Political Voice

Don’t think too hard  – I’m still a registered Libertarian.

but [First Lady] Michelle Obama’s speech at the Democratic National Convention – WOW, just WOW!  Definitely, worth a view.  It’s not just the words, her delivery — it’s the emotion in those words.

That is the story of this country, the story that has brought me to this stage tonight, the story of generations of people who felt the lash of bondage, the shame of servitude, the sting of segregation, but who kept on striving and hoping and doing what needed to be done so that today I wake up every morning in a house that was built by slaves.  And I watch my daughters, two beautiful, intelligent, black young women playing with their dogs on the White House lawn.

If you can’t handle the Clinton rah-rah hoopla, forward to 11:20 in the video below.  GREAT speech!

 

 

That said, still voting my conscience this election cycle – choosing Johnson/Weld for President.  Both former governors, both qualified to run our country.  If ever a time to buck the trend of voting major party – Democrat/Republican – this is OUR year.

HUGE fan of states’ rights & self rule.  Can’t be convinced that white men 2 time zones away know best how to govern my adopted home, Colorado.  Can’t be convinced that the needs of Colorado are the same as those in New Jersey.  Our country is super diverse, big government STAY OUT & let native thinking take care of local needs.

Ask me what I think about selecting Supreme Court justices?  ARGH!  🙂

 

LOVE that my employer never forgets Earth Day – one of the million & one reasons I HEART living in Colorado.

Tough to beat last year’s excursion to NOAA (super interesting).  This year PS purchased plants & shovels – so we shared a sunny afternoon hour & beautified our entrance stoop.  Not too many employers allow you to play in the dirt on Earth Day.  Pretty cool, huh?

Unfortunately my mind diverts to global warming, when I think of Earth Day – the horrible man-made disaster we’ve indebted future generations…polluting resources, increasing ground temps +20 degrees until half the US is a virtual Arizona.

My interest in Antarctic iceberg calving is akin to voyeur-viewing a car accident – you can’t help but slow down & stare.

This year’s focus was much closer to home: Durango, in southwest Colorado.  Colorado is like the Earth’s playground – evergreen forests, snowy mountain peaks, glacier-fed streams.  Last August’s eco-disaster, makes me CRAZY.  Polluted, chemically-induced mining water fed local streams in the Four Corners.  Most long-term damage only affects the Navajo Nation in western New Mexico…so who cares, right?

Wake up – it’s OUR planet.

Be good to Mother Earth folks, we share space on this beautiful, live-giving planet.  If not for you, do it for future generations 🙂

 

 

What The Colorado Waste Water Spill Tells Us About Mining Contamination

By Justin Worland, Time Magazine

PUBLISHED Aug. 10, 2015

 

Scientists grappled with the consequences of a spill of toxic wastewater on Monday, one day after the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reported that an accident had led to 3 million gallons of mining runoff flowing into a river in Colorado used for drinking water. But researchers who study water resources in the region say the spill, while significant on its own, is just the latest example of the much broader problem of water contamination from mining processes.

 

“In the Rocky Mountain area, acid rock and acid mine drainage is a major water quality problem,” said Diane McKnight, a professor civil, environmental and architectural engineering at the University of Colorado. “This is certainly an unfortunate event, but the impact of acid rock and acid rock drainage is well recognized and understood in Colorado.”

 

Acid drainage results when water flows through acidic minerals that have been exposed due to mining. Water that contains these minerals in high volumes becomes unsafe for drinking. Colorado alone has hundreds of mines that have created acid drainage—but rarely on the scale of last week’s incident.

 

Last week’s event was the result of an accident inadvertently caused by EPA workers looking into reports that a mine was leaking contaminated water. During the process, loose material gave way and released millions of gallons of contaminated water, turning the Animas River orange and yielding it unusable for days. Water is still spilling into the river at a rate of 500 gallons per minute, though the EPA has set up a filtering system aimed at removing toxic elements, including copper, lead and manganese, according to regional EPA administrator Shaun McGrath. Still, officials urged local residents to await further tests, which should happen within the next few days, before using the water. The river has been temporarily disconnected from the public water supply.

 

The consequences of last week’s incident could have lasting repercussions. Events like heavy rain and melting snow that disturb sediment settled at the bottom of the river may release some of the toxic minerals deposited there by the spill. If that happens, local officials will need a game plan to test the water and inform those who may be at risk, said Williams.

 

The spill has angered local residents, many of whom depend on the river for livestock and tourist businesses. Still, this is hardly the first mining wastewater spill in the area. Largely due to mine pollution, the water doesn’t support a very robust ecosystem, though some organisms manage to live in it. “It’s not correct to say these are lifeless streams,” said McKnight. “There’s certainly bacteria and some algae growing.”

 

Ultimately, Williams says he hopes the incident raises awareness about the bigger problem of mines polluting waterways throughout the region. The technology exists, Williams says, and efforts by the EPA and other agencies to remediate toxic sites need to be funded fully.

 

You hear about pollution, it doesn’t really register,” he said. “Then you see this blob of yellow running down the river.”

 

 

Peace Sign

 

Big news day.

While I try to keep my site’s central message consistent, I find myself over-the-top INSPIRED by our nation’s President.  President Obama spoke from Havana – from a Communist nation isolated & ostracized by the U.S. since the 1950’s, a failed policy.

I’m not a Democrat, I’m a registered Libertarian.  Not a believer in big Government.  Sincerely & fervently, do not believe a centralized D.C. think-tank solution is the same best answer for all Americans – confident the people of Colorado know best how to solve the problems of Colorado.

but unlike our nation’s government, crippled by divisive politics, I have the ability to look beyond party politics & applaud our President’s actions today in Cuba.

 

Today I applaud Peace.  Thrice this year I’ve brandished a Peace tat marathoning  #2016whyIrun

During a time when opposition candidates are surging on a platform of hate – building a Mexican border wall, restricting rights of Muslim-faith Americans – today’s message: PEACE, uniting peoples.

 

I have come here to extend a hand of friendship to the Cuban people.

 

…in many ways, the United States and Cuba are like two brothers that have been estranged for many years, even as we share the same blood.  We both live in a new world, colonized by Europeans.

 

Cuba, like the United States, was built in part by slaves brought here from Africa.  Like the United States, the Cuban people can trace their heritage to both slaves and slave owners.  We’ve welcomed both immigrants who came a great distance to start new lives in the Americas.

 

And I always believed in what Martin Luther King, Jr. called the fierce urgency of now.  We should not fear change, we should embrace it.

 

Failed diplomatic efforts & mega $$ have been spent, generation after generation, to secure a working relationship with Israel & the Arab Middle East – yet we isolate our Cuban brothers, only 90 miles from Miami.

We in the Americas share a similar heritage.  Our people share a common culture & geography.

We should expand NAFTA (North American Trade Agreement), expand trade with our brothers in Canada, Mexico & the Caribbean.  We should strengthen these relationships – not build barriers to distance one another.

While governments create differences, our peoples – our inner core – are the same.

 

I travel to Moscow this September to marathon AND visit friends I worked & lived with 15 years ago. Russia’s a mere 55 miles from Alaska. Brother from another mother.  Find a solution, find a commonality.

We’re stronger when we stand together.