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- Newsgroups: ca.environment
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!jato!quake!brian
- From: brian@quake.sylmar.ca.us (Brian K. Yoder)
- Subject: Re: Markets Only...What a Concept!
- Message-ID: <C1AzBw.C2H@quake.sylmar.ca.us>
- Organization: Quake Public Access
- References: <C13Jx6.F6H@quake.sylmar.ca.us> <1993Jan19.194409.9141@butch.lmsc.lockheed.com>
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 10:47:52 GMT
- Lines: 129
-
- In article <1993Jan19.194409.9141@butch.lmsc.lockheed.com> tilley@sunfse.ese.lmsc.lockheed.com writes:
- >In article <C13Jx6.F6H@quake.sylmar.ca.us> brian@quake.sylmar.ca.us (Brian K. Yoder) writes:
- >>In message <38511105@hpindda.cup.hp.com>, alanm@hpindda.cup.hp.com (Alan McGow
- >>en) writes:
- >>>Brian Yoder writes:
- >>>>But how much is that impact "worth"? Who decide how much an acres of forest
- >>>>is worth? Greenpeace? Earth First? Users of lumber? Backpackers? Timber
- >>>>companies? My point here is that the kind of system you seem to be advocating
- >>>>is NOT a way of informing the market...it is a way of putting the market
- >>>>under the control of a political process.
-
- >The market already operates within the context of a political process.
-
- Of course it does. The question is whether the choices in the market will be
- made by a political process, or if the political system merely serves as a
- level playing field on which the various buyers and sellers can make their
- own choices.
-
- >The value of money is greatly impacted by the actions of the central banks.
-
- Indeed, that's why I'm opposed to central banks and governemnt currency!
- (Just for fun, have a look at the adjusted value of US currency since 1789...
- it is roughly flat for over 100 years and the just when the central banking
- system was instituted, it started rising at an exponential rate. Funny that.
-
- >Some forms of property (such as the copyright) exist because a political
- >process has defined them.
-
- No. Rights exist prior to law...laws may recognize a right or may delimit
- it, but they exist because of the nature of human beings and the needs they
- have for successful social relationships.
-
- >>>Issues about the long-range health of ecosystems and the biosphere *must*
- >>>be handled by a political process, and cannot be left up to market processes.
-
- >>Why? Because you don't believe that property rights are unalienable? ...
-
- >If the impacted "resource" is a natural commons (meaning that privatization
- >is not a reasonable option) such as an ecosystem or the atmosphere,
-
- What's so unreasonable about privatiging these?
-
- Even if you could somehow justify such commoness, why does it follow that
- the government (rather than the users of the resource) ought to centrally plan
- the use of those resources? Where does it stop? Isn't everything a resource?
- Isn't this a call for universal government control?
-
- >then the
- >remaining choices are to ignore the impact, or allow the government to
- >regulate the use of the commons as a public trust.
-
- Oh, are you so closed-minded that you can't think of any others?
-
- Besdies, why can't atmospheric usage rights be privatized?
-
- >I can find no meaningful sense in which any individual "owns" a portion of
- >the atmosphere as property.
-
- If the air in a certain region (say, a city) can absorb N units of gas X per
- day safely, then why not simply make that a tradable right just like water
- rights and oil rights are? It's very simple, as long as you can prove some
- kind of harm legally (something hard to do even for environmentalists).
-
- >>Of course if you deny that these are true then you'll have to explain how an
- >>unalienable rights can be subordinated to government control, ...
-
- >If something has not been privatized (such as an ecosystem), then it is a
- >commons.
-
- How do you define "ecosystem" in this context? Why is it valuable? To whom?
-
- Besides, what about property which can quite easily be privatized (like
- a forest for example)?
-
- >I fail to see why anyone has to "explain" how non-existant
- >property can be subordinated to government control.
-
- >>Unacceptable to whom? Just because you and your friends don't like the way
- >>others use property that THEY own is no justification for you to force them to
- >>do as you would like them to.
-
- >If your use of property affects a natural commons, then why should I not
- >concern myself with the impact on the commons? It appears to be your
- >argument (please correct me if I'm wrong) that any resource can either be
- >privatized, or the impact on the resource can be ignored.
-
- Or more directly, that any resource important enough to have substantial
- value can be privatized, or its use can be evaluated with regard to the
- protection of individual rights (e.g. even if you can't privatize a
- river, killing 100 people by dumping poison in their water is still
- a crime.).
-
- >It is my
- >contention that there are resources which exist as a natural commons
- >(such as an ecosystem). As one member of the public that uses this
- >commons, I fail to understand why I should be asked to ignore impacts
- >to it.
-
- If your definition of "ecosystem" is as broad as I suspect it is, you would
- deem to be demanding infinite power to rule over others.
-
- >>Are you holding up Victorian England as the ideal society? I believe that in
- >>Victorian England, the government owned the water supply, ...
-
- >My understanding of CA water law (I'm not a lawyer) is that the state of
- >CA owns all surface water, whereas agencies and individuals own the right
- >to use the water. If they don't use their right, they lose it to someone
- >else (appropriative water rights). I also understand that much of the
- >western US operates on this principle.
-
- That's generally correct.
-
- >Further, in 1983 the CA supreme court (in Audibon Society v. Superior Court
- >of Alpine County, Feb. 1983) found the "public trust doctrine" to co-exist
- >with the "appropriative rights" doctrine.
-
- Just because a court did or didn't make some ruling doesn't mean that it was
- correct.
-
- >The specific case regarded Mono
- >Lake, where LA was diverting the flow of the streams feeding Mono Lake into
- >the Owens River. The decision was that the Water Resources Board should
- >have considered the public trust value of these streams (and of Mono Lake)
- >before granting appropriative rights to Los Angeles.
-
- And what is that value?
-
- --Brian
-
-