Personal tools
You are here: home   Blogs   The GOAT Blog   In case you're having a good day...
 
The GOAT Blog

In case you're having a good day...

Jonathan Thompson | Jan 27, 2009 01:19 PM

Okay, so you got up this morning, scraped the scum off your teeth and that last bit of change from your kid's piggybank, and headed down to the corner coffeeshop to buy one cup of endless refills and spend the rest of the day surfing the Interweb looking for some good news to brighten up your unemployed haze.

Well, just call me Mr. Buzzkill, because I'm the bearer of bad news. By now, everyone's heard about the 45,000 jobs that were lost just yesterday. But there's plenty of West-specific downers, such as:

 • Nevada's unemployment rate is now at 9 percent. That's alarming, but not as alarming as how fast it's climbing; just a year ago, it was near 5 percent.

• Weyerhauser is closing two mills in Washington. More than 200 jobs will be lost.

• Oregon's unemployment rate climbed to 11 percent. 

• Non-profits in California are suffering and failing.

• And in the Phoenix area, some folks are predicting an infestation of roof rats in homes that have been left abandoned by foreclosure. They're also bemoaning a nearly $14 billion loss by Freeport-McMoran, the Phoenix based mining company.

I know, enviro-loving, tree-hugging folks like us should be celebrating the demise of the economy. After all, all those shut down sawmills, and mining company collapses, and shrinking exurbs mean less logging, mining and desert-gobbling growth. There may be something to that, and we may someday look back and see that our current woes slowed down a runaway train on the tracks to disaster. But that doesn't change the fact that a lot of people are in a world of hurt right now, and that our current problems could very well increase the gap between rich and poor. And before you go get another free refill on that coffee to celebrate the demise of society's excesses, keep this in mind: A tattered economy provides one of the best justifications for all kinds of crazy stuff, like mining, drilling, building, you name it. And when folks are struggling to pay the rent, they care less about the environment

Sorry for wrecking your day.

 

JOIN THE High CountryEmail Commons

Award-winning content delivered weekly.

RSS FEEDS

Keep in touch! Find us on Facebook & Twitter
  • Wolves by Ted Vanegas: I live in "wild Idaho", where its citizens seem to...
  • Thank you! by Crista Worthy: Bravo! This might just be my favorite essay tha...
  • wolf attacks by jeff: if you dont like the wild, live in another contine...
  • Bowden's War by Paul Zeiger: Well, Charles Bowden’s essay “The War Next Doo...
  • East to the West essay by Bill Richey: I appreciated the descriptions of the from the int...
  1. It's the population, stupid? | Some Westerners want to blame our environmental wo...
  2. East to the West | A writer contemplates where the West begins, both ...
  3. No ESA for sage grouse | Feds say iconic bird needs protection, but won't g...
  4. Three cheers | Here's to an anonymous donor, Target and 11 scient...
  5. Shooting bullets, not blanks | A tremendous posterity, and firearms in National P...
  1. Charles Bowden on The War Next Door | On the U.S.-Mexico border, the corrupt and futile ...
  2. Thank you, Utah, for leading the way | Utah's Legislature has brilliant plans to cut educ...
  3. Mobile Nation | Every winter in Quartzsite, Ariz., tens of thousan...
  4. The myths of Native American identity | Paul Chaat Smith's latest book, Everything You Kno...
  5. Water fallout | A nuclear power plant proposed for Green River, Ut...
More from Culture & Communities
Predator control, Alaska-style In Alaska, collared wolves are gunned down. And a chihuahua.
Wheatpastin' the Rez Turn up the volume and watch the street artist Jetsonorama at work.
Untold tales of the American frontier The second edition of John Ravage's book, Black Pioneers: Images of the Black Experience on the North American Frontier, illuminates the roles blacks played in settling the West.
All Culture & Communities

Most recent from the blogs

 
© 2010 High Country News, all rights reserved. | privacy policy | powered by Plone | site by Groundwire and Web Collective | design by our very own Ryan Foster