I think the same argument was made when we considered liquor licenses.
The sky hasn't fallen.   And the same argument could be made for really
*any* kind of change.

It feels like people are pretty entrenched in their positions and the
discussion has become a forum for ringing up votes for one side or the
other.   LincolnTalk is valuable, but it shouldn't be the basis for
decision-making on town policy (i.e., loudest voices win) IMO.

-Bob

On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 2:35 PM Gordon Woodington <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Because not everything that is grey can be undone and when it gets too
> dark it is too late.  Just the nature of how most of humankind,
> governments, groups of people react.  It is too hard.
>
> An individual claims one's personal increment is important and must be
> allowed, as many others will do too, and that one's own part was not the
> cause of the total negative impact and is absolutely needed.  Every year
> for more than a century there has been environmental pollution and
> resultant damage, but each increment was not the issue, but the sum of
> increments is a big disaster.  We see so many examples that society/mankind
> is not able to "unroll" enough of the increments .
>
> I expect human nature to be the same on a small scale, here in Lincoln.
>  Once the damage of an increment becomes "the new normal", memories fade of
> what was lost, and it's easier to forge ahead yet another increment,
> because " it too has so little impact".  So I disagree wholeheartedly with
> allowing the proposed incremental changes.
>
> Because of many real aspects of Nature and human nature, I believe changes
> will become irreversible.
>
> Gordon Woodington
>
> On Tue, Jul 12, 2022 at 10:09 AM Rich Rosenbaum <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I don't know why people think that changes are irreversible. If something
>> isn't working is there a reason that it can't be undone?
>>
>> How else can you learn what really works and what doesn't?
>>
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