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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 25th, 2007, 10:45 PM        Forest Thinning Saves Lives
Many on the far left believe cutting down trees is always wrong but this controversial policy's fruit is coming to light in California:
LAKE ARROWHEAD -- As flames ravage surrounding communities, this resort town high in the San Bernardino Mountains emerged largely unscathed, an island in a sea of destruction.

The credit for that isolated victory, federal officials say, should go to firefighting tactics, shifting winds and favorable terrain -- and a sometimes controversial U.S. Forest Service effort to eliminate the tinder that fuels forest fires.
Since 2002, the Forest Service has removed millions of trees, thinned brush and cut low-hanging branches, creating fuel breaks around almost 80% of the community. Fires don't spread quickly or easily through such areas, instead burning lower to the ground and with less intensity.

"The fuel breaks saved Lake Arrowhead," said Randall Clauson, the Forest Service's division chief for the San Bernardino National Forest and incident commander earlier this week on the two biggest wildfires still burning in the mountains.

He said he believes that, without the breaks, "the fire would have run right through Lake Arrowhead and gone to Highway 18, cutting off the evacuation route and probably resulting in the loss of hundreds of lives."
LA Times

That is quite something -- literally a policy of cutting down trees having been strategically employed to save lives. I wonder how environmentalists feel about that one?
Sometimes cutting trees is a good thing.
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derrida derrida is offline
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Old Oct 27th, 2007, 03:58 AM       
Look it up. 85 percent of fires in wilderness areas are suppressed. How much fuel buildup does this result in? Billions of public dollars and far too many lives are spent every year, particularly when it is time to defend the second homes and resorts of the wealthy, who apparently expect the federal government to assume the position of local fire department. Fires are a natural part of a forest ecosystem, as are the pests and pathogens that provide the same "thinning" services you applaud. Does the active management of wilderness strike you as absurd? Would the earth be a charred wasteland if not for the intervention of mankind?
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Old Oct 27th, 2007, 12:09 PM       
So then you are in favor of fighting fire with fire?
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mburbank~ Yes, okay, fine, I do know what you meant, but why is it not possible for you to get through a paragraph without making all the words cry?

How can someone who obviously thinks so much of their ideas have so little respect for expressing them? How can someone who so yearns to be taken seriously make so little effort?!
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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 01:45 AM       
I think it makes sense for people to practice forest thinning as it saves property an dlives, and frankly, I do not think all of these homes are merely resorts of the wealthy. And even if they were, what gives you the power to say that another man's property ought to be destroyed?
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Chojin Chojin is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 05:17 AM       
Did you know that if we dry up all the oceans, we can save a lot of people from drowning too?
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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 07:43 AM       
But we are thinning forests... Trees are a very renewable resource, my friend, and sometimes they burn a little too much and threaten houses, Chojin.

You are strawmanning me... I propose thinning of forests and you pretend I take a more extreme stance.

This is simply ERRONEOUS.
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derrida derrida is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 10:14 AM       
the problem with most logging is that it results in dense stands of young growth, which are the most susceptible to fires. fire breaks do work, and we need to make roads safe for people, so i can't take issue with the letter of what you are saying. (and anyone who disagrees probably doesnt shower regularly. why would you waste time addressing people who arent even in the mainstream of thought on environmentalism? is it easier to paint a movement by picking and choosing the negative qualities of its least thoughtful members?) the problem is that this is going to be used to justify public money subsidizing what timber companies should be doing in the first place: forest management.
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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 11:41 AM       
So forest companies, private entities meant to make profit for their shareholders... Must do official government bidding? Sounds like socialism if I ever heard it.

Canada has officially adopted a policy of forest thinning because it does prevent extreme forest fires. You can argue a lot but you are arguing against lawmakers in Canada and the US which have adopted such policies -- and in this circumstance, policies which saved lives.
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derrida derrida is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 12:48 PM       
what's so unreasonable about expecting a timber company to perform preventative maintenance on stocks of land so as to prevent loss of those resources? the government spending money to do things which should be done by the private sector? sounds like socialism to me.

forest thinning is necessary as it stands but only because natural burn cycles have been disrupted.
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 02:53 PM       
Natural burn cycles were stupid anyways, and totally inconvenient since they happen whenever they want to. If the forest's gotta burn, might as well be us doing it when we need to.
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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 06:51 PM       
So they would only be performing it on land they held? Well, certainly that makes sense and rather than socialism that is mere a security code for a business to fulfill and so really is not socialism. What would be socialism is if we did not compensate a private company for performing the task in Yellowstone National Forest.

How can you support socialism or are you perhaps not an American?
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Chojin Chojin is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 08:47 PM       
It's a miracle our entire planet wasn't consumed in a ball of fire before we could invent the chainsaw.

I hear that's how the sun was formed.
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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 10:30 PM       
Naturally, many fires burn themselves out much to the detriment of humanity. Now that we have been fruitful and multiplied we need to manage the Earth that we live on (it is our domain, our possession, ours to rape).
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Chojin Chojin is offline
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Old Oct 28th, 2007, 11:13 PM       
Also what do you mean draining all the oceans is a more drastic solution?

It still RAINS, doesn't it?

DUH.
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Old Oct 29th, 2007, 10:24 AM       
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kulturkampf View Post
Naturally, many fires burn themselves out much to the detriment of humanity. Now that we have been fruitful and multiplied we need to manage the Earth that we live on (it is our domain, our possession, ours to rape).
You ever heard the phrase "don't bite the hand that feeds you?"
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Kulturkampf Kulturkampf is offline
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Old Oct 29th, 2007, 10:34 AM       
I have.

However, I have not heard "do not irrigate the land that feeds you."
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Chojin Chojin is offline
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Old Oct 29th, 2007, 02:34 PM       
I know I'd be pretty mad if you irrigated me.


Just sayin'.
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Old Oct 29th, 2007, 02:40 PM       
Chojin, I love you.
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Old Oct 31st, 2007, 04:43 PM       
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kulturkampf View Post
Naturally, many fires burn themselves out much to the detriment of humanity. Now that we have been fruitful and multiplied we need to manage the Earth that we live on (it is our domain, our possession, ours to rape).
Can you explain that first statement?

You are tedious, but I'll try to clarify some terms here. The flora that serves as fuel is new growth. Old trees usually survive fire due the the extreme thickness of their bark and lack of accumulated fuel around their bases due to the shade they provide. Stands of new growth, the stuff that fuels canopy fires, grow in when clearcutting is used. This is why clearcutting is no longer common practice. Nowadays logging companies simply pick and choose the oldest, most valuable trees in an area. This is on national land. They are indeed being compensated, not only by the market for their products, but by the government's (dubious, if you consider they are removing only the most fire-resistant trees) rationale, for the service they provide in reducing the severity of fires.

This isn't even what your original post was about, but I guess I felt drunkenly compelled to address the straw-man you erected. Honestly, don't just make up some ghost hippies and paint them with your broad-ass brush. Show me some real ones we can point and laugh at.

Yeah, those safe haven communities work, they cost about 10,000 more per home, but these costs are happily absorbed by the home buyers. One good idea besides changing building materials, landscaping, was instead of building the houses around a golf course that serves as a huge fire alley, they build the course around the homes, making an isolated island.
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