Category Archives: loco

As Tip O’Neill never said, “All politics is loco.”

Stop the Senseless Slaughter

What a low-life profession: a sharpshooter who kills endangered wolves. Reminds me of the Fire Department in Fahrenheit 451 — they start fires instead of putting them out. One can only wish this sharpshooter reads Aldo Leopold’s account of killing a wolf.

“We saw what we thought was a doe fording the torrent, her breast awash in white water. When she climbed the bank toward us and shook out her tail, we realized our error: it was a wolf. A half-dozen others, evidently grown pups, sprang from the willows and all joined in a welcoming melee of wagging tails and playful maulings. What was literally a pile of wolves writhed and tumbled in the center of an open flat at the foot of our rimrock.

In those days we had never heard of passing up a chance to kill a wolf. In a second we were pumping lead into the pack, but with more excitement than accuracy; how to aim a steep downhill shot is always confusing. When our rifles were empty, the old wolf was down, and a pup was dragging a leg into impassable side-rocks.

We reached the old wolf in time to watch a fierce green fire dying in her eyes. I realized then, and have known ever since, that there was something known only to her and to the mountain. I was young then, and full of trigger-itch; I thought that because fewer wolves meant more deer, that no wolves would mean hunters’ paradise. But after seeing the green fire die, I sensed that neither the wolf nor the mountain agreed with such a view.”

—an excerpt from “Thinking Like a Mountain” (A Sand County Almanac) [from Attitudes toward wolves – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia]

This program is fraught with madness. Ranchers need to just suck-it-up and learn to live with predation — they’re rewarded for their loss, anyway.

Given a chance, not only will some balance be restored and an old wrong righted but ecotourism will come to New Mexico. Wake up! mjh

ABQjournal: U.S. Kills Wolf, Hunts His Mate By Tania Soussan, Journal Staff Writer

The male was killed Sunday in New Mexico by a sharpshooter on the program team. Efforts to trap or kill the female were continuing Monday, said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokeswoman Elizabeth Slown.

Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity said, “We’re very troubled that they’re wiping out yet another pack.”

[mjh: Note this pack was located in the Aldo Leopold Wilderness last month. Tragic irony.]
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Writing.Com: Canis lupis, The Gray Wolf

In 1933 the Park Service began to see that perhaps predation was a necessary evil and they decided upon new policy, “no native predator shall be destroyed on account of its normal utilization of any other park animal [in Yellowstone]” ….

Dump Dimdahl

Even as I was composing yesterday’s ambivalent defense of John Dimdahl, forces were moving to position him as the new and improved Republican candidate for governor, replacing that other guy whose name we needn’t remember. Keep reading because I’m not only going to defend Dimdahl again, I have a rebuke for “my” party.

Wow, Richardson, whom I don’t especially like, is going to have great fun kicking Dimdahl’s ass, especially after Dimdahl’s involvement in Sanchez’s previous romp in the mud. At the same time, Dimdahl, whom I like less than I like Richardson, will have great fun thumbing his nose at the Guv, playing the mouse to Richardson’s elephant. I do love an underdog and I have some sympathy for anyone brave enough to run for office. After an unqualified boob like Gary “Big Jerk” Johnson, the Republicans have actually picked someone who is not only qualified but represents them perfectly.

Sadly, I won’t be able to read any more of Dimdahl’s columns for a few months nor see him on The Line, but my blood pressure will probably benefit from it. In commercials, the focus will be on Richardson’s heavy-handed control of everything with an occasional shot of Dimdahl’s smiling face and skier’s tan. The only people who actually hear his venom will be like-minded folk. Oh, well, after the slaughter, he’ll return to his booth at the Frontier, our own Don Quixote. ¡Buena suerte, Juan!

