IN A TIME OF UNIVERSAL DECEIT...TELLING THE TRUTH BECOMES A REVOLUTIONARY ACT

"Capitalism is the astounding belief that the most wicked of men will do the most wicked of things for the greatest good of everyone." John Maynard Keynes

" Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital; that, in fact, capital is the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital and deserves much the higher consideration" Abraham Lincoln

Sunday, November 30, 2008

ARCTIC CLIMATE CHANGE UPDATE, PART II


Winter in Fairbanks is a time of great peace and beauty. The Alaska Progressive Review's head office and research center is fortunate enough to be perched 500 feet atop the first ridge rising on the northern end of the broad valley of the middle reach of the Tanana River. Chena Ridge, it is called, and this is a typical view on an average mid-winter day, from just down the street. A view to the south over the broad valley which encompasses hundreds of miles, from the tip of Denali to the southwest, east 200 and more miles to the distant volcanoes of the Wrangell mountains.


Hard on days like that, often below 0F, to realize just what a predicament humanity is creating, with our carbon emissions from our fossil-fueled ways of living. Yet the signs are there, our declining Arctic summer sea ice, as you read last week, alpine glaciers in the tropics and mid-latitudes in fast recession world-wide (as we saw on Illimani, Bolivia), increasing droughts and wildfire acreages in many areas, and changing weather patterns. So, part II of our Arctic Climate Change Update, will focus on what we can do, on a large, governmental scale, and a small, personal one, to head off looming threats a warming World will deliver.

Yesterday was one of those magical days in Fairbanks when
the weather pattern changed from a milder south flow of Pacific air, to a westerly flow, which brings in our colder, Arctic air. We are blocked from northwest and north winds by hills and low mountains in those directions. When this change to colder air occurs, we usually get a few inches of much needed new snow, and a light west wind, gradually cooling. I was able to squeeze in 90 minutes of skate skiing on our University of Alaska trails during this transition, which had been hard-packed and icy before, fast and fun, but requiring focus and concentration, so as not to lose balance on bumps, etc.. But the day's new snow rendered the trails as smooth as goose down, so gliding around felt like sliding along on a down pillow, very forgiving, smooth, and almost effortless. Four-leggeds are not allowed on the ski trails though, even co-editors of prestigious journals, so Mattie had to wait for her run around campus after my skiing ended.

While we were on our campus circumnavigation last evening, enjoying the downy, light snowflakes brushing our faces in the light 0F headwind, and gazing at the rimed and snow-shrouded trees, I fell into thinking, will times like this be much less frequent 20 or 30 years from now? What will it even be like, it seems like things have changed so fast in my lifetime already. As an operational meteorologist in the western lower 48 states and Alaska, since 1986, I have personally seen many changes. Winter arctic air incursions into the northwestern states are much less frequent and weaker now, than they were 20 years ago. Summers have been much drier there, 1994 seemed especially to be a year of transition in the inter-mountain West to a new type of weather regime, with hotter drier summers, and longer, more severe wildfire seasons. Winter snowpacks have been skimpier most years since then as well, later to start and with earlier melt-offs, contributing to the drought and wildfire trends. The health of the forests in the Northern Rockies especially reflects this. Vast areas of this region in Idaho, Montana, and even south into Utah and Colorado have been decimated by insect pests such as pine beetles and spruce budworms that have weakened and killed large swaths of sensitive species. Insect pests that have wreaked havoc because winter temperatures are often no longer cold enough to kill over-wintering larvae, and then more of these pests are available to infest drought-weakened trees in the ensuing summer.

This really sank in to me during the fire seasons of 2003 and 2006, when
I worked in Idaho and Montana during those summers, forecasting weather for wildfire suppression teams. It was heart-breaking to me to see vast areas that I remembered as healthy, from the 1980s and early 1990s, with 30-50 percent stand mortality in many of the tree species there such as lodgepole pine, englemann spruce, and sub-alpine fir. Here in Alaska, a huge expanse of the boreal spruce forest on the Kenai peninsula was killed by a spruce budworm infestation in the 1990s, which also occurred in the Southern Yukon territory, to our east. This infestation and spruce mortality is moving north, and west, with each year, and last year, many people had budworm infestations on local trees here in Fairbanks. So, we will likely here, within 10 years or so, begin to see our spruce trees die off in the Interior of Alaska. Amongst other things.

Dr. James Hansen is a physics professor who
h
eads the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, Earth Sciences Division, in New York City, and also works at Columbia University in an adjunct position. He is credited with being one of the first broadly-respected and established scientists to raise the issue of global warming as a looming threat, in his speeches to Congressional committees in 1988. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Hansen. His latest research and opinions are even more sobering, and frankly, cause for occasional great pessimism in our darker moments, at the Alaska Progressive Review. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-james-hansen/twenty-years-later-tippin_b_108766.html. And the news just seems to be getting worse. http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2008/11/30-1. Times when we need to take a run/ski or wilderness break, to remember how fortunate we are to be here and refocus on the present moment.

But we do need to plan for the future. If, as Dr. Hansen and other researchers are
saying, is true, that our current atmospheric CO2 concentration of 385 ppm is unsafe, that we are heading to the tipping points mentioned earlier, and must get back to 350 ppm or less, then serious action is needed now. Since we are increasing each year 3-4 ppm, which is also expected to keep increasing, unless changes in global energy production use and generation methods occcur. His proposal for a non-regressive carbon tax, with proceeds used to fund research and manufacturing of alternative energy methods sounds to us like a great large-scale initiative, and one that could be emulated on a global, not just national, scale. Wouldn't it be nice, if our country could take the lead on this important issue, and be a global inspiration, as it was during the space race of the 1960s? Moratoriums on coal-fired power plants are very important as well, besides being one of the dirtiest, greatest contributors of national and global CO2 emmissions, the destruction of entire mountains in Appalachia http://www.ohvec.org/galleries/mountaintop_removal/007/ stands as a testiment to our short-sitedness as a country and culture. What will future generations think, 200 years hence, if they are here, when they gaze upon these areas? We don't really have the time to debate back and forth about what kind of things should be done, ACTION NEEDS TO BE TAKEN NOW, as researchers state. To prevent catastrophic sea level rises and worsening droughts. And on the upper end/worst case scenario, runaway greenhouse warming leading to mass extinctions.

I have many times read a marvelous book, written in 1974, by Ursula K. Leguin, an amazingly progressive and foresightful woman, called "The Dispossessed". Set on a moon, Annares, of a planet, Urras, in the Tau-Ceti star system, 11 light-years from Earth. Anarchists and socialists on Urras, which had a culture like the depression-era U.S., but more technically advanced, rebelled. They were able to colonize and develop their own socialistic-anarchistic culture on it's barely-inhabitable moon of Annares, so long as they kept mining and sending valuable minerals back to the home-planet. One of the many really interesting things in this book, was when the main character, a physicist who develops a theory of faster-than-light travel, meets the ambassador from Earth, taking refuge in the Terran embassy, since he is being pursued for his theory. He doesn't want the near-fascist states on the home planet to use it for their own profit. Only this Earth is as it is hundreds of years in our future. The Terran (Latin for Earth, commonly used in the sci-fi genre)
ambassador tells him that her (our) planet is a burnt out shell, mostly deserts. Runaway global warming decimated the planet and the human race, and the survivors live hard lives under totally regimented circumstances, the only way any kind of technical culture is able to continue. A different race, the Hainish, brought sub-light space-travel to Earth and the neighboring star systems and helped them (us). Remember, this was written in 1974, when very few people had ever even thought of global warming. One of my high-school english teachers in 1980 gave this book to me, and I've always been in awe of it's beauty and foresight. http://www.amazon.com/Dispossessed-Ursula-K-Guin/dp/0061054887/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1228117569&sr=1-1. Is this the kind of future we want, and which will occur, if nothing is done? So, for our large-scale efforts, the Alaska Progressive Review, supports and will work for large-scale solutions like those proposed by Dr. Hansen, and encourages everyone to do so as well. Pressure our/your politicians!

But what can and should we do on a personal scale? Ah...there is the dilemma, because what you are about to read, means significant changes to our current ways of living. Changes that even for us here at the A.P.R. will be difficult to implement and continue, but really MUST be done. There are three main categories, and we'll look at each one, and describe what we here at A.P.R. are or plan on doing in the near future. These categories are: 1. Food 2. Transportation 3. Domestic Energy Use

So, let's look at number 1, Food.

