Category Archives: Uncategorized

It’s the Desert, Silly.

A West Jordan woman who has xeriscaped her lawn apparently is drawing complaints from her sprinkler using neighbors.

Four years ago, Eframo heeded then Gov. Olene Walker’s plea for Utahns to fight the drought by conserving water. She studied the “Slow the Flow” messages from the Jordan Valley Water Conservation District and the city of West Jordan itself – neither of which apparently expected anyone to take them seriously.
Eframo shut off her sprinklers and planted more than 200 drought-resistant plants. She sees her effort at xeriscaping as a hope for the future; her neighbors see it as an attack on their property values.
Eframo has a message for suburban Utah and its acres of water-sucking lawns: “Get off of it-we’re living in a desert!” she says. “We’ve got to save water.”

But Eframo’s neighbors are complaining, the gist of the issue being respecting your neighbors and adjusting your landscape to blend in,according to South Jordan’s water conservation technician Steve Glain.
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Columbus Day no reason to celebrate

As Native Americans in this day and age, we are survivors, we have survived the genocide, the federal Policy to “kill the Indian, and save the man”, and all the other atrocities that are not covered in US history books.  I wish a beautiful victory song to all Native Americans today, we have survived and, for most of the tribes and bands, our cultures are intact, alive and well.  We have overcome the onslaught, we must however never forget, and strive to better our Native communities and homelands by educating ourselves and our people so that they can represent our people to preserve our land, our resources, our cultures, and our religions.
 
Steven Chischilly  
 
Columbus Day no reason to celebrate 
By Mary Annette Pember

 
In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue on a mission of plunder for Spain. When he arrived here, he commenced the virtual annihilation of the indigenous peoples of the Americas. A culture and nation founded on the murderous, exploitive
philosophy of this act has two choices: apologize and make reparations, or cunningly twist the facts and make it an opportunity
 for celebration.

The United States has chosen the latter.

In many ways, the whole Columbus Day debate is a big yawn for
native peoples, just another in the ongoing pinches in the rear that define being Native American in America. Mostly, we simply say, “Ouch,” and go on with the business of surviving the policies borne out of a ruling government’s mindset that sees Christopher Columbus as a national hero. At the time of European “discovery” in the 15th century, there
were more than 10 million native peoples in North America. But by the beginning of the 20th century, our numbers had dwindled to less the 230,000.

So we’re pretty ambivalent about the whole celebration idea surrounding our near-demise. The Columbus attitude has justified U.S-
Indian policy all the way from stolen lands and broken treaties to recent attacks on tribal sovereignty and the failure to make good on
 Indian trust funds.

 Currently, mainstream America has a “just get over it” attitude to native peoples, dismissing our grievances as political correctness
gone awry. But in the recent words of an elder, “If the shoe were on the other foot, Americans would carry laminated copies of their
ancestors’ treaties until they got their just dues.”

Asking the U.S. government to abandon Columbus Day in favor of Indigenous Peoples’ Day is akin to asking for a sea change in the
national psychology. It demands a soul-searching objectivity that is simply too threatening to the mainstream culture and economy.
The European “discovery” of America is a misnomer. This victor’s history is still very much at the heart of the American psyche. By
ignoring the fact that that the place was already inhabited by millions of indigenous peoples, the celebration of Columbus Day
exalts a criminal act.

 This philosophy has allowed the current Christopher Columbus reincarnation, George W. Bush, sufficient national support in his
efforts to bring democratic light to the darker regions of Iraq. As a native woman, experienced in the repercussions of American policy-making, I’m waiting for the president’s supporters to propose establishing a George W. Bush Day in Iraq, celebrating the civilizing
of that country.

I bet few Americans would see the irony.

 Mary Annette Pember, Red Cliff Ojibwe, is past president of the Native American Journalists Association. She currently lives and  works as an independent journalist in Cincinnati.

