Showing posts with label Alaska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alaska. Show all posts

Monday, November 22, 2010

Historical Image of the Day

My Recent US History course just read and discussed Elizabeth Kolbert's Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change. It's a very good book, though as depressing as you might imagine. In honor of that, this week I will be highlighting environmental disasters in US history.


Oiled otters after Exxon Valdez oil spill, Alaska, 1989

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Alaskan Polling

As we see that Lisa Murkowski might actually lose her grudge match against Palin clone Joe Miller, I wonder why polling of Alaskan races trends far to the left of actual reality. Murkowski was supposed to blow Miller out; all the stories were written about the slap in Palin's face. Yet this is very much not the case. Similarly, in 2008 Mark Begich was supposed to destroy the scandal-riven Ted Stevens and longtime Republican Rep. Don Young was also likely to lose. Yet Begich barely squeaked out a win and Young won fairly easily.

What's up with this? Do they not poll the lunatics who live in the middle of nowhere, crawling out of their caves covered in animal furs to vote for the farthest-right candidate possible?

Sunday, February 07, 2010

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Historical Image of the Day

Filipino salmon cannery workers, Alaska, probably the 1930s but it could be as late as the 1950s.

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Sarah Palin: "So Sambo Beat the Bitch"

At least according to this story, that quote was Sarah Palin's response to Obama winning the Democratic nomination. This is a pretty extreme story. The evidence base is not as deep as one might hope and a few people willing to give their names would certainly make the story stronger. But Charley James has put together a not unconvincing case that Palin is a racist and just generally awful person. Given my knowledge of the rural West, these kinds of quotes do not surprise me in the least. Rural westerners can be as virulently racist and sexist as the biggest southern redneck stereotype you can think of. She grew up in this culture and came of power in a political party that has done little to disguise its racism over the last 40 years, particularly on the local level.

Certainly these charges need to be investigated more fully and deserve attention from the larger media.

Via Helmut.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Dead Animal Office

Those are some classy office decorations Sarah Palin has in her governor's office. I know visiting digntaries would really respect our government if they visited the Vice President's office and it looked like that.

The photo is from the New York Times, but that bear almost looks photoshopped in there. What the hell is keeping the head on the couch?

Via TreeHugger

Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Treason in Defense of Moosehunting

Boy, you travel to Arkansas for a couple of days and you miss one of the most hilarious political events in recent years. Bad timing on my part.

Sarah Palin is just a joke. On Friday, some compared her to Geraldine Ferraro. Many Democrats compared her to Dan Quayle. That's not far off, but Quayle was significantly more competent. No, the real comparison is Tom Eagleton. To refresh your memory, Eagleton was George McGovern's VP pick in 1972. Immediately after his selection, it was revealed that he had a history of mental problems that he did not reveal to McGovern. This totally unvetted candidate became an embarrassment to McGovern and was replaced by Sargent Shriver.

I don't think McCain will dump Palin. It would make him look even more incompetent than the initial selection did. But I do think it is shocking he would select someone with this much baggage. It is more shocking that McCain did so little vetting of Palin. In modern politics, did McCain not think her history would be investigated? Every day, McCain's choice shows itself to be the move of a desperate and fading candidate.

Forget about the deal with her daughter. That should be out of bounds. But there is so much more. The abuse of power, the seeming corruption, the lying about being opposed to pork barrel spending (I supported the Bridge to Nowhere before I didn't support it!).

But what really gets me is the Alaskan Independence Party stuff. Not only is she crazy, but Palin and her husband are evidently on the verge of being traitors to their nation. Her husband was a member of the secessionists from 1995 until 2002, when Palin first ran for statewide office. They were both at the organization's founding convention. But on the Republican side, I guess it is OK to speak out against your country so long as it is in defense of right-wing extremist values. This is a big story that is just going to get bigger I think. She is so embarrassing as to make people seriously question whether John McCain is fit for the presidency. This is by far the most disastrous VP pick since Eagleton. Bush won with Quayle. But McGovern's already struggling candidacy was doomed by the sense that he did not know what he was doing. Neither does McCain.

