"This week, turning the corner into the astronomical Spring, we have gone abruptly from warm winter to hot summer. And I mean hot: it was 84 degrees Farenheit in western Massachusetts today, brightly sunny, with puffy white cumulus clouds against a brilliant blue sky, unobstructed by any leaves. No shade.
"Today reminded me of a wax model: beautiful but blank. The façade of beauty, with the crucial vital spark missing.When I went for a walk up the mountain early this morning, the woods were eerily silent. I remembered mournfully the spring mornings of my childhood, where I would be awakened by the joyful singing of the dawn chorus of thousands of birds each happily greeting each other and the new day. . . .
"While no one of us can shoulder personal responsibility for this tragedy of the commons, all of us who have benefited from the heedless extraction of oil and relentless destruction of the forests and the oceans must be aware of the extent to which we have brought this on ourselves, and taken the rest of the natural world along with us."
Read the Article by Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez: Silent Spring Dawns Hot, Dry and Merciless at Common Dreams.
Also read http://frackban.org/ about fracking in WV.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Jukebox Music 1940 to 1999 Cool
.
This is great. It's sort of a time machine of music. Each of the years below connect to the best 20 hits of that year. Pick a year, wait a few seconds, and the Juke Box will show you the 20 hits to select from. You can play all 20 hits for that year, or just those that you like. Hope you like it..
This is great. It's sort of a time machine of music. Each of the years below connect to the best 20 hits of that year. Pick a year, wait a few seconds, and the Juke Box will show you the 20 hits to select from. You can play all 20 hits for that year, or just those that you like. Hope you like it..
> > > 1940
> > > 1950
> > > 1960
> > > 1970
> > > 1980
> > > 1990
> > > 1941
> > > 1951
> > > 1961
> > > 1971
> > > 1981
> > > 1991
> > > 1942
> > > 1952
> > > 1962
> > > 1972
> > > 1982
> > > 1992
> > > 1943
> > > 1953
> > > 1963
> > > 1973
> > > 1983
> > > 1993
> > > 1944
> > > 1954
> > > 1964
> > > 1974
> > > 1984
> > > 1994
> > > 1945
> > > 1955
> > > 1965
> > > 1975
> > > 1985
> > > 1995
> > > 1946
> > > 1956
> > > 1966
> > > 1976
> > > 1986
> > > 1996
> > > 1947
> > > 1957
> > > 1967
> > > 1977
> > > 1987
> > > 1997
> > > 1948
> > > 1958
> > > 1968
> > > 1978
> > > 1988
> > > 1998
> > > 1949
> > > 1959
> > > 1969
> > > 1979
> > > 1989
> > > 1999
Cool, huh?
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
'These are again revolutionary times,' Declaration of Water Rights and Heritage by Frackban.org
.
In photo above while judges sample water from around the world, demonstrators point out the irony that natural gas hydraulic fracturing is destroying water quality, outside the annual International Water Festival in Berkeley Springs Feb. 25, 2012.
(Story also posted at AlterNet)
It was the region’s water that brought George Washington and his colleagues up the Potomac to settle the area, and they proclaimed the healing qualities of the town’s warm springs. Today Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, calls itself “the nation’s first spa” and warm water flowing through the park draws visitors all year long. Residents rely on the fountains to fill bottles of drinking water for their homes.
So frankban.org proclaimed Berkeley Springs a “water heritage site” outside the Morgan County courthouse the previous Wednesday, Feb. 22, on Washington’s birthday 2012. Full Text of The World's First International Water Heritage Site Proclamation is below.
As the Presidential election approaches in November, most politicians claim an allegiance to a continued pursuit of fossil fuels by oil and gas companies, and maintain fracking the Marcellus Shale is in the nation’s best interest. The advocates outside the water festival want the country to put its resources into alternative energy sources.
The World's First International Water Heritage Site
By Charles E. Sullivan and John C. Webster
Washington's birthday, 2-22-2012, 2:22pm. Citizens of Morgan County, West Virginia, gathered on the Morgan County Courthouse steps in the Town of Bath, corner of Fairfax and Washington Streets (U.S. 522), to celebrate the 22nd Annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting and to demonstrate against the international ecocrime of hydraulic fracturing for natural gas (fracking).
