Mountaintop Removal and Kitty Genovese
But for my children, I would have them keep their distance from the thickening center;
corruption
Never has been compulsory, when the cities lie at the monster's feet there
are left the mountains.
---- Robinson Jeffers
The most common form of terrorism in the U.S.A. is that carried on by bulldozers and chainsaws. It is not enough to understand the natural world; the point is to defend and preserve it. Sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul.
---- Edward Abbey
Last week, as I drove north on I-64 in West Virginia from Beckley toward Cabin Creek, I was stunned at how beautiful the Appalachian Mountains appeared. The day was cool, gray, and rainy. Maple and oak and tulip trees were in full color, glowing gold and rust against the dark green of pine and hemlock. Tattered scarves of translucent clouds lay draped over the mountains' shoulders giving the steep heights an alluring look of exotic, primeval mystery.
I was not in West Virginia, though, to gawk at the beauty strip of mountains still standing along the interstate to entice tourists. I had come to see Mountaintop Removal first hand. As I drove, I found myself remembering Kitty Genovese. In 1964, 28 year old Kitty Genovese was stabbed to death and raped on a street in Queens. Her murder prompted a national outcry because, as she screamed for help, no one came to her rescue or even called the police. Why were Americans so passively uncaring for the plight of their neighbor? As a young idealistic person, I was nearly as ashamed as if I had failed to act myself. Of course, I lived in Cincinnati and was somewhat out of earshot. But I vowed that if ever I were witness to something like that, I would get involved.
What's happening in eastern Kentucky and southern West Virginia to our mountains is rape and murder. If only the mountains had voices to scream, the world would quake with the sound. The coal companies, like Nazi doctors preparing a patient for an experiment, shave the mountains first, clear cutting the oldest and most productive habitats in our hemisphere. Frequently they dump entire forests into the valleys and bury them under the blasted rubble of the former mountains. So hungry are they for the coal, they don't even have time to eat the lumber hors d'oeurve.
I was headed for Kayford Mountain, the home of Larry Gibson who has refused to sell out to the coal companies. The mountains for three hundred and sixty degrees around Kayford have been removed. Once Larry looked up at the surrounding peaks. Now he looks 1000 feet down. It's radical, mountain mastectomy for as far as the eye can see. Mountaintop Removal is the surgical mining technique that Massey Energy and Arch Coal and other companies are inflicting on the Appalachians. The tops of the mountains (euphemistically called "overburden") are blown off. Then the "overburden" becomes "valley fill," mega tons of rubble shoved over into the valleys, destroying lush habitat and burying over 1000 miles of streams. Judy Bonds of Coal River Mountain Watch says, "We're in a war zone. We're being bombed. They're using 3 ½ million pounds of explosives a day to destroy our mountains."
People often say that the decimated area looks like the moon. It's true that where rounded, tree covered mountains once soared is now ragged, gray plain. Two million acres blown to bits. An area the size of Delaware. But nowhere in the moon's Sea of Tranquility, not yet anyway, would you see a twenty story machine with an insatiable appetite for coal gnawing at the stripped ribs of a mountain side. Nor on the moon would you see a cavalcade of coal trucks, each hauling 120,000 pounds of coal, rumbling through switchbacks down the flanks of the remaining lower slopes and terrifying the local drivers. The moon is placid and beautiful except for some garbage and flags left by the Apollo astronauts. The moon doesn't have billion-gallon toxic, coal-slurry ponds precariously contained by earthen dams that can fail suddenly and bury whole towns under twenty feet of poisonous sludge. ( It's happened twice.) One is leaking right now above the Marsh Fork elementary school. The moon isn't causing incredible rates of asthma and cancer, isn't cracking the foundations and walls of poor people's houses, poisoning wells, filling their houses and lungs with coal dust, and forcing them to move. The moon doesn't have streams full of dead fish. And the moon doesn't have devastating floods that wash entire communities away because all the vegetation and topsoil have been removed. And I don't think the moon has 450 of its mountains unaccounted for.
