Biden closes public land. No more off-road adventures.

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Suck My Glock

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Our freedom to roam is under assault from a plan to close everything off and make us ask permission before we enjoy it.


https://1ft.io/proxy?q=https%3A%2F%2Fthefederalist.com%2F2023%2F11%2F02%2Fif-biden-gets-his-way-your-next-adventure-out-west-will-be-canceled%2F

There is a plan underway to close the great open spaces of the American West to you, me, our children, and our children’s children. The federal government — which owns most of this land — is determined to move from a “use and let use” system of accessing Western public lands to a permission-based system that will mean reservations, permits, and closures.

Just last month, the Bureau of Land Management issued a final decision to close 317 miles of historic and popular off-road trails near Moab, Utah. For decades, these trails — which are mostly old uranium mining roads — have been enjoyed by everyone from Jeep owners to dirt bike riders to base jumpers looking for a place to land. They have evocative names like Gemini Bridges, Mashed Potatoes, and Dead Cow Trail. They appear in guidebooks. Some of them are even featured in the hugely popular Easter Jeep Safari.

The plan is already being implemented, and it threatens the freedom enjoyed by tens of millions of Americans who hike, camp, Jeep, mountain bike, ATV, fish, swim, canoe, kayak, trail run, overland, base jump, raft, and backpack the millions of acres of free space that make “the West” the West.

I have enjoyed our public lands my entire life. There is nothing like a sip of coffee as you watch the first rays of dawn begin to break on the red rocks. You don’t realize how tough your kids are until they shrug off a chilly 15-degree night in a sleeping bag. And you don’t really appreciate how unfathomably vast the West is until you spend three days exploring the backcountry without seeing another human soul.

All of these experiences — and many others — take place on public lands. There is no entrance fee. There is no permit required. You just lace up your hiking boots, or jump in your pickup, or hop on your mountain bike, and you go. Simple as that. So long you don’t litter or destroy or cause a ruckus, you are left to your own devices. It is something that unites Americans of every class, creed, color, and political persuasion.

That feeling of expansive freedom speaks to everyone who steps outside to enjoy and explore America’s public lands. It feels like our birthright to enjoy them and, for hundreds of years now, it has been just that.

But now, that freedom to roam is under assault from a plan to close everything off and make you ask permission before you enjoy it. If nothing is done to stop it, one of the last, great, unifying forces in American public and private life will be fundamentally transformed and left unrecognizable before most people realize what is happening.

Zooming out, the aggressive rate of federal trail closures is part of the larger “30×30” plan that President Joe Biden announced shortly after taking office. The alleged intention is to “conserve at least 30% of U.S. lands and waters and 30% of U.S. ocean areas by 2030.”

There is no evidence that users of these trails have been damaging them. Indeed, people cherish these lands. Go drive the trails and you will rarely encounter even a single piece of trash. That is why they have been in use for decades with no appreciable degradation.

Nevertheless, the federal government is now implementing a plan to close hundreds of miles of cherished trails. And that is why the BlueRibbon Coalition — the nation’s premier group dedicated to preserving motorized access to wilderness — has joined with the Colorado Offroad Trail Defenders to challenge the plan in court. They are represented by my organization, the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

What the Biden administration’s plan really means is an aggressive plan to close those lands to use by the public. Well, not to the entire public — crunchy backpackers and hikers are still beloved by the left. But the executive decision will limit access for the “wrong” kind of outdoorsy people — people who drive Jeeps and Toyotas and ride ATVs and dirt bikes, and who look like they might be having a good time without suffering under a heavy backpack.

This seems to be a great paradox to those who do not understand why people love overlanding, dispersed camping, dirt biking, ATV riding, and off-roading, but it is no mystery to those of us who actually engage in these activities. We love the wilderness, too. We love taking our children, friends, and family out there and enjoying fresh air and magnificent scenery. If we come across someone else’s trash, we pick it up. If we see someone breaking the rules (by, say, driving off-trail), we reprimand them.

There are very, very few law enforcement personnel on these lands enforcing the rules. Instead, the motorized travel community self-enforces an ethic of respect for public lands. We teach it to our children. That is why these trails remain so attractive as a place to recreate.

The Moab closures are a bellwether case for protecting access to public lands. The closures represent a provocative challenge to an entire way of life for millions of people in the West. If the Biden administration can close these lands, it can close them anywhere. Americans have shown themselves to be responsible stewards of their public lands, and they deserve to be able to enjoy them — freely — for generations to come.
 
Biden Issued an executive order that BLM's first priority is the ecology. So you dumb ass shooters that put lead in the ground suck hind tit.

Oh yeah way too many are too lazy to do anything so they will just wonder what happened after it happens.
 
A lot of you talked shit when I said I’m not buying a red rock pass to enjoy what God made.

