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āļø charles smith āļø
Letās be honest - Everest should be cut off from climbers, and the only people that should be allowed up there are ppl who volunteer to clean up all the garbage and human excrement adrenaline junkies have left up there over the decades, and anyone who volunteers to attempt to bring down any bodies of those who died.
The ascent is too dangerous, too many ill-equipped and unprepared climbers try to make the climb, and too much garbage is piling up and poisoning the run off that communities around Everest rely on to live.
Reminder that:
Rainbow Valley, for all its macabre connotations, is also a literal trash heap.
Base Camp and ABC are worse. The entire route is lined with garbage.
The Sherpa population receive little credit forĀ incredible amount of work they do, often doing mostĀ of the work of the climber or team so that the team takes all the credit. Itās true that thereās a monetary benefit for their communities, but their job is also one of the most dangerous in the world.
There are documented crimes on Everest. Theft and assault are just the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Theft of oxygen tanks and other vital equipment can seriously endanger climbers. Entire books have been written about this.
People have been left to die on the climb. In some places, depending on the altitude, it becomes unavoidable or near impossible to move someone down the mountain. However, there have been avoidableĀ deaths, again well-documented. Some climbers even say they have something calledĀ āsummit feverā where only the climb has meaning, and not their fellow climbers.Ā
Itās overcrowded.Ā The victoryās lost most of its meaning. Just let it be.
this is another reason why land back / indigenous sovereignty is so important. give the mountain back to the people whoāve been taking care of it for centuries and let them have full control over it legally. let them decide if it should or shouldnāt be a tourist attraction or if people should be allowed to climb it. just defer to Sherpa people when it comes to anything to do with SagarmÄthÄ
A snippet from the new Lackadaisy animated film trailer!
Catch the full trailer here!
Film coming to YouTube March 2023!
An influential system overseen by retailers and clothing makers ranks petroleum-based synthetics like āvegan leatherā as more environmentally sound than natural fibers.
The rise of vegan leather, which is typically made from polyurethane, a type of plastic that has a more favorable Higg rating, has brought unintended consequences, industry officials say. Even as leather is replaced by synthetics, Americans are still eating lots of beef ā which means the hides from those slaughtered cattle have nowhere to go. In 2020, a record 5 million hides, or about 15 percent of all available, went to landfills, according to the U.S. Hide, Skin and Leather Association, a Washington-based trade group.
āTheyāre throwing the hides in the offal barrels out back,ā said Ron Meek, a former meat processor who has been helping smaller plants weather the downturn in leather demand.
oh good, weāre just wasting the hides now, thatās so much better than making things out of them
From a crafting perspective, leather is so very expensive to buy as well. itās extremely frustrating, because this beautiful material can be used to generate useful goods that people actually want - which is pretty bloody rare in crafting, much as I love crafting - but cost of materials is such a barrier. If more people really got into it as a crafting material, it would be really pleasing.
Chris Apassingok energized the Elders & Youth Conference Monday in a keynote address about his life as a young hunter, and the whale that put him in the spotlight.
Re-Blog to support Native hunting rights and fight against individuals who donāt understand our Indigenous cultures.Ā
???? no? āāācultureāāā isnāt an excuse for violence against a peaceful species for absolutely no logical reason
Well itās not really about culture so much as FEEDING THEMSELVES so
Hey, @romancatholic wanna guess how much a head of cabbage costs up in indigenous communities up north? Did you guess the price in your local store, likely around 50 cents or a dollar something? Youād be incredibly wrong.Ā Ā
$28. FuckingĀ $28 for a single head of cabbage. Baby formula can be upwards of 55 dollars. And when youāre that far up north, being vegan is a LUXURY that virtually no one can afford. They need PROTEIN. They need fuel to survive. And a whale carcass can provide WEEKS, if not a couple MONTHS of food for a community. That is an insane amount of time, and he did his community an incredible service by killing that whale.Ā
Sorry youād rather see people starve to death but fuck off?
Canadaās Native population are constantly given the shaft. This dude is a hero for catching that whale.
