Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Tornados, an oil spill, and a heroic German Shepherd named Buddy

What a tornado can look like
Stock photo

Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget. Our hearts go out to those who lost family and friends in the tornados which rampaged through parts of the South Saturday, leaving at least 12 dead, scores injured and hundreds of others homeless. One official described it as the worst natural disaster to hit the region in decades and another likened it to the devastation wrought by Hurricane Katrina.

The stories of heroism, survival, miracles and tragedy certainly of this one certainly rival those which came out of New Orleans. They attest both to the destructive fury of the tornados and to the incredible capacity our species has for survival.

For excellent video coverage:

Related Links:
Birth of a Tornado: What Causes Them
Mississippi Assessing Damage By Tornado
Survivor Tales from Storms That Killed 12

We also continue to be both saddened and disheartened that crude oil continues to flow from a pipeline five thousand feet into the Gulf of Mexico.

To me, this disaster has two things in common with the explosion at the
Upper Branch mine in West Virginia. Working men died trying to support families, going to into places human beings don’t naturally belong, to produce a fuel source that isn’t healthy for life on any portion of this planet.

And because of that, a part of the United States that’s already been slammed by tornados next gets to deal with crude oil washing ashore along their Mexican Gulf course or, the Coast Guard decides to try to burn it off, thick dense smoke in their skies for days.

It’s another disaster but unlike the first one ~ the raging winds ~ this one never needed to happen and it did, ultimately, because a lot of us, as individuals, had unrealistic expectations of the Great American Dream. And it happened because we were greedy.

As Consumer Americans, we were willing to pay the human cost and so were those who worked in the industry. What makes this so totally unacceptable to me is that safer and healthier sources of energy have been there far longer that the stuff we dig or suck from the planet. Solar, low yield hydro, wind, methane, tidal, they’ve all been here for a very, very long time.

To me, any human being who dies for family has not done so for nothing. Coal miners, steel mill workers, commercial fishermen, those who man the oil rigs and work in the refineries, those who go into the woods to cut the timber and those who make it into boards, they’re all doing it for the best of reasons.

They’re also doing it for the communities in which they live and their states, provinces and districts, their regions and nations, and of course for their dreams of a better world. I can conceive of no nobler a way to live and sometimes, no more tragic and genocidal a way to die. So I’ve asked myself and I put it to you.

Do we need oil and coal so much that we’re willing to let miners in Appalachia and wildcatters in the Mexican Gulf die for it? Do we so need oil and coal so much that we’re willing to continue to pollute our air, our water and our land with it, and to dramatically cut short both the quality of life and the span of it for all those exposed to its toxic effects? Do we need fossil fuel enough to go to war for it and to protect, however inhumane, the despotic rulers of some of the nations which provide it to us?
We talk about honoring people who die for the Great American Dream. All the remembrances don’t bring back a human being and they certainly do not replace one. And funerals and wakes do absolutely nothing to mitigate the fear these laborers live with 24/7, realizing that their work place could so easily bury them alive or incinerate them.

We owe these people far more than honor. We owe them a future and in this case, a green one.

Related Links:
Regulators Approve First Offshore Wind Farm in U.S.

When a man who gets stabbed protecting a woman he’s never met is allowed to bleed to death on a sidewalk in daylight in one of the largest cities in the world, it is clearly time to reassess the capacity of members of our species to not so much as dial 911 on a cell phone.

It happened last week in New York City’s Queens Borough and was all caught by (we assume but cannot verify, unmanned) surveillance cameras. This one made The Today Show and local television and radio show comment lines and email in baskets were flooded with outraged and angry Gotham City citizens who simply could not believe something like this could happen in their community in this day and age.

Apparently the entire nation and much of the International Community feels the same way. And we join them. This may have been common behavior in New York City prior to 9/11 but it has not been since. An act of war which rocked a nation naturally hit Ground Zero the hardest and from The Bronx to Staten Island,
residents of the five boroughs united behind a stronger, kinder and move livable community.

The Good Samaritan’s name is Hugo Tale-Yax. He was born in Guatemala and his wake was held yesterday, Wednesday, April 27, 2010,
at Funeraria Le Fey, in Brooklyn.

