U can tie this directly why for example up in Southern Oregon and Northern California as a result of native Indigenous Tribes that live there managed to invoke policy changes to restore the natural resources of how natural atomspheric Mathematical electrical power flows through living waters to recharge the aquifers So U can note on the Rogue River 🌈 Aurora's Spiral in southern Oregon they removed 3 dams Thats was followed up by the California on the Klamath River basin to remove thise dams Thats reclamation eater engineering project if restoration of monadic alignment tuning tyming voltage capicitance level of awareness to restore the Great living Over unity Soul Spirit Sun Temple essence of Mother UrthA in nature The natural flow of atomspheric rivers of Fire and Ice Krystal structural engineering Spiritual integration with God source eternal Core Still point of balance Balance in nature The natural Krystal River Spiral Echoes of pure eternal absolute love to experience Mother Nature Celestial creation mechanics Mu ah VA 💋🌈 Aurora's
It's not developers. It's the State and Federal Government that control ALL open water. Rivers, streams, ocean, natural lakes (man made ones may be community controlled). Literally, you can go to prison for having a pot in your backyard when it rains to hold water, because it is the States "property" once the raid drops hit the bottom of the pot. Now with the Costal Commission we have a non-profit that is VERY highly and well funded that controls up to 5 miles inland as well. They honestly do both good and bad things for both nature and humanity around them. What you mean is that you hate Government who constantly fails to do their research and do a good job. Now to be fair to them, they likely didn't know that putting cement walls down the LA river would have this effect.... but here we are. The best way to fix it IS to figure out the putting out artificial reef like they were saying. The question is what is the best way to not poison the water when they build it.
That first guy was playing games with those before and after beach pics. High tide vs low tide, showing a different area. Let those who own beach front property shoulder the bill
That's Absolutely true The native groundskeepers here live in the Trees of eternal life NOT Castle Rock Military Hollywood Entertainment Gaming Platform Money Trap experiment Victim victimizer software experiment that spread to 2 other Matrices that led to Quarantine Andromeda Strain Borgha Matrix AI QI coded military Pentagram rule based dominance over every single sentient life form numbers to generate another Artificial life form numbers so all U have left are Soulless Clones Cyborgs Blade Runners Androids Cybernetic Group Think Thought police Hive Mind Robo Cops obeying the ABUSER thought machine Thinking Machines judgement day Rise Up to wake up and smell the Roses PRETENDING to be alive One Mental body Automatons Machine learning speed is 1/2 cycles breathing false dead light Intelligence machinery Programs Thinking Machine Chat Bots Chatty Cathy Dolls Doll Houses Truman show false light Movie set simulator software network coded display of Optical neurological mathematical atmospheric breathing illusion of false finite light Intelligence Tree Trunks The Imitation Game The inteting technique, see Turing test. For other uses, see The Imitation Game (disambiguation). The Imitation Game is a 2014 American period biographical thriller film directed by Morten Tyldum and written by Graham Moore, based on the 1983 biography Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges. The Imitation Game The film's title quotes the name of the game cryptanalyst Alan Turing proposed for answering the question "Can machines think?", in his 1950 seminal paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence". The film stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Turing, who decrypted German intelligence messages for the British government during World War II. Keira Knightley, Matthew Goode, Rory Kinnear, Charles Dance, and Mark Strong appear in supporting roles. The Imitation Game was released theatrically in the United States on November 14, 201
Along with the development, it is my theory that the addition of break waters have broken up coastal currents which may have had an impact on erosion?!🤔
Yes this is true, but to what effect, and is it worth remediation? Or is it small enough? OR are there better ways to build a water break? Like at Newport Beach, near the Wedge, for instance could they have elevated coral reefs built that would have a similar effect to the water break's but could also allow more natural soil movement. I am not sure, but It seems like the huge granite rocks don't work quite like they had intended to.
Erosion is a thing. Has been a thing for a long time. Sorry that those with houses on the beach lose value. Same happens to those impacted by other natural events (Hurricanes, floods, fires) Of all the stories on California Insider this is the one I have the least pity for.
