One of the stories I was pursuing in 2013-2014 that I hope I get a chance to track down someday is the use of traditional ecological knowledge, or TEK, to combat damages wrought by climate change
For example, around here Kumeyaay and Diegueño peoples perfected ways of surface water maintenance in the very dry climates of inland southern California. These were assumed to be natural by Spanish colonizers
The "wild" and "untouched" American landscapes were, as it turns out, more often than not part of an intricate & interlinked & very sophisticated method of land management, but it benefited those reappropriating land from indigenous peoples to erase them
But I only know a very small amount about this and hope to research it further, there are others who are far more qualified than I to discuss these very issues and what has transpired since then
Oh, here's a story that I've always found to be a good example of why listening to the past to inform the future is important. In 1964, a devastating earthquake rocked the state and caused dozens of deaths & huge physical changes en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1964_Alas…
Among other damages caused by the Good Friday quake was the total destruction of the one-time boom town of Portage, in Alaska's Mat-Su Valley not too far outside Anchorage. You can still go out there and see the leftovers of the abandoned town. It's eerie. alaska.org/detail/portage…
An entire Anchorage neighborhood slid into the water. It is now a beautiful but also eerie park, called, appropriately enough, Earthquake Park. alaska.org/photos/gallery…
The original Dena'ina name for this region is Nen Ghiłgedi (no. 7 on this map.) It translates to "rotten land," or to put it more baldly, "don't build here, you idiots!" When I asked some Dené friends about it they shrugged and said listening is important. denaina.anchoragemuseum.org/multimedia/den…
It's fascinating and timely and I look forward to exploring this project more in the future. Our accepted interpretation of today's reality is built on a lot of other realities, and we should listen to them.
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I've been thinking about doing this thread for a couple of days. This is mostly for myself so I can go back to it, I don't really expect anybody in this dying hellscape to see it, but I wanted to lay it out here for my own sake. Here's my last few years in news stories:
Here's me, just so incredibly naive in late 2016, saying that "fake news" wasn't the problem so much as lack of journalism. For the record, I still stand by this, but at the time I had no idea how much social media was in on the disinfo attacks:
Hi everybody! A lot of you have been asking me what you can get me for my birthday, which is this weekend. Just kidding, literally no one asked me that but just in case you were considering getting me something please donate here instead entertainmentcommunity.org
Alternately, please consider joining a #WritersGuildofAmerica picket line and support the absolute shit out of this strike
I haven't really articulated this much but: Disinformation depends on altering our stories, true ones and fictional ones, to affect how we see ourselves and each other and make the world seem much more negative. There is a lot of power in culture, so of course jackholes want it
"The majority of the 1,000-plus book challenges analyzed by The Post were filed by just 11 people.
Each of these people brought 10 or more challenges against books in their school district; one man filed 92 challenges."
"As the planet warms, more calamities will strike the U.S. and, if the recent past is any indication, create new opportunities for militias and other extremist groups to mobilize and recruit...."
That's why all the insane border hardening and eugenics shit is happening now too. Borders are there to consolidate resources. Well, we're the resources they're trying to consolidate.