We're rediscovering why a successful campaign team doesn't always make an effective leadership team. A gigantic ecological and environmental disaster is 36 days into changing the planet for countless decades, and Robert Gibbs is mad at the press.
BP can't get an alternative dispersant in time for a government deadline, and the United States government is again at the mercy of a Too Big To Stop corporate villain.
19 oil drilling permits without proper environmental oversight have been approved since the moratorium on no new drilling permits. Ken Salazar can't give a straight answer why. "Grandfathered" isn't good enough.
Dr. Steven Chu, Energy Department Secretary said on Rachel Maddow's show that he is getting his information from the newspapers. But he does favor stopping all drilling projects.
Where and when does this become a Federal Emergency? When the oil spill reaches Washington D.C.?
Peter Daou said it best; and then Rayne at The Seminal took it from there. There is no Planet B.
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Bridges for Blockades

What makes me go ziggity boom? What makes my heartstrings zing?
This morning I listened to Nina Simons, cofounder of Bioneers, on "Conversations." The link was forwarded by a friend, Pat Fero, who is also a Connector. You can read about Connectors, Mavens and Salespeople in Malcolm Gladwell's book "The Tipping Point."
The conversation from "Conversations" this morning was about biodiversity, ecology, earth and women leaders. I started taking notes on a small notepad as I listened, swapped that for a larger note, and then swapped all for a big ol' pad of paper. My heartstrings zinged.
Just before I listened to "Conversations," I accepted an invitation to participate in another friend's Focus Group. Deb Schanilec is a blissmonger, an extraordinary individual and a joygiver. You can follow her blog by clicking on the link below.
Deb, and Nina Simons, Rosemary Jozwiak, Pat Fero, and my neighbor, Marilyn are trying to help us develop new neural pathways, replacing the affiliative neurons formed habitually by repetitive behaviors that no longer work for us.
We're finding our internal biodiversity.
I'm recently discovering that what my friends who are connected to earth, spirit and self are saying is true.
We are entering a new time. Connections are being made, forces are in play, the universe is sorting itself into a configuration that must be described as healing.
We're redefining our understanding of power. From the patriarchal system of win:lose, we are hearing voices and seeing faces who can ignite leadership that sees win:win as the more viable system for our planet. We are beginning to understand that the way we bind societal wounds is address > heal > transcend.
We are beginning to end the old stories, and tell the new.
We are beginning to awaken to not knowing. Not knowing allows us to choose who we are becoming; to appreciate respectful disagreement, to connect the dots, and close the circles.
We are finding that the fight:flight response is a stress response that was studied in men, and applied to women. We are learning that women have a different stress response that is tend&befriend, and that this response may be why women live longer.
Perhaps Earth can now, too.
This morning I discovered that my bookmark folders for internet searching no longer work alone. If I save a page lately, it can belong to Women, Water Stuff, Ecology, Environment, Educational, Health and Reference all together. How I think, react, cooperate, learn and win are becoming one.
Barriers are coming down, stories are coming up.
I'm finding bridges instead of blockades in relating to the natural world, communal spirit, myself.
I'm finding that "we" can be as beautiful as "I."
Susan, a woman I met first last Sunday, said that we can only become whole - become an Elder - when our feminine and masculine entwine. Rather than a blockade between left and right brainers, masculine and feminine, we need to blend the two energies. Yang without Yin is a weakling; bundled together the union is unbeatable.
Now, that makes my heartstrings go ziggity boom.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Women+Heart+Earth

Patricia Fero, Michigan psychotherapist and author of "Mining for Diamonds," invaluable nuggets for overcoming adversity and achieving resiliency, has a new book about to be born. Watch for its arrival here: http://www.patriciafero.com
"What Happens When Women Wake Up?" explores 11 personal stories of awakening. The experiences resonate with truth and urgency, and with purpose. Pat identifies the goal of her lifework as "Divine Assignment" and the book is extraoardinary proof of her mission as a guide to personal and planetary transformation.
On page 35 of the book Pat releases us with Permission to Rage. As our planet deteriorates, we must abandon our powerlessness to get well and truly mad. Patricia Fero: "The following essay is a demonstration of laying claim to my anger and using it to mobilize action. I offer this rant in the energy of Mother Bear fierceness. The niceness and pacifity we've been programmed into no longer serves us or our planet."
