My thanks to Noelle at The Little Hedgehog, not only for links to
all my blogs, but for singling out BUllSHit.
By the way, I made my very first BUllSHit bumper sticker in 1992.
mjh
Category Archives: Theirs
Crow is Delicious, even cold
Journal Watch
I’m still waiting for the editorial demanding Bush pay for the repairs. mjh [9/1]
Las Cruces Runway Needs Presidential Fix ABQjournal Opinion [9/4]
The buck-
passing has already started. The Bush-Cheney campaign directed questions to Andrews Air Force Base, which directed questions to the
Presidential Airlift Group. A spokesman at the Air Mobility Command, which oversees Andrews AFB, had no knowledge of the incident and
could not comment.
Runway 4/22 is shut down until repairs can be made. The repairs, of course, can’t be made until someone coughs up
the cash.
If personnel delegated by the campaign to handle its logistics ignored the city’s warning about runway capabilities, that
“someone” should be the Bush-Cheney campaign.
Happy Birthday, Wilderness Act!
Wilderness Act’s birthday worth celebrating –
greatfallstribune.com
On this date 40 years ago, President Lyndon Johnson signed S.4013 “to establish on public lands of the
United States a National Wilderness Preservation System for the permanent good of the whole people. …”
Said the president:
“If
future generations are to remember us with gratitude rather than contempt, we must leave them more than the miracles of technology. We
must leave them a glimpse of the world as it was in the beginning, not just after we got through with it.”
One hundred and thirteen
times since then, eight presidents — including, on four occasions, George W. Bush — have signed laws designating additional wilderness,
from the five-acre Pelican Island in Florida to the more than 9 million-acre Wrangell-St. Elias Wilderness in Alaska.
Today, thanks to
this pathfinding, grassroots and bipartisan legislation, 106 million acres of American public land in 44 states is protected from
development.
But there’s more to be done.
For one thing, eight times as much public land, mostly in the West, remains roadless and
undeveloped, but it isn’t protected by wilderness designation. Some of it should be.
Despite the economic, aesthetic and even
theological value of leaving some places alone, the pressure to develop those last unprotected areas is intense, and it has not decreased
during the Bush administration.
Wilderness Act turns 40, and people are still
arguing about it
The federal act designated 9.1 million acres as wilderness, described by the bill’s framers as land “where the
earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.”
More than anything else,
the 1964 bill planted the concept in the American consciousness that wilderness has innate public value, that it contributes to the
common good.
40th Anniversary of Wilderness
Protection Act / Our great American wilderness needs better protection
Wilderness Facts
Under the 1964 Wilderness Act:
—
There are now 106 million acres protected as wilderness. Alaska accounts for more than half of them, 58 million acres, which is 16
percent of the state. California has 14 million acres, or 14 percent of the state. Other states with more than 4 million acres of
wilderness are Arizona, Washington and Idaho.
— President Bush so far has signed four wilderness bills by Congress adding 529,604
acres, nearly all in Nevada. The most acreage was added by President Carter, who signed 14 wilderness bills covering a total of 66.3
million acres, mostly in Alaska. Ronald Reagan signed 43 bills adding 10.6 million acres. Bill Clinton signed 13 bills adding 9.5 million
acres. George H. W. Bush signed 10 bills adding 4 million acres.
— California has the most wilderness areas, 130, followed by
Arizona, 90; Alaska, 48; Nevada, 42; Colorado, 41; Oregon, 40; and Washington, 30. [663 areas nationwide]
Sources: The Interior
Department; The Wilderness Society; Wilderness.net
Wilderness protection’s enduring
U.S. legacy
These days, with the nation divided over so many things, it is easy to forget that once, not so long ago, wilderness
protection was not seen as predominantly a Republican or a Democratic issue, but as a valuable legacy for both parties. In fact, while
Jimmy Carter can claim the largest amount of wilderness (66 million acres) signed into law by any administration, Ronald Reagan signed
more wilderness bills (43) than any other president.
Venerable Wilderness Act stands test of time
Only
Congress can designate wilderness, although the president has to sign laws doing it. The acreage added so far in Bush’s tenure is the
least of any president since Lyndon Johnson signed the Wilderness Act on Sept. 3, 1964.
