Tom Doak,
No one on this site is better positioned to present the case for Bandon than you.
So, perhaps you can tell us how the Bandon project was perceived andd received by the people of Bandon and the surrounding area.
Thanks
From my limited perspective, the town and surrounding area appeared to be on the decline, with lumbering and other industries/businesses reducing their activities or abandoning the area.
The introduction of the golf complex at Bandon seemed to revitalize or at least boost the local economy, and I have to believe that it continues to do so.
Somewhere, people have to decide, what's more important, dunes, bugs and trees or people.
By today's standards, would the island of Manhattan be permitted to be transformed into one of the centers of the world.
Have we gone too far with protectionism ?
Did Sandpines sound the death knell for the oblique dunes in Oregon ?
Could Prestwick, Troon, Western Gailes and Turnberry be built today ?
I'm less interested in what people in America have to say about this, less interested in what people in the UK have to say about this, less interested in what people in Scotland have to say about this, and MORE interested in what the local and surrounding townspeople have to say about this.
I'd rather have my local schoolboard decide the curriculum than some bureaucrat in Trenton or Washington DC.
Likewise, one would think that the locals should be in charge of their fate and the ones making the decisions that directly affect
their lives with respect to the Trump project.
And, I understand the "National Interest" argument, but in many cases having people in California opine/decide what people in New York should do, and vice versa, doesn't fly very well with me.