Here's why:
Indian see white man about to shoot self in foot. Indian say NO... Common sense - more important than greed._________________________featuring: reality, Faux "News" kryptonite
Tuesday, January 24, 2017
Monday, January 16, 2017
Water Taker Fail #1
Tuesday, December 13, 2016
Trash to Treasure Fabrication Facility
The
Ely Shoshone Tribe (EST) needs to focus on projects that promote self
reliance, sustainability, adaptive potential, and profit potential.
There
is a world-wide “maker” movement developing a set of fabrication
processes that help on all of these issues. However, most makers are
individuals, without the time to fully realize all of the possible
potential of a small factory.
I
recommend that the EST consider helping start a facility utilizing a
number of small, relatively inexpensive tools together to create a
fabrication facility for custom and small factory output.
The
parts built could be made of various plastics, aluminum, copper,
brass, silver, gold, and other low melting temperature metals.
Consider
this:
80%
of the plastic made today does not get recycled.
Which
means there is a huge potential free feedstock for
recycled plastic components.
Those
components could be cast, milled, or 3D printed – and castings made
from them can be used to cast metal parts. (Moreover, the aluminum
parts could be made from aluminum scrap.) Home-built tool designs
exist online that inexpensively accomplish these tasks.
As
it may sound; this is too big a project for any individual to handle
on their own. It should be done as a cooperative.
I
can help.
I
am willing to purchase a LulzBot TAZ 6 3D printer (cost $2500) as
part of my buy-in to the cooperative.
But
I need a facility, help collecting recycled plastic, help building
the plastic recycling tools, resources to build those tools, and help
operating the facility.
This
should not be a substantial burden on the EST. But I need the help of
Tribal members and/or students to realize this dream.
If
there is an interest, please let me know.
Rick
Spilsbury
Preliminary Technical Overview
I
would like to see this project function as a cooperative. So, rather
than tell you what to do, I'd prefer to point out the issues and we
can work them out together.
1.
First things first; a fabrication shop needs needs a location. I
think one of the buildings behind the Charter School would be ideal.
In part, because we could work together with the students.
2.
A fab shop needs something to fabricate. And used plastic is free.
If we could explain what we were doing to the school, the students
might be willing to bring us their waste plastic for recycling –
and help us sort it by putting each type of plastic in its respective
box.
3.
The plastic needs to be processed for storage and use – shred.
That means we need a shredder. The website PreciousPlastic.com
has plans for building a thermoplastic shredder. The design is rather
straightforward, but welding skills and fab shop tools are
temporarily required. I believe someone in town has a plasma cutting
table. So, cutting the components is something that can be
outsourced. I can help by sourcing components and assembling the
shredder assembly. Or, we could buy a shredder at retail price from
Filabot.com for $4200.
4.
At this point, we pretty much have to figure out what we want to
make first. PreciousPlastic.com also has instructions for building a
compressor oven, an injection molder, and an extruder.
a.
A compressor oven works best on large and more solid objects.
Additionally, those solid objects could be later carved into
masterpieces in a CNC milling machine.
b.
Injection molding can create many complex parts quickly, but require
molds. One option is for a CNC milling machine to cut these molds
from aluminum. The other option is to “lost wax” cast the molds
from hand-carved foam, CNC milled wax, or 3D printed PLA plastic.
This gives us an option to save money. We can make complex injection
molds with either a CNC milling machine or a 3D
printer. Initially, we don't need both.
c.
An extruder could make filament for 3D printers – which might make
us money the quickest and/or save us a lot of money on our own 3D
prints. But we would have to buy a spooler. A spooler from
Filabot.com costs $1200. And if we don't want to build our own
extruder, its retail cost is $2500.
5.
Now it's time to brainstorm. What would you like to build?
I
would like to build:
-
an aluminum bracket to mount a ski to the front fork of a fat mountain bike (combined with an electric hub motor, this would be a hybrid human powered snowmobile).
-
aluminum bicycle, kickbike, and scooter lugs (that could be glued to any tube material to make custom fitted rides right in a retailer's store)
-
Custom designed jewelry
-
lego/puzzle designed plastic components to construct custom recycled plastic furniture (bookcases, desks, drawers, and cabinets)
-
custom shoe soles
-
aluminum components of suspensions attached to frames of a hybrid human powered ATV
-
brass and recycled plastic belt buckles
-
hollow translucent greenhouse bricks
Your
turn.
Go
ahead and be artsy.
