Birth Place of Atomic Bomb “Preserved” and “Honored”

I was pretty shocked when I read a short article in today’s news about the Birthplace of the A-bomb being restored.

preservationists have gone behind the security fences to preserve for the first time a structure in which the Manhattan Project scientists did their work at Los Alamos National Laboratory. They contend the building is as significant as George Washington’s home or a Civil War battlefield.
This past weekend, a series of events marked the restoration of a wooden, garage-like building where the world’s first plutonium bombs were assembled.
Cynthia Kelly is president of Washington, D.C.-based Atomic Heritage Foundation, which is leading a drive to preserve key atomic-age sites at Los Alamos; Oak Ridge, Tenn.; and Hanford, Wash.
”It doesn’t look like much,” she said. ”It’s what happened there. It takes you back in time.”

It’s pretty sad when money is spent to idolize the history of death and destruction and in particular, the most devastating events of death and destruction (by the U.S.) in history.

What is wrong with this picture?

Anti-nuclear activist Greg Mello, who heads the Los Alamos Study Group, objects to the celebratory aura surrounding the events. He said the events should have a ”tone of grief and remorse” since they commemorate work that led to the bombing of the Japanese cities.
”The legacy is fear and . . . enormous national efforts devoted to weapons of mass destruction, and we’re still struggling with that today,” he said.

The simple structure is a reminder of the urgency with which scientists gathered in New Mexico in 1943 to design and assemble the first atomic weapons. There was no futuristic laboratory or sophisticated equipment on the mesa top where the federal government took over a boys’ ranch school.

The preservation project is quite costly, with most of the funds coming from our tax dollars.

The ”high bay” building, which Kelly said cost about $1 million to restore, is still behind security fences. Kelly said although the building is inaccessible to the public, she hopes that will change.
Funding for restoration of the ”high bay” building came from the federal government, $700,000 of it through the ”Save America’s Treasures” program. Several other sites at Los Alamos also are slated for preservation.

Helen Thomas speaks in Salt Lake

Helen Thomas, long time White House Correspondent and Journalist, spoke last night in Salt Lake City. People who went to hear her speak had to be turned away because the venue quickly filled up to the point of standing room only. Thomas is frequently referred to as “The First Lady of the Press.”

Journalist Helen Thomas lived up to her reputation Saturday in Salt Lake City, delivering a fiery speech to a standing-room-only crowd of hundreds that a tent-revival minister might be proud of.
“Reporters were gullible to the White House spin,” she said. “Our much touted standards of fairness, and above all truth, the holy grail of our profession, took a holiday.”
Of Bush, a man she calls a staunch conservative who views the world in blacks and whites, she said, “He wanted to be known as a war president. He is.”
Thomas, who has covered nine presidents in her 57 years as White House correspondent for United Press International, criticized Bush for thinking he is “above the law,” citing his secret authorization of domestic wiretapping and the treatment of detainees.
“I believe people can handle the truth, and deserve no less,” she said.

A Soldiers Peace Walk News

Local News Items about Marshall Thompson’s Walk through Salt Lake Valley yesterday:

KUTV – Soldier Protests Iraq War By Walking Across Utah
KSL TV – Soldier Walks into Salt Lake on Trip Through State

Journal Entry for October 7

“Securing a Clean Energy Future for Utah”, Sunday, October 8

 

2006-2007
Lecture-and-Discussion Series Presents

“Securing a Clean Energy Future for Utah”
Tim Wagner, Director, Utah Smart Energy Campaign, Sierra Club

Sunday, October 8, 2006

Meet & Greet: 1:45 pm • Presentation: 2:00 pm • Meeting Closes: 3:30 pm
Salt Lake Main Library, 210 East 400 South, Fourth Floor Conference Room

Free and Open to the Public

Tim Wagner is the Director of the Utah Smart Energy Campaign, an electrical energy-focused program of the Utah Chapter of the Sierra Club.

The program is designed to educate Utah consumers about the external costs associated with the state and nation’s high rate of coal-derived electricity and advocate for more development of renewable energy sources, such as wind, solar, biomass, and geothermal. Tim currently holds a position on the state’s Mercury Work Group, a consortium of 15 individuals appointed by the Utah Division of Environmental Quality to assess and address issues associated with mercury contamination in Utah’s surface waters. He was also recently appointed to a position on Governor Huntsman’s Blue Ribbon Climate Change Advisory Panel, a body assigned to assess current science on global warming and to help develop Utah policies to address the problem.