As long as local communities bare the cost, god bless them. It is hard to justify repair costs from inland communities subsidizing any buildback with their tax monies. The long term answer is for the oceanside communites restore the natural repair elements from the rivers and creeks.
Saying climate change did this is not going to bring the sand back. Carbon emissions in the U.S. have gone down in recent years, especially in California.
The currents run north to south. The permanent solutions are jetties as appropriate in the problem areas. Proof: just look at the north side of all jetties.sand extends way out from the beach. Permanent solution with sand provided by nature.
Moving the train tracks inland seems to be the only true fix. Trying to keep the states Oceans back with federal taxpayers dollars around the country will cost taxpayers Trillions.
The plan is to put the tracks underneath the five freeway from Doheney all the way to the nuclear plant that will be a 20 year plan though the immediate plan is just to continue to protect the tracks where they are
Build build build! Develop develop develop until the whole state collapses under the weight of coastal erosion and increasing water tables meant for deep root indigenous tree systems. You should investigate further inland.
It was an extremely rough year with the rain. I worked security there keeping the rail line closed along with parts of the trail in the town. Its a tough break for all the residents.
Imagine being able to go back in time a 1,000,000 years and then slowly fast forward to present day and witness the formation and erosion of California beaches prior to and after humans' arrived on the scene.
Its the track that causes the problems as the water bounce against them and then washes sand back out, its a losing battle. Move the tracks to another place inland. 35 Trillion in debt money is running out. Santa Ana River was the source of Orange County sand no more.
I live 20 minutes from these parts, these are NOT billionaires. Yes some are multi-millionaires, but a bunch of them are baby boomers who bought in the 1970's, and paid off their loan 20 years ago..... and are making property tax payments now. Aka they are "house rich, but money poor". The same goes for a lot of people on Balboa Island in Newport. If you want billionaire class go to Laguna Beach on the water, go to Newport Coast, and go to immediately north of Crystal Cove. Buffet had a house an North Laguna Beach. I know Mark Cuban owns a house in Laguna Beach up in the hills, I know Bill Gates I believe did own one there, I dont think so anymore. There are a bunch more, though. Laguna beach can physically only be so large due to the hills around it. It is very similar to Aspen Colorado in this way. Or Jackson Hole Wyoming, but in Jackson they artificially made it this way by buying up all of the raw land and donating to a an ecological preserve land trust that, basically, just holds the property tax-free forever. Aka so no one else can build there. Creating artificial scarcity. To be fair billionaires often have like +10 houses. Except Elon. Elon lives in a $50k starter home. lol
Interesting take on the issue. Sacrificing ocean health for tourism. One issue this myopic approach fails to factor in is recognizing where the sand went and where it will go again. They've opened Pandora's box. The sand is suffocating the nearshore reefs and killing them off. Secondly, the pollution from a couple demonstrable sources is too affecting this as kelp plays an integral part in sand retention through accretion. These folks have messed with nature and we will suffer their actions. Wheeler North reef, the artificial reef at this location had a major influence on this conundrum. I presented empirical data several years ago indicating this and the city of San Clemente doubled down on ignorance. Your story here is but a part of a much grander failure of actions under the guise of science. I am stupider after listening to the mayor and this geologist. This will go down as one of the dumbest things man has done. 🤡🎶
These selfish homeowners caused all these problems. Take back all the land and d restore the creeks. This is a man made problem and taxpayers must be pay for any restoration
All the rocky promontories in Southern California are sandstone natural jetties slowing the natural erosion. They have harder granite cobblestones eroding from ancient cliffs. Look at Point Loma, La Jolla, Laguna, Palos Verdes etc. The long sandy beaches are the terminus of the larger river canyons. The answer to preserving beaches is before your eyes. Jetties imitating rocky promontories.
An interesting thing the regional governments did in Western Australia was prevent development along the coastline within 500 yards or meters from the shoreline as a way to protect the beaches and coastline. If only we had a time capsule to do the same in California. As many of these homes all into the ocean the cities are going to have to make the tough choice of implementing any new development. This whole issue is just another perfect example of California falling apart. This state has so many emergency issues plaguing it. Infrastructure, fresh water, over-development, budget crisis, forest management, toxic sewage along the Tijuana / Imperial Beach border...