For
instance; melted aluminum can be poured into the cracks of wood to
make beautiful furniture, picture frames, etc.
Remember:
-
The people who buy recycled plastics often want to show it off.
-
Some plastics can be used in place of wood.
-
Existing physical shapes can be 3D scanned.
-
Anything designed with CAD software will be easier to modify.
and...
-
Some 3D printed designs cannot be replicated in castings.
-
Anything 3D printed or CNC milled will take significantly longer to produce.
-
Neither the recycled plastics nor the recycled aluminum will be as strong as materials specifically made for the item. (Which means they will have to be designed slightly heavier.)
-
Anything cast from metal will require a kiln.
6.
Which brings us to the subject of how to fire the castings and melt
the metals. I think a kiln in the far back end of the parking lot
behind the buildings behind the School is a great location. Far away
enough to not be dangerous, but close enough to conveniently utilize
in school projects. It would be fired by propane. But I have seen
wood fired rocket stoves online. (And maybe someday we could make our
own hydrogen to fire it.) A kiln could also be used to fire pottery.
(If someone local has experience with kilns, that would sure be
nice.)
7. Components
can be designed on anyone's computer with free CAD software. Which
means build requests could come in from anywhere. Moreover, many
designs are available for download.
8. By
having the capacity to construct our own components gives us the
capacity to build our own machines. OpenSourceEcology.org
has collected what they call a “Global Village Construction Set”
- a set of easy fabrication DIY plans for 50 low cost industrial
machines. They are sharing these designs online for free – with the
hopes that we can build small, sustainable civilizations with modern
comforts.
Proposed Business Structure
As
with most businesses, there will be no income initially. Tools will
need to be purchased. Work will need to be done. And on top of that,
we will need to organize into a functional group.
Unlike
most businesses, cooperatives are democratic institutions. Which
means, without someone to order us around, we need to write by-laws
before we can start. But of course, that means there has to be a
“we.”
If
EST tribal members are interested in forming a limited liability
corporation manufacturing cooperative, please call me, Rick
Spilsbury, at 775-235-7557.
I
hope to run the Fabrication Shop something like a library. Use of the
shop will be shared amongst cooperative members. Non-members can pay
rent to use the Fab Shop. Contracted work will have to be figured out
as needed.
As
with most cooperatives, there will be a buy-in fee to provide the
cooperative with start-up funds. And as with most cooperatives, you
don't have to be a member to help out. But if you help out enough,
your labor counts towards your membership fee.
The
ultimate pay off for this project should be self-sufficiency and
respectable long-term earnings. But initially, we will need help from
the EST. We have no money for rent. And building the machines to
recycle plastic and cast aluminum will take money – even though we
will be making them from “junkyard” parts.
If
there are talented people in the EST who want to help with the
welding and construction of the machines and kiln, we're set. But if
not, we will have to either find others willing to help, or pay
others willing to help.
I
estimate initial costs will run in the low thousands – depending
upon what tools we invest in. To make complex parts, we will need
either a 3D printer or a CNC milling machine. However, initially; we
could carve simple parts out of wax or foam by hand – and then use
lost wax casting techniques to make molds.
Which
means; with a little help and a lot of participation we could be
fabricating parts and arts up to a little bigger than a basketball –
out of plastics and low melting temperature metals. The profits will
be shared fairly. And not only will some EST members be employed, but
they may also receive on the job training.
This
project will promote self-reliance by setting up manufacturing on
Tribal land.
This
project will promote sustainability by recycling unused plastic and
aluminum waste.
This
project will assist our adaptive potential by providing tools to
build most anything solid (within it's size and material limits).
And
this project will assist profit potential for artists, mechanics,
inventors, and manufacturers.
We
can turn trash into treasure, make money, and maybe even export
goods from White Pine County. The technology to do this is now
affordable. The skills required to draw a CAD (Computer Aided
Drafting) description of your part are not that hard to learn. And
moreover, we can have fun making things we cannot buy.
Tuesday, November 29, 2016
the oil companies own our asses because we keep giving them money
The United States has become a banana republic. The mainstream media won't report it. But there is a pattern to the disintegration of our democracy. This has happened four times now since the year 2000 – where the frontrunner Presidential candidate, who had committed to do something about Climate Change, has lost due to cheating (such as gerrymandering, poll closures in poor communities, purging of voter rolls, likely remote control of vote counting, and essentially every other dirty trick in the book). Those unfortunate candidates were Al Gore, John Kerry, Bernie Sanders, and now Hillary Clinton.