As for the stern rebuke of the god-damn Democrats: one of the responses to Dimdahl’s candidacy chided him for supporting legalization of marijuana. There is the one thing that millions of Democrats and Republicans agree on: marijuana should be legalized, regulated just like alcohol and taxed at twice the rate. For Democrats to attack anyone on this issue is hypocrisy and mud-slinging worthy of right-wingers. mjh

ABQjournal: New Start in Race for Governor By Leslie Linthicum, Journal Staff Writer

Republicans dropped a bomb in the governor’s race Saturday, taking poor-performing Santa Fe doctor J.R. Damron off the ticket and replacing him with party pit bull John Dendahl, a conservative former party chairman.

Republicans hope sharp-tongued Dendahl will bring bigger guns to the November battle to unseat popular incumbent Bill Richardson. …

“I think that it’s an act of desperation for a party to reach back into the past to someone who represents the nasty politics of division and gridlock,” [Richardson’s campaign chairman Dave] Contarino said. “The contrast is incredible— a bi-partisan governor who crosses party lines to get things done versus a partisan, negative bomb-thrower.”

Republican National Committee chairman Ken Mehlman quickly weighed in with praise for Dendahl’s nomination, saying, “Unlike his opponent, John Dendahl is committed to fighting corruption from the Governor’s office on down.” [mjh: you can judge Dimdahl by those who praise him, like the ruthless Mehlman]

Dendahl, who said he will drop the drug issue in this campaign, has mixed it up with Richardson before. He was still the Republican Party chairman when Richardson first ran for governor in 2002 against Republican John Sanchez and Green Party candidate David Bacon.

The Sanchez-Richardson battle was expensive and ugly until, shortly before election day, Sanchez announced he was stopping his attack ads and telling Dendahl to cut the mudslinging as well.

After he won, Richardson said, “I think what this election shows is Dendahl’s politics of negativity is going to be repudiated and, hopefully, he’ll be gone from the political scene.”
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The Wednesday Morning Quarterback: RICHARDSON HAS A NEW OPPONENT

mjh’s blog — In Defense of Dendahl (gag)

mjh’s blog — Search Results for Dimdahl

If Lies Were Oil, We’d Have A Gusher

Read these 3 snippets (and the full articles). Note that in the first piece, Mathis engages in a classic attack on the motives of his enemies. I am not simply a citizen with a different and equally valuable opinion, I am a radical obstructionist and a liar feigning concern for the environment. Thanks, Mark. No one would suggest the same of an oil industry guy like you.

Of course, it takes an economics professor to really screw up the discussion. In the second piece, Gisser seems to support but dislike higher prices that aren’t as high as we think they are. He supports a tariff that keeps the price per barrel high (a widely accepted idea, even among “hands-off” conservatives) but opposes current tariffs that keep the price higher.

Both Gisser and Mathis emphasize the part of the problem is bad people like me won’t allow oil refineries in our back yards. And yet, it was an oil company that shut down a successful oil refinery in California for no apparent reason (other than the all-ruling bottom line). Read the previous entry for some of the evidence that the oil industry itself crushed independent refineries to control the market. It’s not NIMBY, it’s NIMBP — Not In My Back Pocket.

Both Gisser and Mathis believe ANWR will solve everything, an astonishingly nutty idea. Leave aside that a deal was made ages ago to sacrifice part of Alaska and preserve a tinier part. Leave aside what this says about people willing to betray earlier agreements. Just consider how long it would take ANWR oil to reach market and its tiny impact. This can be boiled down to a longish bumpersticker: We Will NOT Drill Our Way Out of This Problem. mjh

ABQjournal: Looming Crisis Eclipses 575 Debate By Mark Mathis, Executive director, Citizens‘ Alliance for Responsible Energy [Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy’s membership includes New Mexico oil and gas producers.]

I’m focused on educating the public about an issue that affects every aspect of our daily lives: the need to guarantee America’s energy supply. Without abundant, affordable energy, our high quality of life will quickly decline. And yet, just like the battle over the 505, many politicians are not looking out for your best interests.

