I wait


December 29, 2011.

Another year almost gone. I try to remember the good things, but can’t.

Some speak of destruction by fire; I saw that this year, only the fire was sun, no rain, relentless dry scorching weather, day after day, week upon week, months….

Damn near the whole year.

I am told half a billion trees died in Texas alone.

It started raining about a month ago. Slow, steady, light but soaking rain. With the rain came cold. The moisture will pay dividends down the line, but now, cold and wet suck life from animals forced to endure without hay to fill their guts.

Aquifers, lakes and livestock ponds remain precariously low despite the recent showers. I have no clue what the new year will bring.

I’ve lived with a cloud overhead, a sense of impending doom I can’t seem to shake.

And I have been hard on myself. I didn’t fix the front tooth I broke while biting a cow’s ear and I didn’t fix the broken bone in my right hand when I hit yet another cow in the head; both remind me of my shortfalls, my lack of patience and my horrible temper.

And these are milk cows with which I have an intimate relationship, involving a considerable amount of trust.

I’ve hurt others I love as well. Wasn’t my intention, but it is what it is. I feel terrible for what I have done.

A friend says don’t do that anymore, when I describe my travails.

I tell him I try. But it seems the default state in me; in the blink of an eye or one unguarded moment I do things that permanently alter the landscape, and later leave me in a state of despair.

I’ve killed a notable number of animals this year; some for food, some out of a sense or mercy or duty as they lay suffering. I wonder if I shall see them again, this long, long line whose last minute on this earth was spent staring into my cold blue eyes.

Will they, can they forgive me?

I have helped some in need; I have denied many more.

It’s as though God has turned his back, like my prayers somehow don’t quite reach through the fog and the noise and the confusion of this world.

I tire of seeing evil prosper. I tire of liars and propagandists, who set traps and spew deceitful words against the righteous.

I despise the haughty looks of the rich, their glass towers and fine linens and sparkly jewelry and soft hands with manicured nails, fine tailored clothes and wafts of perfume and cologne, delicate morsels of food served on silver and china-ware, while waiters and waitresses smile for tips to feed the kids at home.

I detest those that sit in towers overlooking cities below, devising their schemes, planning their wars, creating money from thin air in seemingly endless amounts, while the rest suffer and strain to earn a living.

And in the next breath, their counterparts say we need more fucking taxes.

You make money out of thin air to do whatever you want when you want and how you want. Why then do you need to tax the rest of us that have to earn our money the hard way?

You borrowed the money. You pay it back.

Here’s the deal. I say no. I do not sign off on this. Do what you will but do so without my blessing.

I remain a criminal without a crime, a warrior set aside.

And I wait.


Don December 29, 2011 - 11:17pm
( categories: Miscellany )

Hope you get some good news in the coming year.

Libertarianism: MiracleGro for the feeble-minded.

steeleweed December 30, 2011 - 11:38am

...(being the toxic chemical sort), I'd think of making use of Fracker hardware to inject water back into the depleted aquifers during the wet season. Runoff has its uses, but I'm sure many farmers see it as good water lost....

There doesn't seem to be enough thought given to planning for those bad times, and I can't help but wonder if it might be in part due to speculators looking to make a killing off betting against success. Big bucks going into those efforts means money not being spent on real improvements to infrastructure that might ameliorate effects of draught or relieve those farmers worst-affected..

"It's no longer IOKIYAR....It's OK If You're A Republican, but IOKBYAR--It's OK BECAUSE You're a Republican." -- Me

justadood December 30, 2011 - 12:03pm

to put in the frackers?

zot23 December 30, 2011 - 12:33pm

to inject into the aquifers, to replenish some of what's been extracted over the years (we pull out *lots* more than comes in naturally these days)

BIG caveat to that idea--fracking hardware makes use of toxic chemicals in the oil/gas extraction that I just don't know could make my speculation a stupid one or not.

It crossed my mind after reading about an LA-area project that injects water into a local aquifer/cachement to replace water drained by wells in daily activity. We 'lose' so much fresh water to runoff in wet times that if more could be caught there might be more to use in dry/lean times.

Your response suggests to me you also consider 'runoff' to be 'lost' water...easy enough to see it that way. What if we could catch and store that (other than the usual lakes and reservoirs)?

"It's no longer IOKIYAR....It's OK If You're A Republican, but IOKBYAR--It's OK BECAUSE You're a Republican." -- Me

justadood December 30, 2011 - 2:38pm

...so to speak, but I have a distinct feeling that taking surface water and injecting it into reservoirs is something that would typically have a lower ROI than increasing the efficiency of surface water usage. I could certainly see doing it in some circumstances, such as when one needs to purify it and doesn't have the industrial capacity, or where one needs to stop saltwater encroachment, but as a general means of coping with aquifer depletion it strikes me as something of a stopgap.

Bottom line, I'd really like to see us seek to be as parsimonious in our use of groundwater as possible - helps make us pick land uses that are more sustainable.

"In combat one should be very suspicious of painless moral choices. When you are confronted with a seemingly painless moral choice, the odds are that you haven't looked deeply enough." ~ Karl Marlantes

JustPlainDave December 30, 2011 - 2:48pm

"It's no longer IOKIYAR....It's OK If You're A Republican, but IOKBYAR--It's OK BECAUSE You're a Republican." -- Me

justadood December 30, 2011 - 5:37pm

It's a damn shame, but the gradual desertification of the Southwest and Midwest over coming decades is a given in virtually all climate models. How far it goes depends mostly on how far we go as a species toward that precipice of ten degrees Farenheit warmer overall.

Antifa December 30, 2011 - 12:48pm

thanks

Nat Wilson Turner December 31, 2011 - 3:23am

...
December 29, 2011.
Another year almost gone. I try to remember the good things, but can’t.
____________

That seems not to recognize that you, against the odds, made it through another year. From what I've read, from and about you; you're a pretty tough guy. Not in the macho sense, but in the down and dirty about what it takes in this life.
There are things regarding you and your character that I envy, but not too much.
Whatever Don; I hope next year gets a little closer to your comfort level; hell, maybe you're already there.
Cheers for the coming year...


Find out just what any people will quietly submit to and you have found out the exact measure of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them,and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows,or with both~FDouglas

Celsius 233 December 31, 2011 - 7:50am

Despite the dark mood, I think I am where I am supposed to be, and I find some comfort in that.

Blessings.

I did inhale.

Don December 31, 2011 - 10:07am

thanks for your hard work and great words. I always find they resonate with me.

graham January 1, 2012 - 9:26am

Droughts come and go. Awhile back we had a year here in north Alabama that was so dry the combines stayed in the barn because the cotton wasn't tall enough to cut. The following year, despite cumulative rain statistics still below normal, we had near-record cotton, and my neighbor had 14-foot corn.

In the long run, as Keynes put it, we are all dead. Humanity is ultimately doomed, if only by one of the many possible mass extinctions. In the meantime, though, I believe we are making forward progress; as an aggregate, over time, things are getting better.

xfrosch January 4, 2012 - 4:07pm

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