Micheal wrote:
If there were somewhere farming was more profitable, most likely people would be doing it already. Imperial County, where most of the farming you are talking about takes place, is actually pretty empty of people. Less than 200,000 in the whole county, and most of them involved in Agriculture.
Again, we're talking about the future. Maybe you haven't noticed but plenty of farming is already gone on in other places. If the situation changes, then more of it may move to those places. What is so hard to understand about this? The PRESENT situation is not the issue.
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Most of the water for the Ag there comes from the Colorado river. Water isn't the only problem, with residue from the industrial farming and pest management making the land less productive and thus less profitable. The industry will eventually move on, when the land plays out and they find a better place to grow crops. Until then it will keep on going. Since other than the agriculture, there isn't much reason to be in Imperial County, when it does the county will probably fade to a series of ghost towns.
In the previous paragraph you said "people would be doing it somewhere else already if they were going to" and in this one it's "well, eventually they'll move on." Are you even reading this before clicking submit?
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As for why I talk about the rest of California, once you start to pull the plug on something its hard to stop the leak.
This is a platitude of nothing. No, in fact relocating agriculture from southern California does not meant he inevitable total death of agriculture in the state.
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We used to have a whole lot more military bases here before Congress went to the ABC method of site location. Once they started closing bases here it became a fad. Few are left.
And military base closures are decided and submitted to Congress by BRAC. Congress obviously uses some pork-barrel politics in the process but even they don't just pick bases at random. Fort Ord was closed because it was exceedingly costly. The same goes for many other facilities in California where the combination of high costs and idiotic regulations just make business of any kind very expensive. COLAs for troops alone so they could afford to live there were princely.
San Diego, however, retains its huge navy base because that's where the ocean is, and it would be hugely costly and disruptive to operations to move it else where. So no, "ABC" is not how bases are closed, and the loss of some of something does not mean the loss of all. That's calssic Slippery Slope fallacy reasoning. Where in the **** do you even get this from?