There’s a segment of the Left that wants to view so-called “green” technology as purely green and the businesses behind them as the benevolent and selfless saviors of the earth. It’s a form of religion for some. 
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Let’s clarify something else on your court case. There’s a huge difference between something that violates your rights and something that a community agrees they don’t want on certain property. The way deed restrictions get placed is for owners to put those restrictions there. Then, when you sell the property, they stay in place. Don’t want to abide by it? Don’t buy it. If you look at HOA’s, it’s LOADED with Deed restrictions that has been upheld over and over again by the courts. I’m not sure (and I’m too lazy to look) if they’ve been upheld at the Supreme Court level but they exist all over the country and they’re enforced by civil penalties. It’s a contract you enter into and it’s legally binding. The ONLY exception is when the contract is held illegal by the courts.
Nope. Texas doesn’t meet your criterion, either. You cannot emit toxic smoke from your land that hurts someone outside of it. That is you not being able to “do what you want” with your property.
You should google ‘strip mining’ and see the real issue.
It’s way more than ‘mountaintops are pretty to look at’ I guarantee you.
Samm
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You aren’t suggesting that strip mining being done without complying with Clean Air, Clean Water, Wetland, F&W, Endangered Species and whatever other Federal and State regulatory requirements may apply, are you?
That’s probably more accurate.
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