I will say one thing about Palin's daughter. If this was Obama's daughter, the right-wingers would be up in arms about the lack of moral values among Democrats. But with Republicans, it is not about your personal behavior. Rather, it is about what side of the ideological divide you fall on. Any personal problem can be forgiven so long as you talk the talk. See the Swiftboating of John Kerry and the treatment of Dan Rather's story on Bush in the Vietnam years during the 2004 election for evidence.

I would also like to note that after watching and listening to Palin, I think she is the whitest person in America.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Sarah Palin?

What a laughable VP selection for John McCain. If Biden was everything Obama needed, Palin gives McCain nothing. She has almost no experience, having won the governor's position in 2006. This completely undermines McCain's harping on Obama's lack of experience. She is totally unknown to anyone outside of Alaska. She is a former beauty pageant queen, so I guess that means McCain is running with a younger attractive woman. Should make him happy.

And although she ran for governor of Alaska on an anti-corruption campaign, she is now being investigated by the Alaska legislature for abusing her power in a case where she dismissed the state's chief of public safety after he refused to fire a police officer who happened to be getting a divorce from Palin's sister. Nice.

So I guess the Republicans are just running openly on a bad governance platform this year. Alright then.

This is just such an amazingly stupid pick for McCain. If he's trying to attract Hillary supporters by choosing a woman, he picked the wrong woman. Selected Texas Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson would have made a lot more sense. Impeccable conservative credentials, popular senator, well-known name, and the seat would remain in Republican hands if they won. But evidently, Hutchinson never received serious consideration.

I also wonder if we will ever see a ticket with two white men again? Or if we do, it will be considered a bad political move. I'm fine with that, but just curious to see what happens in 2012.

Hilarious.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Monday, November 12, 2007

Into the Wild

Kit Stolz's defense of Christopher McCandless, the hero of Into the Wild, sums up just about everything I am uncomfortable with in characters like him. McCandless, a wealthy Virginia kid, gave up everything he had to go live an "authentic" life. This eventually led him to Alaska, where he wandered into the backcountry without any kind of provisions and starved to death. Jon Krakauer and now Sean Penn have idealized McCandless in print and film.

McCandless definitely represents an archetype of American environmentalism--the driven masculine loner who turns his back on privilege and goes to find himself in nature. Other prominent examples are Edward Abbey, Henry David Thoreau, and John Muir. Perhaps the most salient comparison is the early 20th century artist and writer Everett Ruess, who as a young man wandered into the southwestern deserts, never to be seen again. But should this behavior be lionized? I think not.

First of all, I have a lot of trouble dealing with kids like McCandless because despite their pretensions to giving up their privilege, in fact they are still incredibly privileged. McCandless was a rich kid whose behavior was deeply influenced by his wealth. You don't see many working-class kids engaging in this kind of behavior. Why? They are too busy figuring out how to eat to romanticize what it would be like to not eat, or only eat foods you gathered. It takes some serious privilege to distance yourself enough from real life to think wandering off into Alaska for the summer without having a clue about your surroundings is a good idea. No doubt someone out there might find some working-class examples of this behavior, but I've never met them nor read about them.

Second, it reinforces the wilderness ideal in environmentalism. I have long argued that focusing on pristine wilderness has done more to undermine the movement than anything Reagan or Bush have done. At one time, environmentalism focused both on protecting land and protecting human bodies. It was during this period, in the 1960s and 1970s, that everything from the Wilderness Act to the Endangered Species Act to the Clean Air and Clean Water Acts were passed. Environmentalists made close connections between protecting land and protecting humans. Thus they were able to do both. Environmentalism was a bipartisan issue.