Allow
me to quote the Palmer
Report about the 2016 election:
“In order to believe that
the official vote tallies are legitimate, you have to accept that all
of the above legitimately happened: African-Americans in the south
went from turning out in droves for Hillary Clinton in the primary to
not caring if she won the general election. Donald Trump got
sixty-something percent of the same-day voting in Florida. The
polling averages were wrong for the first time in modern history.
Trump beat his poll numbers despite having spent the primary season
tending to fall below them. Clinton fell below her poll numbers
despite having spent the primary season tending to beat them. In
every state where Trump pulled off a shocking upset victory, he just
happened to do it with one percent of the vote. And in an election
that everyone cared particularly deeply about, no one really turned
out to vote at all. I can accept any one of the above things
happening as an isolated fluke. I cannot accept all the above
happening. And so for once in my evidence-driven career, I’m left
to believe that the conspiracy theorists are right: the vote tallies
are rigged.”
Want
to know who's behind all of this? Follow the money. What giant
industry has the most to gain by electing Climate Change denying
Republicans? We all know the oil companies have pumped huge
sums of money into the elections. We all know the oil companies spend
huge sums of money advertising on mass media (obviously
to manipulate our news). And we all should know that this is our
money being used against us.
They
now have the capacity to steal a landslide election. And they may
have had that ability for quite a few years now. Maybe that's why
Obama's energy policy pretty much up until the end of his second term
has been “all of the above.” Maybe that's why pro-renewable
Energy Czar Van Jones stepped down without a fight. Maybe Obama
suspected that there was literally no way he would ever win an
election if he tried to do something about Climate Change – no
matter how many people voted for him.
It's
now blatantly obvious that the oil companies care more about keeping
their multi-billion dollar income streams than the truth, our
democracy, or even the future of life on the planet.
A
recent study, published in Science
(Advances) has concluded that if carbon dioxide emissions
continue on their current trajectory, the U.S. West will have a
greater
than 90% probability of a megadrought. This is very
serious. A megadrought decimated the Anasazi civilization – and
there are millions more people now living in the Western States. Need
I remind you that the most recent drought death toll for trees in
California now is over
100 million trees.
Twenty
years ago, everyone (Republican and Democrat) agreed that we had
to do something about Global warming. Yet today, with the scientists'
most dire climate predictions literally coming
true (or
worse); there is controversy. It's so blatantly obvious that
money, not common sense, has changed the politicians minds.
As
former President Jimmy Carter recently said; America has become an
“oligarchy with unlimited political bribery.”
-
Subsidies and tax breaks are the only reason fossil fuels are still competitive with renewable energy – and there is no end in sight for these subsidies – no matter how many billions the oil companies make.
-
Fracking is essentially trading fresh water for oil and gas.
-
Deep water oil drilling is so risky we're practically guaranteed more big spills.
-
And going to war over oil hasn't made us safer. It has only driven us further into debt.
Nonetheless,
for another four years, we can expect a repeat of Bush/Cheney oil
politics. Which means there will likely be even more war.
(There has recently been a
revolution in biology, and for the first time in history there may
soon be biblically effective biological weapons. Which means that the
election cheaters have likely given an obvious racist access to
weapons that might be able to kill off whole races of people.
But do the oil companies care?
The First World burns most of the gas. So, if the poor of the world
were to die off, that would just mean the First World could burn more
gas.
I'm not saying that a biowar
is inevitable. But the destruction of our democracy is well under
way. And the consequences of that could be far worse than we ever
imagined.)
We
now know that government really is the
problem – so long as it is a puppet of the fossil fuel industries.
Fortunately,
we can do something about the destruction of our
democracy, the addictive dependence of our economy on oil, and the
mass extinctions already happening in our Environment. This too, is
obvious. We can stop buying oil products. That's it. Without as much
money, they won't be nearly as powerful. Stop feeding
the beasts!
This
won't be easy. But the alternative appears to be living in a fascist
state with a failing economy due to a collapsing Environment – or
worse.
I
already drive as little as possible, keep my earth-bermed house below
60 degrees in the Winter, installed solar panels, and grow a garden
so I won't have to import all my vegetables from the
other side of the planet… But that just isn't enough.
So
I've decided to do this:
(Will
it be enough? Of course not, but I've got to do something.)
