Posted on 01/28/2019 1:02:55 PM PST by EveningStar
Against a backdrop of jumbled boulders and spindly trees, former Joshua Tree National Park Supt. Curt Sauer joined dozens of people at a rally in this high desert enclave on Saturday to express their anger over the economic and physical damage caused by the partial government shutdown to the park and the surrounding community.
President Trump signed a short-term spending bill on Friday that will reopen the government until Feb. 15. But the 35-day shutdown has already taken a heavy toll on the economy of this dusty refuge for nature lovers, rock climbers and artists at the main gateway to the 800,000-acre national park, as well as on the otherworldly landscape within the parks boundaries...
Reports of trash piling up, vandalism, illegal camping and off-road driving led to restricted operations at Joshua Tree, as well as at Yosemite and Death Valley national parks. During this period, skeleton federal crews, volunteers and imported law enforcement officers began patrolling Joshua Tree...
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
Like George Carlin said,
The planet has been through a lot worse than us. Been through earthquakes, volcanoes, plate tectonics, continental drift, solar flares, sun spots, magnetic storms, the magnetic reversal of the poles hundreds of thousands of years of bombardment by comets and asteroids and meteors, worldwide floods, tidal waves, worldwide fires, erosion, cosmic rays, recurring ice ages And we think some plastic bags and some aluminum cans are going to make a difference? The planet isnt going anywhere. WE are!
George Carlin was very much correct.
“to express their anger over the economic and physical damage caused by the partial government shutdown “
Excuse me, the shutdown did not “cause” anything. If there was a lot of trash, blame the people who left the trash!!
I’m in favor of shutting down the government.
In fact, let’s keep shutting it down until all we have left are the military, food inspectors, and President Trump. :-)
It's not like 12,000 people in a caravan invaded the park.
There ya go...How in hell do you destroy that? I’ve been there many times. You could drive 5000 dune buggies across those 800,000 acres and nothing would be destroyed. As usual, these complaining leftist who want everything banned are FOS.
I am sure there is a baby just minutes away from being born that you can kill, would that make you feel any better?
Sounds like my neighbor's yard.
Good point, these AH’s want to protect desert weeds and dirt in their nearly 1 million acre park, but if you try to protect our lawless violent borders, our country and our sovereignty, you’re a racist Nazi.
“Against a backdrop of jumbled boulders and spindly trees...”
The lead sentence makes it sound like total destruction!
Is the Grand Canyon looking for free, clean fill?
The yawning chasm doesn’t look sustainable.
Uh oh; sounds like the triggered snowflakes in CA need a Whaaaambulance.
About as scenic as I-80 from Rawlins to Green River, Wyoming. Not quite as long.
Exactly.
The border wall and security overall is integral to the long term good of this country. National parks included.
I have a number of observations and opinions I want to put out on this subject in general as well as comments directed to the specifics.
I went to JT about 18 months ago. I thought it was much better than I expected. I had been familiar with Joshua Trees here in Arizona as there are a few regions that have clusters, notably northwest of Wickenburg. The park was much more than just the JT habitat.
I found the communities nearby somewhat in the hippie/biker/Burning Man genre but enjoyed myself nevertheless. I thought the trails and layout made for great hikes for a senior couple with grandkids along — something a great many of the national parks can’t achieve.
The restroom areas were not very well maintained, but it was a crowded weekend.
I have family members that were impacted by the shutdown and they know it goes with the turf. There have been about a dozen shutdowns in the last twenty years since the Democrats hamstrung the normal budget process that used to be a matter of course.
I am not very fond of visiting California despite its number of great features and some fine people. It is too much like going to a foreign country where everyone is rude, of lower intelligence but also think their culture knows everything of value. I will, however, visit Joshua Tree again, it is time well spent and enjoyable.
I think that government employees that want to grandstand on political issues should be seen for the drama queens they are trying to be by such actions.
BS. All lies.
Thank the Lord that the fat-ass, 60 IQ unnecessary federal drones are back at work. The country nearly collapsed without them. I missed getting federal documents with greasy potato chip fingerprints.
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