Well..... to quote a part of a great American song "this land is your land, this land is my land"
please refer back to post #1 in this thread...
It's not like the "traffic" is going to be like setting up camp next to RT 70 on a summer Sunday after noon. There are many times I ride and NEVER cross paths with anyone else. I stop and open up my backpack and enjoy a 1/2 hour-45 minute break and eat lunch off to the side and hear no other motors running in the woods. Sound enforcement needs to be part of any plan.
Not sure what you mean by the first two points. The land is both yours and mine, but that, by itself, doesn't imply anything about exactly what ought to be permissible on that land. Give me a specific reference within post #1 and I will try to respond.
FOR THE REST OF THIS POST, PLEASE NOTICE THAT THE CONTEXT IS THE PROPOSAL TO OPEN UP FIRE BREAKS FOR GENERAL DIRT BIKE OR ORV TRAFFIC.
We have roads all over the Pinelands. There are plenty of opportunities for people to drive around. They just need to do it in street legal vehicles. I think it can be easily argued that there are too many roads, in fact. Motorized traffic generally has negative impacts on natural communities. Wildlife biologists have abundantly documented this.
Obviously, most of us do not want to shut down all motorized traffic in the Pinelands, so the question becomes, how much traffic do we think is tolerable in terms of negative impacts on wildlife. Probably the answer, purely within that context, is the less traffic the better. So it becomes difficult to develop an argument that says there ought to be more.
And then the other issue is how does your preferred form of entertainment affect the prospect of other people enjoying theirs. Historically, dirt bikes, ATV's and monster trucks were not a major part of the scene. The popularity is a fairly recent phenomenon. Maybe the last 30 years? Each year, there seems to be more and more.
So the reality is that you have a large number of people out there who are not particularly receptive to the message that they should be willing to tolerate the noise, dust, road ruts, destroyed vegetation, etc., that comes with increased ORV traffic in places where they were not accustomed to having it. I think we have all experienced the spells of peace and quiet out there. Sometimes it makes you think you really are way out in the remote wilderness. Personally, I think we need to be working toward more of that, not less.
Please understand, I say all this in reference to the proposal to open up fire breaks or plow lines to dirt bikes and/or ATV's. A lot of the riders openly brag that they can come and go as they please and evade the law all day long. If an activity is already problematic in terms of its affects on the ecosystem and other user groups, and it's also difficult to police, how can you argue that we should increase the opportunities for that activity?