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By Don Casey
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Tuesday, 15 December 2009 09:05 |
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We read glowing reports and articles about "Sustainable Agriculture." It is difficult to create an awareness of the potential harm because the verbiage and slogans used sound so benevolent. The reality is that foodshed regulations will give environmental groups and
government agencies control over all means of production of the food
consumed by the American people. Through increased
taxation and regulation, American citizens will be stripped of their
wealth and property and all resources will be redistributed as
government sees fit.
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Read more... - Sustainable Agricult...
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By Diane Ross
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Monday, 07 January 2008 04:41 |
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Australian leaders enforce Agenda 21 Sustainable Development by restricting private property use through policies like the "Native Vegetation Act." Public-private partnerships with willing corporations, councils, developers and others are used to advance the agenda. As a result, Australian businesses are becoming nationalized and private property is being abolished. Click here for a January 2010 radio broadcast with protesting farmer, Peter Spencer. Updates here.
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Read more... - Agenda for the 21st ...
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By Ronald A. Zumbrun
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Wednesday, 16 May 2007 15:36 |
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On April 30, 2007, the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association presented a new initiative to the Attorney General’s Office entitled the “California Property Owners and Farmland Protection Act” to be voted on at the June 2008 election. It will reverse the eminent domain Kelo case for Californians by specifically defining “public use” as meaning use and ownership by a public agency for the public use stated at the time of the taking, such as roads, parks and public facilities. |
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Read more... - New California Initi...
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By Susanna Lynton Jennings
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Friday, 10 September 2004 06:49 |
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Summary:
KING COUNTY, Wash. -- Are gardens and ecosystems mutually exlcusive? King County's 65-10 rule denies future generations the American gardening tradition. |
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Read more... - Future Theft
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By Michael Shaw
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Tuesday, 20 April 2004 09:03 |
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Summary:
Achieving Abundance Ecology requires a direct relationship between man and the land, Abundance Ecologist Michael Shaw said in a presentation to the Trans-Heritage Association annual meeting and conference in Alpine Texas in May 2003. Shaw speaks from experience, having received acclaim for creating an ecological oasis from a weedy 75-acre parcel on the central coast of California -- what he calls "Liberty Garden."
"To release the potential productivity and diversity of a landscape, an owner must be free to engage in rigorous disturbance, and free to pursue a reasoned and creative process of trial and error. This process would be suited to the choice of each individual and the uniqueness of each property," Shaw said. Read some key excerpts from Shaw's presentation to the Trans-Texas Heritage Association.
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Read more... - Sustainable Developm...
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