Oil prices have climbed above $70 a barrel, but Congress will not allow oil companies to drill in the Alaska National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR). Congressional members voting “no” on ANWR understand that this vast oilfield could give us one million barrels of crude a day for 20 to 30 years. They know only a tiny portion of the refuge will be disturbed (the equivalent of one letter on this page), and that caribou populations at nearby Prudhoe Bay have quintupled since production began there. However, these nonleaders say “Nay” to ANWR because they are controlled by radical activist groups who spend enormous amounts of money supporting those who vote for their agenda while attacking those who don’t.

These same congressional obstructionists have voted to maintain a ban on oil and natural gas drilling in the Outer Continental Shelf that’s been off limits for 25 years. Meanwhile, Cuba is exploring for oil and gas just 45 miles from American beaches. Opponents of drilling feign concern over disrupted views and environmental danger. Of course, they know you can’t see a drilling rig three to 200 miles from the shoreline and that oil rigs in the Gulf took all Hurricane Katrina could dish out without a single spill.

Because of congressional inaction, nuclear power is still on the back burner, new refineries for gasoline can’t get built, onshore drilling is delayed or denied and Canadian companies drill for natural gas in the Great Lakes while the American region remains off limits. All the while your energy costs keep rising.

ABQjournal: Hysteria Over High Gas Prices Is Pumped Up By Micha Gisser, of the Rio Grande Foundation, professor emeritus of economics, University of New Mexico, and a senior fellow, Rio Grande Foundation. [mjh: The Rio Grande Foundation is a “think” tank located in a booth under the picture of John Wayne at the Frontier.]

Surprisingly, today our economy is robust despite the spike in oil prices. There are two reasons for this: First, at a price of $1.50 a gallon, due to personal income growth and increased automobile efficiency, the percentage of average household income spent on gasoline fell from 4.5 percent in 1971 to 3.1 percent in 2001.

Second, President Bush’s tax cut in May of 2003, supported by accommodating monetary policy, gave the economy a huge boost that easily swamped the impact of rising gasoline prices. Politicians who advocate restoring taxes to their pre-May 2003 level should think again.

The present spike in gasoline prices— surprise, surprise— occurred because supply and demand for a change have not been going hand-in-hand. Demand for oil has intensified since the economies of China and India have at long last taken off. But the growth in oil supply slowed down considerably in the wake of Katrina and Rita [mjh: in spite of those flawless oil rigs Mathis sings the praises of?], the instability in the Middle East [mjh: which our inept leadership contributes to] and in response to the new ethanol legislation fiasco. That policy forced oil companies to shoulder the distorting 54-cent a gallon tariff to protect ethanol producers.

In the short term Congress could alleviate the market pressures by rescinding the ethanol tariff, abolishing— or at least relaxing— the “boutique” regulations that hinder gasoline mobility across the United States, and doing something about the NIMBY (not in my backyard) activists who are responsible for the freeze in the number of oil refineries.

ABQjournal: More Wells a Drop in Bucket of Energy Woes By Stephen Capra, New Mexico Wilderness Alliance

For the past year many people have watched with frustration as the energy crisis has come to engulf America. We all knew it was coming; it’s just that we have a President that chose to ignore the warnings and continues to blame conservationists and any rational person who has challenged his oil-based policies.

America burns 10,000 gallons of oil per second. We possess only 3 percent of the world’s oil reserves, and 2.9 percent of the world’s natural gas reserves, yet we are producing them at a much faster rate than many Mid-East countries, meaning we will be more vulnerable to shortages sooner, according to reports from British Petroleum.

The Gulf region in the Mid-East provides 24 percent of our oil. …

Here in the Rocky Mountain West, oil and gas development has spread like wildfire. Drill rigs are entering residential neighborhoods, bordering National Parks, sprouting up in National Monuments and threatening some of our wildest remaining public lands, yet we are now paying more than ever to heat our homes and drive our cars. It seems abundantly clear that oil is not the answer to our energy needs.