Itās worth mentioning here that the species of whale he killed was not endangered, and that the whale had a far better life than factory farmed animals/fish, and that if you want to make a difference to the lives of animals, there are SO many more effective ways you could go about that than go after very poor indigenous people whoāve been oppressed for centuries and have no other realistic way of feeding themselves.
Climate resiliency was built into the fabric of Babcock Ranch with stronger storms in mind, and Hurricane Ian was a major test.
āGrande told CNN he wanted to find a new home where developers prioritized climate resiliency in a state that is increasingly vulnerable to record-breaking storm surge, catastrophic wind and historic rainfall.
What he found was Babcock Ranch ā only 12 miles northeast of Fort Myers, yet seemingly light years away.
Hurricane Ian has devastated the Fort Myers area. Some people floated on freezers to escape
Babcock Ranch calls itself āAmericaās first solar-powered town.ā Its nearby solar array ā made up of 700,000 individual panels ā generates more electricity than the 2,000-home neighborhood uses, in a state where most electricity is generated by burning natural gas, a planet-warming fossil fuel.
The streets in this meticulously planned neighborhood were designed to flood so houses donāt. Native landscaping along roads helps control storm water. Power and internet lines are buried to avoid wind damage. This is all in addition to being built to Floridaās robust building codes.
Some residents, like Grande, installed more solar panels on their roofs and added battery systems as an extra layer of protection from power outages. Many drive electric vehicles, taking full advantage of solar energy in the Sunshine State.
Climate resiliency was built into the fabric of the town with stronger storms in mind.
So when Hurricane Ian came barreling toward southwest Florida this week, it was a true test for the community. The storm obliterated the nearby Fort Myers and Naples areas with record-breaking surge and winds over 100 mph. It knocked out power to more than 2.6 million customers in the state, including 90% of Charlotte County.
But the lights stayed on in Babcock Ranch.
āIt certainly exceeded our expectations of a major hurricane,ā Grande, 58, told CNN.
The storm uprooted trees and tore shingles from roofs, but other than that Grande said there is no major damage. Its residents say Babcock Ranch is proof that an eco-conscious and solar-powered town can withstand the wrath of a near-Category 5 storm.
āWe have proof of the case now because [the hurricane] came right over us,ā Nancy Chorpenning, a 68-year-old Babcock Ranch resident, told CNN. āWe have water, electricity, internet ā and we may be the only people in Southwest Florida who are that fortunate.ā
ā¦
ā Perhaps the highest endorsement for the city is that it is now a refuge for some of Ianās hardest-hit victims. The state opened Babcock Neighborhood School as an official shelter, even though it didnāt have the mandated generator. The solar array kept the lights on. ā
Why should low-carbon projects be permitted to destroy legendary Native American sacred sites? Yakama elders witnessed the construction of The Dalles Dam that flooded and silenced Celilo Falls on the Columbia River. Since time immemorial, Celilo Falls was one of historyās great marketplaces. Multiple tribes had permanent villages near the falls. Thousands of people gathered annually to trade, feast, and participate in games and religious ceremonies over millennia. During spring, this natural monument surged up to 10 times the amount of water that passes over Niagara Falls today.
What must Indigenous people continue to sacrifice for energy development? The Seattle Times editorial board recently announced support for the Goldendale pumped-storage hydroelectric project to benefit the stateās clean-energy portfolio [āGoldendale energy project can help meet stateās clean-energy needs,ā Sept. 2, Opinion]. The board constructed an alternate reality where tribal nations could find common ground with the developer and resolve objections to project construction. The board wrote, āA compromise that would allow the project to go forward while respecting tribal concerns would be a benefit for all.ā The board ignores the realities of Native American history and the history of this project, which the Confederated Tribes and Bands of Yakama Nation (Yakama Nation) have objected to from the initial development proposal at this site.
The project site is situated on Pushpum ā a sacred site to the Yakama Nation, a place where there is an abundance of traditional foods and medicines. The developerās footprint proposes excavation and trenching over identified Indigenous Traditional Cultural Properties, historic and archaeological resources and access to exercise ceremonial practices and treaty-gathering rights.
