CA gov newsom announces plan to redistribute farmland to blacks and pre-american tribes!!

It has little value unless it's near a growing city and can be urbanized. You have acreage in the Central Valley region that goes for a few thousand an acre now simply because it can no longer be farmed with water restrictions, pollution restrictions, and other government regulations not to mention taxes. So, it sits fallow and unused.

For example, 12 ranches on Point Reyes in Marin County north of San Fran were run out of business after operating there for over a century by rabid environmentalist nutgoobers. In the 1970's elk were reintroduced to the area as part of a conservation thing. The elk had to compete with the dairy farmers and cattle ranchers in the area for grazing land.

Of course, the state stepped in and made regulations in favor of the elk (which you can't hunt and add no value to the land whatsoever having been gone from it for nearly a century). This was followed by suing the ranchers out of business over various practices as they supposedly made it difficult for the elk to survive there.


Or, there are lots of orchards in the Central Valley particularly almond orchards. Operators were restricted more and more on water usage to a point where they couldn't sustain operations. So, they would dig up the trees, smash them into piles and burn then to get rid of them then spread the ash on the soil to help rejuvenate it. The state came in and made that practice illegal. The result was it became too expensive to dig the trees up and use industrial wood chippers to grind them up as an alternative. So, the trees--now dead--were left in place to rot. This attracted all sorts of nuisance pests that began to have negative effects on neighboring farms doing other production. The inability to use viable pesticides meant those farms couldn't control the problem and began losing money on crops lost to the pests. That made them, in turn, shut down operations.


That is sad. Environmentalists and stupid government restrictions have an adverse impact on the environment.
Here in the Northern counties in PA they introduced Elk and they co-exist with the farmlands. They have lotteries for hunting Elk to keep the herds in check and healthy. Of course, the environmentalists and PETA assholes haven't been successful at trying to mess with the farmers or the Elk herds here...yet. But then, we hunters and landowners would fight them tooth and nail.
 
Black failure is NOT the fault of white people . Blacks are low IQ.

1. Black-americans come in last in all standardized tests. Asian-americans do fine on all the tests so it’s not due to cultural bias in the tests.

2. Africa is by far the poorest and most backward continent on the planet. All of black africa is now controlled by blacks and has been for decades so it’s not due to racism.

3. No black has ever won a Science Nobel Prize unless you count one in 1979 for the semi-science of economics. They have won many nobels in non-brain fields like Peace and also in Literature so it is not due to racism.

4. Out of 1725 chess grandmasters in the world, only THREE are black.

5. 50 years of affirmative action special treatment and blacks have fallen even further behind. What does that tell you?

6. If there is a GIANT WHITE CONSPIRACY holding down blacks, why doesn’t it apply in pro sports.?
Stupid fucker, at least get your facts straight!

There are at least 15 identified Black Chess Grandmasters, with prominent figures including Maurice Ashley (USA), Pontus Carlsson (Sweden/Colombia), Amon Simutowe (Zambia), and Bassem Amin (Egypt), among several others from various African nations. The list of Black Grandmasters continues to grow, with notable players from countries such as Egypt, Zambia, South Africa, Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia.



Key Black Grandmasters:
  • 1756893002606.jpeg
    Maurice Ashley
    (Jamaica/USA): Became the first Black person to earn the Grandmaster title in 1999.
  • Pontus Carlsson
    (Colombia/Sweden): Earned the title in 2007 and is a prominent figure in the Black chess community.

  • 1756893002695.jpeg
    Amon Simutowe
    (Zambia): Achieved the Grandmaster title in 2007, becoming the first from sub-Saharan Africa.

  • 1756893002739.jpeg
    Kenny Solomon
    (South Africa): Became South Africa's first GM in 2014.

  • 1756893002780.jpeg
    Bassem Amin
    (Egypt): Holds the title of the highest-rated Black chess player ever.
Other African Grandmasters:


  • Egypt: Includes players such as Adham Fawzy, Essam El-Gindy, Ahmed Adly, and Samy Shoker.
  • Algeria: Has produced Grandmasters like Bilel Bellahcene, Aimen Rizouk, and Mohamed Haddouche.
  • Tunisia: Notable GMs include Bouaziz Slim and Amir Zaibi.
  • Morocco: Features Hicham Hamdouchi among its Grandmasters.
The presence of Black Grandmasters is intercontinental, including players from the Caribbean, North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa.
 
Here in the Northern counties in PA they introduced Elk and they co-exist with the farmlands. They have lotteries for hunting Elk to keep the herds in check and healthy.

Hunting wild animals is the most ethical way to get meat. Assuming it's done by good hunters with rifles. I don't think bow hunting is ethical.
 
I get your point but the democrat party has lots of non-white politicians in it too.
Oddly enough, the 'non-white' politicians are faking it, or are just as racist and a useful tool for Democrats. (Yup...even Obama).

To the average inner city black, it is the New Plantation. Democrats want to keep them there.
A few escape and become productive members of society, but very few.
 
It has little value unless it's near a growing city and can be urbanized. You have acreage in the Central Valley region that goes for a few thousand an acre now simply because it can no longer be farmed with water restrictions, pollution restrictions, and other government regulations not to mention taxes. So, it sits fallow and unused.

For example, 12 ranches on Point Reyes in Marin County north of San Fran were run out of business after operating there for over a century by rabid environmentalist nutgoobers. In the 1970's elk were reintroduced to the area as part of a conservation thing. The elk had to compete with the dairy farmers and cattle ranchers in the area for grazing land.

Of course, the state stepped in and made regulations in favor of the elk (which you can't hunt and add no value to the land whatsoever having been gone from it for nearly a century). This was followed by suing the ranchers out of business over various practices as they supposedly made it difficult for the elk to survive there.


Or, there are lots of orchards in the Central Valley particularly almond orchards. Operators were restricted more and more on water usage to a point where they couldn't sustain operations. So, they would dig up the trees, smash them into piles and burn then to get rid of them then spread the ash on the soil to help rejuvenate it. The state came in and made that practice illegal. The result was it became too expensive to dig the trees up and use industrial wood chippers to grind them up as an alternative. So, the trees--now dead--were left in place to rot. This attracted all sorts of nuisance pests that began to have negative effects on neighboring farms doing other production. The inability to use viable pesticides meant those farms couldn't control the problem and began losing money on crops lost to the pests. That made them, in turn, shut down operations.


Story after story like this all over the SDTC.

The land is still not government owned land.
 
Hunting wild animals is the most ethical way to get meat. Assuming it's done by good hunters with rifles. I don't think bow hunting is ethical.
Depends on what you are hunting.

It's easier to raise meat animals than to depend on hunting wild ones, and they often give you other useful products while they are being raised as well.

But I get it. You like to hunt. I have no problem with that.
 
I'm not talking about ease. I'm talking about ethics. Animals raised in feed lots do not have a good life.
They have an excellent life, since they aren't raised in feed lots.

Feed lots are not used to raise cattle or anything else.

Cattle raised for meat are put out to the best pastureland the farmer can get, they given water at all times they need it, they can spend the night protected in a barn where it's warm and lit, the cows get milked when they need it, they are fed good hay in the winter when grass is no longer available to graze in, they are vaccinated against various diseases, and treated with medicine when they are injured or catch a disease. They are with each other to satisfy their herd instincts, and the rancher tries to keep the pastureland free of poisonous weeds.

When the time comes to harvest them, they are sold to feed lots for a final bulk up on grain before heading to the slaughter house.

Obviously, you have never raised cattle nor even understood what it takes to run a farm or ranch.
 
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