This is a picture of Amazonian rain forest in Peru being cleared for cattle grazing. A practice that has been accelerating over the past 25 years, not just in Central and South America, but in tropical areas of Asia and Africa as well. Why? Besides the critical problem of rising population (which also needs to be addressed, and is directly related to climate change), small-scale farmers and multi-national agribusiness conglomerates continue to clear and develop forested tropical areas to grow soy and grain for animal feed, as well as for grazing land. All so we can continue to have our $2.00 Whoppers and Big Macs. As you are probably are aware, the tropical rain forests are the "lungs" of the planet, exchanging vast amounts of CO2 and O2 on a daily and seasonal basis. Their conversion to grazing land exacts a terrible environmental cost, as the soils in these areas are easily eroded, with thin organic top layers. When this thin topsoil layer is lost, the strong tropical sun and hot climate bakes the remaining surface into a brick-like surface in which it becomes very difficult for new growth to resume. On a large scale, this accelarates surface warming and desertification, and if large enough, is another strong positive feedback in the global warming cycle. So, for this reason alone, we all need to consider cutting back on our meat consumption, or eliminate it entirely. Another disturbing aspect of large scale livestock production is this:
http://www.grist.org/news/daily/2006/12/01/6/index.html.
It is a tremendous contributor of greenhouse gas emissions.In addition, it has been calculated that to provide all the people on Earth a diet similar to that we in this country or Europe enjoy, would be beyond the resources available. How sane or just is that, that others must go without, so we can enjoy whatever kinds of foods we want?

Another consideration in our diets, is transportation effects. Think of the environmental effects and use of resources that goes into hauling grapes from Chile to Europe, or North America. Even
worse, many fish processors ship salmon caught off Alaska and Canada to China for processing, then back to be sold! If that is not a testament to the insanity and unsustainability of our current socio-economic system, I don't know what is! So, when considering our food choices in a sustainable light, and to help mitigate climate change, go local! Farmers markets, local food co-ops (if you're lucky enough to have one!), and natural food stores are the way to go for that. Look at the labels of your food and produce, choose those that are closest to your area, and organic, if possible, since no fossil-fuel based fertilizers and pesticides will have been used in their production.


So what are we doing here at the Alaska Progressive Review? Well, we've eliminated red meat entirely from our diets, though Mattie has had a few beef steaks for very special occasions. Such as birthdays and after running off threatening bull caribou. We eat sustainable Alaska salmon and halibut, but not every day, and very limited amounts of poultry. We buy locally produced eggs from free-range chickens, when possible. The hardest part is reducing our dairy intake, which is just as harmful as red-meat consumption. But we do love our cheese, butter, and ice cream. We have eliminated ice cream though as an un-necessary luxury, and gone over to soy and rice-based desserts, and are searching for an ideal cheese substitute. Milk was easy to eliminate, plenty of soy, rice, and nut-based alternatives there. So are we saying everyone should live a Vegan (non-animal based diet) lifestyle? No, we realize that requires large sacrifices in time and consideration, to live that way, though if more people did, it would be very beneficial on all scales. And we at A.P.R. are not living that way entirely either. If you really feel the requirement for meat in your diets, by all means try and go organic/free range, poultry if possible, and if you are fortunate enough to live in an area that permits, consider subsistence hunting/fishing. Of course, those of us here in Alaska are fortunate enough to be able to do that.

Category 2, Transportation:


Here is one of the latest new passenger jetliners, the Boeing 777 Dreamliner. Using lighter carbon-composite airframe technology, and the most fuel-efficient engines available. One of the most technically advanced jetliners in the World. Unfortunately, jet travel greenhouse gas emissions have increased 83% since 1990, and are forecast to continue that trend, barring unforeseen circumstances, over the next 30 years. Jets to do not just emit CO2 in their exhaust, but also nitrogen oxides (NOx), which are many times more potent of a greenhouse gas, as well as the ice-crystal contrails, which help trap surface heat in. In fact, when the U.S. airspace was shut down on 9/11, 12, and 13, 2001, the effect was noticeable in the temperature record!




The graph to the right shows Carbon emissions per passenger kilometer of travel. Note how aviation fits in to the spectrum there, with short-haul being the most damaging. But, in the fine print for this image, from this report,




http://www.davidsuzuki.org/Climate_Change/What_You_Can_Do/air_travel.asp, upper-air effects of emissions are not shown. If they were, the aviation emissions would be 2.7 times greater! There are research initiatives underway to develop alternatives to kerosene jet fuel, using plant and algae-based material. If this can be done in a way without affecting food supplies, this would be of great benefit. However, there still would be the damaging nitrogen oxide emissions and contrail formation effects. So, what should we do? The article above, describes some useful things. What are we here at the A.P.R. doing? Well, although we love to travel, realizing the effects, we are cutting back. Living in Alaska is especially difficult in that regard, since our family/relatives are in the lower 48, and driving there is so time-consuming. So, we now limit our personal jet travel to one trip per year, combining trips to other countries with that to see family. In addition, if possible, we try and perform some socially useful purpose in doing so, such as information exchanges, or visits to progressive/sustainable research facilities. It sometimes happens in my other career that I have to fly to distant areas, and mixed feelings about this occur, but these trips are usually to provide useful services. Since we here at A.P.R. strive to develop and share ideas about sustainable and "greener" ways and methods of living, how about this? Why can't we in America develop high-speed electric rail networks between our cities, and eventually, even to Alaska? Wouldn't it be wonderful to be able to get on a high-speed 200 mph electric train to the lower 48? One that would have tunnels underneath wildlife corridors, to mitigate effects on their travel and habitat. We need to envision things like this to make them happen.

How about local car traveling? Obviously we all need to have more fuel-efficient vehicles, drive less and use mass transit more, if available. But throwing aside our current vehicles for newer ones isn't all that helpful, since the manufacturing and distribution of them exacts a high cost. So, use your current one as little as possible, and when it is time for a newer one, buy used high-efficiency if possible. Our current A.P.R. 2006 Ford Escape with the more efficient 2.3L 4 cylinder engine may last us until 2012 or so, in which case we hope a plug-in hybrid with similar 4WD capabilities will be available. If walking/biking, or mass transit is not an option for many of your in-town trips, consider getting or transforming a bike into an electric cycle. We are going to purchase a bike electrification kit here at A.P.R. soon, for about 450.00. It is a nickel-metal-hydride battery (hopefully soon more efficient lithium-ion batteries will be available) powered front-wheel motor that you just replace the current front wheel with. So you can still pedal it when you want. It is advertised as giving 30 miles per charge, at 20 mph. http://www.werelectrified.com/index.php#overview
We envision this as viable for almost all in-town trips, to work, stores, etc.. Even in our cold winters, with studded tires, traction concerns are not an issue.

Category 3. Domestic Energy Use

Probably the easiest way to effect changes in our current ways of living, to ease our effects on the global climate system and resource depletion. If you are going to build a new house, find a builder who uses green methods and recycled materials. Use a design that will incorporate things like passive solar heating, partial wall burial for insulation, ultra-efficient heating methods, energy/water-efficient appliances, and green landscaping methods for shading, if you live in a warmer environment. For those in established residences, when the time comes for newer appliances and lighting, there are many new high-efficiency alternatives now. Compact Fluorescent Lightbulbs (CFL) should always be used in every fixture. Although they do contain mercury unfortunately, they are 3-4 times more efficient than the old incandescent bulbs. LED bulbs are being developed that are even more efficient, but these are a few more years from mass production. Turn off all appliances when not in use, computers, stereos, etc.. It's amazing when calculated, how much energy is wasted by keeping computers and other electronics on, even in a standby mode. Lower your thermostats if at all possible, and use electronic, programmable ones, as they will increase the efficiency of your heating/cooling systems. We here at A.P.R. do all of these things.

If you live in an area where wood-burning is possible for heating, use this as much as you can. At least the CO2 from burning of wood, a renewable resource, will be offset by the growth of new trees that replace the ones harvested. Here in Fairbanks, we have some of the strongest winter temperature inversions in the World. That is, colder air, in still calm weather patterns, settles in the valleys, with warmer air above, keeping a lid on mixing and dispersion of pollutants. When heating oil prices shot up last year, thousands of people in this area began more wood-burning. The result has been a great increase in fine-particulate pollution over our Middle Tanana Valley, which Fairbanks is nestled in, often to unhealthy levels during strong inversion periods. So, while we at A.P.R. try and use our woodstove as often as possible, to use less heating oil, during strong inversion episodes, we voluntarily cut back on this, to limit our contribution to the unhealthy fine particulate loading. Which affects small children, the elderly, and anyone with respiratory problems the greatest. If you live in an area like this, keep that in mind.

