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Default There's dumb and then there's...

....southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming


Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state’s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly…"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise—not the faster increases associated with global
warming—have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all – (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.
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Default There's dumb and then there's...

On Jun 2, 2:08*pm, X ` Man dump-on-conservati...@anywhere-you-
can.com wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming

Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state’s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly…"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise—not the faster increases associated with global
warming—have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all – (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. *Here's an
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.


Mans greed will be his downfall......
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2012
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Default There's dumb and then there's...

*e#c wrote:
On Jun 2, 2:08 pm, X ` Mandump-on-conservati...@anywhere-you-
can.com wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming

Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state’s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly…"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise—not the faster increases associated with global
warming—have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all – (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.

Mans greed will be his downfall......

Reported as dumb spam.
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Feb 2012
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Default There's dumb and then there's...

On 6/2/2012 10:18 PM, Earl wrote:
*e#c wrote:
On Jun 2, 2:08 pm, X ` Mandump-on-conservati...@anywhere-you-
can.com wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming

Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state’s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly…"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise—not the faster increases associated with global
warming—have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all – (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely
criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their
folly.

Mans greed will be his downfall......

Reported as dumb spam.


They must have started the pre meds on him.
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Default There's dumb and then there's...

On 6/2/2012 2:08 PM, X ` Man wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming


Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state’s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly…"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise—not the faster increases associated with global
warming—have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all – (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an ,
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.

Under Bush Developers started building in flood plains and FLOOD WAYS,
in addition they are now permitted to fill in flood plains at least
around here. All of this means higher insurance premiums and forcing
flooding onto people who would otherwise not be at risk of flooding.


  #6   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,868
Default There's dumb and then there's...

In article , s says...

On 6/2/2012 2:08 PM, X ` Man wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming


Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state?s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly?"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise?not the faster increases associated with global
warming?have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all ? (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an ,
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.

Under Bush Developers started building in flood plains and FLOOD WAYS,
in addition they are now permitted to fill in flood plains at least
around here. All of this means higher insurance premiums and forcing
flooding onto people who would otherwise not be at risk of flooding.


You must not be familiar with the several thousand years when people
built their homes near rivers and farmed land near rivers. You also need
to do some reading up on irrigation on how that works.
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Default There's dumb and then there's...

On 6/3/12 8:32 AM, BAR wrote:
In , s says...

On 6/2/2012 2:08 PM, X ` Man wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming


Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state?s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly?"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise?not the faster increases associated with global
warming?have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all ? (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an ,
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.

Under Bush Developers started building in flood plains and FLOOD WAYS,
in addition they are now permitted to fill in flood plains at least
around here. All of this means higher insurance premiums and forcing
flooding onto people who would otherwise not be at risk of flooding.


You must not be familiar with the several thousand years when people
built their homes near rivers and farmed land near rivers. You also need
to do some reading up on irrigation on how that works.



The subject here is flooding of commercial property and houses built too
close to potential flooding/surge waters and insurance coverage for same.
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2008
Posts: 5,868
Default There's dumb and then there's...

In article ,
says...

On Sun, 3 Jun 2012 08:32:43 -0400, BAR wrote:

In article ,
s says...

On 6/2/2012 2:08 PM, X ` Man wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming


Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state?s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly?"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise?not the faster increases associated with global
warming?have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all ? (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an ,
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.
Under Bush Developers started building in flood plains and FLOOD WAYS,
in addition they are now permitted to fill in flood plains at least
around here. All of this means higher insurance premiums and forcing
flooding onto people who would otherwise not be at risk of flooding.


You must not be familiar with the several thousand years when people
built their homes near rivers and farmed land near rivers. You also need
to do some reading up on irrigation on how that works.


You need to get a grip on how dikes, levees, bridges, and waterside
buildings act as dams.

http://citizensvoice.com/news/west-p...-dam-1.1202046


I live near a big river and I know how structures act as dams.

Stupid rich people buying government and getting laws twisted so that
they can build enormously expensive structures in harms way for the
sake of a "view" runs insurance prices through the roof for everybody.
You also didn't address the OP's original question. How does passing a
law against natural forces prevent nature from taking its own course?


