I’m serious too when I say that settlers and their aggressive, destructive farming practices were main factors in the dust bowl.
They stripped the prairie by plowing deep, deep into the soil—destroying the deep roots of the prairie grasses and plants that hold onto moisture in the soil and hold it together even during a drought.
Those roots were so important:
They planted voracious plants by themselves acre upon acre—things like corn which is so destructive even here in the Great Lakes region we rotate our fields of corn with soybeans because the corn strips nitrogen and beans put it back.
The soil turned to dust. The plants were not there to hold the soil and hold the moisture. The droughts hit and that was that.
Settlers version of farming is DANGEROUS and harsh and requires so many chemicals—chemicals most white people will never have to worry about in their water
So yes. Fuck your fantasy. Grow some lettuce in a wheelbarrow, put some herbs on your window sill, and raise some backyard chickens instead lmfao.
And make connections with the Indigenous people on whose land you’re living! The people who know how to live on it sustainably, and from whom it’s been stolen. Work with them to restore what can be restored, and create what needs to be created anew. Make friends. Share food. Swap seeds. Support them in their struggles. Realize that the problem of a sustainable and liveable future won’t be solved until this one is.
You’re in this mess because Indigenous land was stolen, and Indigenous methods of living on it were compromised. Idyllic farm fantasies won’t change that.
^ grassroots are important ^
White people were so colossally ignorant that when it became apparent that the land was drying up and blowing away, our solution was to plow up more earth, all the esrth we could find, because we thought that the moisture released from the damp soil would encourage cloud formation. The theory was that “rain follows the plough.” We reacted to an ecological disaster by doubling down. Nobody believed it was happening or that it was that bad. It was a horrible time. Animals drowned, lungs and nostrils filled with dust. Nothing could live, barely even insects. It was BAD.
So like, if you’re assuming that we are going to react to current ecological crisis by just naturally coming to our senses and fixing it, you’re wrong.
We have to fight for it and force change. And I’m terrified.
Absolutely true. Luckily, research is being done on how to amend this and prevent it.
There are a number of Indigenous academics and scientists working on eco-diversity, sustainable farming, and conservation. Support their work! If you are bringing in a speaker on these topics, look to see if there are Indigenous peoples working in that field. We’ve got a twitter tag & a website you can use to look up Indigenous and other POC academics: #pocknowstuff.
Häxan will be released on Blu-ray on October 14 via The Criterion Collection. The 1922 Swedish-Danish silent film is presented as a documentary but contains nightmarish dramatizations worthy of a horror film.
Also known as Witchcraft Through the Ages, the film is written and directed by Benjamin Christensen (Seven Footprints to Satan). He also stars alongside Clara Pontoppidan, Oscar Stribolt, Astrid Holm, and Maren Pedersen.
Haxan has been digitally restored in 2K. The original Danish score, arranged by film music specialist Gillian
Anderson and performed by the Czech Film Orchestra in 2001, is presented in
5.0 surround DTS-HD Master Audio.
The film features with newly-translated English intertitles. Glyn Smith designed the cover art. Special features are listed below.
This is actually very on brand for trump and his supporters. Not sure why everyone is shocked.
PROTECT YOUR NEIGHBOR.
Rhetoric like this coming from authority always results in violence towards the vulnerable parties being attacked - it was true in the American Southeast in the 1830s, in California in the 1840s and 50s, in Germany in the 1930s and 40s and in Bosnia and Rwanda in the 1990s, and in a million other instances. It’s consistent and it’ll happen again if you don’t rise and fight.
If you are sincerely willing to show up for people and protect them when they call (and you have to ask yourself that ahead of time) - You got a local mosque? Go up there with a lil basket of treats and introduce yourself to the imam and let him know who you are and that you’re with them if there’s a physical confrontation. You got Spanish-speaking neighbors? Let them know you know what’s up and that you’re a safe space if shit hits the fan.
“The Hamlet-inspired plot is nearly identical to the original. …
The crucial difference is that, instead of the original’s gorgeous hand-drawn visuals, the new movie looks and feels like live-action, an illusion achieved through a sophisticated mix of digital imagery and virtual-reality techniques.
The result plays like a Hollywood blockbuster disguised as a National Geographic documentary, or perhaps the world’s most expensive safari-themed karaoke video. The movie feels both overwhelmed by its technical virtuosity and shackled by its fidelity to the source material.”
This blog is mostly so I can vent my feelings and share my interests. Other than that, I am nothing special.
If you don't like Left Wing political thought and philosophy, all things related to horror, the supernatural, the grotesque, guns or the strange, then get the fuck out. I just warned you.