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For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
Oh no, not the golf courses!
In general I agree with you for sure, we have way too many. But if there are any worth preserving, I'd say it's the old ones in Scotland where golf was invented. And at least there they don't have to be watered constantly.
Out of all the golf courses, these are pretty much the only ones worth preserving - located in places where they don't need too much additional irrigation, with heritage value, adding to tourism potential. I wish the golf courses in vegas would fall into the sea instead.
So spontaneously localized sea in Vegas or California is all gone already?
The golf course lifts off entirely, flies off and crashes into the atlantic. It carries with it all the customers that were on it at the time and the course manager, but inexplicably all the staff are left behind.
Almost all golf courses in North America are closed water systems and planted with exclusively native flora. They’re literally better for the environment than any other development which could replace them. Get better talking points.
Bermuda grass, the most common grass used on North American golf courses, is not native to North America.
Is there a giant dome over the golf course grass that captures moisture lost to atmosphere?
Is the entirety of the Vegas course just desert sand with patches of desert flora?
Better for the environment than other alternatives? Maybe better than a concrete jungle.
I'm not a golf coursologist, so I can't be sure how a golf course functions. I'm not an aeronautical engineer either but I don't need to be to know bricks can't fly.