You did this to yourselves.

I’ll still be in the Grand Canyon without a park pass cause it’s not their land, it’s OURS.

Make bolt cutters great again
 
I’ve been an off road back country enthusiast all my life. Spent some time off-road this summer in CO, WY, UT and ID and what I saw were trails torn up by extensive use, litter EVERYWHERE, lots of SxS UTV tracks all over virgin country side for no apparent reason, and some of the stupidest drivers with no clue on driver etiquette or responsibilities. This is no different than trashy shooters getting areas closed except it can’t be fixed with a weekend cleanup. I don’t see this as a political issue and more about preserving OUR land for Future generations.
 
This has nothing to do with preserving the land.
It is all about control.
As far as the " get permission " to use the land.
Their goal is for only the elite to " get permission ".

Nothing the democrats and quite a few of the republicans these days , do anything that isn't about control.
That is of course , unless it is about filling their pockets.
 
Whether it’s to control or to preserve, so much of the land has been destroyed that it’s an easy argument for them to make. The side by sides are a real problem as is a certain demographic that’s used to living in squalor. The problem with closing the land is it forces those people into new areas that will wind up destroyed.
 
Ballistic Therapy said:
You can't just blame the side by sides.
There are just as many idiots that own jeeps and 4x4 trucks.

Yeah, ya kinda can. Have you been to any off highway site recently? Cruise up to Crown King? Literally overrun with SXS. Most of them are "sign and drive" idiots that would rather look cool to their similarly minded friends shredding the desert that even think about picking up a single piece of thrash.
 
XJThrottle said:
Ballistic Therapy said:
You can't just blame the side by sides.
There are just as many idiots that own jeeps and 4x4 trucks.

Yeah, ya kinda can. Have you been to any off highway site recently? Cruise up to Crown King? Literally overrun with SXS. Most of them are "sign and drive" idiots that would rather look cool to their similarly minded friends shredding the desert that even think about picking up a single piece of thrash.

Yeah, from my experience off-roading, the UTVs are the most common vehicle out there, and by far, they are unskilled reckless and too speedy to be safe.

The only savior is the more technical trails they don't use because "they can go fast".
 
Ballistic Therapy said:
You can't just blame the side by sides.
There are just as many idiots that own jeeps and 4x4 trucks.

There are idiots that own jeeps and 4x4’s but they’re outnumbered at least 10:1 by idiots in side by sides. They may not take them on technical sections, but they thrash all of the trails used to get to those sections, which will lead to closures of everything.
 
Who the F^%$K are they saving the land for?

Thier kids that sit in the basement playing video games, the LGBTQRFUs, BLM, ANTIFA, the folks that think meat comes from a grocery store, and eggs come out in Styrofoam? Only way these ass-hats will ever see the outdoors is on nature channel TV, that they watch.

Great idea, but no audience. Let those of us that use it, enjoy it. We will at least control what we can and enjoy it.
 
It’s closed to motorized travel not closed entirely. If you’ve been there any time in the last few years it shouldn’t be a surprise. If people actually self-regulated, didn’t tear shit up, and didn’t leave piles of trash behind like the article claimed then it likely wouldn’t be happening.

This might be BLM’s dream but there are plenty of locals up there that support it because they’re tired of shit getting destroyed. It’s supposed to be multi-use but you couldn’t hike, bike, etc without some asshole in a SxS buzzing you at 50mph. The same thing is going on in the San Juans now. The passes up there need county maintenance to open and there’s more and more people in the counties that are tired of everyone coming in to town and acting like they own the place, so they’re just going to stop maintaining them and keep them closed to motor vehicles. It already happened this year with black bear.
 
I’m not singling out SXS. There are plenty of idiots out there doing idiot stuff. Saw “hikers” tramping in the protected tundra zones in Colorado. They literally had to step over the sign that explained why Not to go out there, but there they were. Some buffoon in a pickup truck drove out onto a high mountain pass hiking path and got stuck in the shale. We have a good friend that has been a campground host for 10 years at a NP campground. This was her last year even though she loves it. Too many, like 10%, are rude entitled RVers and tenters that leave trash and are just terrible disgusting human beings.

Speaking as someone who does use and enjoy the outdoors some of it Does need to be control. The shear numbers of people who want to go out in nature are overwhelming the environment and facilities. Without limits the land and animals are severely impacted. The experience one has is degraded due to all the people. Great hiking trails in Sedona are like beach boardwalks, roads and access to NPs are like LA rush hour traffic. I think one of the best things the NP Service has done is implement Timed Entry access and limiting Trail permits. The other option is just full closure. Several sites that people have enjoyed for years have been shutdown by Tribal Authorities because people had no respect for the land or their fellow man.
 
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