Compared to the destroyed mountains of West Virginia, the moon is a field of dreams. One might complain that the moon is a little short on culture, but the coal companies are making sure that southern West Virginia is, too. It's much easier for them to do their business if no one's around. No witnesses. The people flee for their lives and take the remnants of their mountain lore, their knowledge of animals and medicinal plants, their history, and sense of place. Larry Gibson calls it genocide.
So, what does it look like if not the moon? Like the mangled body of a torture victim. Or, metaphorically, like our Constitution does now to anyone who once believed in it. The Robinson Jeffers' quote above comes from his poem Shine, Perishing Republic. It seems sadly ironic to me that Jeffers would advise his children that when corruption in the cities overwhelms them, they can escape to the mountains. Where does one escape to when the mountains are gone? When the mountains have been ground up for profit? Larry Gibson says he used to laugh at people taking pictures of the mountains. He told them, "Why take a picture of a mountain? It's going to be there forever."
Where does Don Blankenship, CEO of Massey Energy, think that he is going to escape to?
There are crimes and there are crimes. Here in Maine, where I live, we often are appalled by paper company clear cuts. But, given enough time, poplar will be succeeded by spruce and pine, and the softwoods in turn by maple, birch, and oak. It's even sadly comforting to imagine that if the human species eradicates itself by its insistence on dominating and destroying nature rather than living in harmony with it, nature will, after a good scouring by fire and ice, recover. However, the Appalachian Mountains will not recover. They will not re-grow. When we think of cannibalism, we think of a ritualistic or desperate practice that is morally repugnant. But, imagine a cannibal who eats portions of his own body. It's hardly even a question of morality. It's psychotic. Such is the consumption of the mountains.
Bill McKibben has said that we no longer live in an environment, we live in an economy. If the economy is your standard for reality, then it is also your standard of ethics, just as nature would be if you lived in an environment. If the economy is your reality, your ethic is profit. If your reality is nature, your ethic is conservation and sustainability. Which reality will actually determine whether our species survives?
As Judy Bonds says, Mountaintop Removal is a practice with which we cannot compromise. It must stop. There is no nicer way to destroy the oldest mountains in the world, mountains that began their lives three hundred million years ago when North America and Africa were nudged up against each other.
Many people in the West Virginian and Kentucky have heard the cry of the mountains and the displaced people. They are courageously fighting King Coal. Their lives are threatened frequently. Ever since Massey Energy bulldozed his family cemetery, Larry Gibson has dedicated his life to saving the mountains. Judy Bonds, a former Pizza Hut waitress, won the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2002 for her efforts. Visit the website of Coal River Mountain Watch (www.crmw.net) and the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (www.ohvec.org ) to find out what you can do. This is not just their fight. The U.S. has plans to build 150 more coal burning plants. Coal is the worst of the fossil fuels for CO2 emissions. The forests being buried in West Virginia valleys once absorbed CO2 and mitigated climate change.
Kitty Genovese is now screaming in the West Virginia mountains. She's screaming for our lives as much as hers. Judy Bonds says, "We're selling our children's feet to buy our fancy shoes."
Robert Shetterly lives in Brooksville, Maine. He will be painting portraits of Judy Bonds and Larry Gibson for his series Americans Who Tell the Truth.
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21 Comments so far
Show AllLEE ANN: Among atoms, as the electrons go popping from shell route to shell route, new combinations can be formed. Seems in EVERY trace of the natural world, systems balance... and when that balance is violated beyond measure, the paradigm implodes, explodes or comes apart. It's like the euphemism re: the crack of the cosmic egg.
I share that because SOOOOOOOOOO much is now officially out of kilter, and to the extend what we see on the manifest plane reflects higher forces ("as above, so below"), it's reasonable to assume the PARADIGM here is about to implode. I can't say how much of that disruption will come about through nature's agencies (climate instability and its MANY forces, wind, water, earthquake, volcano, tornados, fires, etc) and how much US economic mis-appropriation of funds on such a grand scale, causing so much catastrophe and emitting such obscene WASTE to life and its expressions.