We proclaimed a reinstatement of rights that citizens of this country, and the many states that united to form it, were supposed to have been guaranteed by the founding fathers, through original documents forged by that elite gathering of privileged landowners (who pondered to create an enlightened system of government within the constraints and beliefs of their time) and thereafter added to and slowly strengthened by a Bill of Rights to The Constitution of The United States of America.
Realizing both the myth and history of our nation, and attempting to set our current condition within that context, two documents approved by the grassroots organization Morgan County Frack Ban (http://www.frackban.org/) were read by Charles E. Sullivan, Frack Ban orator, after co-member John C. Webster read the following excerpt from The Constitution of West Virginia:
Article 2, 2-2. Powers of government in citizens.
"The powers of government reside in all the citizens of the state, and can be rightfully exercised only in accordance with their will and appointment."
Unfortunately, the citizens of West Virginia have not been allowed to exercise those rights. We feel, therefore, that we must go around the current system as it now stands and proclaim a line in the sand beyond which the corporate governance of this state, and of the United States, must not go in an attempt to destroy "the terrible beauty" of West Virginia and to poison its water and its people.
Preamble to A Declaration of Community Water Rights and Heritage
By Charles E. Sullivan
The Republic of the United States of America was founded upon revolutionary principles. And while many would deny it today, these are again revolutionary times. It therefore seems appropriate to invoke the thoughts of one of America’s greatest thinkers and most conscientious citizens—Henry David Thoreau, who lived from 1817 to 1861.
For those of you who do not know the story, Thoreau went to jail for refusing to pay his taxes. Had he chosen to pay them, Thoreau recognized that he would be supporting a war, the war against Mexico, to which he was morally opposed. So he went to jail rather than pay taxes that would, as he saw it, expand the territory of slavery. Thoreau was a fierce abolitionist.
Even our seemingly mundane lives are filled with such moral choices. Action and inaction, cooperation and non-compliance with the law have consequences. This is what gives our lives meaning; it is what defines who and what we are as human beings. Those who are most alive are passionate about everything they do.
Henry David Thoreau famously declared in his essay On the Duty of Civil Disobedience, “Let every man make known the kind of government that would command his respect and that will be the first step toward obtaining it.”
Thoreau was a man with a social conscience. He was, above all, a man who stood on and acted upon moral principle. This did not always enamor him to his fellow citizens. In a culture predicated upon exploitation and wasteful consumption, truth, particularly inconvenient truth, is rarely popular.
Thoreau also told us, “The fate of the country does not depend upon how you vote at the polls—the worst man is as strong as the best at that game; it does not depend on what kind of paper you drop into the ballot box once a year, but on what kind of man you drop from your chamber into the street every morning.” He also said, "There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root. "
In essence, Thoreau tells us that by strictly adhering to the systems of power, rather than working outside of them when necessary, we are treating the symptoms of disease rather than its underlying cause. One must think outside of the box and one must act according to the dictates of conscience. Or, as another author once said, “You must stand for something or you will fall for anything.”
It is in the spirit of Henry David Thoreau that I offer the following thoughts:
The citizens of Morgan County demand a government that represents working class people and the poor rather than corporate interests and the privileged elite. Its credo must be human need, not corporate greed. Furthermore, we recognize that capitalism is not democracy and that democracy is not capitalism. These are radically opposing ideas, and we must take care not to confuse them.
Our diverse forests are commodified, measured in board feet to be clearcut and off-shored at prodigious bargain rates, like a liquidation sale. World class biodiversity is being turned into biological deserts and monoculture. Money changes hands. The few are getting rich at the expense of the many. The world and the people who live in it are treated like products to be exploited. We are told that nothing is sacred, save for the dollar and markets.
In reality, every political economy is underlain by ecology and by living, evolving, biological systems. Ecology is the only economy that really matters. One cannot make a living on a dead planet; and one cannot drink money.
George Orwell, the author of a chilling novel called 1984, astutely observed, “In times of universal deceit, speaking truth is a revolutionary act.” Being here today is such an act. It is in that spirit that we offer A Declaration of Community Water Rights and Heritage.
A Declaration of Community Water Rights and Heritage
By John C. Webster
When, in the course of human events, it is again necessary to reaffirm our unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, as the various governments of these United States of America - at all levels - have become destructive to them, we must reestablish the proposition that governments derive their just powers from consent of the governed.
