|
|
|
|
|
by Johnny555
1722 days ago
|
|
Lots of these species have been long gone. But the landowner of that 1944 sighting probably couldn't turn over a rock on his property without fines and lawsuits coming at him, at least until now. The endangered species act wasn't enacted until 1973, so I think that landowner had plenty of opportunity to do what he wanted with his property. |
|
I don't know how much "warning" was given for the endangered species act, or if that even matters, since land that's about to be worthless is already worthless.
Also, I have no idea what actually happened in this case. But to speculate/generalize:
IBW were already (obviously) extremely rare in 1944, so there would have been an intense amount of pressure preventing him from "doing" anything with the land, and in a rural, wooded area, there probably weren't many options at the time besides farming it, anyway.
If the guy would have known in 1944 that the endangered species act would be passed in 1973, you'd maybe have a point. But he wouldn't have known.
If the government suddenly told you tomorrow you couldn't sell your house, then claiming it's fair because you could have sold it all the way up to yesterday doesn't do you any good if you had no advanced knowledge of it. And if it were public knowledge, who would want to buy it anyway?