This link, http://www.nrdc.org/greenliving/, from one of A.P.R.'s favorite organizations, gives very useful tips, and is highly recommended.

So, to sum this all up, remember, we as a society and a race, don't have the time to continue waffling and deciding if or what should be done to limit greenhouse gas emissions. Action is necessary now. The last eight years in this country especially, have been a global setback, and we need to make up for it. Please think about the way we live, and what can be done, and share that information as much as possible. Future generations are relying on us.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

ARCTIC CLIMATE CHANGE UPDATE

This week the Alaska Progressive Review feels a review of the status of the global climate system and human-caused climate change ("fouling of the nest") is needed. Because A.P.R. has been so focused on important fast-breaking political issues, we've neglected one of the MOST pressing issues facing the EARTH, and the HUMAN RACE, that will take global solutions, changes in lifestyle, and collaboration, by all of us, to mitigate. Next week the A.P.R. will offer up it's views on current initiatives by private people, researchers, and major environmental groups we support, to find ways of living that are less damaging, and more sustainable, in an effort to tackle the climate-change problem.

Alaska is on the forefront of global focus in man-made climate change, because effects of it are quite marked and more rapid in the Arctic and sub-arctic latitudes (55N-90N). Particularly from Central Siberia, east through Alaska, Yukon and the Northwest territories, almost to Nunavut. These areas have seen the greatest climatic instability caused by the increase in summer and winter temperatures; melting of permafrost (which releases yet more carbon dioxide and methane, positive feedbacks), earlier springs, increased summer wildfire acreages (another positive feedback mechanism, releasing vast amounts of CO2 from the burned vegetation and soil) some years, and floods in others.

Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute, at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Many researchers on the global forefront of climate change, also work there, some of whom I've had the honor to work and consult with about my thesis research project. Ned writes articles about all aspects of science, which you can read about in http://www.gi.alaska.edu/ScienceForum. It has articles archived back for many years, about alot of interesting subjects. He also writes regularly for Alaska Magazine, and has written several interesting books. http://www.amazon.com/Alaska-Tracks-Footprints-Country-Ambler/dp/1438232233/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1227654610&sr=1-1
Ned is also one of the best cross-country skiers in Fairbanks, a subject of great interest to the Alaska Progressive Review, and an inspiration. Because that wonderful form of exercise that enables one to use the whole body to propel it vast distances across the 6-7 month frozen landscape comes from our favorite Progressive nations of Norway, Sweden, and Finland. Socially-evolved and focused democracies. Ned's article describes the record-breaking low Arctic Ocean ice cover extent that occurred in summer, 2007.

After this article, we'll provide a current update of the Arctic Ice state, in 2008, along with a little discussion of the 4th U.N. International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, the state of the science analysis of the past/current climate, and projected future climate based on expected emissions scenarios.

Alaska Science Forum December 12, 2007
Northern sea ice takes a big hit in 2007
Article #1885
by Ned Rozell
This column is provided as a public service by the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, in cooperation with the UAF research community.
Ned Rozell is a science writer at the institute.

SAN FRANCISCO—For the past few years, vanishing northern sea ice has been a theme of many talks and posters here at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union, which draws about 15,000 scientists to the Moscone Center during the weeklong conference. At a press conference here on Wednesday, Dec. 12, 2007, scientists revealed that the ice on top of the northernmost ocean took a punch in the summer of 2007 that might be a knockout blow.
In 1980, the dense ice that floats on the Arctic Ocean like a large, moving jigsaw puzzle took up about the same area as the entire Lower 48 states; in September 2007, it was about as big as the U.S. east of the Mississippi River, said Don Perovich of the U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory in New Hampshire. The ice loss in 2007, 23 percent greater than the previous record in 2005, has some scientists here predicting that the northern sea ice will vanish in summer as soon as five years from now. Perovich agreed that one of the greatest environmental changes people have ever seen might be close at hand.


Sea Ice off Gambell, Alaska. Photo by Ned Rozelle

“I used to say that sometime in my children’s lifetimes (sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean would disappear for half the year), but now I might see it,” said Perovich, who is in his 50s. John Walsh of the International Arctic Research Center in Fairbanks was, along with Perovich, one of four scientists facing reporters from all over the world on Wednesday morning. Walsh spoke of how warmer water from the Atlantic has been entering the Arctic Ocean. “We’re really moving into record territory in the last four or five years,” Walsh said, citing the work of IARC’s Igor Polyakov, who coordinates an annual scientific cruise in the Arctic Ocean. While surprisingly warm water from the Atlantic is entering the Arctic Ocean—which probably adds to the loss of sea ice by melting it from beneath—unusually warm water from the Pacific is also invading the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait, said Mike Steele of the University of Washington. “In 2007, north of Alaska and eastern Siberia, the Arctic Ocean was 3.5 degrees Celsius warmer than the historical average and 1.5 degrees warmer than the historical maximum,” Steele said, adding that waters off Alaska were especially warm. “The Bering Strait and Chukchi Sea are warming most.”

Because ice reflects about 85 percent of the sun’s radiation and open water only reflects 7 percent, 2007’s low ice led to the ocean absorbing much more of the sun’s heat. Perovich calculated that the Arctic Ocean in September 2007 absorbed 300 percent more solar energy than it did in 1980. He said that the sun was the real culprit in the loss of sea ice this year, and that the warm pulses of Atlantic and Pacific water also eroded the ice pack.
Perovich and his colleagues monitored a piece of sea ice off Alaska’s coast on the Beaufort Sea this year, finding it was almost 11 feet thick in June but shrunk to less than two feet thick by September. Ice seems to be at least three feet thinner than normal almost everywhere scientists have measured it.


“That missing meter of ice means the ice is more vulnerable,” Steele said.
The loss of ice in the summer will happen soon unless things change drastically, the scientists said. “As you go further down this path, it’s harder to get back,” Perovich said. “It’s the fourth quarter now, and we’re down two touchdowns.”


For all the dire predictions that would spell the doom of the polar bear and other creatures that depend on sea ice, the sea ice could still bounce back, Steele said.“Ice grows quickly when the air is really cold,” he said. “A recipe to bring the ice back is a few cold winters in a row.”

Smoke from the Boundary Fire, along the Chatanika River, 40 miles northeast of Fairbanks, June, 2004, 10 days before it became a conflagration, and was pushed toward Fairbanks. Photo by Michael Richmond.

The Boundary Fire, 500,000 acres and one month later, July, 2004. Photo by Dave Dallison. Fire Behavior analyst, Rocky Mountain Interagency Type I Suppression Team.

ARCTIC SEA ICE UPDATE 2008
Arctic sea ice extent during the 2008 melt season dropped to the second-lowest level since satellite measurements began in 1979, reaching the lowest point in its annual cycle of melt and growth on September 14, 2008. Average sea ice extent over the month of September, a standard measure in the scientific study of Arctic sea ice, was 4.67 million square kilometers (1.80 million square miles) (Figure 1). The record monthly low, set in 2007, was 4.28 million square kilometers (1.65 million square miles); the now-third-lowest monthly value, set in 2005, was 5.57 million square kilometers (2.15 million square miles).
The 2008 season strongly reinforces the thirty-year downward trend in Arctic ice extent. The 2008 September low was 34% below the long-term average from 1979 to 2000 and only 9% greater than the 2007 record (
Figure 2). Because the 2008 low was so far below the September average, the negative trend in September extent has been pulled downward, from –10.7 % per decade to –11.7 % per decade (Figure 3).
NSIDC Senior Scientist Mark Serreze said, “When you look at the sharp decline that we’ve seen over the past thirty years, a ‘recovery’ from lowest to second lowest is no recovery at all. Both within and beyond the Arctic, the implications of the decline are enormous.”


That was the latest from the National Sea and Ice Data Center, in Boulder, CO
"Our supporters fund data management and scientific research at the project level. For example, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) supports the NSIDC Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC) and funds the production and distribution of remote-sensing data sets. The National Science Foundation (NSF) provides data management for scientists doing polar research. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) provides support for management of NOAA data sets at NSIDC and has funded many of the center's data-rescue activities. NASA, NOAA and NSF, as well as additional sources of funding, support NSIDC scientists and outreach activities through competitive grants and contracts NSIDC is part of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The University and CIRES provide a collaborative environment and support for our research."
This institude, funded and staffed by U.S. government agencies and universities, is THE source for accurate, state of the science ice data and trends.

