eddie-soehnel-portable-iden.../data/insights-hub/hrecords/5310.json
2026-06-16 13:20:04 -06:00

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{
"HubID": "5310",
"Date": "7/1/2025",
"HubTags": [
"External Platform Posts",
"Future Map"
],
"Contacts": "c6107AdamCramer",
"Companies": "",
"File": "",
"Image": "",
"Summary": "<p>This is a win—but a pyrrhic one, at best. The freight train is still coming. Its just math. Our national debt is staggering, and when it comes to budget priorities, public lands rank nearly, if not, last. As the economy deteriorates this decade, with job incomes tightening and resource scarcity biting harder, Americans will focus on immediate personal needs. In that context, public lands—generating $1 billion in annual revenue within a $30 trillion economy—barely register. If you care about protecting these lands—whether for recreation or because your business depends on them—its time to stop relying on government support or hopes of killing public land sales in the next bill. Start exploring how the private sector, emerging technologies, and new business models can step in and carry the load. Can we avoid this looming collapse? Maybe. Our next economic boom could arrive just in time to spark the next supercycle. But that is looking increasingly unlikely. Better to prepare for the worst and act now, while we still have the option.</p><p>https://www.outdooralliance.org/blog/2025/6/28/public-land-selloff-provisions-removed-from-senate-budget-reconciliation-bill<br /></p>",
"Notes": ""
}