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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)

 
Some of us will, at least to a point. I will read things that are well
reasoned, logical and backed by facts if they disagree with my point of
view... one of the best ways to really know a subject is to be able to
argue either side of it.

But I'm not going to read ignorant drivel dressed up to look like it's
something important, such as pretty much anything by Al Gore... or any
other demagogic politician.

Jeff DeWitt



§qů@r3 Wh33£s wrote:
> 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.
>
>
>

 

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