People build where the money is. The good farm land is along rivers. The
rivers are a method of transporting crops to markets. People have always
been building, farming and living along rivers.

Follow the Nile river through Egypt and you will see that all of the
cities are along the river. All of the people live along the river. All
of the food is produced along the river.

Where is Paris? Where is London. Where is Rome? Where is Moscow? Where
is Berlin? Where is Baghdad?
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Feb 2012
Posts: 880
Default There's dumb and then there's...

On 6/3/2012 10:59 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sun, 3 Jun 2012 08:32:43 -0400, wrote:

In ,
s says...

On 6/2/2012 2:08 PM, X ` Man wrote:
...southern dumb:

Sea Level Bill Would Allow North Carolina to Stick Its Head in the Sand
A bill moving through the state legislature would allow developers to
ignore sea level predictions based on global warming


Wading into the turbulent debate over global warming, North Carolina's
state legislature is considering a bill that would require the
government to ignore new reports of rising sea levels and predictions of
ocean and climate scientists.

*Business interests* along the state's coastline pushed lawmakers to
include language in a law that would require future sea level estimates
to be based only on data from past years. New evidence, especially on
sea level rise that could be tied to global warming, would not be
factored into the state's development plans for the coast.

"We're skeptical of the rising sea level science," says Tom Thompson,
chairman of NC-20, an economic development group representing the
state's 20 coastal counties. "Our concern is that the economy could be
tremendously impacted by a hypothetical number with nothing but
computers and speculation."

That 'hypothetical number' came from the state?s Coastal Resources
Commission, which recommended planning around a 39-inch rise in sea
level by 2100. At the behest of NC-20 and coastal governments, the
commission decided to remove the number from its policy entirely.

"Originally we did have the 39-inch recommendation, but the commission
chose to remove that," says Michele Walker, spokeswoman for the North
Carolina Coastal Resources Commission. "We got a lot of pushback from
coastal governments and groups who were concerned that would hurt their
ability to develop in their communities."

The bill is still in its early stages, but the section stirring up
controversy states:

"These rates shall only be determined using historical data, and these
data shall be limited to the time period following the year 1900. Rates
of seas-level rise may be extrapolated linearly?"

The parts about using only historical data, which shows a slow, linear
sea-level rise?not the faster increases associated with global
warming?have drawn the most ire from scientists.

"Cleary they don't understand science at all ? (sea level rise) hasn't
been linear," says Stan Riggs, a professor at East Carolina University
who is an expert on the state's coastline. "To put blinders on and just
say we don't accept what's happening on our coast is absolutely criminal."

"But the people that live out there that aren't developers are all on
board. It's the managers and developers who want to keep the status quo.
They're making a lot of money off of it," Riggs added.

- - -

Ignorance and stupidity, backed up by commercial greed. Here's an ,
idea...let the business owners who want to build in the future flood
zone pay for their own infrastructure *and* force them to self insure so
taxpayers and policy holders elsewhere don't end up paying for their folly.
Under Bush Developers started building in flood plains and FLOOD WAYS,
in addition they are now permitted to fill in flood plains at least
around here. All of this means higher insurance premiums and forcing
flooding onto people who would otherwise not be at risk of flooding.

You must not be familiar with the several thousand years when people
built their homes near rivers and farmed land near rivers. You also need
to do some reading up on irrigation on how that works.


You need to get a grip on how dikes, levees, bridges, and waterside
buildings act as dams.

http://citizensvoice.com/news/west-p...-dam-1.1202046


I live near a big river and I know how structures act as dams.

Stupid rich people buying government and getting laws twisted so that
they can build enormously expensive structures in harms way for the
sake of a "view" runs insurance prices through the roof for everybody.
You also didn't address the OP's original question. How does passing a
law against natural forces prevent nature from taking its own course?


People build where the money is. The good farm land is along rivers. The
rivers are a method of transporting crops to markets. People have always
been building, farming and living along rivers.

Follow the Nile river through Egypt and you will see that all of the
cities are along the river. All of the people live along the river. All
of the food is produced along the river.

Where is Paris? Where is London. Where is Rome? Where is Moscow? Where
is Berlin? Where is Baghdad?


Where is Venice? Where is Holland? Where is The Big Easy.
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