I'm
designing an electric scooter – that will hopefully replace some
(maybe even many) cars soon. It will be different from all the
scooters now available – especially how it will be marketed. I hope
to start a local cooperative to help in making components for it from
recycled materials. And then I plan to provide custom frame kits that
can be assembled right in the local bike shop. I'm convinced that
this fair marketing concept could provide promotable value to local
manufacturers and independent bicycle retailers. We might even change
Capitalism a little...
More
on this later.
Thursday, August 11, 2016
How I found my “happy place” - and cured my allergies
I'll warn you now that I
will be writing about death. But my intent is to write about life.
Actually, I intend to write about maximizing my experience of life.
And the best way to maximize our experiences is to live them healthy.
And the healthiest way to live is with humility.
I have learned at least
twice now in my life how vitally important humility actually is.
When I was young, I had
bad sinus allergies. During allergy season, my sinuses were running
all the time. There was constant sneezing. One sinus or the other was
plugged up most of the time. And of course, I was miserable. This
lasted for a few weeks out of the year, every year, since about the
time my brother died.
I hadn't really thought
about this until I just wrote that…
…
My bother's death was a
tragedy.
Tragedy results in fear.
Fear leads to overreaction.
The classic coyote story
conundrum... I wanted to control the uncontrollable.
I wasn't religious. So, I
couldn't just pray and wait. I had to do something. And that
something was to be prepared for any circumstance. I wasn't a gun nut
or anything. But I was always on alert. Always trying to be aware.
Always a little afraid.
I wasn't paranoid.
Actually, I thought I was doing just fine. In the eyes of society;
was. Good at school. Never got into trouble. I was afraid to even
hang out with the bad kids. (Of course, that might have turned out to
have been a good decision.)
My point is that I wanted
to control the uncontrollable – my life. And I was smart enough to
think that maybe I could.
But it would take a lot of
effort. Emotionally, I never rested. I was over-stressed (quite a
common condition, I hear.) And, of course, I had sinus allergies,
which added to my stress.
But one day, when I was
about 14 years old, the stress and the illness were just too much for
me. I wasn't about to put up with the sinus problems any more. I had
to mow the lawn that day. I was expecting a sinus event and I was not
looking forward to it. So, I was desperate enough to try something
different.
I accepted my
vulnerability, summoned my inner peace, and confronted my issues
without fear… and instantly I no longer had allergies any more.
It was amazing. It was as
if I had just decided not to have allergies – and it worked.
But I never documented
what I did. And since there wasn't a problem any more, I ceased to
think about it.
At least, I ceased to
think about it until my late 40's – when my sinus allergies came
back… and I couldn't repeat what I achieved back when I was 14.
I guess watching my
parents getting old was freaking me out.
I dread the anguish of
them passing. I dread the loneliness.
There it was again –
that urge to control the uncontrollable. There I was again –
wishing I could do something to prevent death and dying – rather
than accepting death as a part of life.
As I look back at it –
it seems silly. We might be able to extend our lives – but we all
will eventually die. Nonetheless, somewhere deep down inside of me; I
did not want to accept that. I wanted to believe I could avoid the
pain. So, I constantly worried about it. And I suspect that because
of that; my stress levels rose. And because that, I wasn't living at
optimum level. And I suspect because of that; my sinus allergies came
back.
I tried for years, every
Fall; to repeat what I had achieved back when I was young. It helped.
But I couldn't quite go back to that mental state I had had for
decades. It was so frustrating – which, of course, made it worse.
Last Fall, my allergies
got bad enough that I ended up with an ear infection. Fortunately,
antibiotics took care of it – but there's something very scary
about having an infection so close to my brain.
As I write this, it is
mid-July – just about the time my allergies come back. I wasn't
looking forward to it. But I thought at least I could go outside for
a while before things got bad again. So, I decided to go backpacking.
I love the mountains. I
love to spend time in them. I love the feeling of being away from it
all – while at the same time being right in the middle of what
really matters.
My plan was simple –
four days, out and back, alone.
This would be the first
time I'd ever been backpacking alone.
I'd camped alone, and it
felt a little lonely. So, I haven't really gone out often alone.
(Good news: I never felt
lonely. But more on that later…)
As I said earlier; I
healed myself when I was young simply with an epiphany. I don't
believe it's necessary to go out on some kind of walkabout alone in
the wilderness to rid yourself of an allergy – but it worked for
me. I needed time away from the distractions.
I now know why I wanted to
be away for a while – alone.
I was holding onto
irrational fear.
I needed to let it go.
I needed time to myself to
learn about me.
