?
=?UTF-8?b?wqdxxa9AcjMgV2gzM8Kjcw==?=
Guest
It was on Sun, 04 Jun 2006 19:44:13 +0200, another Dirty Dusty Delta day, when Crius Anonymous Remailer coughed up:
> On Thurs, Jun 1 2006 8:28 am, R. Lander wrote:
>
> << In the lower 48 states, there's no real frontier left. We
> don't need more machines, noise and trail(er) trash invading the
> last wild, quiet places. Be happy with all the trails you've
> got. If you find those trails overcrowded, blame human
> overbreeding, not environmentalism. >>
>
> Good post but the usual suspects are reacting the usual way. If
> all the douchebags who take wilderness for granted would read
> books like Bill McKibben's "The End Of Nature" (1989) there
> might be some hope. This issue goes well beyond drunk wheelers
> trashing trails. There is a dangerous psychological disconnect
> between people and nature in rich nations. They have forgotten
> where "it" all comes from, and it's not a factory or a bank.
>
> http://www.billmckibben.com/books.html
>
> N.C.
Also a good post, but probably will be ignored. You can lead a horse to
water, but you can't make him think. And who is likely to read anything
that goes contrary to their chosen belief-system?
Sad.
--
There is nothing so agonizing to the fine skin of vanity as the application
of a rough truth.
-Edward Bulwer-Lytton, writer (1803-1873)
> On Thurs, Jun 1 2006 8:28 am, R. Lander wrote:
>
> << In the lower 48 states, there's no real frontier left. We
> don't need more machines, noise and trail(er) trash invading the
> last wild, quiet places. Be happy with all the trails you've
> got. If you find those trails overcrowded, blame human
> overbreeding, not environmentalism. >>
>
> Good post but the usual suspects are reacting the usual way. If
> all the douchebags who take wilderness for granted would read
> books like Bill McKibben's "The End Of Nature" (1989) there
> might be some hope. This issue goes well beyond drunk wheelers
> trashing trails. There is a dangerous psychological disconnect
> between people and nature in rich nations. They have forgotten
> where "it" all comes from, and it's not a factory or a bank.
>
> http://www.billmckibben.com/books.html
>
> N.C.
Also a good post, but probably will be ignored. You can lead a horse to
water, but you can't make him think. And who is likely to read anything
that goes contrary to their chosen belief-system?
Sad.
--
There is nothing so agonizing to the fine skin of vanity as the application
of a rough truth.
-Edward Bulwer-Lytton, writer (1803-1873)