Speaking of city dwellers, some Bay Area agencies, politicians, and environ-whackos are again trying to get everyone into densely populated cities. Centralized power over the masses is, of course, their goal.
[url]www.bayarea.com/mld/bayarea/news/3243409.htm[/url]
A coalition of Bay Area regional agencies, environmental, business and social justice groups will present the draft Regional Livability Footprint Project.
It offers three growth alternatives that range from concentrating new residents inside existing cities to building transit villages to more compact suburban-style neighborhoods.
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Their pushing "Alternative 1", moving new residents into existing cities.
[url]www.abag.ca.gov/planning/smartgrowth/whatisSG.html[/url]
Regional ecosystems also provide important habitat for a number of endangered and threatened species, including the San Joaquin kit fox, the Bay checkerspot butterfly, the California red-legged frog, the California black rail, the Alameda whipsnake and the California least tern.
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Phuck that stinking frog! I have to live in a two-bedroom shithole in Oakland so some stinkin' frog has room to play? What BS!
And who's to say the Alameda whipsnake doesn't eat that stickin' red-legged frog? Obviously, the snake doesn't care the frog is an "endangered" species!
Morons!