The producers of this must really be putting us all on. There is no issue other than beach replenishment, and there is no cause other than the loss of streams delivering sand along the coast?. That you could have this 30 minute piece with multiple people being interviewed and no mention that global climate change is raising sea level. I am pretty well stunned. I am sorry to say that the interviewer seems a little bit clueless. The deep trouble we are all in deserves better.
@michaelbrickey6684 The ocean level on average, has risen around 2 inches in the last 30 years along the California coastline. It's hard to believe that caused all the lost shorelines.
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U can tie this directly why for example up in Southern Oregon and Northern California as a result of native Indigenous Tribes that live there managed to invoke policy changes to restore the natural resources of how natural atomspheric Mathematical electrical power flows through living waters to recharge the aquifers
So U can note on the Rogue River 🌈 Aurora's Spiral in southern Oregon they removed 3 dams
Thats was followed up by the California on the Klamath River basin to remove thise dams
Thats reclamation eater engineering project if restoration of monadic alignment tuning tyming voltage capicitance level of awareness to restore the Great living Over unity Soul Spirit Sun Temple essence of Mother UrthA in nature
The natural flow of atomspheric rivers of Fire and Ice Krystal structural engineering Spiritual integration with God source eternal Core Still point of balance
Balance in nature
The natural Krystal River Spiral Echoes of pure eternal absolute love to experience Mother Nature Celestial creation mechanics
Mu ah VA 💋🌈 Aurora's
I ride Amtrak Surfliner from Irvine to San Diego frequently. Connects with ferry to Coronado, or Lyft to Lindberg Field. The views are gorgeous! 💯💥
Native Californian here for 60 years. This makes me disgusted to see how our state has been abused by developers.
If there were no developers the problem would mostly be the same, we would just not notice as no one would be here to see it.
Urban overdevelopment is our doom and not one politician will place a moratorium on overbuilding. Hedonism out of control.
Sand sources aren't suitable in long term
It's not developers. It's the State and Federal Government that control ALL open water. Rivers, streams, ocean, natural lakes (man made ones may be community controlled). Literally, you can go to prison for having a pot in your backyard when it rains to hold water, because it is the States "property" once the raid drops hit the bottom of the pot. Now with the Costal Commission we have a non-profit that is VERY highly and well funded that controls up to 5 miles inland as well. They honestly do both good and bad things for both nature and humanity around them.
What you mean is that you hate Government who constantly fails to do their research and do a good job. Now to be fair to them, they likely didn't know that putting cement walls down the LA river would have this effect.... but here we are.
The best way to fix it IS to figure out the putting out artificial reef like they were saying. The question is what is the best way to not poison the water when they build it.
But don't you live in a place that was developed?
That first guy was playing games with those before and after beach pics. High tide vs low tide, showing a different area. Let those who own beach front property shoulder the bill
“Castles made of sand…. Slip into the sea…. Eventually….”- Jimi‼️
That's Absolutely true
The native groundskeepers here live in the Trees of eternal life NOT Castle Rock Military Hollywood Entertainment Gaming Platform Money Trap experiment Victim victimizer software experiment that spread to 2 other Matrices that led to Quarantine Andromeda Strain Borgha Matrix AI QI coded military Pentagram rule based dominance over every single sentient life form numbers to generate another Artificial life form numbers so all U have left are Soulless Clones Cyborgs Blade Runners Androids Cybernetic Group Think Thought police Hive Mind Robo Cops obeying the ABUSER thought machine
Thinking Machines judgement day Rise Up to wake up and smell the Roses
PRETENDING to be alive One
Mental body Automatons
Machine learning speed is 1/2 cycles breathing false dead light Intelligence machinery Programs
Thinking Machine Chat Bots Chatty Cathy Dolls
Doll Houses
Truman show false light Movie set simulator software network coded display of Optical neurological mathematical atmospheric breathing illusion of false finite light Intelligence Tree Trunks
The Imitation Game
The inteting technique, see Turing test. For other uses, see The Imitation Game (disambiguation).
