Type: The Mormon Church works to ban gay marriage in California, even as gay people in places like Rexburg, Idaho, come out of the LDS closet.


Living with trees

Between Earth and Sky: Our Intimate Connections to TreesNalini M. Nadkarni336 pages, hardcover: $24.95.University of California, 2008. Between Earth and Sky sets out to describe the many ways in which trees sustain us. When author Nalini Nadkarni was a girl in suburban Maryland, after school she would climb one of the eight maples in her…

Tales from the heartwood

Working the Woods, Working the Sea: An Anthology of Northwest WritingEdited by Finn Wilcox and Jerry Gorsline400 pages, softcover, $22.Empty Bowl, 2008. The second edition of Working the Woods, Working the Sea — the first was published in 1986 — contains a lot of new material, but its core is still fiction, nonfiction and poetry…

Midnight in Montana

On a cold night that should have been warm, I pulled off the highway and headed for an historic gentleman’s club to hear the Doug Turman Sextet, a band of no particular renown. This was mining country in northwestern Montana, where unpredictable, bitter weather is a fact of life, outdoors and in. Next to me…

Why we all need the Democrats to abandon gun control

At this year’s annual Gun Rights Policy Conference in September, National Rifle Association President Sandy Froman endorsed Arizona Sen. John McCain in the upcoming presidential election. This came as no surprise; the Democrats have long been denounced by the NRA as the anti-Second Amendment party — Nanny-State know-it-alls, Big-Government gun-controllers out of touch with the…

Religion, politics and culture

Believing that religion is a matter which lies solely between man and his G-d … that thelegislative powers of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared their Legislature should “make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free…

Scrimpfest in the West

The posh St. Regis Resort at Monarch Beach in Southern California offers pregnant couples a lavish package vacation called the “Last Hurrah.” But in late September, that moniker might have been better applied to the $440,000 weeklong retreat American International Group held there for some of its top sales agents — less than a week…

Future carnage

The toll that humans take on the rest of the planet has bothered me for quite some time (hcn, 10/13/08). I am 50 years old and remember an article in my weekly reader in about third grade (circa 1967) about the population explosion. It troubled me enough then and since that i decided not to…

Watery shell game

Regarding “a river runs near it,” we really shouldn’t call this water development (hcn, 9/15/08). It really is just water reallocation. No new water is being developed. Every time we reallocate water in substantial quantities, we do so crudely. This is probably just a little less crude than in the past, but we really don’t…

Who’s left behind?

In regards to the writers on the range piece, “a macabre measure of the human footprint,” most everybody’s working with the idea of too many of us, except for those who believe there can never be too many of us because god’s taking care of that (hcn, 10/13/08). For the rest, it leads directly to…

An eye on the agencies

Regarding your recent story “the great giveaway,” i retired as national recreation director for the bureau of land management in 2003, because i saw the bush administration consistently subvert the overall mission of the blm through the appointment of politicos willing to overrule professional judgment and substitute white house imperatives (hcn, 10/13/08). I retired earlier…

Out stealing water

Oh, really? Theft of the property of others is now called “water harvesting” (hcn, 10/13/08). So … Even if you are a government agency or municipality, by all means necessary, just take what doesn’t belong to you. It has become the way of solving situations, where someone has recently arrived on the scene, knowing full…

The great barbecue, revisited

Paul Vandevelder’s article was right about the end of western welfare, in my opinion (hcn, 10/13/08). Large government deficits and the recent unraveling of our credit-based economy will likely have lasting effects on the west. While we may not be able to depend any longer on government largesse to fund bridges, dams, and other pet…