The president has named 13 national monuments so far using the century-old Antiquities Act, putting tight restrictions on more than 1 million acres of public land.The most recent designation came last week, when the president designated more than 350,000 acres of the San Gabriel Mountains in California as a monument near Los Angeles.While Obama and his allies see the land protections as furthering the cause of conservation, Republicans say they are evidence of an “imperial presidency.”“The Antiquities Act is a political arrow in the president’s quiver,” said Melissa Subbotin, spokeswoman for Rep. Rob Bishop (R-Utah). “It’s abused for political purposes.”[...]In June, he expanded to nearly 500,000 square miles a sanctuary near remote Pacific islands, putting the area off-limits to fishing and energy exploration.He’s also protected historic sites like an area in eastern Maryland that was important to the early life of abolitionist Harriet Tubman, and the home and gravesite of labor movement leader Cesar Chavez in California’s Tehachapi Mountains.
The saddest part about this is that the federal government owns any monuments and parks in the first place.
Misleading title. This is a good thing.
Misleading title.
Did he do this while on a golfing trip?
Quote from: Kinder Swageington on October 16, 2014, 11:26:52 AMDid he do this while on a golfing trip?Yawn.You know Obama has taken some of the fewest vacation days in Presidential history, right?
There's far more important things to focus on. Why the federal government is even concerned about this is beyond me. It's another power that's not given to the feds in the Constitution and something that states can do themselves
Republicans are retarded as hell. Of course, I hate both political parties, the two party system made voting for president in this country a joke a long time ago.
Quote from: Kinder Swageington on October 16, 2014, 11:26:52 AMThere's far more important things to focus on. Why the federal government is even concerned about this is beyond me. It's another power that's not given to the feds in the Constitution and something that states can do themselvesYou do realize a government -should be- capable of doing more than one thing?We aren't allocating a chunk of time to one issue before moving onto the next.
Quote from: IcyWind on October 16, 2014, 11:58:21 AMQuote from: Kinder Swageington on October 16, 2014, 11:26:52 AMThere's far more important things to focus on. Why the federal government is even concerned about this is beyond me. It's another power that's not given to the feds in the Constitution and something that states can do themselvesYou do realize a government -should be- capable of doing more than one thing?We aren't allocating a chunk of time to one issue before moving onto the next.That's why it focuses on actual important issues, such as ISIS, Ebola, and personal privacy
Quote from: Lady Noelle on October 16, 2014, 12:29:50 PMRepublicans are retarded as hell. Of course, I hate both political parties, the two party system made voting for president in this country a joke a long time ago.fix'dState and local issues still matter a lot, and affect you more directly. Voting still matters.
Quote from: Kinder Swageington on October 16, 2014, 02:19:25 PMQuote from: IcyWind on October 16, 2014, 11:58:21 AMQuote from: Kinder Swageington on October 16, 2014, 11:26:52 AMThere's far more important things to focus on. Why the federal government is even concerned about this is beyond me. It's another power that's not given to the feds in the Constitution and something that states can do themselvesYou do realize a government -should be- capable of doing more than one thing?We aren't allocating a chunk of time to one issue before moving onto the next.That's why it focuses on actual important issues, such as ISIS, Ebola, and personal privacyOne of these three is not like the others.
they'd dismantle the EPA and let class-action lawsuits regulate companies.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on October 16, 2014, 10:22:42 AMThe saddest part about this is that the federal government owns any monuments and parks in the first place.I dunno, man. I don't really trust people enough to avoid destroying areas, resources, or habitats. My city is still building thousands upon thousands of new homes, even though our infrastructure can't handle it. If it were up to them, they'd develop all of the natural habitats and mountains near me.
Quote from: Mad Max on October 16, 2014, 10:26:16 AMQuote from: Meta Cognition on October 16, 2014, 10:22:42 AMThe saddest part about this is that the federal government owns any monuments and parks in the first place.I dunno, man. I don't really trust people enough to avoid destroying areas, resources, or habitats. My city is still building thousands upon thousands of new homes, even though our infrastructure can't handle it. If it were up to them, they'd develop all of the natural habitats and mountains near me.>doesn't trust people>govt. by people for people>trusts govt.
I don't trust unregulated industry. If nobody says companies can't spill toxic waste into rivers and water supplies, they will.