Category Archives: Rants and Raves

Rage, Flobots and the DNC in Denver

By Cassie

The DNC is in Denver this week which is pretty historic considering who will be accepting the nomination for president. But also impressive is that Rage Against the Machine and the Flobots are playing here today, I believe. One of my friends, Lorena, won tickets to the show, and another, Rhonda, is going to Invesco when Obama makes his acceptance speech. It’s pretty crazy to see so much attention on Colorado right now.

The Flobots and Rage are not promoting or protesting the Democratic party or anything, actually the way I understand it, they are trying to bring awareness about the government and political process in general, the influence of corporate media on Americans (and govt), and the influence of Americans -and our politics- on the world (for better and for worse).  Here’s a quote from one of the band members:

“Our message here is really trying to gather and rally all of this investment that people are getting now in the whole political process. We have both young people and old really re-energized for the first time and really involved in this process,” Brackett said. “And we want to make sure that energy doesn’t get lost when the president is finally elected.”

Rage is a little heavy of a band for me, but they are super smart and right on target with their lyrics. I love the Flobots hip-hop beat, violins and lyrics, and I believe they are from Colorado. If you’ve never heard Rage or Flobots, here are some Rage lyrics, and a Flobot video:

No Shelter
The main attraction distraction
Got you number than number than numb.
Empty your pockets son they got you thinkin’ that
What you need is what they sellin’
Make you think that buyin’ is rebellin’

From the theaters to malls on every shore
The thin line between entertainment and war
The front line is everywhere there’ll be no shelter here
Still burn the nightmare works you pushin’ for,
I’m a snap of the whip, the true feather to tar
Memory erased and promise gone,
Tradin’ your history for a V.C.R.

Cinema simulated life in trauma
Forthright culture, Americana
Chained to the dream they got you searchin’ for
The thin line between entertainment and war
There’ll be no shelter here,
The front line is everywhere. X4
Hospitals not profitful
The market bulls got pockets full
To advertise some hip disguise
View the world from American eyes
The parmagon keep fiendin’ for more
The thin line between entertainment and war
Fix the need, develop the taste,
Buy the products, or get laid to waste
Coca-cola was back in the veins of Saigon
And Rambo troops We got a dope pair ‘a Nikes on
Godzilla pure motherfuckin’ filler
Get your eyes on the real killer,
Cinema simulated life in trauma
Forthright culture, Americana
Chained to the dream they got you searchin’ for,
The thin line between entertainment and war.
There’ll be no shelter here,
The front line is everywhere. X4
American eyes, American eyes,
View the world from American eyes,

Bury the past, rob us blind,
leave nothing behind. X2
Just stare. X4
Or live the nightmare.

American Eyes, of course, when said aloud is: Americanize.

Here is “Handlebars” which is probably the Flobot’s most famous but they also have other good songs like “There is a War Going On for Your Mind” “Rise” “The Moon” and others.

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Tour De Farms -Fort Collins

Britton and I went on the Tour De Farms events from the Rocky Mountain Sustainablilty group on Saturday. It was pretty fun. We loaded up the bikes in the Honda Civic and met at the Farmer’s Market in Fort Collins. There we had a discussion about local food economies and the benefits of eating organic. Then we looked around the Farmer’s Market and ate some Grand Junction peaches.


At the Farmer’s Market

From there we headed off on bike as a group to a couple of urban backyard gardens and discussed the importance of this.


In an Urban Garden

Then we rode a little more and saw a couple of commercial operations including an organic nursery and greenhouse operation that is part of a larger farm out in Wellington and a Community Supported Agriculture farm that has over 125 members.


Rows of Food with a Mountain backdrop

It was pretty cool to see over 50 people in a row on bikes going from farm to farm in a 5 mile radius in Fort Collins.


Biking to and fro

The last event at Happy Heart Farm was probably the best. We talked about the importance of transportation in the equation (biking) to reduce our carbon footprint and even had a bike courier deliver lunch from a local co-op. It was definitely a pretty hippie and awesome day. The speaker even talked about moving from a “locavore” society to a “bike-a-vore” society. Which made me think, who eats their bicycle anyway? 🙂

Even the sandwich choices were either vegetarian or vegan -that’s pretty rare. I would have liked to have seen a few animals as part of the discussion on farming -especially for the kids to play with, and maybe a little more diversity in the people who turned out for the event, but overall, it was a great way to spend a morning. And we ended up at New Belgium’s again which made Britton all the happier…


Hanging out at Happy Heart Farm under the old tree arch

When we came home, we hung out with Matt and Jamie at our house for a little while and then slept out in our backyard in a tent to complete the hippie day.