Related Links
Good Samaritan bleeds to death while pedestrians walk by

CROSSING OVER


Heaven is richer for her arrival and our world has been made a better place because of the things black journalist, activist, editor and columnist Evelyn Cunningham did with her time among us.

Evelyn, to me, was another role model because her courage, her dedication, her passion for freedom and her faith that our species would one day grow to deserve the best of its dreams was not a gender thing or a racial thing. It was a human being thing and it transcended any label applied to her and her life during the 94 years she moved so gracefully and so resolutely among us.

For more on this remarkable human being:


GOOD NEWS

In another demonstration that green is the way to go, we’re pleased to report that another Seattle resident has solarized his home and is now off the electric power grid.
Yep, even in allegedly soggy Seattle, he anticipates that the $40,000 it cost him to do this will be paid back in ten years. We strongly suspect that as more people emulate his example and designers, engineers and manufacturers compete for the trade, costs will drop, systems will become more efficient and all construction in the future will be cheaper to build, buy, insulate and energize
. For more on this one:

Well, if you’re looking for work, North Dakota is booming. But you better go there in an RV, a camper pickup, a station wagon, an SUV or towing a trailer because housing, from homes to hotels and motels to mobile home parks and including boarding house rooms, is as scarce as employment is plentiful. Hundreds are doing it though and what makes that cool to me is that it’s an accepted lifestyle and support networks are growing to assist single individuals and families making the transition from covered wagon to soddie or log cabin, as it were.
Yep, for more on this one:

Well, this one doesn’t come as any surprise
. People who don’t feel good about themselves are often abusive to others, according to Judi Hopson and Emma Hopson, registered nurses and authors of a stress management book for paramedics, firefighters and police entitled "Burnout To Balance: EMS Stress."

As they contend, low self-esteem is on the increase during these tough times. Clerics, family counselors, law enforcement and the medical community across America are reporting a corresponding rise in domestic violence, a trend also mirrored in a growing volume of incidents of road rage, and verbal and physical assaults in general.

The authors offer practical, constructive and proven advice on how potentially explosive situations can most often be defused.
Yes, for more on this:

We were also gratified that Pope Benedict XVI earlier this month said that while he recognized that the Church was under attack, he felt that those who had, indeed, sinned needed to repent and recognize their mistakes.

It was not considered nearly enough by many of those who have been victimized. A spokesman for the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, Mark Serrano, said, “When the pope can't bring himself to utter the words 'pedophile priest' or 'child sex crimes' or 'cover-ups' or 'complicit bishops,' it's hard to have faith that he is able to honestly and effectively deal with this growing crisis."

As far as The Northstar Journal is concerned, however, this is a start in the right direction. So, we feel, is the resignation of Belgium’s longest-serving bishop, Father
Roger Vangheluwe. who admitted this month that he abused “a boy in my close entourage.”

Vangheluwe joins a growing number of other top Catholic clerics who are removing themselves from positions in the Church, including Bishop Walter Mixa, one of Germany’s most prominent and outspoken conservative clerics, and James Moriarty of Kildare and Leighlin, Ireland.

Scant comfort to the victims and to those others whose faith in those chosen to care for their spiritual lives has been so profoundly shaken, but this has been covered up for centuries. It very likely could have remained that way and perhaps the Vatican could have dealt with it internally.

It didn’t come down that way but thanks to those initial handful with the integrity to seek an end to this most corrosive of human abuses, responsibility is being assumed. It’s a process that has begun and considering the vehemence with which it is being pursued by those so basely violated, I’d predict it’s not going to end for some while.

I hope, however, that it does not destroy the Catholic Church, for that would be the most magnificent and unjustifiable of hyprocrisies. No other species on Earth, save humankind, condones the abuse of its young.

In my mind, then, this is not a religious or spiritual issue. Child abusers respect no institutions, no faiths and certainly no philosophies. And they are found under every flag on the planet.

This is about how much each and every one of us cares not just about the youngsters in our own lives, but about all the world’s children. Maybe it’s just me, but I don’t see the two as being mutually exclusive. It’s been my experience that to care about one is, in fact, to care about all.

If the US Food and Drug Administration approves it, some men suffering from advanced prostrated cancer may live a lot longer. According to Seattle Times science reporter Sandi Doughton:

“The treatment's benefits are modest. But as the first product of its type to emerge from decades of often-frustrating research, Provenge could help open doors for immune-based therapies against a range of cancers.”