I do think when so many people suffer (many of my women friends found themselves just plain crying all weekend. I reminded them the suffering they are processing for personal issues and family tests is being further inflated by empathy for the VAST suffering in so many places of the world) the time for transition is near. It will not be a cake walk, no birth-labor process ever is. I do believe it's inevitable, and those who survive will begin to create civilization based on more egalitarian bases.
Remember the posting on CD about the baboons in Kenya? Since theirs is a male-dominant society, the real macho boys always ate first. Turns out the food was tainted, and that killed off all the testosterone fellas... instead of the less dominant males taking their old places to re-construct a hierarchy that was raw-power based, the males who had felt oppression entered into more balanced social relationships with the females.
90% of what passes for "official" research on human nature and psychology is tainted by the social paradigms we've all been force fed into thanks to both religion and economic systems, these twin portals serving the state and its power bastions. What is possible has not yet been exhausted, and those who think human nature will always emulate a "Lord of the Flies" scenario lack imagination, not to mention spiritual realization!
Change happens! Find flowers, trees and untainted streams to heal your spirit. You ARE under invasion! But this, too, shall pass.
Siouxrose - It's so true! Having this relatively minor invasion of my property has made me understand much more what it must feel like to be an Iraqi citizen. I've often thought about that. Compared to what they are going through, I have nothing to complain about.
I am upset, of course, about the damage done to me and I hate the feeling of violation I'm experiencing. But it's more disturbing that this is going on in so many places and in so many ways. The quest for power, money, and energy to fuel ever greater military machines is a march toward doom.
LEE ANN: You were both kind and patient in the interest of pursuing your higher calling as teacher to explain yourself to your critics. Like you, I buy second hand items, carry a cloth bag to the supermarket, re-use the same plastic container for water, etc.
Let's not forget that technology to expedite fuel efficiency has existed from time, but been closed off by those greedy interests that prefer SUVS that guzzle up all the oil. The developing of suburbia, and the necessity for spiritual souls to move further off the generic grid, requires cars. It is not the fault of the driver that the car doesn't get good mileage!
Being conservative with energy is important. Last year I never used heat through my home. I relied on a small space heater situated in the room I spent time in. My electric bill has never been over $47. Even in summer with minimal AC use. There are places every one of us can and should cut back, areas where we can be more conscious consumers, but transportation is the tricky one for the reasons I've mentioned.
I, too, bike where and when I can. It's simply not always possible.
Lee Ann: I hope your domestic peace will soon be restored. In a sense, as we experience the trespass of machines (the reps of corporate interests) we sense via empathy what colonized people feel when the boot of the US soldier enters in the name of freedom/democracy, or other.
These indeed ARE times that test men's & women's souls, but I think the triumph on personal terms is never to compromise your own humanity, to still show respect to others, kindness where possible, and in every possible moment recognize the beauty of life, that it is a GIFT from a Creative source that exceeds our understanding.
Thanks to all who responded to my post! I appreciate your kind words and interest in this matter.
Siouxrose - I always look for your posts as they are just so wonderful. You are a thoughtful writer with many fine insights.
In a follow-up to my contact with the DEP, my husband got a call this morning from the site inspector who was rather uncooperative and tried to say that the burial of the liner was perfectly environmentally safe. Fortunately, my husband is much more diplomatic than I would have been, and after he asked the inspector if he'd like to have the liner buried on HIS hillside, the man, Jamie Stevens, agreed to contact PetroEdge to "see what he could do." I imagine this will be pretty much nothing, but at least we tried.
PJD - (My name is spelled LeeAnn, not LeAnn) No, I don't get land use royalty. I don't own even a fraction of the gas rights, and the DEP is virtually always on the side of the energy companies. There is no compensation of any kind for the loss of my trees or turning my two acres into an eyesore except for the planting of grass and clover.
Also, to PJD, it's a bit presumptuous for you to take me to task for where I live without knowing anything else about me. But, since you have, I feel the need to respond - both in my own defense and that of anyone else who has chosen to live in a rural area.
I live 20 miles from where I work, so yes, there is a price to be paid for living where I do. My second-hand car is a 4 wheel drive, but it's the most efficient I could get without buying a new hybrid. However, it only takes me about 25 minutes to get to work, mostly on the interstate. In most small or medium sized cities without good public transportation, it takes much longer than that with stop and go traffic.
