Chapter 4 | See previous
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My individual theories presented here are not a coincidental three part story. Instead, presented a little more chronologically. Part 1 was about children that enjoyed playing in sand piles because sand piles were a new and fantastic experience. People have been exploring new territories since the beginning of our modern times – merely 50000 years ago[1]. What has changed dramatically? In an incredibly increased at a geometrical rate of changes in us and our environment. In other examples of the rate that things change in our world, have things changed more in the past 500 years compared to its previous 45,000 years? I think our world's changes of anything are also getting scarier at the existing geometric rate. How long is that going to last or will it at all? |
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Take any basic data that you like and will enable you to “calculate” a lot of modern miracles. (This method explains any 'miracles'
differently) For example, the human population has increased which mathematically coincides with the increase in the American debt. There is also a
correlation to the availability of new territorial adventures[2,3]. Like everywhere on this earth, California began the same way as anywhere such as North America which was taken over by the older Europeans or whomever. A lot has changed in the Californian territory[7] since my relatively small life time. |
Chapter 5 - Dry Lake(Owens) and Pismo Beach and Glamis(Algodones) Dunes
I'm a SCUBA diver and I don't touch anything[9] except water and sand.
Owens Lake we called "Dry Lake" when we didn't call it mud. It did rain for about an inch of water in this dry lake and that made the best mud surface for real 4-wheeling harmless fun. | A very long time ago I started off-roading by driving on a dirt trail in a desert that was located in the middle of nowhere known. We preferred driving in the desert at night with a lot of self-provided lights. Were we destroying nature's desert environment? That's when we came to a long strip of dirt in that desert probably put there by a bulldozer because it was completely flat. We still don't know what that big road was.[5] Was there a big deep hole in the middle of another nearby trail? |
That white color is wind and dust and salt. Still no condos here. |
Even then we knew a few tips about off-roading in weird places. Even with lights, if you can't see the road ahead, then stop. It was a big hole 20 feet wide and we didn't want to get close enough to look down that hole. Instead we threw a beer bottle into it and we never heard it hit anything. At that time in my life there were no cell phones and we didn't know where we were or that anyone could track us which they are able to these days (2016+). Somebody went where we did and never returned. No one knew where he went. If he was lucky, he never knew either.[6] |
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Chapter 6 - Glamis Dunes
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Chapter 7 Agodones/Glamis Dunes
In this blog I have shown you a lot of great expanses of possible inhabitable territorial but unwanted nothings. As always, then came the
humans. It seems that we ruin everything. There's only one thing we can do about it. There is no reason for anyone to care. These sand piles are found in a lot of places in our world. Most of these places where uninhabitable by people.[11]. Things needed by people were not yet found: Water, food, roads, medical hospitals, gas stations and condominiums. That will change. In a proceeding story I told you about not many people being in some places in the no-wheres. Does anyone or committee or any group have any ideas about what 8 billion people do in their daily schedules? I don't even think there's a guess. The '70s seem like ancient history. We call this uninhabitable area Glamis. No one ever knew where this place was and there was no way to find this unknown place. Believe it or not only some of the old people had ever heard of maps or compasses. Our new generation had things that had never existed like roads in these harsh environments. The only way to get there was the follow someone that had accidentally discovered it. When we went down there next to Mexico we brought everything we needed to ride the dunes day and night. We brought a little tent, bottled water, gasoline and our various transportation. As you can see in the photos there were no signs no lights or just plainly nothing. We could traverse geographically during the day by the sun pointing sort of east and west. Sometimes during the night with a new moon, finding your direction got a little more complicated. At one time when there were hot and dirty families tented here and there. My friend Russ Deer provided a mew geographic known point. How? Remember, GPS a Cell phones did not exist. At one time there was a big K-Mart store that eventually bought Sears. K-Mart was a very large store even before Walmart. K-Mart had a rotating blue light put on a metal pole that was close to the ceiling that was targeting all customers to a specific and special sale. In some way, Russ “obtained” one of these great tall lights and took it to Glamis with us. People could see it from anywhere in the dunes in the middle of the night. We decided to sleep at midnight on some nights. Parents were aware that their kids or teens are planned to be lost out there somewhere. Amazingly, parents showed up after midnight and asked (or begged) for us to turn the light on for a little while longer. Sometimes it's amazing how easy it is to really administer any selected society. |
These are desert dunes or shopping centers. You could make money. |
They're here the same way as the windmills except these don't make electricity. |
No ATVs and rippled sand is back in a few days. Same deal with your freeway. Recovery just takes longer. |
Dunes are dunes. Different ATV's. Saharas' camels. |
Comparison Meeting - That's all |
The Glamis dunes were a larger area than this picture that we called Main Street. It was like the main area in NY called city center where
everyone conjugated for most holidays. That picture is not New York but it is a place that mysteriously showed up jn the 1979 National Geographic magazine. Usually on weekends or day holidays people showed up here for a few reasonsI had to go to a place that was called a library to find this 1979 copy of National Geographic and those are my friends and I who are unidentified because we were looking at what the photo was intended and it's a good photographer because she was exposing real film for twenty seconds and still getting a good picture. This place was called “Main Street” because everyone was there on weekends or holidays doing what some would call ruining the desert. I have two responses other than “yes”. #1: The dunes are still the same as the ones shown above because the windmills are still turning and all of the pictures that I've shown in this entire series except for one thing #2: The word population is about 8 billion (human). The following are simple examples, Where do you get your food. Where do you live? Do most of you drive something for your transportation. Have you ever used roads or trails. Have you ever been in hospitals, gas stations, dentists, or stores where you buy whatever you seem necessary? O.K. Then where do all of these sub-examples exist. If you live on earth, then you are the same environmental problem as anybody else. If you disagree then exactly how are you are a better living anything? Do you really think so? I'll be dead pretty soon. Your worries wont go away. There are ten more to replace me. (Oh, I don't have any children!) |
References or notes:
[1] ”homo-sapiens has been around for 200,000 years. “Modern man” is<>only 50,000 years old. We are both of them. [2] The World's Human Population> [3] Examples of famous American off roading explorers who effectivly ruined our national environment and we're all of their favorite future predictions. [4] Previous story of the very nice environment where we'd all want to ruin and live. [5] Probably an unknown drugs import or export airway. [6]Probably once a certical mine shaft. If you want to find this, be careful, Good luck. Do cell phones work underground in the middle of nowhere even these modern days? [7] california history [9] I became a certified SCUBA diver when I was sixteen. (Minimum legal age) Why? I don't know. I thought women looked pretty good in wet suits. Good forms.
[11] Only parts of the Algodones Dunes are open to the public. Here is only one of government's basic ideas. |
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