Bobw235
Senior Member
- Location
- Massachusetts
A well-written and important piece from Nicholas Kristof, which contemplates the future of our national parks in America and the threats they face. For those who have experienced the beauty of our national parks, this will resonate with you.
It begins:
This Land Is My Land (And Yours, Too!)
Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof AUG. 20, 2016
Nicholas Kristof enjoying part of his inheritance (as an American citizen), a lake on the John Muir Trail in California. Credit Caroline Kristof
NOT to boast, but that image is me enjoying a pristine alpine lake I own in the California Sierras. It’s property so valuable that Bill Gates could never buy it. Yet it’s mine.
But wait! Don’t stalk off — it’s also yours! It’s part of America’s extraordinary, but now threatened, heritage of public lands. These lands are being starved of funds to sustain them and are the target of an ideological battle, with the new Republican Party platform arguing that certain federal lands should be handed over to the states. Which lands aren’t specified.
This objective is sad, because America was the first country in the world to take its most stunning scenic places and turn them into a shared space belonging to all — an element of what Wallace Stegner called America’s “best idea.”
It begins:
This Land Is My Land (And Yours, Too!)
Nicholas Kristof
Nicholas Kristof AUG. 20, 2016

Nicholas Kristof enjoying part of his inheritance (as an American citizen), a lake on the John Muir Trail in California. Credit Caroline Kristof
NOT to boast, but that image is me enjoying a pristine alpine lake I own in the California Sierras. It’s property so valuable that Bill Gates could never buy it. Yet it’s mine.
But wait! Don’t stalk off — it’s also yours! It’s part of America’s extraordinary, but now threatened, heritage of public lands. These lands are being starved of funds to sustain them and are the target of an ideological battle, with the new Republican Party platform arguing that certain federal lands should be handed over to the states. Which lands aren’t specified.
This objective is sad, because America was the first country in the world to take its most stunning scenic places and turn them into a shared space belonging to all — an element of what Wallace Stegner called America’s “best idea.”