So what are the effects and implications of reduced Arctic sea ice? Less summer ice allows a greater expanse of the Arctic ocean to absorb solar radiation. Water with it's much greater heat capacity than air, absorbs a vast amount more of heat, which is then transported around the basin, helping melt more ice, etc... Which is another positive feedback. This then causes more warming, longer, warmer Arctic summers with greater fire acreages, increased thunderstorm activity (because of a deeper troposphere in the warm season) to start the fires, warmer springs that end earlier, etc..

It has been found that in the shallower depths of the Arctic Ocean basin, along the continental shelves, are vast deposits of frozen methane. Methane that if allowed to melt by warmer water, would be released into the atmosphere, and could, if unchecked, lead to rapid and lethal global warming of average temperatures to as high as 140F! Temperatures which were reached 200+ million years ago, during the "End-Permian Exctinction", in which 95 percent of the species in the fossil record, disappeared. http://www.amazon.com/When-Life-Nearly-Died-Extinction/dp/050005116X
Methane is over 20 times more efficient in warming the atmosphere than carbon dioxide, and there are already disturbing reports of higher atmospheric methane levels in the Arctic ocean north of Siberia.
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/climate-change/exclusive-the-methane-time-bomb-938932.html
The End-Permian extinction is thought to have been triggered by a global average temperature rise of 10C, caused by massive volcanism in Siberia, which released vast amounts of CO2, causing it. The 10C warming caused the frozen Arctic methane deposits to melt, in a giant methane "burp" which triggered the catastrophic runaway warming, causing the 95 percent species mortality. This 10C warming is on the very upper-end of climate change modeling scenarios results for the planet 60-80 years hence. A disturbing picture to be sure.

Climate-change sceptics have tried to sow confusion and doubt about the veracity and scientific robustness of the latest research. Many of these sceptics have ties to the fossil-fuel industries, which is not surprising. However, if we are to accept that science describes aspects of our physical reality, and use the technology that it has brought, electricity, modern transportation, medicine, etc... then we cannot ignore these reports. To do so would be to deny that science as we know it is valid, and would be very hypocritical. The U.N. International Panel for Climate Change (IPCC), a global consortium of climate-change researchers investigating all aspects of the Earth's climate system, have issued four assessment reports, the latest in 2007. This link is a good summary of the findings from it. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPCC_Fourth_Assessment_Report
If you want to read the actual report, here is a link to a .pdf version of it:
http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/syr/ar4_syr.pdf
There really isn't any doubt among the scientific community about human-caused global warming, the questions now are, how much warming will occur, what will the effects be on regional scales, and what can be done to help mitigate, if possible, these changes. The movie that ex-Vice President Al Gore produced, "An Inconvenient Truth" was also a good depiction of the problems we face. Every researcher I've talked with agreed that the movie was accurate and reflected the state of current knowledge about the problem. There are still alot of unknowns concerning feedbacks and interaction processes between the atmosphere, oceans, cryosphere (ice cover), and biosphere, which are the subject of research by thousands of scientists, world-wide. What is most disturbing, is that the pace of changes we have seen, for instance, in retreat of Arctic ice cover, has been far faster than climate change modeling predicted. James Hansen, a climate change researcher who works for NASA, has stated that a 2-3C increase in global temperatures caused ice sheet melting in Greenland and the southern edge of Antarctica 3.5 million years ago which raised sea levels 25 meters in a very short time, a few decades, not centuries. That the response of the climate system was non-linear, with a "tipping point", beyond which there was no way to stop it. The current atmospheric CO2 concentration of 385 parts per million (ppm), is increasing 3-4 ppm annually and Hansen has estimated that a concentration approaching 450 ppm, which is now less than 20 years away, would bring the tipping-point warming of 2-3C, and lead to the rapid ice-sheet melting and sea level rise. Given the fact that changes are already occurring faster than models have suggested, it would seem prudent that a concentrated global fast-track effort needs to be done, to prevent catastrophic changes. http://www.commondreams.org/view/2008/11/25-1 . This latest article, by George Monbiot, a British environmental writer, for their Guardian newspaper, is a good resource, and is heartily endorsed by the A.P.R.

In the face of this mounting threat of catastrophic warming and climatic disruption, what can and should individuals do, to try and prevent its occurrence? That will be the subject of next week's writing, in your Alaska Progressive Review.

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Spare Change or No Change At All

NOTE: This is the first article by a guest writer. A retired professor, Steve Conn worked in the Univ. of Alaska Anchorage, in the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER) in the 1970s. He also headed the Alaska Public Interest Research Group, in Anchorage, for more than 10 years. Many of the articles he writes end up on my favorite news-site, counterpunch.org. Thanks Steve... eds..

by Steve Conn

Change? The corporate crooks keep getting billions of our money and we get what? Maybe, spare change, if there is any left. “Change,” as in changing a new-born’s diapers. Or, for you Graying Panthers, changing your Depends. “Change”. It does depend on how much change you want. Will a new smile do? We won’t have to look at that smug Bush’s face. We get a radiant smile from President-elect Obama. Like Eisenhower’s Smile. That’s a change. A small change. My first, active Presidential campaign was for Ike because the Republican headquarters was on the way to my bus stop when I left Hebrew school. I was in the fifth grade in 1952 at George Wythe Elementary School in Hampton and the smart guys at the Eisenhower headquarters in Newport News gave me a huge poster of a smiling Ike, much bigger than the one of Stevenson. Eisenhower had an Obama Smile. Stevenson had the smug smile of an unapproachable know-it-all who had better things to do than campaign. My poster was billboard size, but the Republicans in Virginia couldn’t afford a billboard in those days, so they gave it to me.

In those days, Virginia Republicans were like the Greens, the Party of Lincoln in theSegregated South, where they still sold school kids real Confererate money at the Jeff Davis’s old home in Richmond and the American Civil War was still taught as “the War Between the States.” I wonder how I got that poster home on the city bus from Newport News to Hampton? Did I sit way in the back of the bus with the Blacks, just me and my poster? My fifth grade teacher, Miss Clemons, let us hang our posters of Ike and Stevenson in front of our classroom over the blackboards. Eisenhower’s was huge and dragged down to the floor in folds. We had an entire elementary school march around the playground with our posters and- guess what? - Eisenhower won! A grassroots experiment in Democracy that predicted a Presidential upset in Virginia. “I like Ike” was the greatest political slogan of the Twentieth Century. I recently heard someone try to explain “Two Chickens in Every Pot.” “I like Ike” was easy to connect to that big round, beaming white face. It fit right in with early TV ads toothpaste ads like Bucky Beaver and New Ipana Toothpaste. My infatuation with Eisenhower ended the day I heard him lie. Time had passed andI was in the National Guard Armory in Washington, D.C. in 1960 as Virginia state winner in the Hire the Handicapped essay contest along with the other state winners and the scowling young man who won from the territory of Puerto Rico. Maybe he had been brought up by parents who told him about Puerto Ricans shooting up the American Congress to demand their freedom or maybe he knew what colonialism was really like. I knew about Virginia’s Royal colonial status and had even played Baron de Botetourt (1768-1770) in a May Day celebration. I knew about all the Royal Governors because I lived right down the road from Colonial Williamsburg where that era was idealized. We were taught that being Rebels against the Crown had been a good thing and being Rebels in the war against the states had been good. But we were hazy on the details of Colonialism. Slavery wasn’t mentioned. That Puerto Rican kid wasn’t hazy. His look would have kept him far away from President Obama, but this was less than three years before Kennedy was assassinated by Oswald. In cultural terms, it seems like a lifetime. So there we were in the National Guard Armory. We had just met George Meany, who came across as a grandfatherly type and whose office had at a dynamite view of either the White House or the Capitol, I don’t remember which. The AFL-CIO had sponsored the essay contest about Hiring the Handicapped. Down in Virginia, Right to Work, Right to Starve, still held the day. At the Newport News Ship Building and Dry Dock Company- the “shipyard.” created on the James River, along with Newport News by Robber Baron Collis Huntington, to export West Virginia coal to Europe and build war ships, majestic liners and merchant ships, real unionization was always put down. A company union held sway and a choir of black workers would sing sweet nothings to the workers when organizing efforts were tried against the company union. Blacks and white were pitted against each other and the company won.

