Foreword by Paul Dreissen
Being “hoisted by his own petard” means the bomb maker gets blown up and lifted sky high by his own explosive device. Former Colorado Department of Natural Resources director Greg Walcher notes that the term applies with delicious irony to the in-your-face, holier-than-thou environmentalists who inhabit and run San Francisco.
Determined to save locally endangered salmon populations, they and the State of California have long demanded and imposed water use reductions by Central Valley farmers. But now the California Water Resources Board wants further water use reductions – and this time those reductions will also hit city residences, schools and businesses, and hit them hard: a hefty portion of 98 billion to 220 billion gallons less water per year! Imagine how many baths, showers, laundry and dishwasher loads, and other “essentials” that would mean.
But those rules and reductions were supposed to apply only to OTHER people, the once ultra-green urbanites are wailing.
We must all sacrifice for the environment
But I meant you – not me! We’re supposed to be exempt from rules we inflict on others.
Guest opinion by Greg Walcher
Have we become a society of people who want to regulate others, but not ourselves? We laugh at those who suddenly object to a policy that seemed perfectly OK when (they thought) it only applied to others.
We make fun of Al Gore demanding that “we” end “our” fossil fuel use, while he travels the world in private jets and SUVs. We chortle about politicians and Hollywood stars advocating gun control while surrounded by heavily armed bodyguards.
In truth, such hypocrisy is common, because the desire to control other people’s behavior is human nature, at least for many. Yet our attempts at control frequently come back to haunt us.
In Hamlet’s most famous speech, he predicted that a would-be assassin might end up being “hoist with his own petard.” A “petard” is a bomb, so Hamlet meant the bomb maker might be blown up (“hoisted” off the ground) by his own explosives.
Today that Shakespearean phrase is a common proverb describing poetic justice, another way of saying “caught in his own trap,” or “what goes around comes around.”
San Francisco officials are once again learning this, as they struggle yet again with water shortages. Several times, endangered species issues have come back to haunt some of the nation’s most unyielding environmental campaigners and their elected officials. (San Francisco is the birthplace and headquarters of the Sierra Club.)
Yet the City has never moderated its in-your-face, holier-than-thou environmentalism. When President Trump announced the U.S. exit from the Paris climate deal, San Francisco announced that it would comply with the intent anyway, by limiting local fossil fuel use.
The City has also banned plastic straws, grocery bags and Styrofoam containers. It even requires solar panels on private buildings. If something is on the environmental industry wish list, San Francisco is leading the way.
But when the same activists insist on leaving more water in the rivers, to protect salmon, they mean water from Central Valley farmers – not their own water. Up to now, state regulators have obliged, and water restrictions have been imposed on farms to the south for 25 years.
Hundreds of billions of gallons of water previously used for irrigation have been flushed to the ocean, rather than sent through the California Aqueduct to the Central Valley, supposedly to protect salmon migration and spawning. Nevertheless, area salmon remain endangered.
So now the California Water Resources Control Board proposes further restrictions, this time including water that is part of San Francisco’s municipal supply.
Public hearings are generating numerous angry responses. That’s hardly surprising, since the plan would double the flow of water in the Tuolumne, Stanislaus and Merced Rivers, leaving more water for salmon, but less for the City – a lot less.
In fact, it could mean an annual reduction of 300,000 to 675,000 acre-feet of water for the Bay Area. In everyday household terms, that’s 98 billion to 220 billion gallons per year! Imagine how many baths, showers, laundry and dishwasher loads, lawn waterings and restaurant glasses of water that would mean.
Imagine how many almonds, walnuts, tomatoes, grapes, olives, apricots and peaches, how much cotton and rice, how much milk and cheese would not be produced in the Central Valley, if that much additional water is taken from farmers.
While San Francisco’s water supply has been mired in controversy for a century, today the city has some of the purest water in the nation. That’s because its water comes from the Hetch Hetchy reservoir in Yosemite National Park.

The losing battle against building that dam and reservoir was a defining battle cry of Sierra Club founder John Muir, who vigorously opposed it. The dam was built anyway, and since the 1920s it has delivered Tuolumne River water to San Francisco, and to farms near Modesto.
But San Francisco’s water rights are junior to the agricultural rights, so the City could actually face the largest reductions.
Golden Gate City leaders, their environmentalist allies and normally ultra-green citizens are outraged. They never intended that water reductions they so strongly support would have any effect on themselves.
Meanwhile, a local group called “Restore Hetch Hetchy” advocates tearing down the dam. In 2012 it got an initiative on the local ballot for that very purpose. But San Francisco voters voted it down. They support tearing down other people’s reservoirs, not their own.
The opponents then went to court, and have been there ever since. Ironically, they’re fighting the City itself, which argues that the legality of Hetch Hetchy is “settled,” and that the reservoir’s water supply is now indispensable.
Adding still more to the petard-like irony, the reservoir doesn’t just supply water to 2.7 million residents and businesses in more a dozen Bay Area communities. It also generates significant hydroelectric power, which is vital for a city and state that have vowed to end all electricity generation from nuclear, coal and natural gas facilities.
