Where the hell did you get that out my suggesting the governor relate to cities and business leaders that he thinks we need a desalinization effort, and he’d like to see the state move in that direction.
I told you that wouldn’t cost a dime of state money.
Your reaction is why I seldom try to engage some of you folks.
I give you a ration presentation sans subsides and any state involvement, and you go postal.
Where the hell did you get that out my suggesting the governor relate to cities and business leaders that he thinks we need a desalinization effort, and heâd like to see the state move in that direction.
I told you that wouldn’t cost a dime of state money.
Your reaction is why I seldom try to engage some of you folks.
I give you a ration presentation sans subsides and any state involvement, and you go postal.
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Well, your first sentence in the post to which I’m responding now seems very reasonable...it says, in essence, the governor should state his personal belief and say to other government levels “pretty please build desalinization plants for which I won’t give you a penny”.
But you earlier said (From your post # 21 above):
“I still support desalinization plants, and the state should try to herd localities to invest in them”
Sorry, my image of “herding” involves cracking of whips and forcing things to go where they’d prefer not to go -— and not of some cowboy saying “please, oh pretty please”.