For nearly 50 years, a federal program, The Land and Water Conservation Fund, has been working effectively in our state to protect our most critical outdoor resources and to provide recreation opportunities that have helped spur a $1 billion recreation economy in South Dakota. Yet the fund, which is supposed to receive $900 million annually, has been constantly raided by Congress and used for other unintended purposes. Sen. Tim Johnson wants to fix that problem and make sure the promise that was made to the American people is finally fulfilled. He has co-sponsored a bill (SB 338) in the U.S. Senate that would make sure LWCF receives the annual funding that the federal government collects from offshore drilling.Sen. Johnson is a strong leader and is expected to defend the environment from the seat he holds until the end of the upcoming election cycle.
West River ranchers describing themselves as Republicans are angry that their political leaders aren't doing more to end the land grab that would spoil their livelihoods:
Dwayne Vig, 71, a cattle rancher near Mud Butte in Meade County, says while he's no Obama fan, he is even less enthused about TransCanada's pipeline. The couple feared they would be taken to court by TransCanada under eminent domain, a law that allows land to be acquired if it is perceived as being in the national interest.--Daniel Simmons-Ritchie Rapid City Journal staff.A now-dethroned former GOP strategist taught meanness as an effective political tool: some of us learned better than others have.
The earth hater party is splintering in South Dakota, a state that traffics Native children and is under fire by civil rights groups.
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Republican is simply another word for Earth hater but comments intended to troll the author or other readers will not be published so use a handle or even your real name and don’t be an asshole.