To these ends, and realizing that protection of our natural water sources, their courses, and the surrounding ecosystems that produce and support them, are essential to ensure and secure the future of Morgan County, West Virginia, and that of its citizens; we do, therefore, proclaim the following Declaration Of Community Water Rights and Heritage, in order to stop the insidious intrusion of corporate governance upon the very means of our existence in violation of the public trust:
Whereas 70% of the earth's surface is covered with water, of which only 3% is fresh water derived from all sources, and of which only 1% can be used as potable water; and,
Whereas the hills, hollows, mountains, and valleys of Morgan County, West Virginia, are 80% forested and must be protected as progenitor of the naturally fresh, clean, and potable water necessary to replenish two-thirds of all human bodies that is water; and,
Whereas we recognize the historic efforts made by citizens of this county to guarantee the future of its potable water supplies, even in the face of unchecked development, never-ending divisions to vast and interconnected areas of contiguous, protected ecosystem required to produce said natural water supplies, and on-going degradation of same; and,
Whereas corporate governance has led us to a situation where we have no rights as a people to community control, by way of ballot referenda, to redress grievances, a situation resulting from 135 years of corporate rule over West Virginia and its legislators by timbering, coal, oil and gas industries, the latter of which has begun the international ecocrime of hydraulic fracturing; and
Whereas hydraulic fracturing for natural gas is but the latest and most perfidious attempt to destroy, for profit, the very means of our existence, as well as unalienable rights set forth by the 1776 Declaration of Independence, and thereafter by federal and state Constitutions; and
Whereas, in that same year, George Washington, then-future President of the United States of America, did purchase an original lot in the newly chartered Town of Bath, this country's first resort spa, surrounding the famous Berkeley Springs, around which the town was built, and which springs have been permanently protected within the 4.5 acre Berkeley Springs State Park; and
Whereas we must also protect - by a ban on hydraulic fracturing - the additional and various fresh water springs, wells, runs, creeks, rivers, and lakes of this county, including but not limited to Warm Springs Run, Sleepy Creek, the Cacapon and Potomac Rivers, and the Cacapon Resort State Park Lake;
We do, therefore, appeal to attendees at this year's 22nd Annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting, being held at the Country Inn adjacent to Berkeley Springs State Park, to join us in declaring the Town of Bath, the County of Morgan, West Virginia, and all watersheds arising within or flowing through or around them, to be The World's First International Water Heritage Site.
***********
A 12 -minute 'YouTube' video of the complete 2-22-2012 proclamation, filmed by Brent Walls, can be viewed at http://www.frackban.org/apps/videos/videos/show/15984950-declaration-of-water-rights-and-heritage-site.
(Charles E. Sullivan is a botanist, naturalist, nature photographer, writer, and a student of Henry David Thoreau. John C. Webster is a gardener, garden designer, horticulturist, plant breeder, and a student of Thomas Jefferson. Patty Heaphy, a writer and former teacher of English, served as editor for this piece.)
************
A landowner's only recourse with the gas and oil companies is to sue for damages after the fact, and renters have no rights at all, thanks to laws rushed through state and national legislatures, such as the Natural Gas Horizontal Well Control Act introduced, debated, and passed in a matter of weeks in the West Virginia state legistlature November 2011. (Read more and see more images at Part 1 of this story "Water Sanctuary Declared as Fracking Encroaches on WV Town, Feb. 23, 2012)
.
Posted by Kay Ebeling, the City of Angels is Everywhere
.
In photo above while judges sample water from around the world, demonstrators point out the irony that natural gas hydraulic fracturing is destroying water quality, outside the annual International Water Festival in Berkeley Springs Feb. 25, 2012.
(Story also posted at AlterNet)
It was the region’s water that brought George Washington and his colleagues up the Potomac to settle the area, and they proclaimed the healing qualities of the town’s warm springs. Today Berkeley Springs, West Virginia, calls itself “the nation’s first spa” and warm water flowing through the park draws visitors all year long. Residents rely on the fountains to fill bottles of drinking water for their homes.
So frankban.org proclaimed Berkeley Springs a “water heritage site” outside the Morgan County courthouse the previous Wednesday, Feb. 22, on Washington’s birthday 2012. Full Text of The World's First International Water Heritage Site Proclamation is below.
