The format is LOCATION: TEXT [EXPLANATION] Drop from II.G.17., III.A.4., III.D.1., III.D.5., III.F.1., and III.F.3.: [Drop any advocacy of natural gas, a nonrenewable fossil fuel.] Add this to the end of III C 9 a: Instead, broadcasters who wish to provide programming for such receivers and audiences that wish to enjoy them should be allowed to continue that activity. Drop from II.G.17., III.A.4., III.D.1., III.D.5., III.F.1., and III.F.3.: [Drop any advocacy of natural gas, a nonrenewable fossil fuel.] Add this to III F 4: We favor the removal of any administrative impediments to efficient long-haul freight transport by rail. Although railroads are often faster than trucks, time is lost when switching goods from one railroad to another, even when the trains are the same size and gauge. This waste should be eliminated. Add this to the end of III F: We favor elimination of any government policy or public spending that would in any way promote inefficient modes of transportation over efficient modes. We favor the retrofitting of existing corridors for safe, efficient, energy-efficient transportation of various sizes and speeds. [Congress has written laws that require the Federal Aviation Administration to promote air transportation, regardless of whether it is the best mode to use. Because air travel is among the least efficient options available, this policy tends to increase the speed with which petroleum is sucked out of the ground and spewed into the atmosphere.] Add this to the end of III F: We favor policies that encourage development of sufficient public restrooms and bathing facilities to provide for the hygiene of travelers, including cyclists. Many commuters who would like to bicycle to work are discouraged because they would have to remain sweaty at work. Providing safe, clean public showers could improve their health and comfort without imposing unreasonable costs on small employers. [One of the biggest complaints about segregation was the scarcity of black public toilets, which had the effect of restricting daily activities and robbing human dignity. The end of segregation has equalized the situation in many places by eliminating white public toilets.] Add this to the end of III F: We wish to prohibit transportation discrimination. [Even if their homes are served by mass transit, practicality often forces people who work at remote sites or multiple sites to drive the entire way to work. For example, some railroad parking lots discourage overnight parking by people who work nearby but live far away.] Add this to the end of III F: We favor obtaining land to maintain transportation corridors before development of the surrounding land, reducing the need to raze buildings. Allowing buildings to be built where they will have to be torn down at taxpayer expense is a crooked practice aimed at enriching the construction and real estate industries. Either the government should buy the land when it is available and cheap, or mapping of official routes should require development rights to be transferred out of transportation corridors, preserving the value to the owner. Add this to III H 1: We favor the modification of property rights to recognize the interests of the community and the right to cross open, undeveloped land, and also to undo the influence of past victimization. [The concept is based on the right to travel, the right of indigenous nomads to continue their lives, the absence of criminal trespass in Scottish law, and the Scandinavian concept of Allemansret (Everyman's Right): the right to public access of the wilderness. Exclusion from private land is a peculiarity of laws of England, which we liked so little that we freed ourselves in 1776.] Add this to the end of III H: Public improvements should add value to the community without taking any away. Add this to the end of III H: We favor moving vice out of vulnerable neighborhoods by means of zoning laws with fines that reflect social damage. Operators who keep vice in isolated or adult-oriented zones would be free to do business. Those who bring it into the neighborhoods where you work and your children play should be closed down with heavy daily fines. [Gambling, prostitution, and similar vice-oriented activities can cause blight if allowed to proliferate in neighborhoods with children or respectable businesses. Because it addresses human desires, efforts to eradicate vice tend to drive it underground, where people will encounter it without intending to. Criminal prosecution has a threshold of proof, encouraging undercover police investigation and entrapment. Zoning laws, enforced against the landowner, require only proof that the activity has taken place at a location, not identification of perpetrators.] Add this to III H 3: We favor requiring growing municipalities to live within the limits of their resources. Add this to the end of III I: We favor dismantling destructive dams, such as the Glen Canyon dam, that promote evaporation of precious water, erosion of adjacent landforms, and extinction of migratory fish. Add this to the end of III J: We support the right to glean food from fields after harvest. [In France, where they are protected by law, gleaners salvage the remaining food, helping alleviate hunger.]