Motorized vehicles and equipment, such as
chain saws, are prohibited in wilderness areas. Camping, hiking, climbing, fishing, hunting, canoeing and horseback riding are allowed;
grazing livestock is generally allowed. Off-limits are mountain biking, commercial logging, road-building, oil and gas leasing and
mining, except for pre-existing claims. …
Last year the Bush administration directed the Interior Department to quit barring oil and
gas drilling on land proposed for wilderness but not yet designated by Congress. Since then, the department has issued oil and gas leases
on tens of thousands of these acres, mainly in Utah, Colorado and Wyoming. …
Few of the 114 bills signed by Johnson and successive
presidents creating 663 wilderness areas around the nation have been tinkered with, and there never has been an attempt to undo a
wilderness designation.
“The magic is it requires Congress, which in turn requires the citizenry, to be engaged. That’s where it gets
its power,” said William Meadows, president of The Wilderness Society.
His group believes another 200 million acres, much of it in
Alaska, should be considered for wilderness protections. …
Utah author and naturalist Terry Tempest Williams sees poetry in a law
that defines wilderness as “an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who
does not remain.”
“Those who wrote this legislation into being understood the crucial and subtle relationship between language and
landscape,” Williams said. “How we speak about wild, open country is closely aligned with how we treat it. Open lands open minds.”
THE
Rod Knows Bigots
Senator Rod Adair, New Mexico District 33;
Lincoln, Eddy, and Chaves counties
It was revealing in that the Journal yet again, unwittingly, revealed the internal
bigotry that dominates its editorializing, and bleeds over almost daily into its reporting. …
The main objective of both the
Journal and its ideological close relative, the Albuquerque Tribune, as well as several other left-leaning media outlets in the state, is
to damage the Republican Party. … That is the way of bigotry.
Lightning Rod Adair sure is funny. Dendahl,
Buckley, Krauthammer, Thomas, Navarrette, Ramirez, Trevor — what a bunch of commies. Maybe he means Goodman, Cronkite, Belshaw (ha!
might as well count Dave Barry). Oh, I know, he means Richard Reeves (‘Screw You, Buddy’, Reeves wrote in
response to Ashkraft).
Republicans control both houses of Congress and the Presidency; they are working diligently against the
Judiciary. They relentlessly attack the weakest leg of our democracy even as they approve laws allowing conglomerations to buy up and
homogenize the Media, converting news departments into PR readers. All of this wicked duplicity is almost commical, until I read
this:
The Journal’s bigotry is usually the in-your-face variety of the old Democrat Party in its halcyon days of
Jim Crow and segregation.
Wow, zeitgeist! I just wrote “Jim Crow” this morning for the first time in a long time. So,
Adair is saying the Dems are the party of Jim Crow. Hmmm. Where was the GOP during Civil Rights and Voting Rights legislation? About
where they are on women’s rights and gay rights — conservative to reactionary, opposing change (for the good). The Dems sacrificed
those halcyon days and ceded the South to GOP for a generation.
Considering that the Radical Right is furious over affirmative action,
it is funny to read Adair’s detailed census of the NM Republican delegation, right down to non-Anglo-Saxon surnames (wow). Somebody tell
Roddy diversity of opinions counts, too.
Note how many times the Rod uses “bigotry.” This reminds me of rising star deep thinker Alex
Hughes (Lobo) who recently explained that wanting to tax rich people is a form of racism.
Who knew Orwell’s 1984 had become the
Republican playbook. Keep people occupied with endless wars and rewrite the past. Republicans love all people; Democrats invented evil.
Double-plus good! mjh
PS: in case anyone is thinking, ‘Mark is just as big a blowhard only from the left,’ note that I’m not
running for office and I have no desire to dominate your life. Further, I read the brilliant insights of many of these deep thinkers;
they wouldn’t take a second to read my writings.
What Are Friends For?
Dear Albuquerque Trib,
Thank you very much for burying in your backpages that embarassing story
about our president saying that the war on terrorism cannot be won. This, a war Bush has spent hundreds of billions of our tax dollars
and hundreds of US soldiers lives pursuing.
Although one might argue it somewhat newsworthy that Bush believes this war is unwinnable,
I can understand why the Republican Par- … I mean the Albuquerque Tribune would have qualms about letting the New Mexico public see
this on your front page.
Why, it was very noble of you folks to have reported it at all! Keep up the good work filtering the news for
us! You’ve been doing an exemplary job!
(Not Even) Sincerely,
Jim Mullany
The Daily Howler
I
recommend the Daily Howler for relentlessly holding the Media accountable. mjh
New Bloggers Dictionary
vociferous: witty and sexy, as in “the vociferously liberal Mark Justice Hinton” makes Chuck
uneasy.
reflexively: indisputably thoroughly reasoned, used with utmost respect, as in “It’s your job to reflexively attack” all that is wrong with the world; thank you.