You are viewing [info]numairhawk's journal

I Hug Trees [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
numairhawk

[ userinfo | livejournal userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

Links
[Links:| Sheroes Central Virtual Horse Ranch ]

The perils of electronics. [Mar. 22nd, 2009|01:14 am]
[mood |contemplativecontemplative]

The worst part of the theft of my laptop I figured out pretty soon after it was gone.  My story that I've been working on for over two years was on it.  It's okay.  The spine of the story was saved on a flash drive.  But I hadn't transferred the files in over six months and I'd written over 40 more pages.  I haven't taken the time to see what I've got to work with.  In some ways this is good because if I'm able to recreate what I lost I might be okay.   Actually I might have a pretty recent copy printed out somewhere...    I know where we were going, it has all come together...It's just very odd.  I feel a bit of grief for those lost pages. 

link1 comment|post comment

The Election [Nov. 4th, 2008|11:40 pm]

YES WE DID
linkpost comment

Ten Reasons Not to Move to Canada [Oct. 2nd, 2008|10:03 pm]

by Sarah Anderson
 

Ready to say screw this country and buy a one-way ticket north? Here are some reasons to stay in the belly of the beast.

1. The Rest of the World. After the February 2003 antiwar protests, the New York Times described the global peace movement as the world's second superpower. Their actions didn't prevent the war, but protesters in nine countries have succeeded in pressuring their governments to pull their troops from Iraq and/or withdraw from the so-called "coalition of the willing."Antiwar Americans owe it to the majority of the people on this planet who agree with them to stay and do what they can to end the suffering in Iraq and prevent future pre-emptive wars.

2. People Power Can Trump Presidential Power. The strength of social movements can be more important than whoever is in the White House. Example: In 1970, President Nixon supported the Occupational Safety and Health Act, widely considered the most important pro-worker legislation of the last 50 years. It didn't happen because Nixon loved labor unions, but because union power was strong. Stay and help build the peace, economic justice, environmental and other social movements that can make change.

3. The great strides made in voter registration and youth mobilization must be built on rather than abandoned.

4. Like Nicaraguans in the 1980s, Iraqis Need U.S. Allies. After Ronald Reagan was re-elected in 1984, progressives resisted the urge to flee northwards and instead stayed to fight the U.S. governments secret war of arming the contras in Nicaragua and supporting human rights atrocities throughout Central America. Iraq is a different scenario, but we can still learn from the U.S.-Central America solidarity work that exposed illegal U.S. activities and their brutal consequences and ultimately prevailed by forcing a change in policy.

5. We Can't Let up on the 'Free Trade' Front Activists have held the Bush administration at bay on some issues. On trade, opposition in the United States and in developing countries has largely blocked the Bush administrations corporate-driven trade agenda for four years. The President is expected to soon appoint a new top trade negotiator to break the impasse. Whoever he picks would love to see a progressive exodus to Canada.

6. Barack Obama. His victory to become the only African-American in the U.S. Senate was one of the few bright spots of the election. An early opponent of the Iraq war, Obama trounced his primary and general election opponents, even in white rural districts, showing he could teach other progressives a few things about broadening their base. As David Moberg of In These Times puts it, 'Obama demonstrates how a progressive politician can redefine mainstream political symbols to expand support for liberal policies and politicians rather than engage in creeping capitulation to the right.'

7. Say so long to the DLC. Barry Goldwater suffered a resounding defeat when he ran for president against Lyndon Johnson in 1964, but his campaign spawned a conservative movement that eventually gained control of the Republican Party and elected Ronald Reagan in 1980. Progressives should see the excitement surrounding Dean, Kucinich, Moseley Braun, and Sharpton during the primary season as the foundation for a similar takeover of the Democratic Party.

8. 2008. President Bush is entering his second term facing an escalating casualty rate in Iraq, a record trade deficit, a staggering budget deficit, sky-high oil prices, and a deeply divided nation. As the Republicans face likely failure, progressives need to start preparing for regime change in 2008 or sooner. Remember that Nixon was reelected with a bigger margin than Bush, but faced impeachment within a year.

9. Americans are Not All Yahoos. Although I wouldn't attempt to convince a Frenchman of it right now, many surveys indicate that Americans are more internationalist than the election results suggest. In a September poll by the University of Maryland, majorities of Bush supporters expressed support for multilateral approaches to security, including the United States being part of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (68%), the International Criminal Court (75%), the treaty banning land mines (66%), and the Kyoto Treaty on climate change (54%). The problem is that most of these Bush supporters weren't aware that Bush opposed these positions. Stay and help turn progressive instincts into political power.

