Chapter Fifty-Eight: The Merits of the Big Tree I

Chapter Fifty-Eight: The Tree's Credit

1. One field

After the discovery stopped, the three of them stepped off the plane, and Bistable said to Mao Dan and Director Qian: "You two are too tired after three days of traveling, now go back and rest." Pen Fun Pavilion www.biquge.info two days later the two of you will come to my office and we will discuss the problems we have discovered during this round the world trip.

Two days later, Bistable was in his office, and just after eight o'clock, he was in a hurry to call Mao Dan and President Qian, asking them to come to the chairman's office to raise the problems found during the trip.

After receiving the call, Mao Dan hurriedly walked into the chairman's office, and President Qian walked into the chairman's office slowly. As soon as he walked into the office, Shuangwen stood in front of the door and looked at him unhappily, and said, "Principal Qian, why did you come so late?" He pointed to the watch on his wrist and said to him: "Look at it is ten o'clock now, why did you make the same mistake again in the Eucare Center." ”

Principal Qian walked with his briefcase raised his head and said, "What old mistake has been made again, you obviously have no problem finding a problem!"

The chairman then said: "Come, come to my sofa and sit down, today I just want you to find a few questions." As he spoke, he reached out and took Principal Qian's hand and pulled him to the sofa and sat down.

Mao Dan and his teacher, Director Qian, sat face to face on the sofa, and Shuangwen stood next to the two of them and spoke. He said, "What problems did you two see on this trip?"

Mao Dan hesitated for a moment and said: "The discovery number asked us to talk about the developing problems we saw from the trip, so I will briefly say it in order to attract people's attention." ”

He paused for a moment and then continued: "We have been to many countries on this trip, developing countries are characterized by large populations and less arable land per capita, which requires these countries to cherish land more in the process of development.

In the process of developing countries, there has been a contradiction between land and economic development in the development of some places; local governments enclose land and sell land as soon as economic development is mentioned; building and selling houses has regarded real estate development as the main source of government funds, and the dependence of local governments on land sales has emerged, and this dependence has caused large tracts of cultivated land to be developed into non-agricultural land in succession, and high-rise buildings have also been built in the most fertile fields in the world, and the cultivated land between cities has disappearedThe construction of high-speed railways, reservoirs, parking lots, and airports all need to occupy a large amount of cultivated land, and people have set aside a large amount of non-agricultural land in these three mountains, six rivers and one field.

Is this trend a good thing or a bad thing? I think it's the most dangerous thing, and it involves one of the most important issues of land for economic development and the protection of arable land. Mao Dan stopped talking about it here, and the purpose was to give Mr. Qian a chance to speak.

Chairman Shuang glanced at Principal Qian, and saw that his thighs were pressed against his legs, and he was holding a toothpick in one hand to throw his teeth, and he said angrily: "Principal Qian, tell me what you saw?"

Principal Qian threw the toothpick into the spittoon, and then he spit two mouthfuls of phlegm into the spittoon, and then muttered: "I have also seen that with the expansion of the urban framework, a lot of farmland has disappeared and turned into high-rise buildings, which is an abnormal phenomenon."

We know that economic development can stimulate the economy, increase employment, and increase GDP by requisitioning cultivated land to build railways, roads, airports, reservoirs, and real estate-----。 I think that these infrastructure projects should also have a certain degree of restraint on the premise of protecting cultivated land, and cannot blindly develop and develop land, because arable land is a precious non-renewable resource on our planet. ”

He continued: "Looking back at the footprints of human beings, for most of the past 600,000 to 800,000 years, there were no high-rise buildings on the earth, no railways, no cars, no trains, no planes, no electricity, and no household appliances. Human beings have multiplied for 800,000 years by the nourishment of the earth and the cultivation of the fields.

In the past 100 years, we human beings have invented trains, automobiles, airplanes, rockets, power plants, household appliances, and high-rise buildings, and people have lived happily. However, it should also be noted that in the process of pursuing GDP, some local governments have gone too far, and in some cities there are ghost towns that are uninhabited, and the appearance of ghost towns occupies a large amount of arable land and is useless, and the appearance of ghost towns in countries with many people and little arable land is an abuse of cultivated land and an act of labor and injury, and it is a dereliction of duty by the local government's inaction, and some local governments have built wide cement roads in the fields, and in order to avoid inspection, they have paved the cement pavement with soil and carried out loess paving rectification, saying that they can grow soybeans. This kind of rectification method of 'paving loess' cannot achieve the effect of recultivation.

In developing countries, in the reality of more people and less land, people's housing needs should be met to ensure basic needs and limit the demand for leniency and luxury, because the land can hardly bear people's demand for generous and luxurious housing, and it is even more difficult to withstand the ghost towns and loess-paved urban rectification.

Land and arable land are too important for the continuation and development of human beings, and on our planet, if the excessive expansion of cities and areas leads to a large reduction of arable land, then the world's human beings are probably not far from hunger. ”