Yes folks,
Believe it or not we have show. If you’re wondering what happened, blame the Ninja. (Sake should be taken before bed to prevent yearning for Sepuku.
Yes folks,
Believe it or not we have show. If you’re wondering what happened, blame the Ninja. (Sake should be taken before bed to prevent yearning for Sepuku.
American Society, Coal, Conservation, Environment, Government/Politics, Health, Labor, News, State and Local
As the Prophet Isaiah queried: “What will you do on the Day of Reckoning, when evil comes from afar?”
Click on the image to buy the book.
Having just completed my first reading of Jeff Biggers’ masterfully crafted, meticulously researched “Reckoning At Eagle Creek,” I am left feeling nigh-breathless at the scope of the evil that came from afar and visited a nigh-Biblical plague upon people in the form of the heartache, sickness and grim Death that always serves as the handmaiden of coal. Such a sensation is fitting, I suppose, for a book that recounts the history of the thousands of human beings rendered breathlessly mute by the ravages of Black Lung, slate falls, mine explosions, poisoned waters, blasted hills, choked valleys, murdered workers and whole communities literally blown off the map in the merciless, ceaseless quest for the Holy Profit of Coal.
Jeff Biggers has crafted out of family history and regional history an honest, unblinking reckoning of the costs paid by a nation and, indeed, a world for what we have been assured by the industry for more than a century is “cheap” coal. Mr. Biggers proves in the pages of “Reckoning At Eagle Creek” that the only way to see coal as “cheap” is to view the lives, history and heritage consumed in its acquisition as being even cheaper still.
“Reckoning At Eagle Creek” is the manifestation of one man’s quest for understanding of where our dependence on the nastiest fuel form on the planet has taken us and where that path ultimately leads. That quest is neither fanciful nor mythical. It is rock-hard and bone-real. With its publication, “Reckoning At Eagle Creek” becomes an immediately necessary resource for anyone who seeks to understand the ever-increasing toll we all pay for “cheap” coal, for “cheap” electricity, for “cheap” heat. In his “reckoning” of accounts within the scope of his family’s southern Illinois homeland, Jeff Biggers honestly reveals coal mineshafts and stripmine pits for what they are: the abbatoirs of the American Dream.
Read this book. Own this book. “
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American Society, Coal, Conservation, Environment, Odds and Ends, Video
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American Society, Coal, Conservation, Environment, Odds and Ends, Video
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American Society, Coal, Conservation, Environment, Odds and Ends, Video
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American Society, Coal, Conservation, Environment, Odds and Ends, Video
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American Society, Conservation, Environment, Feature, Government/Politics, State and Local
Courtesy LATimes:
Reporting from San Luis Obispo, Calif. - Katie Martin grew up with a set of water commandments. No lingering in the shower. Turn off the faucet when you brush your teeth. Don’t flood the yard.
Until she left for college this fall, the 19-year-old lived with her family in a typical California stucco house with a lawn. But when it comes to water, neither the Martins nor their town, San Luis Obispo, is typical.
Katie, her parents and little brother use roughly half the water on a per-person basis as the average single-family household in Los Angeles used last year.
“The community is just like that,” Martin said.
As climate change, environmental constraints and growth continue to tighten the valve on California’s water supplies, the rest of the state is going to be more like that too. Not just during droughts but all the time.
The reason is simple. Compared to building new reservoirs, recycling or seawater desalination, conservation is one of the cheapest, quickest and least environmentally damaging ways for the state to get more water.
-Article continues at Source.
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