(All Your Land Belongs To Me, Where Elected Folks Believe That "Arbitrariness Is Good") Volokh - The Green Costs of Kelo:

Picture the flipping tail of a squirrel.

We argue that the Supreme Court's decision to allow government to condemn property for transfer to other private parties in order to promote "economic development" may well harm the environment. In particular, private conservation land (an increasingly important tool for protecting environmental amenities and wildlife) is likely to be targeted for condemnation by developers and their allies in local government because conservation property contributes little to development and is usually not subject to property taxes. Allowing economic development condemnations also harms the environment in several indirect ways that we detail in the paper.
[ The Volokh Conspiracy - The Green Costs of Kelo: ]

It will flip. It can't not flip.

This land is becoming the land of no limits on the exercise of power merely by reason of becoming elected.

It makes long term planning about as useless as trying to guess the location of the squirrel's tail at a snapshot in time in the future. It is impossible. It converts the planning horizon into a short term thing . . . . like a day trade in stocks. Don't dare hold a position overnight.