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Opinion: This land is our land


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By Nicholas Kristof, New York Times

The other day, my teenage daughter and I were idly browsing real estate porn, a monument to American inequality: a private island in the Bahamas selling for $17.9 million; a 900-acre retreat in Washington State for $11 million; and an 83-acre estate in Colorado for a cool $100 million.

Then we snapped out of the covetousness, for we had just been enjoying a vacation on even more exclusive property, so valuable that no hedge fund manager could ever afford to buy or rent it.

We had been hiking day after day past pristine mountain lakes, serenaded by the babble of snow-fed streams, greeted by vivid wildflowers in alpine meadows. And it’s all my land!

Of course, it’s also your land. It’s our extraordinary national inheritance, one of the greatest gifts of our ancestors — our public lands.

My daughter and I were backpacking a 210-mile stretch of the Pacific Crest Trail in central California, from Donner Pass to Yosemite. The cost? It was all free.

 

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Comments (1)
  1. dan wilvers says - Posted: September 17, 2015

    I have no beef with the 1% live as you desire it’s a free country, as for me I love simplicity and minimizing my fortunes so I can and do enjoy the great outdoors.

    My singular beef with those folks who have to dough to buy the best is to keep them from blocking access to, in our case, our lake and or lakes, and the oceans. It’s something I admire about the state of Hawaii.

    No matter how pretentious a property may be anyone is allowed access to the beach that their property is built upon, at least that’s how it was the last time I visited.