Back to the Armory. So we state winners were clustered around Ike. He is wearing thick pancake make-up, the first time I saw a man looking like that, I later told my mom. The girls in the group are swooning over this old guy. He could have had them all right then under a tank. Trust me, I have a photo of this and if you saw it, you would know I’m not lying. Power is an aphrodisiac. So the reporters’ crowd up to him and one of them says, “The Russians say they have shot down an American spy plane?” And Ike says, “ It’s not true. It’s a lie.” As we now know, it was true. Francis Gary Powers, (later a Los Angles weatherman, killed when his helicopter went down), was brought into open kangaroo court in Moscow. Ike didn’t know Powers was alive. Powers had decided that it was better to live another day, then to die for Ike and his smile. Now that wasn’t a bad way to learn that President with radiant smiles will lie like dogs. President Obama smiles and offers change, but not prosecution of people who set up America’s torture program. Yes, change, but just a kiss and hug for that old rascal Lieberman who nearly was Vice President back in 2000 and who campaigned with Palin and McCain. Yes, change, like Hillary Clinton, whose husband, Bill, now sells himself like Elvis on the world market, a President transformed into a vacuum cleaner for sucking up foreign money. Well, he had to find a new job. Habitat for Humanity already had a former President. If Clinton was our first Black president, Obama could end up as the First Black Clinton. His big donors and bundlers are already getting big jobs. What else is new? “Change”? I’m using my mutual fund reports as fire starters to keep my house in Point Roberts warm instead of reading them. That Eisenhower poster would have done fine as a fire starter, but it’s gone. All that’s different is the smiler. We’re all waiting for spare change from the next Agent of Change, listening to the rationalizations about why change has to be dependent on a thousand other variables out of the Change Man’s control before he gives us whatever is left. If you pay in a political campaign, you play. Otherwise. It’s going to be small change, for you, if that. Why else are Big Auto and the UAW being raked over the coals when it bellies up for its share of the corporate bailout? When Big Auto was a serious player in the big money political game, it got what it wanted from Clinton and Gore (the Nobel Prize winning environmentalist), emission standards you could drive a light truck or SUV through. But now the Financial Industry, linked to Big Media- as Big Auto used to be- gets billions without strings. The ratio of political donations during the Presidential campaign from the financial to transportation sectors ran 33:1 for Obama and 13:1 for McCain, according to Opensecrets.org. Where political contributions are concerned, Big Auto is so yesterday. That’s why Big Auto’s bailout requests get all the hard questions left out in the mega bailout of the banks. But don’t smirk. You’re not at the table. You’re not even under it. You're just getting smiled at from the podium.

Want your Spare Change? Demand it now, before the inauguration Get a single payer health care program by demanding it as a component of every single corporate bailout by the political donation whores who say they want to help you, for you and yours and for the auto worker with his family, and even the auto executive and his even though he really is happy with what he will keep, whether the bail out happens or not. Tie single payer to every tax dollar siphoned away. Subsidize the corporations and the rest of us in one big plan. Include the employees of health insurance companies when they lose their jobs. Let’s catch up with the rest of the world and make our companies competitive. How radical is that? If spare change is left as an after thought, believe me, if will remain an afterthought. Obama’s radiant smile won’t get your family though your wife’s next stroke. The French said it first- “The more things change, the more things remain the same”.I don’t speak French, but, even in English, it rings true. Go for Space Change or get none at all. P.S. If you can find a way to use Dick Cavett’s snippy attacks on Palin’s use of the language, let me know. I can’t burn it or eat it and Palin didn’t steal a dime of my retirement money from me. Some of his amused New York friends did. Cavett can get back to joking about “the help.” Palin’s crime was her complete inability to ask Joe Biden a single, probative question about his patrons in the credit card industry or his bankruptcy deforms. Palin has a great smile. So does Dick. But smiles make lousy umbrellas on rainy days no matter what the song says. And it’s raining. steveconn@hotmail.com

Friday, November 14, 2008

HOW BROAD IS YOUR SOCIAL CONSCIENCE?

What is a social conscience? I couldn't actually find a good simple explanation, when I googled on it the other day. But what I take it to be, and I think alot of others too, is that part of us that feels empathy and concern for other groups and kinds of people. Not just our family, relatives, church-members, business associates, etc. but complete strangers with different ways of life and belief systems.

It seems like the last eight years, but even more than that, since the late 1970s to early 1980s, this country has been ruled by people with very narrow social consciences. Which is why we see the economic meltdown, two wars of occupation in middle-eastern countries which will go the way that all imperial adventures in that region have in recorded history, and a very polarized election and nation at large.

For me, mine was shaped growing up in San Diego, CA in the 1970s, 15 miles from the border. Since my Mom liked latin cultures and spoke Spanish fluently, as children my siblings and I visited Tijuana and adjacent parts of Baja California frequently. I never could understand the frightening poverty there, and the difference just that line we crossed made. My parents tried to explain as best they could, but it made me realize that things were not all Happy Days and Fantasy Island out there, even just 15 miles away. We could see Tijuana from most of my schoolyards, in the far distance, and it's pall of air pollution especially. That always made me remember what things were really like there. My social conscience was further broadened by having friends of all races and cultures in high school and college, and by being in an inter-racial relationship several years ago, where I witnessed first-hand actual racism, that I had only in the past related to distantly.

This is why I am a "One-Worlder" as a conservative man called me disparagingly several years ago. I just happen to believe that all people, cultures, and countries, deserve to be able to create their own destinies, and live the way they prefer, so long as they aren't hurting other people, cultures, or countries. And that no one country, group, or belief system has a monopoly on spiritual truth at the expense of others, and hence all are in the greater sense, equal. I grew up on science fiction, in books and the usual t.v. shows and movies. One nice thing about most sci-fi, in these books and t.v. shows, is that in the future, it showed the human race in space, as a race, with all groups and cultures. Major problems like poverty and war were solved, and there was some form of effective world government. I've taken that to heart, and hope I will see that in my lifetime, wouldn't you?

All that said, The Alaska Progressive Review supports the historical election of the multi-racial man named Barack Obama as the president of the U.S. Granted, our staff voted for Nader, as we wanted our change faster, nonetheless, this does at least provide some hope for the future. Mainly because we see this man as having to have a much broader social conscience, than that ever seen in a U.S. President. Why? Because he spent time as a child in a third-world country, Indonesia, and got to see the poverty and political repression at the time there. And, as a non-white man, I guarantee you he has experienced direct racism in some form or other, in his lifetime. These two things would certainly pre-dispose him to think about the global political situation in broader terms, and to see the disasters that have befallen this country in the last 8 years as the result of a culture in power that has no empathy for others outside of a very narrow range. I give you this disturbing story from last year, http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/interviews/049, see what you think.

However, before we get too excited, it's time to send a little hard rain down on the parade. One of my favorite writers, usually on a very good website, http://www.counterpunch.org/, is Paul Craig Roberts. He was the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during the Reagan Administration, who has since changed his views on many things, and is very outspoken. This article he wrote sums things up pretty well, http://counterpunch.org/roberts11102008.html. We need to remember, Obama's senate record was hardly all that liberal, and he received an unprecedented sum of campaign contributions from all the major corporate and Wall Street players. These power sources are not going to let him go astray very far from the current sorry picture of national and global political reality.

To get away from this stress of the rapidly-changing national and global socio-political situation, the staff needed to take a ski break. One of the things cross-country skiers here in Interior Alaska like to do, is go on outings of a day or two, or longer, on winter trails that have cabins to stay in at night. The White Mountains, about 40 miles northeast of Fairbanks beckoned. The BLM here manages a trail system with cabins there, that you can rent out for 25.00 a night (My God, that sounds like socialism, privatize that quick!) My plan was to skate ski in 20 miles to a cabin on Beaver Creek, the Borealis-LeFevre cabin. But skate skiing is highly reliant on temperature, since you are using your skis as flat gliding sources, if you don't have the glide, it sucks. When the temperature gets below zero it's much slower, and below -10F, forget it, no wax works well. It had cleared out the night previous, so the valleys were about -15F, but the higher terrain, about +10. I set out hoping for the best, but as soon as I got 8 miles out and started descending into a large broad valley, reality set in. Skating another 12 miles out with 35 lbs. on at -15F on the narrow bumpy trail (there was only about 8" or so of snow on the ground so far) was going to suck bad. And then the next morning it would probably be even colder, so getting back out would be worse. So, we went back to Lee's cabin, just seven miles in, and hoped someone hadn't already reserved it. I got there in early afternoon, it was about zero there, a little above the valley. After exploring a little more, I had to spend 2 hours cutting and sectioning three small black spruce trees with a little handsaw for firewood, there was hardly any left there.