“Utah obtains 95% of its electricity from coal combustion, almost twice the national average, while getting less than 1/10 of 1% from renewables.

There are currently about 1,100 coal-fired power plants across the country, five here in Utah. Industry is proposing approximately 150 additional plants, four in Utah. Most of these proposed facilities will use technology similar to that in use for 30 or more, emitting huge amounts of pollutants such as nitrogen oxide, sulfur dioxide, carbon monoxide, volatile organic compounds (ozone), mercury, and others. Coal combustion worldwide is the single largest source of carbon dioxide, the principle greenhouse gas responsible for global warming.

There are huge economic opportunities in Utah associated with the development of renewable energy sources.

Renewables have little or no pollution factors, use free sources of fuel, and can save consumers tremendous amounts of money, short and long term. Developing renewables can also serve as a hedge against the rising prices of fossil fuels and keep our energy dollars at home.”

Speaker Suggested References and Resources

Coal Power Plant Industry and Renewables

Union of Concerned Scientists, http://www.ucsusa.org
Sierra Club, http://www.sierraclub.org
Clear the Air, http://www.cleartheair.org/dirtypower
Renewable Portfolio Standards, http://www.pewclimate.org/what_s_being_done/in_the_states/rps.cfm
American Wind Energy Association, http://www.awea.org

Global Warming

Al Gore, An Inconvenient Truth. (book and film)
Tim Flannery, The Weather Makers.
Elizabeth Kolbert, Field Notes from a Castrophe.


My Campaign – Upcoming Events

I have been completing surveys and accepting invitations to events for October.
Here are two events I have committed to attending towards the end of October:

Monday, October 23: 7:00pm- 9:00pm
Millcreek Fidos Meet the Salt Lake County Council Candidates

Wednesday, October 25: 7:00pm- 9:00pm
Meet ‘N Greet Night, West Jordan City Hall
8040 South Redwood Road, West Jordan

Ethan Millard (SLCSpin) was on KSL’s Nightside peoject last night with an interview of Chris Cannon. The World, According To Me has transcripted and posted the quotes.

Ethan Millard [to studio hosts]: So I asked him what kind of institutional changes did he think needed to be made this time.

Chris Cannon: You know, I’ve been tinking about this…there’s
nothing more you can do but educate kides as to the dangers. Frankly,
this is the resposibility of parents. If you get on line, you may find
people who are creepy.

There are creepy people out there who will do and say creepy things
— Avoid them.

That’s what you have to do. And maybe we can say that a little more
to the, uh, to the pages.

And, soundbite #2:

Chris Cannon: You know, these kids are actually precocious kids. It
looks like, just maybe, this one email was just a prank, just a bunch
of kids sitting around, egging this guy on, you know. So, uh…the
world’s a complicated place, and we just have to do the best we can.

Eyes Wide Open Exhibit

At the Salt Lake City-County Building this weekend is the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) “Eyes Wide Open” boots exhibit. Each of the 700 pairs of combat boots represents about 40 U.S. soldiers killed in Iraq, 2726 so far. They are tagged with the name and state of one of them, with Utah in the foreground and the rest in order by states from the distance to foreground.

The exhibit was in Logan last week, and will be in SLC Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from 8am to 5:30pm, at the City Hall, 4th South and State Street.

Marshall Thompson’s walk (A Soldier’s Peaced – see post below) will pass by there Saturday morning, starting at the Capitol shortly after 8 am.

A Soldiers Peace iWalk n Salt Lake Valley Today

Today’s “rain or shine” schedule:
8:00 am—The Capital Building (300 N. State Street)
9:30 am—2100 S. and State Street
10:15 am—3300 S. and State Street
11:15-12:00—4800 South and State Street (Lunch)
1:30 pm—Fort Union Blvd. and State Street
2:45 pm—9400 South and State Street

Here are some more journal entries:

Day 3, October 4
Day 4, October 5

Utah Voters Pamphlet

The Utah Voter’s Pamphlet is out and online.

Read about candidates here(pdf format)

The World Can’t Wait

Yesterday, in over 234 cities and towns across the U.S., protests and events were held to support the goals of the World Can’t Wait campaign.

In Salt Lake about 30 people attended the noon protest outside the City County Building at Washington Square. About 15 people attended the 5pm vigil in the pouring down rain. The good news is that there were folks at both events who have never or often haven’t attended any protests.

The World Can’t Wait website has and Updates page with photos and accounts of the protests.

Press Coverage of the WCW Events.