As the Presidential election approaches in November, most politicians claim an allegiance to a continued pursuit of fossil fuels by oil and gas companies, and maintain fracking the Marcellus Shale is in the nation’s best interest. The advocates outside the water festival want the country to put its resources into alternative energy sources.
The World's First International Water Heritage Site
By Charles E. Sullivan and John C. Webster
Washington's birthday, 2-22-2012, 2:22pm. Citizens of Morgan County, West Virginia, gathered on the Morgan County Courthouse steps in the Town of Bath, corner of Fairfax and Washington Streets (U.S. 522), to celebrate the 22nd Annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting and to demonstrate against the international ecocrime of hydraulic fracturing for natural gas (fracking).
We proclaimed a reinstatement of rights that citizens of this country, and the many states that united to form it, were supposed to have been guaranteed by the founding fathers, through original documents forged by that elite gathering of privileged landowners (who pondered to create an enlightened system of government within the constraints and beliefs of their time) and thereafter added to and slowly strengthened by a Bill of Rights to The Constitution of The United States of America.
Realizing both the myth and history of our nation, and attempting to set our current condition within that context, two documents approved by the grassroots organization Morgan County Frack Ban (http://www.frackban.org/) were read by Charles E. Sullivan, Frack Ban orator, after co-member John C. Webster read the following excerpt from The Constitution of West Virginia:
Article 2, 2-2. Powers of government in citizens.
"The powers of government reside in all the citizens of the state, and can be rightfully exercised only in accordance with their will and appointment."
Unfortunately, the citizens of West Virginia have not been allowed to exercise those rights. We feel, therefore, that we must go around the current system as it now stands and proclaim a line in the sand beyond which the corporate governance of this state, and of the United States, must not go in an attempt to destroy "the terrible beauty" of West Virginia and to poison its water and its people.
Preamble to A Declaration of Community Water Rights and Heritage
By Charles E. Sullivan
The Republic of the United States of America was founded upon revolutionary principles. And while many would deny it today, these are again revolutionary times. It therefore seems appropriate to invoke the thoughts of one of America’s greatest thinkers and most conscientious citizens—Henry David Thoreau, who lived from 1817 to 1861.
For those of you who do not know the story, Thoreau went to jail for refusing to pay his taxes. Had he chosen to pay them, Thoreau recognized that he would be supporting a war, the war against Mexico, to which he was morally opposed. So he went to jail rather than pay taxes that would, as he saw it, expand the territory of slavery. Thoreau was a fierce abolitionist.
Even our seemingly mundane lives are filled with such moral choices. Action and inaction, cooperation and non-compliance with the law have consequences. This is what gives our lives meaning; it is what defines who and what we are as human beings. Those who are most alive are passionate about everything they do.
Henry David Thoreau famously declared in his essay On the Duty of Civil Disobedience, “Let every man make known the kind of government that would command his respect and that will be the first step toward obtaining it.”
Thoreau was a man with a social conscience. He was, above all, a man who stood on and acted upon moral principle. This did not always enamor him to his fellow citizens. In a culture predicated upon exploitation and wasteful consumption, truth, particularly inconvenient truth, is rarely popular.
Thoreau also told us, “The fate of the country does not depend upon how you vote at the polls—the worst man is as strong as the best at that game; it does not depend on what kind of paper you drop into the ballot box once a year, but on what kind of man you drop from your chamber into the street every morning.” He also said, "There are a thousand hacking at the branches of evil to one who is striking at the root. "
In essence, Thoreau tells us that by strictly adhering to the systems of power, rather than working outside of them when necessary, we are treating the symptoms of disease rather than its underlying cause. One must think outside of the box and one must act according to the dictates of conscience. Or, as another author once said, “You must stand for something or you will fall for anything.”
It is in the spirit of Henry David Thoreau that I offer the following thoughts:
The citizens of Morgan County demand a government that represents working class people and the poor rather than corporate interests and the privileged elite. Its credo must be human need, not corporate greed. Furthermore, we recognize that capitalism is not democracy and that democracy is not capitalism. These are radically opposing ideas, and we must take care not to confuse them.
Our diverse forests are commodified, measured in board feet to be clearcut and off-shored at prodigious bargain rates, like a liquidation sale. World class biodiversity is being turned into biological deserts and monoculture. Money changes hands. The few are getting rich at the expense of the many. The world and the people who live in it are treated like products to be exploited. We are told that nothing is sacred, save for the dollar and markets.