I got a meager fire started, since the wood wasn't fully cured, then a couple smokejumpers I knew from Alaska Fire Service showed up. Neat seeing them, but I had to go, so we just skated back to the car. There were a few other cabins within another 6-8 miles, but it was already 4pm, and getting colder, so we just headed back to the car and town. I didn't bring my winter tent, so wasn't planning on sleeping out. A good workout nonetheless, and much-needed.

This is what the White Mountains look like, in the distance from the trail. They are only 3500-5000 feet high, but since our timberline this far north is just 3000 ft., they seem higher.
While skiing back to the car, I remembered reading a speech MLK gave back in 1967, just a year ago to the day before his assasination. It was the one where he first publicly came out against the Vietnam War, our society's runaway militarism, and it's effect on poverty.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/058.html This speech sealed his fate, and he knew it, that he had crossed the line. He said several times he was expecting to die soon during that year after the speech. Here are the parts I find truly profound, and unfortunately, more than ever a reality.

"In 1957 a sensitive American official overseas said that it seemed to him that our nation was on the wrong side of a world revolution. During the past ten years we have seen emerge a pattern of suppression which now has justified the presence of U.S. military "advisors" in Venezuela. This need to maintain social stability for our investments accounts for the counter-revolutionary action of American forces in Guatemala. It tells why American helicopters are being used against guerrillas in Colombia and why American napalm and green beret forces have already been active against rebels in Peru. It is with such activity in mind that the words of the late John F. Kennedy come back to haunt us. Five years ago he said, "Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable."
Increasingly, by choice or by accident, this is the role our nation has taken -- the role of those who make peaceful revolution impossible by refusing to give up the privileges and the pleasures that come from the immense profits of overseas investment.
I am convinced that if we are to get on the right side of the world revolution, we as a nation must undergo a radical revolution of values. We must rapidly begin the shift from a "thing-oriented" society to a "person-oriented" society. When machines and computers, profit motives and property rights are considered more important than people, the giant triplets of racism, materialism, and militarism are incapable of being conquered.
A true revolution of values will soon cause us to question the fairness and justice of many of our past and present policies. On the one hand we are called to play the good Samaritan on life's roadside; but that will be only an initial act. One day we must come to see that the whole Jericho road must be transformed so that men and women will not be constantly beaten and robbed as they make their journey on life's highway. True compassion is more than flinging a coin to a beggar; it is not haphazard and superficial. It comes to see that an edifice which produces beggars needs restructuring. A true revolution of values will soon look uneasily on the glaring contrast of poverty and wealth. With righteous indignation, it will look across the seas and see individual capitalists of the West investing huge sums of money in Asia, Africa and South America, only to take the profits out with no concern for the social betterment of the countries, and say: "This is not just." It will look at our alliance with the landed gentry of Latin America and say: "This is not just." The Western arrogance of feeling that it has everything to teach others and nothing to learn from them is not just. A true revolution of values will lay hands on the world order and say of war: "This way of settling differences is not just." This business of burning human beings with napalm, of filling our nation's homes with orphans and widows, of injecting poisonous drugs of hate into veins of people normally humane, of sending men home from dark and bloody battlefields physically handicapped and psychologically deranged, cannot be reconciled with wisdom, justice and love. A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death. America, the richest and most powerful nation in the world, can well lead the way in this revolution of values. There is nothing, except a tragic death wish, to prevent us from reordering our priorities, so that the pursuit of peace will take precedence over the pursuit of war. There is nothing to keep us from molding a recalcitrant status quo with bruised hands until we have fashioned it into a brotherhood."

Do you think Obama has read this speech? I'm willing to bet he has. Our task is to remind him of this. He has actually said nothing new will happen, unless he receives pressure. FDR said the same thing in the early 1930s, before waves of violent strikes and the threat of socialism and communism making inroads, forced him to take action. It's up to progressive people to come forward and be outspoken, because time after time, polls show that a large majority of Americans favors progressive ideas, like universal health care, an end to the Iraq War/Occupation, and more help for the people swindled by unscrupulous and predatory lenders, instead of helping those self-same lenders.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Peru


Many friends and relatives expressed concern back in August and September when I told them I was traveling to Bolivia in October. And there had been political turmoil there in those months, with many fatalities. American Airlines, my carrier from Miami to La Paz, had even cancelled flights from Sept. 15 to Oct. 5. But these problems were in the lower elevation provinces, where dissatisfaction with the central government had been focused. Since I was going to stay in the higher areas to the west, I wasn’t worried. And in fact things went very smoothly during my entire stay in Bolivia, and everyone I met there was friendly. So, when my time to travel to Peru came, on the 22nd of October, I wasn’t expecting anything out of the ordinary to occur. Peru has a "centrist" government currently, not as "left-leaning" as Bolivia, Venezuela, or even Chile now, but more in-line with that seen in Brazil. And it has been relatively stable over the past several years, with only minor outbreaks of political disturbance in outlying areas.
My plan was to take a bus from La Paz to Cuzco, Peru on the 22nd, arriving there at 8pm. I had a train ticket and tour of Macchu Picchu scheduled the next day, starting at 0630. The bus left as planned at 0800 from La Paz, and we were on the eastern branch of the Pan American highway, the main arterial linking all the countries of South America. We went through the Peruvian border in the run-down and poverty-stricken town of Desaguadero; clearing Peruvian customs took us an hour, since there were several buses in addition to ours doing the same thing. We sailed through Puno, Peru, on the shore of sparkling blue Lago Titicaca, the highest navigable lake in the World, at 12,506 feet.

Puno was not an especially attractive city, but being on the lake certainly did add some appeal. One thing I noticed in Peru was that most of the houses and buildings looked unfinished. Re-bar and a layer or two of bricks stuck up from from most of them. My neighbor next to me on the bus, a Bolivian man from Cochabamba explained that in Peru, you get a property tax break if you declare your building to be under construction, hence, they all are!
After a refreshment stop in Puno, we hit the road again, and for a few hours traveled through the altiplano of Peru, amongst tiny villages with people engaged as they have for hundreds of years, herding their livestock and coaxing crops of potatoes, quinoa, and onions from the poor, meager soil at those high elevations. As we approached the small town of Sichuani, still about 150 miles from Cuzco, the bus lurched to a stop. After a minute, when we didn’t resume, all the passengers got up, and we went out of the bus. Ahead of us stretched a line of about a quarter-mile of blocked traffic, with the engines off. We had to investigate.

The first picture, above, is the view just in front of our bus, the line ahead of us, and some rocks on the road. What? So the driver, a few other tourists, and I walked down about a quarter mile, and came to this.
About a thirty foot section of the Pan American highway, the main travel and commercial link between all the countries in the lower half of the continent, covered in about 30 feet of boulders and pieces of metal. Guarded by about ten sharp-eyed youths with sling shots and rocks-in-hand. Off to the right side of the road were 10-20 more of them. After standing around for a few minutes, about 20-30 very angry bus and truck drivers, 8 Argentinian motorcyclists on a trans-continental trip, and a few tourists, myself included, milled around, pondering the situation. The drivers were having a heated discussion, no doubt trying to plan taking back the road, and it only took me a minute to size up the scene and come up with a plan myself. But, a female driver in the group kept pleading with the others not to do anything. This went on for almost an hour, by then it started getting dark, it was about 7pm, then it was too late. Probably for the best, as had there been an attempted take-back of the road, there would certainly have been injuries. Still, we were all angry, we all had plans, and there were many families with small children on the stopped buses. But there was nothing for it but to head back to them. At the time, we didn’t even know what these people were protesting, but I later found out that villagers in this area were angry at the provincial government because of plans to build a hydroelectric project that would inundate some of their grazing and farmland.
So we all went back to the bus and waited, and waited. Around 11pm, with no movement or engines running, my new friends Damon, a British tourist from Bristol, Richard, a Bolivian man traveling for his textile company, and I walked a quarter mile back to find a store. We were starving, and didn’t have a food supply. We found a tiny store open catering to all the stranded people and got some crackers and a beer. All of a sudden, as we were finishing our beer, we heard the distant sound of engines starting. Uh oh…not a good place or time to be left stranded. I was wearing the best shoes for fast movement, hiking boots, so I sprinted back as fast as I could, which proved interesting, at 14,000 feet, after having a large beer, and breathing concentrated diesel fumes. I pounded on our bus to slow down, which it did, I jumped on, and told the driver two more were coming. Damon and Richard jumped on a minute later, and we caught our breath, very relieved to have made it back in the nick of time.
It took us two more hours to get past the block site! All the traffic kept starting and stopping. Finally, as we slowly ground past, our bus was pelted with rocks! But tempered safety glass is very strong, so I wasn’t worried. We never did find out who cleared the block, was it the Army, or did the villagers relent? At no time did we ever see any police. Peru is in serious trouble if they can’t keep open their major highways. There were hundreds of buses, trucks, and other vehicles, blocked on both sides of the road.