As I look back; I've
always been a little edgy outdoors – almost to the point of being
jumpy. I've always tried to be alert – maybe a little too alert. If
a bug touched my skin, I'd immediately jump. If a leaf touched my
skin, I'd immediately jump. If I saw flowers, I'd be worried that
maybe they would stir up my allergies.
Of course, none of this
kept me indoors.
But I could have had a
better time outdoors. I could have been happier.
On the first two days of
my hike, my nose ran and ran. I was too late. It was allergy season
already. I did what it seemed like I always did, I put up with it –
hoping it would go away. Which, of course, it didn't. (Probiotics
have helped. My favorites are Natures Plus ear, nose, & throat
lozenges and kimchi. Of course, I didn't have any kimchi with me.)
By the morning of the
third day; I was beginning to feel good with sleeping on the ground,
exposed and vulnerable. It was then that I noticed that my sinuses
weren't quite as bad as they had been. I had slept in a meadow... and
I wasn't a wreck.
This inspired me to take
the next step:
I was siting on the branch
of a fallen tree under the shade of another tree at the edge of a
meadow. I didn't have my shirt on and the tall grass was rubbing
lightly up against my bare back. I could see there was no risk, but
up until then being touched by these grasses made me feel
uncomfortable. But it was my choice to sit there. And for the past
two days I had been reminding myself that these plants were my
friends (and that I just didn't know it yet). So, I decided to treat
them like friends. I let them rub lightly against my back until I
felt truly comfortable with it.
And almost instantly I was
healed.
This experience reminds me
of the Christian “Serenity” prayer.
Actually, this prayer is
not from the Bible. It was written in the 1930's by an American
theologian. Which means these common sense words were not written in
stone. So I created my own version:
I grant
myself the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
the courage
to change the things I can,
and the
wisdom to know the difference.
...Because, for the most
part; I'm the one who decides whether to be serene, courageous, or
wise.
And now I know: I've tried
being too courageous, and it's cost me serenity. That's wisdom
learned the hard way.
I had found my “happy
place” and I had been right there all along.
When I learned to feel at
peace with the world, I suddenly learned how to stop fighting it
unnecessarily.
It felt like I was home
out in the wilderness.
And now; the flowers are
more beautiful to me than they ever have been before.
…
At my campsite on the
fourth morning, I heard a cry out from behind the brush and trees
above me less than 100 meters away. It sounded like a fawn. And it
sounded like mountain lion was trying to kill it. Then it cried out
again. And again and again. It was a terrible sound I won't soon
forget. And it reminded me of something.
I am going to die. I am
going to die someday. No matter what I do. My death will happen. It
will probably be painful. It will likely involve a lot of anguish and
grief. I might even be screaming in pain like that poor fawn I could
hear – calling out, over and over again for a rescue that was never
coming – for an option it didn't have – for a chance to change
the past.
I imagined it was me. I
imagined myself screaming in anguish. I imagined this as an allegory
for my future – and that it was inevitable.
In some ways, my life is
no more under my control than the ants I had carelessly stepped on
while I was hiking.
The thoughts were awful,
but liberating.
In a way, I had been lying
to myself. Somewhere, deep down in my almost subconscious thoughts; I
believed that I could defend myself from the inevitable.
While I've been preparing
for the worst, looking everywhere for ghosts, and fighting windmills;
I've been missing out on life. I could rest now.
Later on, I also realized
that everyone I care about is destined to die. It is likely I am
destined to hear some of them screaming in anguish too. That is my
fate. And though I could probably change things for the worse, I
won't be able to change things for the better.
…
Since my epiphany; I
noticed (while on a somewhat frustrating mountain bike ride) that
when I started feeling overly vulnerable, I started to sneeze again.
Stress from the fear of crashing my mountain bike and the pounding of
my body against the rocks appears to trigger a mild allergic reaction
in me. Apparently; I'm allergic to crashing. Actually I'm allergic to
the thought that I cannot control my actions on a mountain bike –
and that I cannot avoid trauma. I occasionally spaz. Even though I've
been riding for 30 years now, I still seem to forget everything
once in a while. That leads to an almost mild panic attack. I can
still ride, I just don't ride as well – or enjoy it as much...
Stress does that.
Humility is now my best
defense from stress. I have to admit to myself that I cannot keep
myself perfectly safe. It isn't possible. It isn't even worth the
effort to try. I'm not a perfect rider, and therefore I will make
mistakes. If there wasn't a risk, it wouldn't be as exciting. And if
I'm not willing to get scuffed up once in a while, go find another
sport... I'm not willing to quit. So, I have to accept that someday I
will likely fall... and it's not worth worrying about. I have to
accept my vulnerability – and own it. And when I relax, I ride so
much better.