For example, I am originally from Allentown, PA, and there's not much in the way of public transportation, most housing is NOT near available jobs, and it takes a long time to get anywhere in rush hour. You can ride a bicycle sometimes, in some places. I'm 60 years old, and like many other people, I would not wish to bike on icy roads or in the heat of the sun. In traffic, exposing myself to car emissions. (I did when I was young and lived there, however.)
The environmental issue is not the distance, it's the amount of time spent in a car, and the majority of people who work do not live in walking distance of their jobs. "Walking distance" is probably different from one person to another, but most people surely would not want to walk several miles to work, making the working day much longer. And, again, usually with the added problem of being exposed to pollution along the highway. It's very easy to criticize and assume that one knows how others "should" get to work.
Do you really think it's always possible to choose your home in consideration of where you can find work so you can walk there? Almost no one I work with here in Parkersburg lives close enough to walk. Like most small cities, it's just not laid out that way.
Furthermore, I grow virtually all my vegetables organically and without even using a rototiller. I dig it up by hand to better maintain the topsoil. I buy my eggs and other products locally. I have a large, organic flower garden that is a haven for birds and other small animals. My home is so well insulated my heating costs are very, very low. I don't have any hobbies that involve high energy usage such as 4 wheeling or speed boating, and I stay home most weekends.
I won't go into all the steps I take to be conscientious except to say that I am far from a "super consumer," I recycle, buy almost all my furniture second hand, make a point of using canvas bags in the grocery store, compost all my organic waste and keep the rest to a minimum. I would venture to say that my environmental footprint is much lower than the average American.
So, according to you, everyone should live in cities or small towns, find work near enough to walk or be able to utilize public transportation, and give up living in the midst of beauty and serenity. Do you really think this is realistic or even desirable?
Suburban sprawl is a whole other issue, but suffice it to say that I don't shop in strip malls or any WalMart store, and do most of my shopping in town on my way home.
I posted my story on another site and got a response criticizing me because I "must have gotten my property very cheaply, and you get what you pay for." Some people just can't resist finding fault.
I think this is all beside the point anyway. My post is about the devastation caused by the energy companies who first took advantage of local land owners by hoodwinking them into selling their mineral rights a hundred years ago. It's about the way in which the government supports corporate rights over human rights. It's about the rape of the land and the lack of oversight to make the energy companies do real reclamation instead of some band-aid type minimal seeding.
In spite of your need to chastize me for my choice of lifestyle, please go to the WV SORO site at http://www.wvsoro.org/index.html
and take a look at what is happening to a possible 3,000 sites in West Virginia each year. That's up to 6,000 acres just for gas or oil wells, and does not include running the pipelines or coal excavation.
Corporations are a special form of life, they are a non-biological form of life which doesn't breathe air, does not drink water, or eat food. They require profits to survive. Corporations are (theoretically) immortal. Corporations thrive on mountaintop removal.
The Earth is a no-deposit no-return container
of resources for human consumption. But all is not lost as "There is a hell of a universe next door; let's go!" ee cummings
great piece and excellent post by Le Ann. Just to hear those words "mountain top removal" is terrible already.
what is happening now is the excruciating final blast of capitalism. there was a time- i can even remember it- when greed and consumption observed almost rational limits. not anymore. as long as money can be made destroying the planet, it is doomed. capitalists today will stop at nothing until it's really all over. unless someone figure out a way to stop them.
LEE ANN: My heart goes out to you. I moved to a rural area because it's low cost real estate and quiet. I was so tired of hearing boom boxes night and day and when I lived in a town house, hearing my neighbor's TV, etc. NOISE is toxic when you occupy a rich inner life, the place where a writer must go to cultivate her work.