In reality, every political economy is underlain by ecology and by living, evolving, biological systems. Ecology is the only economy that really matters. One cannot make a living on a dead planet; and one cannot drink money.
George Orwell, the author of a chilling novel called 1984, astutely observed, “In times of universal deceit, speaking truth is a revolutionary act.” Being here today is such an act. It is in that spirit that we offer A Declaration of Community Water Rights and Heritage.
A Declaration of Community Water Rights and Heritage
By John C. Webster
When, in the course of human events, it is again necessary to reaffirm our unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, as the various governments of these United States of America - at all levels - have become destructive to them, we must reestablish the proposition that governments derive their just powers from consent of the governed.
To these ends, and realizing that protection of our natural water sources, their courses, and the surrounding ecosystems that produce and support them, are essential to ensure and secure the future of Morgan County, West Virginia, and that of its citizens; we do, therefore, proclaim the following Declaration Of Community Water Rights and Heritage, in order to stop the insidious intrusion of corporate governance upon the very means of our existence in violation of the public trust:
Whereas 70% of the earth's surface is covered with water, of which only 3% is fresh water derived from all sources, and of which only 1% can be used as potable water; and,
Whereas the hills, hollows, mountains, and valleys of Morgan County, West Virginia, are 80% forested and must be protected as progenitor of the naturally fresh, clean, and potable water necessary to replenish two-thirds of all human bodies that is water; and,
Whereas we recognize the historic efforts made by citizens of this county to guarantee the future of its potable water supplies, even in the face of unchecked development, never-ending divisions to vast and interconnected areas of contiguous, protected ecosystem required to produce said natural water supplies, and on-going degradation of same; and,
Whereas corporate governance has led us to a situation where we have no rights as a people to community control, by way of ballot referenda, to redress grievances, a situation resulting from 135 years of corporate rule over West Virginia and its legislators by timbering, coal, oil and gas industries, the latter of which has begun the international ecocrime of hydraulic fracturing; and
Whereas hydraulic fracturing for natural gas is but the latest and most perfidious attempt to destroy, for profit, the very means of our existence, as well as unalienable rights set forth by the 1776 Declaration of Independence, and thereafter by federal and state Constitutions; and
Whereas, in that same year, George Washington, then-future President of the United States of America, did purchase an original lot in the newly chartered Town of Bath, this country's first resort spa, surrounding the famous Berkeley Springs, around which the town was built, and which springs have been permanently protected within the 4.5 acre Berkeley Springs State Park; and
Whereas we must also protect - by a ban on hydraulic fracturing - the additional and various fresh water springs, wells, runs, creeks, rivers, and lakes of this county, including but not limited to Warm Springs Run, Sleepy Creek, the Cacapon and Potomac Rivers, and the Cacapon Resort State Park Lake;
We do, therefore, appeal to attendees at this year's 22nd Annual Berkeley Springs International Water Tasting, being held at the Country Inn adjacent to Berkeley Springs State Park, to join us in declaring the Town of Bath, the County of Morgan, West Virginia, and all watersheds arising within or flowing through or around them, to be The World's First International Water Heritage Site.
***********
A 12 -minute 'YouTube' video of the complete 2-22-2012 proclamation, filmed by Brent Walls, can be viewed at http://www.frackban.org/apps/videos/videos/show/15984950-declaration-of-water-rights-and-heritage-site.
(Charles E. Sullivan is a botanist, naturalist, nature photographer, writer, and a student of Henry David Thoreau. John C. Webster is a gardener, garden designer, horticulturist, plant breeder, and a student of Thomas Jefferson. Patty Heaphy, a writer and former teacher of English, served as editor for this piece.)
************
A landowner's only recourse with the gas and oil companies is to sue for damages after the fact, and renters have no rights at all, thanks to laws rushed through state and national legislatures, such as the Natural Gas Horizontal Well Control Act introduced, debated, and passed in a matter of weeks in the West Virginia state legistlature November 2011. (Read more and see more images at Part 1 of this story "Water Sanctuary Declared as Fracking Encroaches on WV Town, Feb. 23, 2012)
.
Posted by Kay Ebeling, the City of Angels is Everywhere
.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
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