Notably, the project site covers the ancestral village site of the Willa-witz-pum Band and the Yakama fishing site called Asānum, where Yakama tribal fishermen continue to practice their treaty-fishing rights.
Yakama Nation opposes the development. The developer proposes two, approximately 60-acre reservoirs and associated energy infrastructure within the Columbia Hills near the John Day Dam and an existing wind turbine complex. The majority of the nearly 700 acre site is undeveloped; the lower reservoir would be located on a portion of the former Columbia Gorge Aluminum smelter site. The tribeās treaty-reserved right to exercise gathering, fishing, ceremony and passing of traditions in the area of the proposed project has existed since time immemorial. The tribe studied mitigation; it is impossible at this site.
Columbia Riverkeeper, and more than a dozen other nonprofits, stand in solidarity with Yakama Nation and oppose the development: The climate crisis does not absolve our moral and ethical responsibilities. Both tribal nations and environmental organizations have worked tirelessly to stop fossil fuel developments and secure monumental climate legislation in the Pacific Northwest. But we refuse to support a sacrifice zone to destroy Native American cultural and sacred sites in the name of combating climate change.
Environmental justice is on the line with the pumped-storage development. Seventeen tribal leaders sent a letter to Gov. Jay Inslee, urging him to reject development permits. The leaders explained, āOur ancestors signed Treaties with the United States, often under threat of violence and death, in exchange for our ancestral lands and sacred places. Through these treaties, we retain the rights to practice and live in our traditional ways in these places. Yet, the promises made by the government have been broken time and time again.ā
Earlier this year, the Washington State Office of Equity, located within the governorās office, released the stateās inaugural five-year Washington State Pro-Equity Anti-Racism Plan & Playbook. Gov. Inslee stated, āWe will no longer replicate and reinforce systems, processes and behaviors that lead to inequities and disparities among various communities.ā Now is the time to apply the playbook to climate change and energy siting.
There is no room for compromise. The choice is stark: Continue to advance our nationās and stateās history of sacrificing Indigenous resources through broken promises, or work with tribes committed to tackling the climate crisis while, at the same time, protecting the last remaining sacred sites.
ā
Text by: Jeremy Takala and Lauren Goldberg. āStop sacrificing Indigenous sacred sites in the name of climate change.ā The Seattle Times. 25 September 2022.
LESS movies about the lgbtq experience MORE movies about people who just happen to be lgbtq. is it really that hard to understand
I don't wanna see another story abt a teenage boy coming out to his parents and closed mouth kissing his boyfriend at prom where's my spy thriller action heist movie w a cast made entirely of dykes and femme gay men you know what I'm fucking talkinf about. I'm tired of The Queer Struggle I struggle every stupid day I know what that's all about and honestly none of the coming out stories are cathartic or whatever to me. I don't care. I wanna see a nonbinary person fight a dragon
Flautist Melissa Jefferson plays slaver James Madison's 200-year-old crystal flute in the Library of Congress.
The only Sovereignty is First Nations Sovereignty.
[Photo ID: A photo of taken of some street art painted on an exterior wall in Australia. It is a portrait of a young Queen Elizabeth II painted over with the Australian Aboriginal Flag. The yellow sun at the flagās centre, which represents life and protection, completely obliterates the Queenās face.]
haunted by american dreams
Unmute !
Unmute!!
seriously wondering if we can call the uk a democracy anymore. we have a prime minister that less than 0.3% of the population voted for, we have a new king that we have no say on, people are getting arrested for protesting against the monarchyĀ under the excuse ofĀ āoffending someoneā and we are effectively having a day of mourning forced upon us for the funeral with important hospital appointments cancelled and people even getting kicked out of holiday lettings for the day.Ā this reads like a dystopian world where a dictator has died, not something happening now in a supposed democratic country
Not to mention food banks closing on Monday too
YES LANDBACK. YES, ALL OF IT. YES, INCLUDING YOUR PRECIOUS NATIONAL PARKS. NO MORE WHITE STEWARDSHIP OF NATIVE LANDS.