The Imitation Game is a 2014 American period biographical thriller film directed by Morten Tyldum and written by Graham Moore, based on the 1983 biography Alan Turing: The Enigma by Andrew Hodges.
The Imitation Game
The film's title quotes the name of the game cryptanalyst Alan Turing proposed for answering the question "Can machines think?", in his 1950 seminal paper "Computing Machinery and Intelligence". The film stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Turing, who decrypted German intelligence messages for the British government during World War II. Keira Knightley, Matthew Goode, Rory Kinnear, Charles Dance, and Mark Strong appear in supporting roles.
The Imitation Game was released theatrically in the United States on November 14, 201
I remember being a young boy sitting on my grandfathers knee and him telling me stories of when he was a little boy before there was erosion…
Along with the development, it is my theory that the addition of break waters have broken up coastal currents which may have had an impact on erosion?!🤔
They’ve been talking about blowing up the Federal Breakwater in Long Beach since the 70’s.
Yes this is true, but to what effect, and is it worth remediation? Or is it small enough? OR are there better ways to build a water break? Like at Newport Beach, near the Wedge, for instance could they have elevated coral reefs built that would have a similar effect to the water break's but could also allow more natural soil movement. I am not sure, but It seems like the huge granite rocks don't work quite like they had intended to.
Erosion is a thing. Has been a thing for a long time. Sorry that those with houses on the beach lose value. Same happens to those impacted by other natural events (Hurricanes, floods, fires) Of all the stories on California Insider this is the one I have the least pity for.
As long as local communities bare the cost, god bless them. It is hard to justify repair costs from inland communities subsidizing any buildback with their tax monies. The long term answer is for the oceanside communites restore the natural repair elements from the rivers and creeks.
You kidding. They are us8 g federal taxes to pay for this
Yippy not blame climate change !!
Bravo!!.
Saying climate change did this is not going to bring the sand back. Carbon emissions in the U.S. have gone down in recent years, especially in California.
The currents run north to south. The permanent solutions are jetties as appropriate in the problem areas. Proof: just look at the north side of all jetties.sand extends way out from the beach. Permanent solution with sand provided by nature.
Moving the train tracks inland seems to be the only true fix. Trying to keep the states Oceans back with federal taxpayers dollars around the country will cost taxpayers Trillions.
The plan is to put the tracks underneath the five freeway from Doheney all the way to the nuclear plant that will be a 20 year plan though the immediate plan is just to continue to protect the tracks where they are
Oh no our property values and tourism dollars!!!
Wow been wondering about this topic for years! Thanks for the video!
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Grew up in Oceanside 80s/90s. There used to be miles of beautiful beaches all up and down the coast. Sad to see it in its current condition.
These developers that build over the natural replenishing networks should consider the effects of building there and can this issue be mitigated.
WHO gives these developers permission to build where land structure is NOT strong enough. WHO'S getting rich from this....
So glad to have found this program. Excellent production, informative and poignant.
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Oh so sad the creeks and rivers are buried in concert boxes. Who permitted that Mr. Mayor?
God bless you for what you do❤❤
Build build build! Develop develop develop until the whole state collapses under the weight of coastal erosion and increasing water tables meant for deep root indigenous tree systems. You should investigate further inland.
bring back the rivers. Dumping sand is a waste of money
this is hysterical. Maybe in hindsight, they should stop developing anything on the coast ? Rich people will have to find another way to live. SO SAD.
WHO ALLOWS permits to build there. Adding sand is a bandaid. WHO pays for all of this ridiculousness..!!
CA legislators are demanding that coastal cities pave over paradise and jam housing in every nook and cranny. This is the result
It was an extremely rough year with the rain. I worked security there keeping the rail line closed along with parts of the trail in the town. Its a tough break for all the residents.
No talk of tides.
Imagine being able to go back in time a 1,000,000 years and then slowly fast forward to present day and witness the formation and erosion of California beaches prior to and after humans' arrived on the scene.