10. Winter. Average January temperature in Ottawa: 12.2°F.

Sarah Anderson (saraha@igc.org) is a fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies.

linkpost comment

The abandoned monkey who has found love with a pigeon [Sep. 17th, 2007|06:38 pm]
 Go here to read the story.

Wonderful.
linkpost comment

Earth. [Jul. 7th, 2007|02:00 pm]

I live here, you live here.  Actually, every living thing (that we know of) lives on earth.  So whether or not global warming is scientifically proven, fox news pundits, can we agree that steps to preserve the natural wonders that earth has provided is actually a good idea?   Can we agree that controlling the poisons in the atmosphere is a good idea? 

 

Right wingers use Muslim terror to move there base and accuse left wingers of using Global warming terror to move there base.  Why does the term Global warming turn people off?  I think part of it is the catastrophe aspect of it.  I’m not an expert and I’m not a former vice president, so I can’t say for sure if predictions of a 20ft sea rise are accurate or a ploy to get people to pay attention.  I think that the general population just wouldn’t understand the implications of a 2in sea rise and people have used these big numbers to get attention.

 

People view “going green” as a big life choice.  The things that normal citizens of the modern world do not have to be life altering.  Solar panels and recycled building materials are good for people who can afford it.  Lets just face facts a majority of Americans cannot afford that.  So do what you CAN do: recycle, use cloth grocery bags, use those new energy bulbs, if possible commute by walking, carpooling or using public transit, if that isn’t a possibility when you buy a new car buy a hybrid or more fuel efficient cars (like smart car-coming soon, buy local produce and if you must have it local meat, eggs, and dairy.

 

Those seem like meager things that we can do.  But they contribute to a growing consciousness and a willingness to commit.  The biggest impact that we can have is to bully OUR government to act on environmental issues.

 

Taxes on carbon emissions sound good to me.  I’m pretty sure it has been proven that this is poison to some degree.  So for the health of Americans and citizens of other countries tax it, lower the emission of it and find alternatives. 

 

If I were in office I would give tax cuts to hybrids and not to SUVs.

 

Let me just have a shout-out to car manufacturers for a moment.  Liquid stuff that we put in tanks.  100 years of this and we can’t think of another way to power cars?  Wait wasn’t there electric?  What happened to that?  Ethanol is a liquid you put in a tank.  Frankly this doesn’t seem to be a very good alternative to fossil fuels.  With the amount of processing needed to make it. 

 

But who knows.  The process will not be instant.  We can’t expect things to change overnight. 

 

I am just going to put this out there.  The production of meat, eggs and dairy is extremely wasteful when you think about the fossil fuels needed to raise the feed for the animals, transport the feed to the animals, transport the animals to the slaughter house, processing and packaging the meat, transporting the meat to the grocery store and then transporting it to the home.  Dairy has the same effect because the male calves are veal. 

 

The reason that people think we need these things is because beef, pork, poultry eggs and milk have the money to advertise and to fund special studies that say we need these in our diets.

 

 

linkpost comment

School [Feb. 6th, 2007|12:37 pm]

 

School is going well.  I have an American Government test on Thurs.  It should go alright; I’m actually studying and doing the whole flash card thing.  I adore this class.  I don’t know what it is about History/Social Studies that my teachers are always male, but they are always so impressively smart.  This guy is no exception and this class is an amazement to me because for as long as I’ve been in college, and most of high school I haven’t had a class go so far into class discussion that tends to stay on topic or at least is relevant that everything in this class is relevant that is going on in our country.  There is one girl though who seems a bit clueless.  We were talking about the Declaration of independence and we got onto how women and slaves weren’t really considered.  My Prof. was telling us how Thomas Jefferson had relations with his slave and this girl, I swear, went “Was the slave black?”

 

Earth Science is similar in that it is such a relevant subject that the discussions are interesting and frequent.  It is so refreshing to see students who are actually involved. 

link1 comment|post comment

Happy Holidays [Dec. 24th, 2006|05:08 pm]

The Pug Before Christmas!!!


linkpost comment

I bought an annual pass, I can't wait till I go again. [May. 28th, 2006|08:45 pm]

A Sandhill Crane.  How beautiful.



linkpost comment

Lowry Park Zoo [May. 26th, 2006|11:03 pm]
I went to the Zoo that is a 1/2 hour from my home on Monday.  I had a great time and am thinking of getting a year-long pass.   The high light was Tamani the little baby Elephant born on Octobor 17th 2005.  
link1 comment|post comment

Brokeback to the future! [Feb. 8th, 2006|10:37 pm]
LOL
link1 comment|post comment

navigation
[ viewing | most recent entries ]
[ go | earlier ]