The Next Added 100 Million Americans, Part 19
By Frosty Wooldridge (02/02/07)
California--the bow of the Titanic - At one point, California boasted itself as the most beautiful state in the Union. In 1950, it housed a reasonable 10 million people. Known as the land of milk and honey--California's mountains, coastline and weather beckoned. California Condors soared through limitless blue skies. Yosemite, the Red Woods, whales and seals along its coastline, Hollywood and 77 Sunset Strip - created the California mystique.
Fifty-seven years later, 37.3 million people cram, jam, gridlock and fume in their fumes on âforeverâ crowded freeways. Growing at 1,700 people daily, 620,000 annuallyâCalifornia expects an added 21 million people within 35 years.
Illustrating âenvironmental refugeesâ, 40 percent of Los Angeles residents were born outside the U.S. They arrived from Mexico, Central America and Asia.
Result? Massive subdivision housing sprawl! Roads, malls, schools, churches, firehouses and houses devour land like Kansas wheat combines. Developers demolish nature. They guzzle water. They vomit black smoke into the air. Cars whiz around like mad hornets. The more compacted the traffic, the more âroad ragersâ. Not one smiling face can be seen on a California freeway! Drivers busy themselves trying to stay alive.
Joe Guzzardi, a writer and college in Lodi said, âIf we continue our suicidal immigration path, whether the inevitable development takes the form of sprawl by building on a cityâs periphery or landfill by building inside the city limits, the net result will be the same: an eroded quality of life and a vanished sense of place.â
Californiaâs developers brag âsmart growthâ, however, whether that means âslow growthâ, âmanaged growthâ, âbrilliant growthâ, âdumb growthâ, âfast growthâ, or âsnailâs pace growthââit equals 21 million more people swarming all over California.
Governor Schwarzenegger and state treasurer Phil Angelides stuff themselves into the pockets of developers. Angelides said, âWe are a state of 26 million cars, SUVs and trucks that travel 314 billion miles a year and burn 15 billion gallons of gas. We are on a path over the next 20 years to become a state with 36 million cars that travel 446 billion miles and burn nearly 18 billion gallons. We must choose to grow smarter, to give Californians more transportation options, the choice to driver fewer miles and burn fewer gallons of fossil fuel.â
Some choice! How intelligent is that statement? To top it off, President Bush, in his State-of-the-Union speech said, âIn the next 10 years by 2017, the United States will reduce oil consumption by 20 percent by using conservation, hybrid cars and ethanol.â
He forgot to report America adding 30 million people in that 10 year span. Therefore, our consumption can only rise by a factor of 30 million people using gas, coal, natural gas and wood for energy.
Guzzardi said, âIf people would contemplate the additional 100 million people coming our way in the not too distant future, and our current gluttonous land use, then they might become more alarmed. In a word, the problem is population. If it can be stabilized through sensible immigration policies, then we have a chance to level off growth. Weâd have a chance to save our state and the United States.â
This journalist has bicycled the length and width of California four times in the past 25 years. Iâve seen it change from paradise to hell on earth. Too many people fill its parks with too much trash. Its ocean beaches suffer dying seals and seabirds from too much pollution. As Katie Couric on CBS reported this past week, fish stocks dropped 90 percent in the past decade. California skies fill with toxic smoke too thick to breathe. Yosemite National Park suffers wall to wall crowding. Millions of cars create a kind of insanity of movement far removed from the natural world. Condors no longer soar in pristine skies because the last of them perch in cages built to save their species.
Constant tension fills places like Los Angeles and San Francisco. You canât get away from the crowding, metal, concrete, glass, wires, buildings, roads and loss of sense of place.
One of my favorite writers, a Californian in 1874, John Muir said, âTell me what you will of the benefactions of city civilization, of the sweet security of streetsâall as part of the natural upgrowth of man towards the high destiny we hear so much of. I know that our bodies were made to thrive only in pure air, and the scenes in which pure air is found. If the death exhalations that brood the broad towns in which we so fondly compact ourselves were made visible, we should flee as from a plague. All are more or less sick; there is not a perfectly sane man in all of San Francisco.â
If the United States can be compared to the Titanic, we are a country sailing in dangerous waters, much too fast and overloading our âboatâ with too many people to stay afloat. California might be the bow of our ship and, as it begins failing, its own âenvironmental refugeesâ canât help but abandon ship like rats in a hurricane.
Had the Titanic been able to stop the in-flooding of the North Atlantic, it would not have become the greatest seagoing catastrophe of the last century.
However, California is the bow of our own catastrophe, but no one wants to speak up or take action. I am confounded that no national leaders step into the center ring to call for a national population policy. None talk about stopping the in-flooding of humanity with the simple choice of reasoned action.
It didnât make any difference on the Titanic if you were first class, third class or shoveling the coal in the boilers. When the ship sank, everyone became a victim in one form or another. As California fails in areas of water shortages, less farmland, toxic air pollution, horrific crowding and mind numbing expansion away from natureâenvironmental refugees will escape, but as the rest of the United States adds that next 100 million, and then another 100 million, and yet another 100 millionâwhere will anyone make their escape?
âCamp out among the grass and gentians of glacier meadows, in craggy garden nooks full of Natureâs darlings. Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Natureâs peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while areas will drop off like autumn leaves.â John Muir, 1838â1914
What you can do for a better future for your country:
A republican form of government is not a spectator sport. It means you must jump in, roll up you sleeves and take personal and collective action. Of course, you could let a dictator take over and do everything for you, but that path would give you Cuba, China, North Korea and other unsavory examples.
To stop Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid from giving an amnesty, take action. Call for a full 10 year moratorium.
CALL NANCY PELOSI
Washington, DC - (202) 225-4965
San Francisco, CA - (415) 556-4862
EMAIL NANCY PELOSI
sf.nancy@mail.house.gov
EMAIL FORM FOR NANCY PELOSI www.house.gov/pelosi/contact/contact.html
Senator Harry Reid
202-224-3121 in Washington DC
775-686-5750 in Reno, NV
www.reid.senate.gov
George Bush
1600 Pennsylvania Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20500
comments@whitehouse.gov
Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard for live listener: 202 456 1414
Fax: 202-456-2461
We must 'sour the milk.â Bring out your points in the call:
1, America cannot support another 100 million people added to our country in 34 years, i.e., water crisis, resource depletion, air pollution, gridlock, loss of quality of life, etc.
2, America cannot support lawbreakers being given citizenship.
3, America must maintain our English language.
4, America wants only legal immigrants who play by the rules and speak English.
5, America's working poor deserve a chance at jobs taken by illegals
6, America already has too many people and I support a 10 year moratorium on all immigration.
7, Americans must maintain our schools for our children.
8, We can no longer tolerate 350,000 birthright citizens (anchor babies) annually that subtract from our own citizens.
9, Attrition through enforcement by stopping their ability to wire money home, obtain rental housing and jobs.
10, An amnesty failed in 1986, and it will only be worse today. We're being displaced out of our jobs and out of our own country. Call with relentless and never-give-up passion.
Copyright ©2007 Frosty Wooldridge All Rights Reserved
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