Britton by the tent

The whole day overall was yet another training for Puerto Rico. I believe there are very few organic farms or CSAs there. It would be wonderful to create a farm-stay program where people could stay at the place, work and eat. It gave us renewed vigor and strength that this is going to be one of the coolest things in our lives. We probably would do it here in Colorado except, well, we have a winter season that goes from about the middle of October until the middle of April. I am ready to live like this -well maybe not the whole tent thing 🙂 – year-round.

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Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal

By Cassie
Britton sent me the link to an article with that title, so of course I had to read it. (And Isaac sent it to me after I sent him the Michael Pollan video – bk)

http://www.acresusa.com/toolbox/reprints/Salatin_Sept03.pdf


El Jibaro

I thought it summed up a lot of what Britton and I have talked about before. The “system” -the impersonal “they”- make it very difficult to get OUT of the system that was built by them. “9/11 fueled renewed acceleration to
eliminate freedom from the countryside,” said the author of the article, Joel Salatin. It is interesting to think about 9/11 as a conspiracy or a launching pad for a way to control people even more than before. The Patriot Act seems so finely tuned to remove personal freedoms including privacy, it is scary that everyone went along with it without much of a peep. All in the name of fighting “terrorism”. These are policies that revolve around fear. If we turned it around and another country were doing what we do daily, they would be on our Enemy Number 1 list (torture, spying, weapons proliferation).

The article goes into detail of all the things that a farmer today cannot do including: processing his own food to sell, using the farm as an educational outlet, collaborative marketing and selling other farm goods at his farm, employing youth and interns, and building a small house. He also discusses why the big companies want eradiation (basically x-raying and killing all living material in food for fear of food-pathogens), genetic altering of food (this questionable process stands to earn Monsanto, Dow, and the other chemical companies hoards of money in patents), and to not allow people to even visit farms for fear of infecting all the immune-compromised animals (this is already true). They want to require GPS on all farm animals (this is already happening, but not feasibly working), and to remove firearms from farmers who may need them to defend the farm against predators, or to cull a downed animal. All of these have been proposed and/or are in the works as part of our national food policies.


Goat Farming

When we were in Puerto Rico talking with Awilda about the finca (farm) we asked her about regulations, permits, water rights, etc. She said, “This is el campo (country), no one comes up here, but if you want all that trouble, you go to Arecibo.” She makes pasteles out of the food grown on the land and sells it to local health food stores and had to get food labels made. “If they could, they would attach a box to your back and charge you every time you breathe.” I think I like this lady.


I hope to see a lot of these down there

I understand regulations and their need in our society, but sometimes we need common sense and incentives to make it easier to live green and sustainably, not disincentives. The roads on the way to work have no sidewalks or bike lanes, for instance, so my incentive seems to be to drive, not bike. It is much easier to fill out paperwork and work for someone else than to start your own business. It takes a lot more motivation, but that is the only way to fight the system. Going along with everything just further entrenches us. Live and work in the little boxes we created for you, you can’t go far without us, the system seems to hum at us, like a concrete and metal bee hive.

Also, I found this great website: www.ted.com There are so many great discussions on here. This is one from Michael Pollan, and he actually compares us to bees as well. Joel Salatin is one of his mentors and is highlighted in The Omnivore’s Dilemma.


Presentation by Michael Pollan

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Brick Walls and Dreams

“The brick walls are there for a reason … to show us how badly we want something. The brick walls are there to stop the people who don’t want it badly enough. They’re there to stop the other people.”
-Randy Pausch

As we embark upon our dream we have already started to encounter brick walls. I think our system in general (society) is not setup for us to do the things we really enjoy or want to do. For instance the rules for a ‘conforming’ mortgage are written for people who live in sub-divisions not for people who want to live in the forest. Of course you can still get a loan, but it’ll be more expensive (higher wall).

I had a really cool feeling last night when I was driving home from work. I was thinking about moving to PR and how we are going to make it work and I got the overwhelming feeling that you can do anything. I know people say it, but I am starting to feel it. Its a good feeling. Then I saw this video today and it just re-enforces that you can achieve anything you want if you put your mind to it and work towards it.

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