Rewilding of America is Happening Before Us

KTMrad

Member
Mar 20, 2001
209
0
It might happen. One by one, we will lose our treasures, our public land...rewilding is happening.

Save Yosemite – now!

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© 2001 WorldNetDaily.com


It can literally take your breath away. It did to me, the first time. We were traveling the narrow road along the wild river through the canyon and into the hilly country leading to it. There were the house-size boulders and the Arch Rock. Driving under it was like moving through an entryway into a magic garden. In fact, that´s just about what it is. A magical place. Yosemite National Park. More specifically, Yosemite Valley.

The first time I drove into the open meadows of the valley after passing though the woods, I heard a strange, loud noise and realized it was a waterfall – Bridalveil – the icy water falling from a cliff hundreds of feet above my car – its pathway a streak of white foam as it bounced and cascaded to the valley floor, where it rushed in twisting creeks toward the river.

And then I saw it. Rather, them – a panorama of granite cliffs surrounding me. El Capitan. Half Dome. North Dome. Upper and Lower Yosemite Falls. The Cascades. Sentinel Dome. Glacier Point.

It was almost too much at once. I´d known intellectually it was there and looked like that, but when I actually saw it, it really did take my breath away. I gasped and tears filled my eyes. It was so incredibly, overwhelmingly beautiful. It still is.

I hope you get a chance to be there to savor the immensity, beauty, solitude and eternal quality of this park that belongs to the people of the United States. (That means the park belongs to you!) But you might not get to see it or experience it and that´s not an idle threat. It is a very real possibility, courtesy of environmental zealots and spineless politicians.

Plans have been underway over the last 10 years to evaluate the park and to change it. The idea is to come up with a plan for everything in the park. I have a draft copy of the Yosemite Valley Plan which is over 1,000 pages long, regulating everything – camping, roads, hotels, grasses, animals, streams, the river – you name it.

It boils down to the ultimate goal of turning Yosemite National Park into a sort of living museum. The idea is to remove virtually all human imprint and return it, as the enviros like to say, to its pristine, natural state. They are doing their very best to make it almost impossible for anyone to enjoy it in the manner that´s been available to visitors since the 1800´s. People have no idea what´s in store if the draft plan is carried forward as envisioned.

If those changes are made, it will be harder to get in – raise the entry fees, prohibit certain traffic and reduce available roads; impossible to drive in – can´t have those exhaust fumes; almost impossible to camp in – people can be so messy and campfires pollute; impossible to horseback ride in – horses trample the brush and manure spreads seeds not native to the area; difficult to hike or bike through – those paths deface meadows and woods; or even raft in the river – rafters disturb the fish and disturb the beaches. They actually want to remove restroom facilities! Need I go on? I think you get the drift.

It´s already started. The entry fee was jacked up to $20 per vehicle. A number of housekeeping camping units removed. Two entire river-area campgrounds totally removed. The only gas station in the valley closed. Campfires restricted. Stables and trail-rides reduced. Some roads closed to motor vehicles.

On the surface, the efforts to restore the riverbanks and the meadows are noble efforts and I don´t quibble with them. I am all in favor of protecting natural resources and it is possible to make those improvements and still not restrict the ability of visitors to see and enjoy the park.

But how do you justify the proposal to eliminate camping (which allows people with more limited budgets to enjoy nature) but keep the historic Ahwahnee Hotel (for those with bulging wallets) and enlarge Yosemite Lodge (which is nothing more than a motel)? Yosemite should be for nature – not for maid service.

One proposal would eliminate all private cars and require everyone to be hauled in on electric busses. (Good Morning! California is in the midst of a power shortage!) But tour busses will not be limited! (What about that exhaust?) They also want to tear down beautiful, historic stone bridges, pull out several roads and dams, and demolish all employee housing within the park. (Uh oh, here come the commuters!)

It´s ironic and telling that, on the one hand, there´s an all-out effort to preserve Indian ruins, relics and sites but conversely, an all-out effort to destroy the history of the white man in the valley. All the early settlement buildings are gone except for the lovely wooden church. Why weren´t they saved for posterity? Why are Indian sites more valuable historically? Think about it.

For the sake of the country, the National Park Service and Congress need to know what you think about this. Those decisions are being made now. If you want to put a stop to this absurdity, let them know – now!

The sound activists like best is silence – it gives them the cover they need to carry out their schemes. Don´t let them get away with it. Yosemite is YOUR park. Don´t let them ruin it.



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Barbara Simpson, "The Babe in the Bunker" as she´s known to her KSFO 560 radio talk-show audience in San Francisco, has a 20-year radio, television and newspaper career in the Bay Area and Los Angeles and currently co-edits SpinCritic.com, a news and opinion
 

KWJams

~SPONSOR~
Sep 22, 2000
1,163
4
No Doubt

About fifteen years ago I predicted that someday the government would figure out a way to tax us to look at scenery. :think

About five years ago the road heading south out town here was designated a "Scenic Byway".

If you stop at any roadside pull offs to do anything without having a $3.00 permit they can give you a citation. :eek:

No one hardly lifted a hand to stop that from becoming Law. :(

Yep,,, a scenery tax!

The quickest way to close down an area is to make it too expensive to enjoy.:(
 

Magellan

LIFETIME SPONSOR
Mar 14, 2001
193
2
Man, we have a govt out of control.

How can anyone think a 1000 manifesto on managing a forest will work?

I am not against protecting Yosemite, but I don't see how moving people from tents to ever-large buildings is gonna do it. They're going to kill the experience they want to protect.

"Yeah, that's what I think about when I think of my days in Yosemite. The Starz channel was always great, and there's nothing like laying down your head on soft pillow next to a chocolate mint....."

Hear about those farmers in the Klamath Valley? Govt shut off their irrigation water to help out some fish and put the farms and towns out of business. A government agency did this without any due process. Even if the farmers win their court case, the fields are toast and the businesses are gone!
 

KTMrad

Member
Mar 20, 2001
209
0
Yep, a lot of the info you spoke about has been posted on this forum, just go further back and read up on all this stuff......there is a wealth of info on this site.
Thanks,
 

Ol'89r

LIFETIME SPONSOR
Jan 27, 2000
6,958
45
"Even before the general managment plan has been approved and adopted, it appears the East Mojave National Preserve management staff has moved ahead with its wholesale removal of man-made watering devices that potentially support a vast network of wildlife in this desert region".

Taken from the Riverside Press Enterprise newspaper, 06-08-01. It appears that the PEOPLE IN CHARGE have removed the water sources that the wildlife in the area has depended upon for their survival for years. In an effort to rewild the area they have sacrificed the wildlife. What the hell are these people thinking???????

"These people just don't get it. On one hand it is perfectly acceptable to improve roads, increase visitor usage, enlarge campgrounds and visitor centers, make trails-all that have a negative impact on wildlife and habitat-but it's not ok to leave beautiful, historic windmills and stock tanks that support wildlife. It just doesn't make sense. It is talking out of both sides of your mouth." Author, Jim Matthews.

I repeat my question, What the hell are these people thinking??????

Ol'89r
 

KLX Spode

Member
Feb 29, 2000
53
0
The reason you are confused is you actually believe these people think! They follow thier standard marching orders that their supposed "leaders" lay before them.
The local business owners in the greater Yosemite area are totally up in arms over the outright assault that the enviro-Nazis's have taken towards Yosemite. In their favor, the local Congressman, George Radonovich (R, Mariposa,CA), is taking their cause and helping them in every way possible.He is a very vocal opponent of the government's use and abuse of public lands and parks.
 
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