Sunday, February 3, 2013

Up Bear Creek / 31jan26013i1 / Jill Stein, Pres. Obama & Drones


Green Presidential Candidate Jill Stein

 I told my friends I wouldn’t start criticizing Barack Obama until (and if) he won a second term. I voted for him a second time, even though the Green Party had a wonderful, competent and visionary candidate in Dr. Jill Stein of Massachusetts. But it feels like we’re still semi-trapped in the social and economic collapse of the Bush/Reagan dynasty, and it was important to move this nation off center right, and back to center left. I think the swing won’t be complete until the Dems regain control of Congress.


Then will be the time to mount a hard push to the left to enact a New Green Deal like Stein was advocating – putting America back to work with a Full Employment Program to be co-developed locally and nationally; moving towards green energy and sustainable small businesses; regaining public control of our domestic monetary policy; abolishing corporate personhood; instituting regulatory safeguards for voting rights; championing local control over federal pre-emption, defending civil liberties; and financing new programs by cutting military spending in half; closing our 700+ American military bases around the world; and starting a new round of nuclear disarmament initiatives.


But with the president formally inaugurated into a second term, I have to raise my voice in public opposition to his use of drones -- officially UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) – a program begun under the previous administration and continuing now into Obama’s second term.

Extra-judicial state murders of suspected terrorists, with its collateral damage of civilian casualties, is illegal, unethical, and just plain wrong. It violates the U.N. Charter, and constitutes a thumbing of Uncle Sam’s nose at international law – just like the previous administration used to do. If George W. Bush should have been charged on the world stage for war crimes, and Ronald Reagan likewise for his Contra War in Nicaragua, funded by covert illegal drug smuggling, what should we do with Barack Obama’s drone strikes?

According to the website Global Research, an estimated 800 or more innocents have been killed by UAVs in Pakistan, including up to 168 children, and only 22 Al Qaeda commanders. And according to the Council of Foreign Relations website, by 2010 there had been 79 drone accidents, costing $1 million each



 Maybe we ought to stop trying to limit Americans’ citizen access to guns, and stop slaughtering innocents in drone attacks world-wide. Just because we don’t see it, don’t read about it in the corporate media, and it doesn’t happen to us or our neighbors doesn’t mean a terrible thing isn’t happening -- paid for by our tax dollars


Former President Jimmy Carter has come out publicly and voiced opposition to Obama’s drone assassination policy. So must we.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Up Bear Creek / 24j13iTG / The Talking Gourd




The Death of a Fly Fisherman

After his death
she tidied his desk,
all but the vise
which she lovingly left,
his last fly untied.

-Kyle Harvey
Fruita

Up Bear Creek / 24j13i3 / GJ Art Mag




The amazing Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer at a reading in Grand Junction

Kat Rhein of Wild Kat Media has published a second edition of the Grand Valley’s premiere regional art, media and poetry guide. There are marketing sections on all the local hotspots surrounding Grand Junction, luscious photographs of impressive artwork, arts-related stories, and a selection of regional verse from place-based poets.

To get your own copy of what are quickly becoming collectors’ items in their own right, or to learn more, visit westerncoloradojourneys.com and enjoy the work of Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer, Malcolm Graeme Childers and Frank Coons.

Up Bear Creek / 24j13i3 / Sheridan Celebrates Anniversary




100 YEARS 

It’s wonderful celebrating the hundredth anniversary of the Sheridan Opera House, although it didn’t start out that way. Originally the Segerberg Theatre when it opened as a “picture show theatre,” according to the Telluride Daily Journal of July 2, 1913, the name was later changed from a theatre venue for silent films to an “opera house” and a mainstay on the state’s vaudeville circuit. There were several earlier opera houses in Telluride, both long gone. Opera houses not only hosted performances and lectures, but they served as community centers for dances and fancy dinner parties … The surviving Segerberg/Sheridan has become the town’s cinematic landmark, thanks to the annual Telluride Film Festival and its international following. And blossomed as well into an intimate performance showcase, “Telluride’s living room,” thanks to the Sheridan Arts Foundation.

Up Bear Creek / 24j13i2 / Tamiflu to the Rescue



INFLUENZA 
Sad Things by Diego Kricek Fontanive

It didn’t seem like a big deal. Gorio was home sick last Monday [Jan. 14th] with a headache, bit of a sore throat, cough (but no fever). And then Tuesday. But when it stretched into Wednesday, I took him to the clinic. And glad I did, because he tested positive for the flu … 

Both of us got Tamiflu pills (for which Don at the Apothecary Shoppe in Nucla saved us mucho dinero, as those little drug cures cost a pretty penny). And we stayed home all week. Him in bed, and me sorting through Mary’s things and being caretaker single dad. Lots of chores at Cloud Acre – wood heat means hauling logs from the shed to the stove and keeping the fire banked and burning, hauling water, preparing meals, washing dishes, shoveling snow -- the list of rural Wright’s Mesa what-to-do’s goes on a spell … 

I did get Saturday off to visit friends up from Shiprock for a dip in the pool at Ouray. But missed Sunday’s 49er game, which was tempting (especially as I love it when they win – Giants in the World Series and now the Niners in the Super Bowl – what a year for the Bay Area!) … Friday there was this dinner party in Telluride, but Gorio and I watched movies, played games, stayed up late and slept late … 

Sometimes being sick is the only way to slow the world down and sleep a lot.

