Ear: I hear what you are saying, and in a small way I can understand what you are saying. But I have grown up in Tennessee seeing the government take land from folks that the land was all they owned. I saw the results of what taking that land created for those folks. When I lived in New Mexico I knew a lot of people who had been physically forced off their land in the dark of night, by armed troops. Seen their homes and barns burned to the ground, then dumped on the streets of Alamogordo, and Tularosa. Took away their livelihood, and their lives in the process. The government owns far, far, too much land. They don't need to be picking up more. We can only save so much for future generations. The folks in the here and now need a place to live and recreate. Once the government takes it over they start putting more and more restrictions on it till soon no one is allowed to go there or do anything there.
The federal Government owns 74% of my state. They strategically located parks and preserves in locations preventing us from building any new roads or railroads from one town to another. Isolating large populations from any type of transportation except costly air. Now they are going about designating rivers as Wild and Scenic closing off any river commerce or transportation by motorized boats. Farther isolating communities. Go to Utah, or Nevada, and try and find a place to live outside of the cities. You won't, it's all owned by the government. We have large National Parks containing millions of acres, that get no visitors. There is no roads into the area, and under the current rules and regulations there never will be any. The Park Service must protect it from the public that would destroy it in their opinion.
Yes the island you are referring to might have been nice to preserve, but apparently no one else in your state, including the state, felt that way. If the government owned it the land needed to go into private hands. If the government did not own it, they would have had to take it away from someone to make a preserve there. What you feel should have been preserved others are saying, "Gosh we are lucky to be able to have a home in such a beautiful area". I go back to Tennessee to visit and see homes where there used to be beautiful pastures and farm fields, that I would have liked to preserve forever. One of the most beautiful farms I ever saw was located in Hendersonville, Tennessee. That entire farm is now a cemetery. Some people call it progress, others of us just say life marches on, things change. If not changed by man, Mother Nature will change it. All it takes is time.