Carnival of the Green #48

Enviropundit hosts this week’s Carnival of the Green

As usual there are lots of items to read about the environment, politics and green living.

A farewell end this week’s Carnival of the Green:

A sad farewell. At CityHippy, Al is retiring the blog for various reasons but insists it is au revoir and not goodbye. His last post will be on the one year anniversary of the Carnival of the Green, November 6. He is soliciting hosts for future carnivals as well. Good luck, hope to see you soon!

Nuclear Shockwaves

There have been waves of articles and commentary in today’s news since the announcement of North Korea’s test yesterday.

Welcome to the Nuclear Club
by Norman Solomon
Bush’s Nuclear Apocalypse by Chris Hedges
Analysis: North Korea Test a Sign of Weakness by Stephen Fidler
North Korea’s Nuclear Test and Bush’s FUBAR Foreign Policy by Heather Wokusch


(Photo/BBC)
Image

Blogburst



John Lennon

Today is the anniversary of John Lennon‘s Birthday. Lennon would have been 65.

In honor of this occasion, Capitol Records is releasing Working Class Hero – The Definitive Lennon. Produced by Yoko Ono, the double CD set contains a comprehensive collection of 38 of Lennon’s hit singles.


~ If everyone demanded peace instead of another television set, then there’d be peace.
~ If someone thinks that love and peace is a cliche that must have been left behind in the Sixties, that’s his problem. Love and peace are eternal.
~ We’ve got this gift of love, but love is like a precious plant. You can’t just accept it and leave it in the cupboard or just think it’s going to get on by itself. You’ve got to keep watering it. You’ve got to really look after it and nurture it.
~ You either get tired fighting for peace, or you die.
~ Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we’re being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I’m liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That’s what’s insane about it.

~ Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans.

And…….Experts Warn of an Accidental Atomic War

Nuclear missile modified for conventional attack on Iran could set off alarm in Russia

A Pentagon project to modify its deadliest nuclear missile for use as a conventional weapon against targets such as North Korea and Iran could unwittingly spark an atomic war, two weapons experts warned Thursday.
Russian military officers might misconstrue a submarine-launched conventional D5 intercontinental ballistic missile and conclude that Russia is under nuclear attack, said Ted Postol, a physicist and professor of science, technology and national security policy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Pavel Podvig, a physicist and weapons specialist at Stanford.

“Any launch of a long-range nonnuclear armed sea or land ballistic missile will cause an automated alert of the Russian early warning system,” Postol told reporters.


A nuclear cloud. Sixty years after the first atomic bomb was tested in the New Mexico desert, the United States still has some 2,000 nuclear weapons on hair trigger alert and is considering new weapons such as earth-penetrating bunker
busters. (AFP/File)

Meanwhile, in North Korea…….

While the U.S. is spending funds to restore symbols of death and destruction (see my post below), perhaps advocates of nuclear war should be proud. North Korea is using nuclear weaponry in its most recent test blast.

North Korea said today it had performed its first nuclear weapons test, an underground explosion that defied international warnings but was hailed by the communist nation as a “great leap forward” for its people.
The reported test drew harsh rebuke from North Korea’s neighbors. The U.N. Security Council is expected to discuss the North Korean issue today, and the United States and Japan are likely to press for a resolution imposing additional sanctions on Pyongyang.
Condemnation of North Korea came swiftly after the test was announced.
“A North Korean nuclear test would constitute a provocative act in defiance of the will of the international community and of our call to refrain from actions that would aggravate tensions in Northeast Asia,” White House spokesman Tony Snow said.
“We expect the U.N. Security Council to take immediate actions to respond to this unprovoked act,” Snow said. “The United States is closely monitoring the situation and reaffirms its commitment to protect and defend our allies in the region.”
Snow declined to speculate on a possible U.S. response to a North Korean nuclear test. “At this point we’re still assessing the data and trying to figure out what happened,” he said. “A lot of this hinges on what the data tells us.”

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.