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Christwitz: Our choice is clear PDF Print E-mail
Written by Barbara Christwitz   
Friday, 25 April 2008
Thank you to everyone who organized and participated in various Earth Day events throughout Lake County thereby keeping hope alive.


Coincidentally, on Earth Day I attended Clearlake’s meeting about the Provinsalia proposal. I view Provinsalia and similar projects as more steps towards environmental suicide of our county. Why would more than 500 Provinsalia homes along with a golf course be built when there are now literally hundreds of vacant homes on the market as well as scarce water for agriculture, drinking and household use? The last thing this county needs is to unnecessarily use precious resources to further despoil our delicate ecological balance.


Our choice is clear: We can choose to rip down trees, bulldoze whole hillsides, erect countless developments and strip malls, wreak congestion in our already troubled streets, and suck up the ground water and creeks. Conversely, we can obey the cry and chant, “The earth is our mother; we must take care of her.” This cry is basic, and as we care for our mother, we care for our children and their children after us. In other words, “If Mama ain’t happy, ain’t nobody happy.”


I recommend the DVD (available at local video stores), “The 11th Hour” for a sobering yet helpful view of our plight and hope in these times of climate change. If you watch it, I predict you too will think twice about the Provinsalias of our county.


Barbara Christwitz lives in Clearlake.


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purplegirl - Good Question Registered | 04-26-2008 09:29:11
Quote:
Why would more than 500 Provinsalia homes along with a golf course be built when there are now literally hundreds of vacant homes on the market as well as scarce water for agriculture, drinking and household use?


Good question. You don't even need to be an "environmentalist" to ask it either. Both the question and answer is simply one of common sense.
tom Registered | 04-26-2008 11:06:54
The developer has promised to replace all the oaks cut down with new plantings. Have you ever tried to grow an oak tree? You're lucky to get even 50% germination. Then each surviving seedling needs to be watered and cared for for a number of years before it can make it on it's own, especially in our hot climate. The small percentage that do make it then require many decades before they provide the resources to us and wildlife that will replace the ones cut down. Not a viable mitigation. The statement in the EIR that oaks "will be replanted" are pretty much empty words.
Raphael - It's simple Author | 04-26-2008 14:21:51
all we have to do is change our philosophy: to understand that we are part of nature, not above it....that what we do to the earth we do to ourselves (and our descendants), because we are not separated from nature but are an integral part of it.
It doesn't take much to understand these things, but it requires what modern civilization profoundly lacks: HUMILITY.
the word humility comes from the Latin humus meaning the soil itself.
To be close to the soil is to be humble...a conceptual and physical separation from nature leads to arrogance and ignorance.
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