I chose a townhouse in Gainesville, Florida that was fairly remote; and one morning woke to sounds that would awaken the dead. A number of bulldozers along with trucks that had nifty hooks, made to lift trees freshly cut from their root structures, onto their flat bed began the carnage before sun rise! I protested. I called the police. I called local politicians, but DEVELOPERS (i.e. $) tends to win these battles. From 6 AM till 7 PM every day for months the noise went on, the ground shook, the motors reverberated through my home and I could not eat, sleep or write. So I totally identify. After this and a slew of neanderthal neighbors, I just decided to pull a Thoreau and live far from the maddening crowd. My kids hate where I live, few friends visit, and that's the down side. I use my gas efficient Toyota to take off once every 3 months as a respite to an otherwise rather isolated existence.
The springs, one of the most functional in Florida will be a source of fresh water if the shit hits the fan ecologically. By all cosmic counts, that inevitability is not far up the road. You're not alone in fighting "the machine."
PJD, while some rural living can be energy intensive, many people can and do live more sustainably in remote locations. I have a great-uncle who is lives in the hills and has all his life. Family had to force him after years of begging to get a telephone for his own safety. Needless to say he doesn't have a car. And he lives by himself, sustainably, at age 80.
So, don't be thinking everyone has or needs SUV's.
Regardless of LeAnnG's use of resources (of which we are all guilty too), her plight is one I sympathize with tremendously. Thanks for your experience LeAnnG, many of us are sending good thoughts your way.
Peace~
LeAnnG,
However, no offense intended, but the rural-living lifestyle that you have chosen - a lifestyle that requires very heavy car use, and requires a SUV to get up that long steep driveway, is very energy-inefficient, and is exactly what is driving a lot of the energy exploitation that you decry.
It also drives ugly suburban sprawl, like those horrible big-box covered plateaus along I-79, while sustainable, walkable downtown areas in Clarksburg, Fairmont and Parkersburg become are abandoned.
LeeAnnG,
Aren't you recieving any land-use royalty on the wells production????
Here in western Pennsylvania, the gas drillers are making a hell of a mess, but at least the landowners get a cut of the production. What about you?
LeeAnn G
Your post is better than the aritcle which was good....
Thanks to LeeAnnG for sharing her misfortune with us so that we may learn. The topography of Appalachia is beautiful as everyone can see from the satellite photos and makes for a very attractive habitat for humans and their neighbors. The great number of south-facing slopes in such topographies are ideal for maximum efficiency passive solar house-building methods. The complex natural terrain is great for the soul, and makes for happy people. The forest provides the maximum regulation of temperature, humidity, wind and precipitation, filters the air, and preserves soil health and fertility. The area will only increase in value to humans if humans can only purge the stupid capitalist indoctrination from their brains, and put Peabody Coal, Inc. and all the rest of the capitalist enterprises out of their misery, through systematic individual boycott.
interesting to read this article and comments after reading this op-ed from the Huntington herald Dispatch today--I'll try to paste in the link
http://www.herald-dispatch.com/opinions/x364545429 .
If you want to see what the overall landscape looks like now... Get Google Earth and enter this into the search box: 38 01' 05.29" N 81 28' 17.73" W
You can see massive areas devastated by the mining companies... it indeed looks barren and desolate. Shame.
It is important to note that the elite in this world have homes all over the world to flee to when they have destroyed one of their neighborhoods.
Don't miss LeeAnnG's link. This is what happens when the world is privatized, when mother nature is placed in the benign care of corporate profiteers. I'm surprised anything is left of West Virginia.
The residents of West Virginia have been and continue to be victimized by energy companies and the government agencies who are supposed to protect the environment.
I live 20 miles south of Parkersburg, WV on one of the most beautiful pieces of land one can imagine. I purchased it in 1978, knowing that the mineral rights were not included, but having discovered that it's very difficult to buy any rural property in this state that includes mineral, coal, gas, or oil rights. They were sold to out-of-state energy companies about 100 years ago. (I've posted about this issue before, but it's so horrendous, it bears repeating.)
I was not particularly concerned about the mineral rights, as my land is somewhat inaccessible. I had to have a 1,000 foot driveway put in just to get to the meadow where I was building my house, and the only other area that provides access is between two hillsides. That's where I had my water well drilled, and I also had to cross a neighbor's property to get to it. I negotiated with the neighbor for a permanent right-of-way to my water well.