We got in to Cuzco at 330 in the morning, 7 ½ hours later than expected. I had a hotel room reserved, fortunately, but Damon and Richard didn’t. So I let them camp out on the floor while I took the bed. For my two hours of sleep, since my Macchu Picchu tour was to start at 0630. I thought briefly of cancelling it and just sleeping in, then finding a flight back to La Paz, thinking that things could get worse, but I’m glad I didn’t. I caught a ride to the train station in Cuzco, and then got on the slow four-hour train ride to Macchu Picchu. Although I was dead-tired, and starving, not having had time for food, I stayed awake for most of the train ride, as it was very interesting. Cuzco is a little lower than La Paz, around 11,300 feet, but the train had to go over a 14,000 foot pass, then slowly wind down to the canyon of the Urubamba river, which it then followed to Macchu Picchu. This canyon was amazing, in some areas more than 10,000 feet deep, as glacier-clad peaks sometimes came in view through the clouds as we descended into the jungle. We arrived to the town of Aguas Calientes, the base village containing hotels, restaurants, and shops, at 1100. I was even more faint from hunger, and tired, but had to catch my bus up to the ruins, so couldn’t stop for a meal. The buses wind up a narrow dirt road about two thousand feet, on the side of cliffs. The terrain there is incredible, I’ve never seen such steep gorges and hills, all clad in thick, tropical vegetation. Two thousand people a day are allowed into the ruins, I was with a group that had an English-speaking guide, so after we cleared the ticket booth (it was almost like entering Disneyland!), we began our tour. My pictures don’t do justice to the incredible terrain here, and the scale of the ruins http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machu_Picchu .


Our guide led us around for two hours, explaining the history and purpose of the site, and it’s discovery in 1911, by Hiram Bingham, a Yale University archaeologist. Considering how thick the vegetation is there at 8000-9000 feet on the moist eastern side of the Andes, it’s amazing how thoroughly archaeologists and others were able to clear and restore the ruins. There are even more yet to be restored, sloping down on the side of that steep mountain. It is estimated that thousands of Incan people built the city over a period of 20-30 years, between 1430 and 1460, or so, before it was abandoned, for reasons unknown. The Spaniards never saw it during their conquest of the region 100 years later.



Although I was in near-desperate straights from hunger and lack of sleep, just being at this incredible place helped sustain me. After our tour, we had an hour to ourselves before having to get back on the bus down to Aguas Calientes. I just strolled through the ruins, trying to visualize the people that built the city, and how they lived there. I even made a new friend, she let me approach and pet her long furry neck for a minute, before resuming her meal of tasty green grass.

It started raining as my hour came to an end, so I headed back to the tour bus, on my last legs. I had my best meal during the whole trip at the base village soon after though, fresh sautéed trout from Lago Titicaca, which helped me regain some energy. I was able to sleep most of the way back on the train to Cuzco, which helped even more.

After a much-needed good night’s sleep in Cuzco, I had to re-assess my travel plans. I had a bus seat reserved to return to La Paz that afternoon, but I found out all the bus companies traveling that route were on strike, because of the roadblocks! I had to get back to La Paz as my flight back to Miami was on the 26th, and I had stored two of my bags at my hotel there, so I could travel lightly in Peru. I found a travel agent who spoke some English, and she got me a last-minute plane ticket from Cuzco, to Lima, then an overnight flight back to La Paz, and it wasn’t cheap! I then had two hours to kill before needing to get to the Cuzco airport, so I walked around the main plaza.

These beautiful old cathedrals date back to 1540, and inside (no photographs allowed), elaborate altars with intricate gilt-leaf inlays are present. A turbulent history in that area though, my guidebook listed several battles and assassinations having occurred there over the centuries.
My crowded flight to Lima (filled with stranded people like me) left in the afternoon. It was interesting watching the terrain become increasingly drier as we headed west, and the incredible shroud of air pollution covering bone-dry Lima, population roughly 8 million, which has an annual average precipitation total of less than two inches! Air pollution as bad or worse than any I’ve ever seen in Los Angeles. The Lima airport was also very interesting. I didn’t feel like exploring Lima, not wanting to take any chance of missing my flight back to La Paz, so I stayed in the airport for 8 hours, until my midnight flight. What was so interesting about the Lima airport was the affluence, after being immersed in the poverty of Bolivia and the rest of Peru. Most of it was very new and polished, and the prices for souvenirs, food, and everything else, were higher than I’ve seen anywhere in the U.S.! Obviously only a small fraction of the population of Peru could ever afford to fly, much less be allowed to set foot in that airport.
I noticed a few differences between what I saw in Peru, and experienced in Bolivia. First, prices are significantly higher for everything in Peru, though still cheaper than the U.S., for things like meals and lodging. Second, there were fewer "full-blooded" indigenous people in the areas of my travels in Peru, more people were Mestizo, the mix of indigenous and caucasian, and hence, lighter-skinned, and taller. And third, although the people in Peru were not rude, or hostile in any way, it just seemed like the majority of people I met in Bolivia were friendlier. I'm not sure why, perhaps because the tourist industry in Peru is much more developed, and the number of tourists much greater, that there is some resentment amongst the locals. Who knows...
The rest of my trip was uneventful, a nice restful day in La Paz after getting back in the early morning, then a smooth flight back to Miami, the next morning. All in all, I had a great time in both countries, most of the people were friendly, and though I didn’t get to summit Illimani, the view from 18,000 feet was well worth the hike. The alternating excitement and boredom of the Peruvian road-block experience was also interesting, and a good reminder for me how fortunate we are in the developed countries. I plan on going back to Bolivia some day, as well as to Venezuela, Colombia, Ecuador, more of Peru, Chile, Argentina, and Brazil too, I have developed a fondness for the people and culture of the parts of South America I’ve seen so far.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Evo, Si?



While touring around La Paz or other cities on the altiplano, by bus, train, or taxi, I couldn't help but see many billboards like those below, along with painted slogans, or posters, supporting in some way, Evo Morales, the president, and the ruling party, M.A.S., Moviemento as Socialisem (Movement Towards Socialism). This first billboard translates as "Bolivia, United, Grand, and for Everyone", and was for their referendum on his/their policies last summer. Which passed, with 68 percent of the vote, nation-wide.

This sign, below, translates as "Evo of the People", "Because they never abandoned us, the people will never abandon you". Typical political propaganda, you might say, and certainly there is an element of truth to that. No different than political campaigns in any country. But Evo Morales ascedence to the presidency of Bolivia in December, 2005 represented something historic to the 60 percent of that nation who are fully indigenous, since he is also, of the Aymara group, from the town of Oruro, south of La Paz. Much like the election of Barack Obama is seen by the African-American community in this country, but even more so, considering the longer period of repression and powerlessness of Bolivia's indigenous majority. This link gives a good basic biography of him, and his political career. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evo_Morales


I first became aware of his interesting rise and outlooks when he was elected, and read articles like this: http://www.counterpunch.org/morales09222006.html This was a speech he gave to the U.N. in 2006, in which he provided a clear and understandable outline of what he and his supporters are working for. For me, it made perfect sense, and was greatly admirable. And it was partially for this reason that I wanted to visit Bolivia, because I believe(d) their (MAS) movement had great promise and potential for alleviating long-standing poverty and injustice in that country. And for inspiring movements in other countries of a similar vein, perhaps even in Mexico and the U.S.

Following is the complete text of a letter Pres. Morales wrote to the U.N. on environmental issues, and I couldn't agree more with him.

26 September, 2007 -- Letter from President Evo Morales to the member representatives of the United Nations on the issue of the environment.

"Sister and brother Presidents and Heads of States of the United Nations: The world is suffering from a fever due to climate change, and the disease is the capitalist development model. Whilst over 10,000 years the variation in carbon dioxide (CO2) levels on the planet was approximately 10%, during the last 200 years of industrial development, carbon emissions have increased by 30%. Since 1860, Europe and North America have contributed 70% of the emissions of CO2. 2005 was the hottest year in the last one thousand years on this planet.

Different investigations have demonstrated that out of the 40,170 living species that have been studied, 16,119 are in danger of extinction. One out of eight birds could disappear forever. One out of four mammals is under threat. One out of every three reptiles could cease to exist. Eight out of ten crustaceans and three out of four insects are at risk of extinction. We are living through the sixth crisis of the extinction of living species in the history of the planet and, on this occasion, the rate of extinction is 100 times more accelerated than in geological times.