Up Bear Creek / 24jan26013 / item one



On the trail of the Trogloraptor

SPIDERS … Like snakes, I was afraid of spiders as a young child. We lived among black widows and my mom even got bit by one, hiding in the sleeve of a jacket she put on. She was sick for days … But meeting an herpetologist at Pinnacles National Monument in California, I learned to love snakes – recognizing the danger but respecting their power and beauty. And after 30 years living in Norwood on a property with many old outbuildings and in a house with many resident spiders, I’ve come to an arrangement of sorts. I like to say, they don’t bite me and I don’t kill them. Both of these statements are true, although there may be no direct correlation between them. However, in my own magical worldview, there is. And I take great care to escort spiders out of my home (where a good number provide fly-catching webs, eliminating one of the area’s summer pests).

My success in doing so relates in no small way to making use of that wonderful humane spider trapping tool, the BugZooka – an air gun that sucks up spiders and lets you relocate them outside, unharmed … Having become a fan of spiders now (one of the great Diné feminine deities), I was delighted to learn in a recent issue of Science News of the discovery of a whole new family of spiders, Trogloraptoridae. Tens of thousands of new species are discovered every year, but finding a new family of critters is very rare. These new specimens sport big, three-part claws and spikes on curved feet and measure about three inches with feet extended. So far, this spider family has only one genus and only one species. It was discovered by cavers in southern Oregon, and was dubbed Trogloraptor (“cave robber”) marchingtoni (for amateur spelunker and deputy sheriff Neil Marchington). However, specimens have also turned up in the redwoods of Jedediah Smith State Park in California, and may be a second species of the genus Trogloraptor.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Up Bear Creek 17jan26013



Trying to get the state to use some OHV common sense in our high country
OHVs on a forest road
DENVER … It was a lot of effort for a two-minute speech. My fellow commissioner was unable to attend the meeting of the state Parks & Wildlife Commission at the Westminster Doubletree Hotel as planned, so I got roped into the three-day trip … The state P&W agency had been dinging us on our application grants for an Alpine Ranger to manage our Off-Highway Vehicle traffic on county roads in the high country. Although the state OHV fund has specifically been restructured to help pay for OHV law enforcement, San Miguel County and its neighbors (Ouray, Hinsdale and San Juan) had been preventing from getting these state OHV grants because our joint county regs for OHV usage on our treacherous mountain roads includes insurance and driver’s licenses – neither of which requirements are mandated by the state. As such, the P&W bureaucracy has concluded our regs are “inconsistent” with the state’s regs, and as such can’t be funded … Which puts the four counties in a terrible situation. The state is saying it won’t help us pay for our Alpine Ranger to manage OHV traffic because we don’t let 10-year-olds run motorized OHVs on narrow jeep roads where the exposure is often extreme and quite likely deadly. If that sounds like a crazy situation, you’re right. It is … Although I only got two minutes to make my plea as to the unfairness of the situation, my fellow commissioners Pete McKay of Silverton and Lynn Padgett of Ridgway also spoke, and the three of us had a good effect … Given the legal quagmire of conflicting regs and regulatory inconsistencies, the P&W Commission promised to review the situation with its staff and try to find a solution – good news for the county, as budgets shrink and the ability to do things, like the Alpine Ranger position, become more and more tenuous on taxpayer funding alone … We’ll see if the trip to the big city actually nets the county some real dollars to help manage OHV use on our alpine roads.

APOCALPYTIC PLANET … If you think climate change is the only threat to our future as a species, think again. Paonia-based author Craig Childs has researched the real history of our cataclysmic earth and come up with the many ways the earth has died and come back to life in its multi-million year history. Once again we see that the Darwinian concept of slow, gradual change is counter-balanced by some of the catastrophic insights that Immanuel Velikovsky championed … I can’t help thinking of that dazzling chant that the native people of my hometown, San Francisco, sang and that I named one of my poetry chapbooks after, “Dancing on the Brink of the World.” That certainly describes living on the coast of California, where earthquake, flood, tsunami and volcanic activity abound. But it also speaks to our entire species, trying to find a foothold on an ever-changing planet … Childs is a great writer. He makes the science come alive with personal stories of his adventures seeking extreme habitats that reflect how the entire earth might one day look … Highly recommended.

WATERSHED … The Telluride Institute is hosting a screening in the Nugget Theatre this Friday night at 8 p.m. of Watershed: Exploring a New Water Ethic for a New West, a documentary narrated by movie star and conservationist Robert Redford and produced by son Jamie … "The watershed issue is something that's happening all over the world, where the need for water is greater than the amount of water to provide for it," Robert Redford told Reuters news agency. "I think we're picking the Colorado River as an example of what's going on and trying to focus on that and draw attention to it." … 
Mentzelia marginata

Chimed in Telluride Institute board member Audrey Marnoy, “Watershed's creation, as an inspiring social action tool to engage people, synergizes with the Telluride Institute’s mission to collaborate with leading artists and scientists, businesses and the public to advance real solutions that support healthy environments, diverse cultures and progressive economies.” A short panel discussion bringing the film’s ideas to the local water situation will follow the screening.

NEW ENDEMIC … Ridgway-based Western Slope botanist for the Colorado Natural Heritage program Peggy Lyon reports that a new species of plant has been found in San Miguel and Montrose counties, Mentzelia paradoxensis. The new find was reported in Madroño, published by the California Botanical Society, in a paper by John J. Schenk and Larry Hufford of Washington State University at Pullman titled, “Taxonomic Novelties from Western North America in Menzelia section Bartonia (Loasaceae).” M. paradoxensis is closely related to M. marginata but was found to be its own distinct species.

THE TALKING GOURD

Cabin

He sets up the cribbage board
while she shuffles the deck;
his scotch mingles with ice
while her hot cocoa steams
on this January night.

-David Reynolds
Fountain Valley