Suddenly, the once vital salmon somehow seem less important to City leaders.
Their alternative is (predictably) to have the State spend vastly more on “river restoration,” including killing competing fish. But even if that helps the salmon, it won’t satisfy the environmental industry, which still wants more water restrictions.
Perhaps water leaders across the West can be forgiven for thinking, “Welcome to our world,” if San Francisco is being hoist with its own petard. It is a world the Golden Gate City helped create.
Greg Walcher is president of the Natural Resources Group, author of Smoking Them Out: The Theft of the Environment and How to Take it Back, and a former head of the Colorado Department of Natural Resources.
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Most people that vote for those that promote such stupid stuff assume it will never effect them. It sounds good to do “something” for the smelt or the salmon; “the environment”.
It’s when that “something” starts to impact their own lives is when some begin to wake up and take a second look.
I thought the water was being diverted to save the Delta Smelt, not salmon.
The water restrictions for the smelt are on a different river that also flows into the bay. This particular post is about restrictions for salmon on a river that also enters the bay.
Planned People for social progress, GDP growth, and green, but not too green, lawns.
Ms. Breed and the Sierra Club, tear down your dam! Lead your talk by your walk and set the example! Restore Hetch Hetchy to the time before John Muir and lead by the example of your prophet.
Mr. Gore, turn in the keys to your SUV, private jet, energy pig house. Walk your talk before you tell us how to live, to the contrary to the example you have set for decades as you live the life of privilege.
Until then, we will follow the examples you have set and not become your pawns, the useful idiots enslaving the world for the life you lead.
“Hundreds of billions of gallons of water previously used for irrigation have been flushed to the ocean, rather than sent through the California Aqueduct to the Central Valley, supposedly to protect salmon migration and spawning. Nevertheless, area salmon remain endangered.”
In all this thrashing around, has anyone paused to determine what is endangering the salmon if it is not the water? It would be the cherry on top if all that wasted irrigation has nothing to do with salmon propagation
P.S., Greg Walcher has it right: “Hoist” not “hoisted” by one’s own petard. Hamlet, III, iv.
IIRC petard was the French term for the crude explosives used by sappers to undermine castle walls. Their job was to run up to the base of the wall, set and light their payloads, and get out. Those who mishandled their bombs or didn’t run away fast enough, were likely to be thrown into the air (hoist) by the detonation.
Off topic as hints and tips doesn’t seem to work for me.
Wasn’t the Tesla battery supposed to be free if done within a specific time frame?
https://www.msn.com/en-au/money/other/tesla-battery-cost-revealed-two-years-after-sa-blackout/ar-BBNBBaD?li=AAgfOd8&ocid=mailsignout
i think they did make the timeframe;-(
however i was hit by pay to read on the adelaide reports on costs
thanks heaps for that link
no wonder my SA mates have a 3mth power bill of over 700$
with no oven, dryer, dishwasher, no heating and offpeak hws
No discussion of water in California would be complete without mentioning L.A.
Say what you will of LA, but it would not exist without water from elsewhere and dams and canals.
This book is an amazing story about an amazing person, the one Mulholland Drive is named after, the one who built something incredible. Like it or not, it was incredible.
https://www.amazon.com/Water-Angels-Mulholland-Monumental-Aqueduct/dp/0062251457/
Breaking:
“Green” Senator charged with over 100 counts of bribery etc. dies in car crash. Sources say he was under house arrest and was about to utilize the plea bargain process:
Former State Sen. Brian Joyce Is Charged With Accepting Bribes
December 08, 2017 Updated Dec 08, 2017 7:01 PM
Benjamin Swasey
Former state Sen. Brian Joyce was arrested Friday morning and charged in a federal indictment for allegedly using his legislative seat for private gain.
Joyce, 55, faces more than 100 charges, including racketeering, wire fraud, extortion and money laundering, according to the 102-page indictment.
http://www.wbur.org/news/2017/12/08/brian-joyce-arrest-charges
MA Senator & Green Advocate faces 20 years for 113 counts including Racketeering, Honest Services Wire Fraud and Honest Services Mail Fraud, Money Laundering, Misapplication Involving Federal Funds,
google.com/amp/s/www.bost…
102 Page Indictment-
http://d279m997dpfwgl.cloudfront.net/wp/2017/12/Brian-Joyce-Indictment.pdf
Clinton Foundation doners
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/clinton-foundation-donor-list/
https://www.bing.com/amp/s/www.boston.com/news/politics/2018/09/27/brian-joyce-former-state-senator-found-dead/amp
https://patch.com/massachusetts/plymouth/sen-brian-joyce-ties-energi-wind-turbine-bonding-0
In case any might not have realized just how insane ‘environmentalism’ surrounding water can get–try this article. If you’d like additional details they can be found in the list of court judgements for BC.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/metro-vancouver-water-charged-pipe-1.4695132
In essence–the Greater Vancouver Water District was fined for allowing clean drinking water from a damaged or deteriorated water main to leak into….the lower Fraser River downstream of all the farm run-off and industrialization of the Fraser Valley. There are many community-system sewage outflows delivered to the Fraser upstream of where this leak occurred–but darned if allowing clean treated water to leak into and dilute the muddy sewage-contaminated Fraser River isn’t somehow a crime!
