cities themselves can be absolutely
> crawling with people, the biggest hunk of the country is pretty much
> free of significant numbers of them.
That's because much of it is used to grow crops to feed them, and much
is desert or high mountains. They also don't have the consumption
footprint of the average American (but they're working on it,
unfortunately). People have taken over just about all land that offers
easy living and ample water. When land is truly empty it's usually for
lack of water or harsh climate and terrain.
This is what's really happening in India:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/indiaenv.html
"India's ongoing population explosion has placed great strain on the
country's environment. This rapidly growing population, along with a
move toward urbanization and industrialization, has placed significant
pressure on India's infrastructure and its natural resources.
Deforestation, soil erosion, water pollution and land degradation
continue to worsen and are hindering economic development in rural
India, while the rapid industrialization and urbanization in India's
booming metropolises are straining the limits of municipal services and
causing serious air pollution problems."
> The US is approximately 3.5 million square miles with a population of
> approximately 75 million people which works out to about 78 people per
> square mile.
75 million was surpassed back in the 1890s! The U.S. population will
reach 300 million by 2007, with ~3 million added annually (census.gov).
Average density matters less than the type of land and how many
resources are taken from it. Many areas are already overburdened and
must draw water and food from great distances. That's why you keep
seeing news about water shortages, fishery declines and old growth
facing the axe. Go ahead, pretend none of it matters. It would fit
right in with your general myopia.
> A fair number of those are actually concentrated in the
> major cities so that makes their density greater, but the density of the
> rest of the country less. I'm betting a fairly substantial portion of
> the city folk never get any closer to nature than the zoo and local
> water park, so their impact on the environment is minimal, not counting
> the emissions from their mini-vans.
Again, it takes a lot of land to support city infrastructure. Over 90%
of U.S. forests have been worked over to that end. Agriculture occupies
huge swaths of land. People keep wanting more of what's left for
recreation and blaming everyone but themselves for crowds therein.
> Their indirect impact based on resources used in their behalf and
> what-not might be a bit harder to judge, but unless you're willing to be
> the first in line to be euthanized to minimize the impact to poor mother
> earth I'd suggest you shut up about population issues.
Have you ever heard of birth control? Every time this issue is bought
up, some high-school dropout/Catholic assumes population control means
genocide. You cited the U.S. population at a quarter of its actual
size. How many other facets of this issue don't you understand?
> There are about 4 million miles of roads in the US. For the sake of
> argument lets say 1 mile of road for every square mile of real estate in
> the country. If you laid them all end to end and side by side...well,
> you should get the picture. A road isn't all that wide compared to a
> mile of real estate is it? I'd guess the real estate is about, ohhh,
> 5,200 feet and change wider. IOW the overall impact of a road, on the
> land, is pretty negligible.
Roads are significant because they bring more impact and break the land
into smaller sectors. Once you build a road (paved or dirt) an area is
never the same. Millions of dead animals don't appreciate them, either.
I don't want to abolish roads but I'd like to see an end to new
construction. We might actually have time to fix potholes.
> And besides which, what is your point? Do you seriously think there is
> anything, short of total global sterilization, that man can do to this
> planet that is going to make any kind of lasting impact? Man, and
> whatever impact we might have is going to be less than blip on the radar
> that is the life cycle of this planet.
That's another bogus argument (we can't destroy the whole thing,
therefore we're harmless). Man-made damage is extensive compared to
what once existed in terms of pristine land, now-extinct species and a
lack of pollution. If you keep lowering the bar for acceptable damage,
you can excuse almost anything.
R. Lander
#509
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Human footprint maps
"R. Lander" <r_lander60@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1149896690.284891.297530@y43g2000cwc.googlegr oups.com...
> Tom "Greening" wrote:
>
>> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless
>> without the
>> legend of what the colors actually mean.
>
> (http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
>
> That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the
> claim
> that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green
> areas are
> the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green
> areas are
> veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is
> always
> under more pressure.
===========================
No, it's a bogus map. Just like he said, the colors reflect
nothing without a legend.
Just waht does 'green' mean, what does 'black' mean? At a
glance you'd think black meant it must be pure landfill,
completly paved and overrun with people everywhere. Then, you
see the entire inland passage up the coast totally black.
No explanation given, no reason, no rhyme. Again, it's a bogus
map.
snip rest of crap...
#510
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Human footprint maps
"R. Lander" <r_lander60@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:1149896690.284891.297530@y43g2000cwc.googlegr oups.com...
> Tom "Greening" wrote:
>
>> Pretty pictures you've got there but pretty much useless
>> without the
>> legend of what the colors actually mean.
>
> (http://www.mongabay.com/images/media/footprint.jpg)
>
> That map is useful if you want it to be. It easily debunks the
> claim
> that we only use 2 or 3 percent of the land. Those DARK green
> areas are
> the only lands that have barely been touched. Lighter green
> areas are
> veined with roads and other intrusions. Unbroken wilderness is
> always
> under more pressure.
===========================
No, it's a bogus map. Just like he said, the colors reflect
nothing without a legend.
Just waht does 'green' mean, what does 'black' mean? At a
glance you'd think black meant it must be pure landfill,
completly paved and overrun with people everywhere. Then, you
see the entire inland passage up the coast totally black.
No explanation given, no reason, no rhyme. Again, it's a bogus
map.
snip rest of crap...