When I built my home and had the driveway and well put in, I made sure as little of the land was disturbed as possible and have only made "improvements" that enhance a haven for wildlife.
Last spring, I got a call from a representative of a company called PetroEdge. They planned to drill a gas well on my property approximately 230 feet from my water well. At the time, I could not imagine how they would even get the equipment in to do this, but I sent a "comment" to the Department of Environmental Protection (or Pollution, as I am inclined to call it) because of the proximity to my water well.
Of course, I was informed that the gas drilling permit would be granted, and I had no further recourse to stop it. About a month ago, this atrocity began. To see how it all works, one can go to http://www.wvsoro.org/index.html and look at their sideshow. WV SORO is the West Virginia Surface Owners Rights Organization. It's just starting up, so anyone interested in protecting his or her property might wish to check it out.
Anyway, as briefly as possible, here is what they did - and it's typical of how a gas well is drilled anywhere in WV:
*Two acres of hillside were clear cut, the trunks of the trees, were stacked, and the roots and branches were pushed upward toward the top of the hill where my driveway runs.
*The entire lay of the land was restructured to create a huge plateau with compacted 45 degree sloped sides and a gravelled road leading to the flat surface. Of course, this entire plateau is made of clay, so it's not a pretty sight.
*A monstrous pit was dug on one side of the plateau and lined with an immense plastic liner to hold the salt water and other pollutants dredged up during drilling.
*For weeks, first the dozers and backhoes created a racket as they moved back and forth, shoving dirt aside to create this eyesore. Then an unbelievable amount of large equipment, trucks, and drilling rigs was brought in to begin the actual drilling. The booming, scraping, and grinding almost never stopped day or night for at least three weeks. I'm about 800 feet away, but my neighbors bore the brunt of the noise. Anyone with a small child would have been much more than inconvenienced. One neighbor told me he hadn't had more than four hours of sleep the whole time they were working.
*The workers drilled a "surface" hole, cased it and poured concrete three times. (This was the only concession made to accomodate the proximity to my well - they had to use extra reinforcement in the casing.) Since they have to wait for 8 hours after the concrete is poured, I got a few hours of relief each time from the constant pounding.
*As the drilling commenced, water, sludge, and rock scrapings were pulled out of the hole and put into the holding pit. The water in there is black and nasty looking. Any frogs unfortunate enough to wander in would surely meet their demise.
*Last Sunday, the local fire department arrived because the workers expected to hit gas and it "might be" ignited. Fortunately, that did not happen, and the drilling was completed without incident.
*Now that the drilling is done, I'm not sure exactly what happens next. I know they often drop explosives into the hole to break up the rock and release the gas. I don't know if they did that, but I haven't heard any loud explosions yet. The rigs are gone, but the pit is still there.
At this point, there is still the disposal of the pit liner. The plan is to desalinate the water and remove any solids. Then the water is sprayed back onto the land, the solid waste is either removed entirely (not likely, from what I can tell) or left in the pit. Then the liner is folded over it, according to the SORO literature "like a huge diaper," and it's all buried on my property when the pit is filled in. I contacted the DEP with a request to have the liner removed because I'm concerned about its leaching into my well or the creek that runs below it and feeds other streams, but I was told only that the state would not prevent its removal if "all parties are in agreement." Well, all parties will most certainly not be in agreement because it's very expensive to remove the liner, and PetroEdge does not want to incur more expenses unless they are forced to do so. I sent an email to that effect and requested a reply from the DEP. So far, none is forthcoming.
PetroEdge wants to run the pipeline across the neighbor's property. I don't believe they can be prevented from doing so because Cabot Gas and Oil, the parent company (located in Texas) owns the mineral rights there too. PetroEdge may have to pay for the loss of grazing pasture, as the neighbors have cattle. Big deal.
Finally - and I really, really love this part - the "reclamation" begins. This consists of spreading grass and clover seed where trees used to be. And this is an improvement over what used to be required, which was apparently NOTHING until 1983.
