Voytek,
I'd agree, that balance, a prudent approach is required, not some knee jerk reaction to the unknowing sins of others decades, if not centuries removed.
Do you really believe that the textile mills in Paterson, NJ, that diverted water from the Passaic River, vis a vis canals, and then returned that used water, laced with colorants and chemicals, really understood the environmental impact in 1810 ? 1850 ? 1900 ? 1940 ? During World War II ?
Do you think towns understood the peril of living down stream from other towns, or the benefits of living up river ?
And making golf courses, or anyone else jump through hoops for questionable purposes is a waste of resources and an impediment to progress.
It's easy to have 20-20 hindsight.
I think they knew it was wrong. All the managers of these mills had to do is to ask themselves a simple question: would I want this chemical-laced effluent to be flowing in the stream that is in the backyard of MY OWN HOME, where MY children play?
I think they'd answer NO, regardless of the year you quote. But they thought it's quite alright to pollute other people's environment.
Corporate criminals, is what they were.
Properly disposing of toxic waste is extremely costly. It is far easier to dump millions of pounds of PCBs into the Hudson, as GE has done.
Patrick, "the lunatic fringe" which you observe today is a direct outgrowth of the criminal, poisonous activity of (mostly) chemical companies in the past.
Again, killing sea lions to save the salmon is JUST AS CRAZY as what I described above.
We are talking extremes in this thread. And golf course construction is also a victim to these extremes.
I follow the Liberty National construction (because I live nearby), and there were people who claimed it was better to leave the industrially-polluted land alone than to build a $150 million golf course and remediate the land because of the potential effluent from the pesticides used on the grass would go into the already PCB-laced Hudson River.