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Lets hope! There are way too many expensive parasites in this economy, and way too much potential for fulfillment and useful work wasted.
I wonder if cities in the US can do that legally. That would really begin to raise consciousness.
Go to the Roseville link, and then to Related Information for plants lists http://www.roseville.ca.us/eu/water_utility/water_conservation/for_home/cash_for_grass/default.asp
Where does anonymous get the idea that the problem is huge and wasteful bureaucracy? This is a knee-jerk anti-tax reaction. In my county public health funds will be slashed and people will resort to more expensive emergency room care. Teachers are being fired, and California, hardly a poor state, is already about 47th among the states in funding per pupil. Funding for the university has been declining, although it has been a big contributor to the state’s economy. What is going to happen when the summer wildfires come? Theree needs to be some basic understanding that you don’t get what you don’t pay for.
$17 billion here, $17 billion there, after a while it adds up to real money.
Watch the video. It’s very moving.
Right on. Every comment about our current economic problems takes for granted that we should recover a 5% (more or less) annual GDP growth rate. What would that mean in terms of non-renewable or depletable resources? Can we really afford an indefinitely increasing number of cars in this world?
And so who’s advising on the management of the crisis now? Summers.
Correction: it’s http://www.defendingwaterforcalifornia.org where you can read about the threat to Mt. Shasta.
Lets hope! There are way too many expensive parasites in this economy, and way too much potential for fulfillment and useful work wasted.
I wonder if cities in the US can do that legally. That would really begin to raise consciousness.
Go to the Roseville link, and then to Related Information for plants lists http://www.roseville.ca.us/eu/water_utility/water_conservation/for_home/cash_for_grass/default.asp
Where does anonymous get the idea that the problem is huge and wasteful bureaucracy? This is a knee-jerk anti-tax reaction. In my county public health funds will be slashed and people will resort to more expensive emergency room care. Teachers are being fired, and California, hardly a poor state, is already about 47th among the states in funding per pupil. Funding for the university has been declining, although it has been a big contributor to the state’s economy. What is going to happen when the summer wildfires come? Theree needs to be some basic understanding that you don’t get what you don’t pay for.
$17 billion here, $17 billion there, after a while it adds up to real money.
Watch the video. It’s very moving.
Right on. Every comment about our current economic problems takes for granted that we should recover a 5% (more or less) annual GDP growth rate. What would that mean in terms of non-renewable or depletable resources? Can we really afford an indefinitely increasing number of cars in this world?
And so who’s advising on the management of the crisis now? Summers.
Correction: it’s http://www.defendingwaterforcalifornia.org where you can read about the threat to Mt. Shasta.
Right on.