Sunday, September 26, 2010

Appalachia Rising

September 25-27 marks a HUGE gathering of amazing people from all over the Appalachian Mountains to come together against mountaintop removal (MTR). MTR is a devastating practice of extracting coal that was invented to effectively cut coal miners out of the process.




Instead of digging out a mine and having miners go in there and extract coal themselves, huge coal companies (ie Massey, those douchebags/penis pumps) just blow up the mountain, layer by layer, taking the coal out each time. This is a really terrible practice because the idea of it is to just cut the tops of mountains off, then fill the hollers (read: hollow, valley) with all the rock and rubble from the blasts. This leads to toxins in water sources, flooding because streams have just been buried underneath leftover mountain, and scars all over the earth. Furthermore, it is a highly unsustainable practice because all the coal is extracted with a few blasts, whereas traditional mines take years and years and years to empty. So even though this might be a cheaper way of doing things, only HUGE corporations and CEOs (I hate Don Blankenship) are the ones who profit, no one else. This video explains everything better, although it has the feel of something made in the early 90s.

What we're doing at Appalachia Rising is a number of workshops focused on things from community organizing to field work and corporate campaigning to media work. Our work together is really unique because it combines skills from all walks of life. I'm from California, I now live in DC, and I'm committed to the environmental movement and will rejoice when the day comes that we stop destroying our planet. Countless other people I met yesterday were from all across Appalachia, some from Kentucky, some from West Virginia, some from Georgia, all being directly affected by MTR. Other people were from Utah, New York, even San Francisco, there to show their solidarity with the movement. What we learn will culminate in a day of action, where we will rally together as one, march to the White House, and ask that MTR is stopped.

You can find out more about Appalachia Rising by checking out their website, and I also encourage you to take a look at Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, I Love Mountains, and Appalachian Voices. There are a lot of other organizations out there, but those are some good ones to start with.

For the Mountains,
Harmony

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

So it's been almost a half a year since NZ....

And I'll hafta say, life's been interesting. For starters, there have been some obvious changes since I've been back. Ean and I have changed, I'm a senior in college now, I'll be participating in DC, and one of my brothers is moving up to Alaska. Talk about some crazy occurrences. But, through all of this, it has been incredibly important for me to constantly keep focused on the positives. Currently I'm looking for an internship for my UCDC thing, I'm working for Greenpeace, and I'm trying to stay on top of my schoolwork (I'm taking my senior seminar this quarter!). New Zealand was a great way to take a step away from my life as a whole and view it from a different angle. I'm really glad I did it.

But now it's on to bigger and better adventures. Especially with my schooling wrapping up for the next couple of years (before I go to grad school), now more than ever will my life present me with new opportunities. However, this does not mean that I am just going to leave family and friends behind.... and those in between. I love them all and I'm so glad they are part of my life. As always, time is trudging on, which means things I wanted to arrive faster a year ago are closer than ever, and it's really crazy to think that finally they will come to pass. Not for a while, but in time. The important thing is that I'm not frozen in a space-time continuum, like oftentimes I feel like.

Things I'm excited for:
-my brother's move
-visiting him once he's moved
-Sasquatch! lineup
-Devotchka, Bon Iver, Animal Collective, Passion Pit cds
-seeing Ean... eventually
-UCDC
-graduating
-life beyond school

I'll keep you posted on all of these. Hope everything is going well.

Much love.