The book is a Call to Action, and Pat has inspired me to act.
To begin again, I revisited my bookmarks for "Ecology" and checked on the status of the Eagle Project on the Yellow Dog Plains near the Big Two-Hearted River in the Upper Peninsula. Kennecott Minerals (part of Rio Tinto, "a world leader in finding, mining and processing the earth's mineral resources") has been working hard since about 2004 to put an acid sulfide mine in the wilderness near Marquette, MI. This mine will create approximately 100 jobs, maybe for as long as 7 years. This is "creating jobs."
The mine will also net Kennecott about $2.8 billion in profits, and endanger the Salmon Trout River headwaters with acid drainage into the groundwater. No metallic sulfide mine has ever not polluted its watershed.
On April 21, 2009, activists, working for years just as hard as Kennecott, wrangled a stay of execution for the pristine area from Ingham County Circuit Judge Paula Manderfield, who reversed her earlier decision to approve the lease of 120 acres of state land for a copper and nickel mine. Good on ya! Judge Manderfield.
And good on ya' Chauncey Moran and the Yellowdog Watershed Preserve, who have personally checked water quality in the Yellow Dog Plains wilderness, and filed stays, protested at innumeral hearings and gotten decisions reversed over the years. http://www.yellowdogwatershed.org
Revisiting the Rio Tinto dredge mine project in Madagascar revealed that there is review of a SEIS (Socio-Economic Impact Study). Rio Tinto has claimed that the ilmenite mine (a whitener used in plastics and toothpaste) is a model for future mines in Africa and the rest of the underdeveloped world. Rio Tinto presents their mine project proposals as environmentally sound, and a boost to local economies. Rio Tinto has not lived up to its promises to maintain sustainable resources, to compensate local populations for land use, and to keep it clean overall, darn it. Are we surprised?
Redfern Resources Tulsequah Chief Mine suspended operations as reported in Feb. 2009 because of lack of funding, but the court has allowed them a stay of execution through 2010 to continue to seek money to keep the mine going, including building an access road toward Atlin, British Columbia, where the Atlin Art Centre has its wilderness retreat.
But meanwhile, check what Redfern has accomplished in the Sacred Headwaters of the Stikine, Taku and Tulsequah Rivers. Their last effort to expand their Mother Earth gouging was to use hovercraft to transport mine minerals on the Taku River. http://www.juneauempire.com/stories/021809/loc_392505894.shtml
And why is the EPA "powerless" to enforce compliance of US agreements, initially agreed to by the mining companies?
Fortunately, the heroes of the efforts to heal Earth's wounds and restore her vitality are many and strong.
Dr. Wangari Maathai, founder of the Greenbelt Movement in Africa has planted millions of trees, been beaten unconscious for her efforts more than once, fought machete-wielding farmers and corrupt government, and stood on the stage in 2004 to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. http://www.greenbeltmovement.org
These heroes have re-awakened my passion to keep our planet healthy, clean, viable and thriving.
"What Happens When Women Wake Up?" has launched me back into the river of being awake, of acting on my wakefulness, and encouraging others to do the same.
As Patricia Fero has said with insight and clarity: "we are the ones we've been waiting for."
There is no one else. There is no other time. Our generation is the last and only generation who has one foot in the beginnings of the feminist awakening, and one foot in the new dawn.
Get involved. Act locally, heal globally. The Upper Peninsula in Michigan is where my great-grandmother homesteaded from Finland, and its resources and beauty are ours to nourish and preserve.
Find your roots, identify the places where you can help prune, or fertilize. We all have an enormous and profound stake in the survivability of Earth and her treasures. Speak loud and often, act with vigor, get well and truly mad.
Feminine energy, Earth energy is rising. It is inevitable that the Sacred Feminine will wash the Earth clean, staunch her wounds, and restore her to health. We have evidence of this in the fact that Rio Tinto and Redfern are in financial difficulty (due variously to falling metal prices, expenditures related to mandated clean-up and enforced compliance, and the rising costs of court cases). Even so, we must remain vigilant and loud to assure that the injuries made are closely watched. Mining operations that have closed down leak carcinogens into the watershed the abandoned mines still silently abuse.
And it will take Dr. Maathai, Patricia Fero, our sisters, brothers and millions of committed others to trumpet the charge, to give us heroes to emulate and ongoing missions to embrace.
Good on ya', Patricia Fero!
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