Posted inMarch 5, 2012: The Zombies of Teton County

Goliath vs. Goliath

Your story “Anatomy of a conspiracy theory” suggests that opposition to zoning, planning and conservation as a U.N.-sponsored sovereignty grab is genuinely grassroots (HCN, 2/6/12). We can just as easily see this opposition to regulation as corporate pushback, motivated and underwritten by the energy industry and large agricultural interests. What’s still missing is a documented […]

Posted inMarch 5, 2012: The Zombies of Teton County

Interior Landscapes: A review of The City Beneath the Snow

The City Beneath the Snow: StoriesMarjorie Kowalski Cole276 pages, hardcover: $ 22.95.University of Alaska Press, 2012. With her Bellwether Prize-winning novel Correcting the Landscape — a tale of journalism and urban development — Marjorie Kowalski Cole put Fairbanks, Alaska, on the literary map. Her posthumously published story collection The City Beneath the Snow again brings […]

Posted inMarch 5, 2012: The Zombies of Teton County

HCN subscribers and writers meet in New Zealand

It’s a small, small world. While honeymooning in New Zealand last month, HCN editorial fellow Marian Lyman Kirst and her husband, Michael Kirst, ran into longtime subscribers Barb and Lee Croissant. The Kirsts met the Croissants, retired Parker, Colo., residents, and their daughter and son-in-law, Cindy and Dan Payne, during a guided wildlife walk on […]

Posted inMarch 5, 2012: The Zombies of Teton County

Two degrees warmer and rising: A review of A Great Aridness

A Great Aridness: Climate Change and the Future of the American SouthwestWilliam deBuys384 pages, hardcover: $27.95.Oxford University Press, 2011.   Cracking open yet another book about climate change requires a certain amount of resolve. Most readers already know the facts: In the past 50 years, average temperatures in the United States have risen 2 degrees […]

Posted inMarch 5, 2012: The Zombies of Teton County

Wilderness bills languish in legislative limbo

Like a sausage maker inured to the sights and smells of his job, anyone who dabbles in lawmaking expects un-pleasantries: Negotiations will seem endless, and compromise will be painful. But lately in the nation’s Capitol, legislators have had to grapple with a new stink: Even the most hard-fought deals are indefinitely lodged in legislative limbo. […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 2012: How Arizona's culture helped shape the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords

Environmental warrior Martin Litton is still fighting at 95

Martin Litton, 95, wastes no time on proprieties. “I’m supposed to be dead, you know,” he growls on a January morning, leading me through a thicket of potted plants into his home in the hills near Palo Alto, Calif. A towering presence with a booming voice, Litton has spent his life battling developers, extractive industries […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Hollywood turns wolves into man-killers

THE WESTOnce again, Hollywood has chosen mythmaking over reality in its portrayal of predators, in this case, Alaskan wolves, in a new movie called The Grey. According to the Spokane Spokesman-Review, the “man-versus-beast thriller” pits stranded oilfield roughnecks against extreme cold, hunger and a pack of starving wolves; when carnage erupts, “the wolves are usually […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 2012: How Arizona's culture helped shape the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords

Communities help pay for ecosystem services provided by forests

Strontia Springs Reservoir, 30 miles south of Denver, Colo., looks like water you’d want to scoop up in your dipper. Sunshine and pine reflect off its aqua-blue surface. But 16 years ago, it looked more like a latte clogged with cinnamon bark. In 1996 and 2002, major forest fires scorched the Upper South Platte  River […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 2012: How Arizona's culture helped shape the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords

Monkey-wrenchers to the rescue

I was surprised and dismayed at the apparent power wielded by billboard companies (HCN, 1/23/12, “Billboards vs. Democracy”), but even more surprised and dismayed at the apparent lack of power that governments at all levels have to prevent their various affronts to our senses. Unlike junk mail, telemarketers, and political advertisements on TV, billboards are […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 2012: How Arizona's culture helped shape the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords

The error of the well-intentioned

Thank you for the billboard and “untrammeled” wilderness articles (HCN, 1/23/12, “The law, the lookout and the logging town” & “Billboard vs. Democracy”). Boycotting Utah and/or monkey-wrenching seem like the only viable options for correcting these corporate billboard crimes. Wilderness Watch, by contrast, is well intentioned, but apparently ignorant of the harm it’s doing. Wilderness […]

Posted inFebruary 20, 2012: How Arizona's culture helped shape the shooting of Gabrielle Giffords

The shine of the golden saddle

The grazing buyout is sometimes referred to as a “golden saddle” (HCN, 1/23/12, “Detente in the grazing wars?”). I like that. Even though grazing permits are not rights, the buyouts recognize that grazing permits have been treated as such and are of value to the permittee. I like how it is a free market solution, […]

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