Faced with this bleak future, transnational interests are proposing to continue as before, and paint the machine green, which is to say, continue with growth and irrational consumerism and inequality, generating more and more profits, without realising that we are currently consuming in one year what the planet produces in one year and three months. Faced with this reality, the solution can not be an environmental make over.

I read in the World Bank report that in order to mitigate the impacts of climate change we need to end subsidies on hydrocarbons, put a price on water and promote private investment in the clean energy sector. Once again they want to apply market recipes and privatisation in order to carry out business as usual, and with it, the same illnesses that these policies produce. The same occurs in the case of biofuels, given that to produce one litre of ethanol you require 12 litres of water. In the same way, to process one ton of agrifuels you need, on average, one hectare of land.

Faced with this situation, we - the indigenous peoples and humble and honest inhabitants of this planet - believe that the time has come to put a stop to this, in order to rediscover our roots, with respect for Mother Earth; with the Pachamama as we call it in the Andes. Today, the indigenous peoples of Latin America and the world have been called upon by history to convert ourselves into the vanguard of the struggle to defend nature and life.

I am convinced that the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, recently approved after so many years of struggle, needs to pass from paper to reality so that our knowledge and our participation can help to construct a new future of hope for all. Who else but the indigenous people, can point out the path for humanity in order to preserve nature, natural resources and the territories that we have inhabited from ancient times.

We need a profound change of direction, at the world wide level, so as to stop being the condemned of the earth. The countries of the north need to reduce their carbon emissions by between 60% and 80% if we want to avoid a temperature rise of more than 2º in what is left of this century, which would provoke global warming of catastrophic proportions for life and nature.

We need to create a World Environment Organisation which is binding, and which can discipline the World Trade Organisation, which is propelling as towards barbarism. We can no longer continue to talk of growth in Gross National Product without taking into consideration the destruction and wastage of natural resources. We need to adopt an indicator that allows us to consider, in a combined way, the Human Development Index and the Ecological Footprint in order to measure our environmental situation.

We need to apply harsh taxes on the super concentration of wealth, and adopt effective mechanisms for its equitable redistribution. It is not possible that three families can have an income superior to the combined GDP of the 48 poorest countries. We can not talk of equity and social justice whilst this situation continues.

The United States and Europe consume, on average, 8.4 times more that the world average. It is necessary for them to reduce their level of consumption and recognise that all of us are guests on this same land; of the same Pachamama.

I know that change is not easy when an extremely powerful sector has to renounce their extraordinary profits for the planet to survive. In my own country I suffer, with my head held high, this permanent sabotage because we are ending privileges so that everyone can "Live Well" and not better than our counterparts. I know that change in the world is much more difficult than in my country, but I have absolute confidence in human beings, in their capacity to reason, to learn from mistakes, to recuperate their roots, and to change in order to forge a just, diverse, inclusive, equilibrated world in harmony with nature."

Evo Morales Ayma President of the Republic de Bolivia


Unfortunately, his and his government's viewpoints like this are completely at odds with the majority of developed-nations, and our neo-fascist current administration began to actively work against the new Bolivian government in a variety of ways. Which led to the expulsion of the American ambassador, last September. He was accused of funding the separatist groups in the breakaway provinces, groups who were responsible for riots and many fatalities and injuries last Aug. and Sept.
http://shininglight.us/archives/2008/09/bolivia_at_the_abyss.php
Given America's horrible history of funding and supporting murderous right-wing governments over the past century in Latin America, it's hard not to believe at least some of the charges listed by the MAS government. And because the Bush regime has an especially active dislike of Evo M. and Hugo Chavez, (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Ch%C3%A1vez) in Venezuela, because they are outspoken about changing their societies unjust and grossly unequal political and economic systems using their nationalized-hydrocarbon wealth, and fighting against U.S. imperialist influence in Latin America (nationalized oil/gas industries set a dangerous precedent, although many developed countries have them, Norway, for example.) All that said though, I never had any problem when I divulged that I was from the U.S. A few people did ask me "what's wrong with your country?", about why Bush was elected twice. I told them our corporate media only shows things favorable to the current government, because they get tax breaks and other benefits. And that most Americans only read and see that information.

Before I did my Illimani climb, the owner of an outdoor store called Tattoo, in Calle Illampu, right down the street my first hotel, Rosario, said there was going to be a huge march/rally on the 20th/21st. He was not happy about it because the streets would be clogged, and it would be bad for business. I forgot about it though, but on the 20th, when I got back early from Illimani, I saw the thousands of people streaming into La Paz for this event. Then, the next day, after I visited at the office of the SNMH, I walked back through downtown, toward my hotel, Hotel Gloria, and came upon this scene.


This is just two blocks down the street from Plaza Murrillo, which I had first visited the day of my arrival in La Paz, and where the Presidential Offices and National Assembly Buildings are. What is all this? Bolivian voters are going to decide in January upon a new constitution that will attempt to meet some of the demands of the hydrocarbon-rich, oligarchical western provinces (the so-called Media Luna, middle crescent), while still trying to move forward with MAS initiatives to re-distribute unused land and allocate some income from natural gas exports toward social spending projects. Evo Morales and members of the MAS initiated and led this march across the entire country, to drum up support for the new constitution. On sunday the 20th of October, with Evo and the MAS officials leading, the hundreds of thousands of marchers streamed into La Paz. Groups of miners, farmers (including coca growers), and indigenous groups from all over the country, and even other countries in South America were part of it. On monday, the 21st, a rally was held in Plaza Murrillo, below, with Evo and other functionaries giving speeches, along with some of the different groups' representatives.


All the streets around Plaza Murrillo were clogged with several hundred thousand people. It was quite an effort getting around, but I managed to go through all the different areas around the plaza, including, at very bottom, right behind the stage where Evo and his people were sitting. At all times, people were courteous and nice to me, even though I stuck out like a sore thumb, being much taller and lighter in color. I have to say, it was very inspiring to see all these people, who had marched for many days, at great effort and expense, all in support of their government. Has that ever happened in the U.S.? After the nightmare of these last 8 GWB years especially, I was feeling very cynical about the political process in general, and seeing this helped reinvigorate me, and my desire to help create a more sane and just government in the U.S.


I wasn't able to understand all the speeches, native spanish speakers tend to be fairly fast, so I was only able to pick up scattered phrases. But most of the speeches seemed to be about the new constitution, working for all of Bolivia, etc.. I did catch a few anti-U.S. references, which I'm sure made sense to them, I wish had been able to understand all of them.

I noticed this man early on, above, in Plaza Murrillo, he seemed to have that energy, or air about him, of leadership and authority. I'm sure you can all remember when you've met someone like that. He actually came up to me and inquired where I was from, since obviously, I was a tourist. With my broken spanish and his few phrases of English, I managed to learn he was from Chapare, on the east side of the altiplano, where it starts to slope down to the rain forest. He was indeed the equivalent of a mayor, in his village, and was with a large group of farmers from there. I gave him my "Yo soy en parti verde Alaska Estados Unidos, Evo, Si!, Hugo, Si!" line, of course which I really mean, and he liked that. We talked for about ten minutes, before his group headed up toward the stage where Evo and the other politicians were. Unfortunately with the strong high-elevation tropical sun, I closed my eyes at the wrong time. Oh well...
During the rally, people were lighting firecrackers and skyrockets, and I have to admit, when these were going off, I got nervous, given the turbulent history in Bolivia, and indeed, in that very plaza.

So what does the future hold for Bolivia's fragile experiment with transforming their country? Every indigenous person I talked with was very much in favor of the MAS government and Evo. One Mestizo man, my guide Alejandro, at Tiwanaku, expressed concern about undue Venezuelan and Cuban influence, as thousands of advisors and medical personnel from both countries have been in Bolivia the last few years. The most pessimistic conversation I had was on the train to Uyuni, with a European woman who's husband worked for a European Union aid agency. She said the expulsion of the American ambassador led to other American interests leaving, and cost the country thousands of jobs. And that the differences between the oligarchical provinces and the MAS government were so great, that a civil war was practically inevitable. That was very depressing to hear, and I certainly hope that will not come to pass. I can only hope that the new Democratic administration in this country will take a more realistic and open-minded stance toward the countries in South America as well. As for me, Evo, Si! I really enjoyed my visit to Bolivia, and all the people I met and talked with were nice, most were hopeful for the future, and many thanked me for visiting. I just wish more of them could visit here!