I assume Ca is also one of those numpty places where you cant have a rainwater tank either? not that it helps those in high density apartments.
Seems a govt happy to rule by decree in so many areas should have no trouple with this one. Mandatory rainwater tanks for new homes where possible, plumbed to toilet and laundry, grey water capture, low flow shower heads, dual flush toilets, flow limit at point of entry, water police rapeling from black helicopters, miscreants sent to re-education camps, and no salmon for anyone! Simple
I thought the water was being diverted to save the Delta Smelt, not salmon.
Put in a pipe/canal from the Collumbia river up north. Can’t be that hard, the French put a canal between the Med and the Atlantic in 1650!
What canal is that?
De rien: Canal du Midi et le Canal du Garonne. Castets-en-Dorthe via Toulouse à Sète.
Wouldn’t that be the one that flows by the Rock of Gilbraltor?
“water police rapeling from black helicopters”
During our most recent water crisis in Cape Town, my home was raided by 12 armed law enforcement officials, 5 vehicles with two news crews in tow.
My crime ? the heinous offence of washing my car with a hose !
They of course has their facts wrong – I was legally using my own borehole water complete with local council signage indicating this – guess these morons couldn’t read either.
The democratic world is becoming remarkably Fascist !
And yet real democracy is when people work together for the greater good – that means everybody. Look at Switzerland and all their referendums, the people have voted to increase tax when they know they will ALL benefit. It seems those in this area are the most selfish on the planet !!!
I seem to have mislaid my ‘Complete Works of Shakespeare’ but I believe the quote refers to an engineer being hoist by his own petard, not an assassin. I understand this relates to the use of underground explosives in sieges.
Susan
98 billion to 220 billion gallons sounds like a lot. How much of a reduction is that as a proportion? 10%? 1%? 28%?
What goes around comes around……….hopefully.
Read: https://www.amazon.com/Decline-Fall-California-Destruction-Collection-ebook/dp/B018Q83YNM/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1538140260&sr=1-1&keywords=victor+davis+hanson+california
Victor Davis Hanson’s essays on Northern California water explain it all.
Seems extremely probable that the waste heat from a NPP could be used to evaporate saltwater and make fresh water. This would be ready to feed a city water filtration system. With a coordinated effort to this end low CO2 emitting electricity power and fresh water could be produced for about the same cost as is being wasted on unreliable Green energy.
Not to be pedantic, but I think the expression is “hoist by his own petard” (Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 4).
On the unfortunate occasions where I must interact with a reformist or someone who tries to guilt me into making a personal sacrifice, my stock reply has always been supportive to the cause, followed by something like, “When your (income, carbon footprint, water consumption, electrical usage, etc) falls to the level of mine, then I will match your additional reduction (unit) by (unit).”
I likely consume more than the average on some things (maybe electricity. Need air conditioning in southern US), but invariably it is less than the person making the demands.
Still waiting on any of them to take up my offer.
” WE ” ???? You first. I haven’t seen any of these AGWers sacrifice anything. The most outspoken are the ones that want everybody else to do the sacrificing. ” The company had a bad year so we have to cut wages, but the CEO got a 25% raise and a bonus of stock options. ” Something like that???
Often stated is that there is no ” I ” in teamwork, nor is there a ” WE ” in Incorporation either. But there is that big ” I “.
If AGW is so profoundly worried, they should give up all there money, move into a 600 Sq ft apartment with no electric or heat. You don’t need to take a bath, the dirt will keep you hot. What do you need with all those castles in England for anyway? Who cares about art, when the earth is supposedly burning up?
Heard on the street, literally, was that the monthly electric bills in Australia are $1200/month. with rolling blackouts, brown. Coming soon to a state near you. Afraid to turn on your electric heater?, I can see why.
Meh, nothing a higher minimum wage and open borders can’t fix.,
And a mandate for anyone to whom the city owes money to forgive that debt. Any who refuse will be thrown in Creditor’s Prison on a re-opened Alcatraz. 🙂
The US is curious in that it has a longstanding law that permits municipalities to borrow money from private lenders and the interest paid is tax-free. Is that still true? Really rich people do not buy bonds generating taxable income, they lend to municipalities.
It is done through 10 levels (or more) of shell corporations. Thus income and an increase in wealth is not, per se, taxable, they do rather better than the average Joe. After all, someone has to soak up the sun. A just economic order will close such loopholes.
Ask a financial advisor in the US how to minimize your taxes when you have a lot of money, and that’s probably the first thing (s)he’ll say: fund municipal bonds.
A petard is a small bomb, true; but in Shakespeare’s day it was also slang for “fart.” Hearing the expression “hoist with his own petard,” Shakespeare’s audience would have envisioned someone being lifted out of his chair by an explosive, gaseous fart. That’s the kind of imagery that makes Shakespeare Shakespeare.
And “nothing” was slang for a woman’s vagina. Makes that one awkward conversation between Hamlet and Ophelia at the play-within-a-play even more awkward.