In West Virginia, there are more gas and oil wells than any other state except for Texas, and about 3,000 new permits are issued every single year. That does not mean 3,000 wells are drilled, but they could be if the gas or oil company wanted to do it.
I don't own any gas rights, so I get absolutely nothing out of this except aggravation and the feeling of being violated. From now on I can expect to have someone from PetroEdge arrive on my property periodically to inspect, maintain, or whatever.
A really wonderful book, Night Comes to the Cumberlands, describes the settling of Appalachia and the subsequent takeover by the coal companies. It's worth a read for anyone interested in how and why this beautiful area has been raped and pillaged for the profit of companies that are mostly not even located here.
A friend who was an environmental activist for many years told me that the sole purpose of the EPA and the state versions like the WV DEP is to issue permits to pollute. It's not a nice thought, and I did not want to believe it. But now I'm pretty sure that, at least in essence, this is the truth.
Nature will exact its revenge with the same dispassionate and ruthless efficiency as those going about busily destroying it.
As humanity lies groaning out its last painful breathes with its vision growing dim and its strength transforming into feebleness, choking on the polluted air, land, and water its own activities have created, there will be none to hear, none to observe, none to feel anything as it completes its own (and all other living species') cosmocide.
Or we can begin to organize and take collective action against our slayers.
Let me add another Derrick Jensen recommendation to Glen's excellent ones above. it is a two volume set called:
"End Game"
and to find a more positive view of the fututre than the one with which we are now confronted go to:
bioneers.org.
The USA has never listened to the Earth, but we certainly have exploited it. There should have come a time in out country's evolution where we learned that listening to the Earth is our only means of survival. If we can't keep the Earth alive we won't be able to keep ourselves alive. Sadly, the philosophy of listening to the Earth was available to us as soon as we set foot on the Native America Indian's soil.
Hoa binh
" If only the mountains had voices to scream, the world would quake with the sound."
They do. We have turned our backs on the true "knowing" that it takes to be in communion with the web of life. We have instead, objectified life, all life, sometimes reducing it to mere "resources" to be exploited. We live in a toxic mimicry of life, of relationship, of community.
Dear 2lyons:
You said:
"The mountains and trees are crying but our ears are unable to hear their cries."
Yes. I agree. The mountains, the trees, all non-human life is in constant communication. We have forgotten how to listen.
The planet is talking to us. Are we waiting for a written letter (in our preffered language) in order to take it seriously? Indigenous people have known how to hear the land for eons. It's us "civilized' folks who have lost that connection. Perhaps that is because we have elimintated the understanding of community and relationship. Our society can only exist thru the elimination of these ideas. That is the only way we can rationalize destroying one's landbase and see it as "development", or "construction" instead of seeing the very literal devastation that is occuring. We have become disconnected from the natural world and prefer technology. Unfortunately for us (and the 200 species that go extinct every day), technology will not preserve life. The natural world depends on diviersity, a diversity that we are eliminating for the next Starbucks, Linen & Things, Barnes & Noble, etc.
I know I am but preaching to the choir.
Two excellent books in regards to "hearing" the natural world:
"A Language Older Than Words" by Derrick Jensen
"Listening To The Land" also by Derrick Jensen
Thank You.
-Glen
Thanks for this piece. When Democracy Now! showed images of mountaintop removal I was moved to tears. When driving through Tennessee a few years ago it hurt to see a patch of bare mountain from logging, here and there spotting the Smokeys. But to see mountains completely raped and obliterated had me bawling. The images were obscene and filled with pain.
This must stop. This is completely immoral and many people have the power to stop it. Guatam Buddha said that a person should not make a living doing harmful things. Without people driving the machinery, the mountain cannot be decimated. A person cannot hide from morality behind their job title.
We need to take a stand. The mountains and trees are crying but our ears are unable to hear their cries.
This is not just for the mountains but for the future of humanity. Everyone is a part of this. We are the mountains and the mountains are us, it is time to treat them with respect instead of raping them. We are only raping ourselves.
You can see pictures here: http://www.ohvec.org/galleries/mountaintop_removal/011/index.html
warning: may cause nausea, vomiting, etc.