David Neiwert Profile picture
Jan 2, 2022 21 tweets 6 min read Read on X
The #TodaysBeauty feature is intended as an antidote to the ugly world I report on. I hope it's helped.

Here's a thread of my Top 20 shots from 2021. 1/ J Pod coming past Lime Kiln on Sept. 12.
2/ Eagles are common on San Juan Island, so everyone with a camera gets shots of them here. But getting the right combination of light and pose is always special.
3/ This black oystercatcher on the rocks at Lime Kiln was unperturbed by my presence. I was shooting orcas but this was my best pic that day.
4/ I recently ran a gallery of the many fox pics I got this year, but this one takes the prize.
5/ I love orca calves, like this little one who came past Reuben Tarte Park in April.
6/ There's a population of long-eared owls who like to hunt at American Camp, but they're really hard to photograph because they're so quick in flight. Fortunately, I was able to catch this one perching.
7/ A shot from our visit to the Hall of the Mosses in the Hoh Rain Forest in July.
8/ These two humpbacks' plumes created a swirling rainbow.
9/ This red-tailed hawk was just sitting on a fencepost along the Friday Harbor airport when I pulled up and snagged this shot.
10/ I don't mind encountering Stellers sea lions in a full-size boat, as I was here. They're intimidating when I've come across them in a kayak.
11/ The migratory waterfowl on SJI, like this wood duck, are really something else.
12/ The muscle that humpbacks use to wave their flukes is reportedly the most powerful in all of nature. Watching them dive, I can believe it.
13/ J Pod seemed to enjoy coming past Lime Kiln Lighthouse at dusk this year. This shot is from July.
14/ This white wagtail's appearance at San Juan County Park in June was the species' first documented sighting in the Lower 48. It's common in Europe and Asia, but its only population in North America is a small migratory group in the Nome, Alaska, area.
15/ In addition to our salmon-eating 'resident' orca population, we also see a number or mammal-eating 'transient' orcas, like this one hunting seals near Grandma's Cove.
16/ You don't appreciate how large Stellers sea lions are until you see them all hauled out on a big rock, bawling and growling at each other.
17/ I am always fascinated by northern harriers, particularly their skill at hovering low over their hunting grounds. This one was at American Camp.
18/ This humpback was foraging in the kelp next to Lime Kiln Lighthouse in October.
19/ This barred owl at English Camp has developed a reputation for harassing hikers, because they are so territorial. Fortunately, he stayed put when I walked past.
20/ Another shot from that dusky J Pod visit in September.

May 2022 bring us even more beauty!
Doh! Short-eared owls!

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More from @DavidNeiwert

Apr 28
Was rooting around in my archives when I came across this. It's an instructive artifact of just how long the Christian nationalist/evangelical campaign has been demonizing and scapegoating the LGBTQ community.

It was a mailing from Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority in 1981. 1/4 Image
I liked to keep an eye on what Falwell was doing back then and signed up for his mailings. This one arrived in a plain brown envelope (of course) with a warning that it was for adult eyes only. 2/4

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The whole mailing was meant to evoke recipients' moral disgust. My favorite part was the cutlines. Also, Jerry apparently didn't like it when they made fun of him. 3/4 Image
Read 5 tweets
Apr 6
Idaho’s far-right extremists—first claiming that the hate-crime attack on the University of Utah women’s basketball team in Coeur d’Alene two weeks ago was a “hoax,” now saying it’s not a real crime—seem confused. So let me explain how the law got passed in Idaho in 1983. 1/49

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This a tale of the wages of hate, by which I mean vicious, unrepentant bigotry intended to harm: How it terrorizes and toxifies whole communities, and how its practitioners behave stupidly, even when they think themselves to be smart. In the end, hate is stupid, but it hurts. 2/
The first sign of hate I saw in northern Idaho was the fliers. No one knew who was handing them out, but several came across my editor’s desk at the Sandpoint Daily Bee in the rural Panhandle in early 1979, brought in by a reporter on his rounds. 3/
Read 51 tweets
Jan 4
Certainly it would be a way for Heather to avoid discussing all the far-right extremists she has aided and abetted. Like the “Patriots” who turned up in Coeur d’Alene in June 2021 to threaten and harass LGBTQ people.


The ugly scene at the lakeside park was directly due to Heather’s original work organizing it.

dailykos.com/stories/2022/5…
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These were some of the “Patriots” who turned out.


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Read 4 tweets
Apr 3, 2023
I'm thrilled tonight because I finally managed to snag a recording of transient orcas for my collection of whale sounds, via the Whale Museum livestream at Lime Kiln Lighthouse. They're wildly different than resident orcas! Unfortunately, they don't appear on camera.
According to observers at the scene, these were probably the T49A pod, including the prodigious young male T49A1. More on them here from Maya's Legacy and @orcawild.
sanjuanislandwhalewatch.com/orcas-t49as/
Here's a link to the Whale Museum's livestream, brought to you by the fine folks @TheWhaleMuseum, @WDFW, @WAStatePks, and FolksSJI.org.

Read 4 tweets
Mar 30, 2023
This is unbelievably good news. Decades of work to return Toki to her home waters are finally reaching fruition.
local10.com/news/local/202…
Incidentally, I refuse to call her "Lolita," which was a stage name with lascivious connotations given to her by the Seaquarium's owners. She was only a calf when captured and was placed with a large male orca ("Hugo") who later killed himself. It was hoped they would mate.
Her longtime native name is Tokitae, though the Lummi Nation recently gave her the name Sk'alliCh'echtinault as part of the efforts to relocate her.
dailykos.com/stories/2021/1…
Read 8 tweets
Mar 16, 2023
Thanks to @nberlat for reviewing ‘The Nazi Conscience,’ which is now on my must-read list. Note how it obliterates the ‘sparkling fascism’ arguments of people like @shadihamid, who join the long tradition of telling people like me we’re overreacting.

noahberlatsky.substack.com/p/yes-the-repu…
Claudia Koonz’s thesis recalls that of Milton Mayer, whose ‘They Thought They Were Free’ remains an essential text for understanding fascism then and now. Some notable excerpts:
Of course, I already responded to Hamid. His answer pretty quickly revealed how shallow his argument runs.
Read 4 tweets

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