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Conservancy Protects Additional Land at
Lynx Prairie Preserve - Purchases will safeguard globally rare remnant
prairie communities
"We do work closely with USFWS (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service).
We buy these properties when they need to be bought, so that at some
point we can become the willing seller (to government). This helps the
government get around the problem of local opposition." - The
Nature Conservancy's William Weeks quoted by syndicated columnist
Warren T. Brookes, January 23, 1991.
(Note: Nothing has changed since the above quote, other than the scope
of the resource control. This is an insatiable appetite -- which could
be called an addiction to power -- that gobbles property rights like
the old PacMan game of the 1970s. Bold highlighting, in the original
article, has been left intact, but changed from black to red, to
illustrate the extensive Language Deception which is hard at work to
mislead the read. "Hiking" is simply bait tossed to the
reader to divert attention from the huge hook, which is The Wildlands
Project come to Ohio. Lest any naive reader think that such
"communities" are occupied by humans, they are NOT. The
"Nature Conservancy" is on an all-out mission to control as
much land, water, etc., as it can, under various banners and guises,
such as "protect," "safeguard," "for future
generations," etc. Remember that this "shadow
government" is partnered at the federal, state and local levels
with governments, not only in the United States, but also in many
countries worldwide. Masquerading as a benevolent "non-profit"
organization that simply "protects" lands it acquires, the
reality is that TNC steamrollers the private property owners in its
path. It takes no prisoners, including the indigenous people that get
"resettled" far from their homes. The retaking of all
resources is accomplished under the Trojan Horse disguise of
"protection," then often sold to governments -- for hefty
profits or land swaps, which garner more properties that may be
developed/utilized in the future. One need look no further than
America's resource providers -- her farmers, fishermen, loggers,
miners and ranchers -- to see the same thing happening here. TNC is a
huge player in the conversion of our resourceful, self-reliant,
actually sustainable country into one that is "service
oriented." Unless you want your children and grandchildren to be
maids and gardeners at posh resorts, with no ability to own their own
lands or utilize them for their own "future generations,"
it's high time to listen up. The only thing that is certain about
all this "non-profit" land baron activity -- much of it
funded by EPA and other federal agency grants, which are also known as
your taxpayer dollars -- is that most humans are targeted to become,
first endangered, then extinct. Do you think these statements are too
strong? Read more here
http://www.propertyrightsresearch.org/tncframes.htm and here: http://www.vtc.net/~tnccon/)
May 31, 2006
No author provided at originating website address/URL.
Lynx, Ohio [southeast Adams County, eight miles from the Ohio River
and a little more than an hour from Cincinnati] - Two recent
purchases have added 162
acres to The Nature Conservancy’s Lynx Prairie
Preserve, part of the Edge of Appalachia
Preserve system, in Adams County. The acquisitions,
made possible in part by the Clean
Ohio Fund, will protect the remnant
prairie communities that persist along cliff edges,
narrow ridges, and forest openings within the region.
Copyright 2006, The Nature Conservancy.
http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/ohio/press/press2468.html |