…
About a couple of weeks
after my epiphany, I woke up one morning with my sinuses all stuffed
up again. It took me the rest of the day practicing what I had
learned to get back to a well state. Apparently, I had somehow
dreamed about something that brought back my allergies.
And oddly, when I first
got my allergies back as an adult, it started when I witnessed
someone else with allergy problems. It was as if I caught her
allergies. But I think for me it was more like I caught a yawn that
wouldn't go away. I guess, in a way, empathy can spread disease. By
empathetically feeling her pain, I must have somehow copied her
painful process.
The word psychosomatic
comes to mind – but only for me. I make no assessment of anyone
else's allergies. I also am not bothered to be labeled as once having
a psychosomatic illness. I did nothing wrong – except to
unknowingly overreact to a perceived health threat. I learned from
the experience. And now I feel healthier in multiple ways. We all
have health issues throughout our lives. What's important is that we
heal.
Now, when my sinuses act
up – which they sometimes still do a little; I repeatedly remind
myself not to fight it… and I don't – and neither does my body.
That's not only peaceful, it's empowering.
…
Though I made it sound
like I accomplished all of this by myself, I had a lot of help:
I want to thank
chiropractor Joseph D. Kepo'o for the balloon treatment he performed
that opened up my sinus cavities.
I want to thank Chinese
medicine doctor Robert Cozzie for helping me understand how to turn
what Western doctors condescendingly call the “placebo effect”
into my primary health strategy.
I want to thank life coach
Carol Reynolds for giving me permission to be this honest with
myself.
And I want to thank my
Native ancestors for living a healthy sustainable life in this
beautiful place so that I too could enjoy it now – more like they
did than I ever have before.
Friday, April 29, 2016
Speakin' Out II
This was my second "public comment" at the Legislative Commission's Subcommittee to Study Water on April 22, 2016:
One of the biggest
faults of Nevada Water Law has been with us since it was originally
written. And looking back, the reason is obvious. Back when the
miners, ranchers and farmers got together to divy up Nevada's water;
they obviously didn't want to share any with the Indians. So they
defined water “use” as not what Indians did with
water. In other words, Nevada Water Law essentially does not
define truly sustainable water use as “use.”
This is a crucial
flaw that has ultimately led us in the misguided direction and
over-appropriated condition we now find ourselves.
In my opinion;
Nevada water law, at it's very core, promotes waste.
Because Nevada water
law considers truly sustainable use as waste.
The irony is
terrifying.
Essentially, here in
the desert; the only legal use of water is to expend it.
My ancestors have
lived sustainably here for over 10,000 years. But with
over-appropriated water use, many parts of Nevada could be
uninhabitable in less than 200 years.
Nevada water law
needs to more rationally consider sustainable use, the environment
that supports sustainable use, and future generations that will
depend on us sustainably using what water there is.
We critically need
to start thinking long-term while that option is still available to
us.
Speakin' Out
This was my first "public comment" at the Legislative Commission's Subcommittee to Study Water on April 22, 2016:
Please don't
commodify Nevada's water.
I warn you now; we
will not want to pay speculator driven “market”
prices for our water.
We already have
hedge funds investing in Nevada's water. Obviously, they're hoping
that the “market price” will go through the roof. In Australia,
where the commodification of water has been called “unbundling,”
speculators have drastically driven up the price of water for water
users. Consequently a huge number of farms have been driven out of
business, urban users have faced severe restrictions, and Australia's
environment has suffered dire consequences.
In Israel, where
there is no legal doctrine of prior appropriation rights; some
Israelis have claimed that they have solved their water problems with
a free-market solution. Of course; most Americans have now realized
that the term free-market actually means; the freedom for the
powerful to take from the rest of us. Part of Israel's
“solution” is to take water from the Palestinians. There are
places in Palestine where the Palestinians and their crops go thirsty
because the water under their feet is being exported to Israel. As a
Rural Nevadan of Native American heritage, I don't want to be treated
like Israel treats Palestinians.
I can see where the
SNWA would want to change Nevada's water laws so that the water from
the ranches they bought can be exported. But commodification is not
the way to do it. The cost to everyone in the State is
not worth it.
In the end; if all
that matters about water is the price, only those with money to pay
the over-inflated prices will have water.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)