Its the track that causes the problems as the water bounce against them and then washes sand back out, its a losing battle. Move the tracks to another place inland. 35 Trillion in debt money is running out. Santa Ana River was the source of Orange County sand no more.
Thank you.
Fascinating.
If the revetment isn’t built on bedrock it will fail. Building it on sand is temporary at best.
Billionaires worried about their properties being washed away
I live 20 minutes from these parts, these are NOT billionaires. Yes some are multi-millionaires, but a bunch of them are baby boomers who bought in the 1970's, and paid off their loan 20 years ago..... and are making property tax payments now. Aka they are "house rich, but money poor". The same goes for a lot of people on Balboa Island in Newport.
If you want billionaire class go to Laguna Beach on the water, go to Newport Coast, and go to immediately north of Crystal Cove. Buffet had a house an North Laguna Beach. I know Mark Cuban owns a house in Laguna Beach up in the hills, I know Bill Gates I believe did own one there, I dont think so anymore. There are a bunch more, though.
Laguna beach can physically only be so large due to the hills around it. It is very similar to Aspen Colorado in this way. Or Jackson Hole Wyoming, but in Jackson they artificially made it this way by buying up all of the raw land and donating to a an ecological preserve land trust that, basically, just holds the property tax-free forever. Aka so no one else can build there. Creating artificial scarcity.
To be fair billionaires often have like +10 houses. Except Elon. Elon lives in a $50k starter home. lol
This is normal coastal erosion.
Good topic
Thanks! 😊 Pls Join CA Insider Newsletter to stay in the know: bit.ly/Cainsidernews
Newsome sending inland waterbodies out into the ocean
Interesting take on the issue. Sacrificing ocean health for tourism. One issue this myopic approach fails to factor in is recognizing where the sand went and where it will go again. They've opened Pandora's box. The sand is suffocating the nearshore reefs and killing them off.
Secondly, the pollution from a couple demonstrable sources is too affecting this as kelp plays an integral part in sand retention through accretion.
These folks have messed with nature and we will suffer their actions. Wheeler North reef, the artificial reef at this location had a major influence on this conundrum. I presented empirical data several years ago indicating this and the city of San Clemente doubled down on ignorance.
Your story here is but a part of a much grander failure of actions under the guise of science.
I am stupider after listening to the mayor and this geologist.
This will go down as one of the dumbest things man has done.
🤡🎶
These selfish homeowners caused all these problems. Take back all the land and d restore the creeks. This is a man made problem and taxpayers must be pay for any restoration
All the rocky promontories in Southern California are sandstone natural jetties slowing the natural erosion. They have harder granite cobblestones eroding from ancient cliffs. Look at Point Loma, La Jolla, Laguna, Palos Verdes etc. The long sandy beaches are the terminus of the larger river canyons. The answer to preserving beaches is before your eyes. Jetties imitating rocky promontories.
An interesting thing the regional governments did in Western Australia was prevent development along the coastline within 500 yards or meters from the shoreline as a way to protect the beaches and coastline. If only we had a time capsule to do the same in California. As many of these homes all into the ocean the cities are going to have to make the tough choice of implementing any new development. This whole issue is just another perfect example of California falling apart. This state has so many emergency issues plaguing it. Infrastructure, fresh water, over-development, budget crisis, forest management, toxic sewage along the Tijuana / Imperial Beach border...
Long shore drift lol
Ever heard of EROSION?😂😂😂
The producers of this must really be putting us all on. There is no issue other than beach replenishment, and there is no cause other than the loss of streams delivering sand along the coast?. That you could have this 30 minute piece with multiple people being interviewed and no mention that global climate change is raising sea level. I am pretty well stunned. I am sorry to say that the interviewer seems a little bit clueless. The deep trouble we are all in deserves better.
@michaelbrickey6684 The ocean level on average, has risen around 2 inches in the last 30 years along the California coastline. It's hard to believe that caused all the lost shorelines.
@@marksimonian210But you better believe it! You're seeing it with your own eyes!