For the past six years President Bush and Congress have given the oil and gas industry everything they want on a silver platter. From the Enron debacle, to opening up vast tracts of public lands, to giving billions in tax cuts and royalty relief to an industry that is raking in record profits, while destroying our precious groundwater, wildlife habitat and our most important gift to future generations— our land. While top executives walk away with golden parachutes, those on fixed incomes struggle to stay warm in winter or cool in summer, and driving is slowly becoming a privilege of the wealthy. This president and Congress should be held accountable for failing miserably to protect the economic, environmental and national security interests of our country by allowing the big oil lobby to control domestic energy policy. …

The industry stump speech continues to be we need all types of energy, including alternative sources. But when it comes to putting your money where your mouth is, industry, with a few exceptions, continues to put its effort into drilling and its money into lobbying for more access to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Otero Mesa, Valle Vidal and any place that can put money in their coffers.

The question is how do we solve the problem? First, I think we can all agree there are no simple solutions. Oil in the short-term will clearly continue to be part of the energy matrix. Where conservationists and the oil industry differ is in approach. It is imperative that drilling of our wildest public lands be stopped. It’s simply not going to make a meaningful difference in the supply or price of oil or gas that we have in America. If we drilled in the Arctic Refuge today it would take more than 10 years for that oil to reach the market and would reduce the price at the pump by 1 cent per gallon in 20 years, when it finally reached peak production, according to the Energy Information Administration, a branch of the Department of Energy. With the price of oil being set by the world market, Refuge oil would be a drop in the bucket.

When we say no to the oil and gas industry, we force change….

More than 95 percent of our public lands are open today to drilling. The conservation community is battling to save the last 5 percent. Oil is not the answer. We must be bold and imaginative in developing alternative sources of energy. We must begin by saying no to the Bush energy policies and yes to sanity.

[updated 6/27/06 to add two other responses to Mark Mathis’ piece…]
Continue reading If Lies Were Oil, We’d Have A Gusher

I Never Call It The Albuquerque Urinal, But Now I’m Pissed

As you may know, Bernalillo County’s Probate Judge, Merri Rudd (y mi esposa) was unopposed in the Democratic Primary yesterday and also is unopposed in the General Election in November. So, she won back in March on Filing Day but for the need for one vote yesterday. Still, some might want to know she received 25,737 votes, more than any other judge or county position in Bernalillo. More than Gary King or Jim Baca or any candidate other than the top state-wide offices (within Bernalillo County) — 10,000+ votes more than Heather Wilson. Bernalillo County, New Mexico, USA – Unofficial Election Results

You won’t know this from the Albuquerque Journal (or local TV news). Intrepid journalist Dan McKay, who Merri introduced me to in the neighborhood grocery store, studiously ignores the office of Probate Judge and Merri Rudd. McKay has written many, many articles on Bernalillo politics and elections. Only once have I seen him mention the office or the office holder, and that may have been the last time I chastised him for his negligence.

Does the office of Probate Judge matter less than dog-catcher (sorry, under the new HEART ordinance, that’s “Dog-Human Interface Facilitator”)? There are only 5 elected county positions mandated by the state constitution; Probate Judge is one of these. Constitutionally, the office is as “important” as sheriff.

“Aw, come on, she was unopposed.” That, in itself, may have been news. But note that Michael Brasher is in a similar position and got a paragraph explaining that (and 4,855 votes). Somehow, the Journal can’t spare a sentence for one of the top vote-getters in the county. What else are they overlooking/under-reporting? mjh

PS: my friends at the Journal might warn McKay to watch out for me at the grocery store — I may slip something embarrassing or expensive in his basket.

Update at 1:17pm: after my venting, Merri notes that none of the judges races seem to have merited coverage in McKay’s article. So, rather then being the only county official ignored, she’s one of many judges. So much fairer.

[See mjh’s blog — The Thrill of Victory]