Starting in the 1980s, and probably because of the hostility of the Reagan administration to environmental legislation, the environmental movement began focusing almost exclusively on saving pristine land. New, more radical groups like EarthFirst! and Greenpeace helped promote this shift through their vigorous defense of American forests and whales respectively, but the Sierra Club and Wilderness Society probably did more to push this new emphasis because they found they could raise much more money when they promoted charismatic, but endangered, animals or beautiful forest and desert scenes that were under attack than they could by focusing on the kind of legal and technical issues that create legislation. Once the environmental movement gave up its emphasis on human beings, it lost popularity and became divisive rather than consensus building. Thus since 1980, they have succeeded in protecting a lot of wilderness areas when Democrats are president, but they are completely left out in the cold when Republicans are in power and they are nowhere near building groundswells of popular support for any sort of legislation.

To be fair, I do believe this is starting to change. Young people seem to be much more into coalition building and connecting humans and wilderness. And this is an absolute good.

Third, people like McCandless do a very poor job of making connections between their own behavior and its larger implications on the land. Now McCandless may have never made claims to being an environmentalist, but given that his cause has picked up on my so many environmentalists, this is still a worthy point. McCandless went out there with his gun and was hunting animals to survive. He even shot a moose (or it could have been a caribou) once, though because he didn't have a freaking clue what to do with a large animal to preserve its meat, it all went bad. What he didn't realize, and what his defenders don't seem to get, is that it was through the behavior of people just like him that the nation's wildlife plummeted during the 19th century. Of course, there was a lot of pointless hunting for fun as well, and there is no doubt that significantly added to the decline of the bison and passenger pigeon, among other species. But what if everyone wanted to live like McCandless? What if even 5% of Americans did? What if they all went out to Montana or Alaska or Arizona or wherever and decided to live off the land. How fast would wildlife be hunted out? When people like McCandless go hunting in the wild, they do far more environmental damage than they ever would living in the city. If you really care about nature, leave it alone.

Stolz also lauds the film, which I thought was really pretty blase. He says, "After this movie, he may become a Clint Eastwood of indie filmmaking, a completely free spirit and a free talent. Watch out world." The merits of Eastwood as a filmmaker aside (the most overrated American director), Penn's movie falls flat in a lot of ways. I went in thinking I would either love it or hate it. In fact, I was bored by it. Despite a great supporting cast, Emile Hirsch never seems to inhabit the character. He's almost a cipher that other great actors can work around. He mutters some words about his great Alaskan adventure without any convincing emotion and then Catherine Keener or Hal Holbrook can worry about him in a meaningful way.

Stolz also talks about how great the music by Eddie Vedder was. About this, the less said the better. It added nothing to the film and in fact became rather annoying several times.

What's more, what many viewers and readers don't seem to get is that Christopher McCandless was a total asshole. Despite extremely sympathetic portrayals of the man by both Krakauer and Penn, he clearly didn't give a shit about the people who cared for him. And this is what comes across in sympathetic portrayls! Imagine what an unsympathetic how he would look to the more critical chronicler. Both Krakauer and Penn make it abundantly clear that so many people who he met were touched by him, cared for him, etc. I have no doubt this is true. But a person to model oneself after this does not make. What makes a good person is also caring about the people who care about you. McCandless clearly did not. He was a spoiled, neurotic rich brat who couldn't deal with the kind of modern family crisis that thousands of other kids manage to live with every day. He decided instead to abandon his family, and continue to abandon people who wanted to bring him into their families, in order to live out his wilderness fantasy. Had he even brought a goddamn map with him into the wilderness he would have lived. Instead, he died.

Christopher McCandless did not deserve to die. I feel bad for his family and for all the people who knew him. But he also does not deserve to be remembered by history. And he especially does not deserve to be heroically portrayed in books and on the big screen. Rather, his is a story of personal dysfunction, the search for false authenticity, and a fatal romanticization of wilderness. It is a cautionary tale, not a laudatory one.