Yes, for more on this one:

COOL STUFF WE FOUND ON THE NET AT A GOOD PRICE (Free is a good price, right?)

I’m not a comic book junkie but I know some. They’re always searching the Net for the old, the rare, the unusual and the archived. Here’s a software download which will let them view whatever they find, regardless the format. We had a lot of fun with this one. Here’s it’s review:

Editorial Review of ComicRack

ComicRack is a powerful and free program which lets you read downloaded comics in many formats, including the popular .CBR and .CBZ formats. The odds are good that if you recognize those file types, you will want this program.

We all know
Rule 34 of the Internet, but there's another rule, not named or numbered as far as I know: "If you discover you need a program to do something, odds are, someone's written it." So it is with Comic Rack. I recently discovered a site which hosts legal downloads of out-of-copyright Golden Age comics, and after grabbing a few, I realized I needed a better way to read and organize my suddenly growing collection. Thus, I discovered ComicRack.

ComicRack aspires to be "iTunes for your comics," and it shares some features with that program. It's both an organizer and a viewer, letting you create libraries and filtered lists of your comics, as well as displaying them for viewing, with many choices as to page layout and display features, including a right-to-left "manga mode", page rotation, and much more. Indeed, "And much more..." is sort of the catch phrase of Comic Rack.

ComicRack is not just feature-rich, it's feature-Bill-Gates-rich. The number of options is incredible. Just to pick one example, on the "Pages" tab, you can set the type of each page to any of 11 categories, such as "Front Cover," "Story," or "Advertising," then filter the pages menu to just show particular categories. There's always something new to discover as you dig through the menus and dialog boxes. You'll need to dig, too, which brings us to the downsides of the program.

A labor of love and a one-man show, ComicRack is supported by an enthusiastic community. Any imaginable feature, and a few I never thought of, is crammed in. However, as with many such programs, enthusiasm for coding doesn't translate into enthusiasm for the tedious work of documenting, and the online wiki which serves as the manual is painfully sparse. It's a cardinal rule of interface design that the user should never be surprised, but ComicRack is full of surprises.
Panes and lists appear and disappear almost randomly, and while you can work out the rules and the options which control them with a little effort, it can take a while to get to the point where you can load and read your comics without finding some aspect of the interface doing something you don't expect.

ComicRack is 100% free software, though, and that forgives many sins. Donations are encouraged but not required. ComicRack is regularly updated and supported, with an active community. I strongly recommend checking it out if you download comics to read on your computer. And if you're looking for a source of legal comics to download, check out GoldenAgeComics.co.uk.
Note: This program is donationware. It is free to try, but the author accepts and encourages donations towards further development.

--Ian Harac

For more information and to download:

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

One of the ways that both single people and families are not only surviving hard times but getting ahead in them is by combining households under one roof. It’s not a new idea. But the difference now seems to be that instead of just picking a roommate on compatibility and a credit check, people are coming together to collectively meet their individual costs of living.

A quick example of this is the woman nurse with kids and the unemployed machinist who loves kids and is also real good at fixing things like cars, bicycles, home appliances. In the intentional households of the 21st Century, the machinist would likely be providing at home daycare and auto/appliance repair as his portion of the rent, the utilities and groceries, with him still making his own spending money.

There are lots of variations on the theme but one thing they all have in common is that they provide an emotional support base and from a health perspective, that is absolutely necessary. Stress is the common enemy so these households work out ways to eliminate as much of it as they can. That frees them up for the kind of creative thinking that’s been working for families, neighborhoods and communities for several thousand years that we know of and probably a lot longer than that.
The Tyee writer Chis Cannon’s article entitled “Save the Planet, Share a Roof: Collective living is greener, saves money and might just expand your world” is a beautiful description of this lifestyle alternative. Chris uses images of nature and home, from one coast of North America to the other, and renders the human beings involved in ways impossible not to identify with and like.
Yep, for this one, then:

HEALTH NEWS

This has got to come as good news to those impacted by AIDS. An experimental vaccine for HIV tested in Thailand last September protected one out of three of those people who participated in the study. The medical community is more optimistic than ever than this disease could be eliminated world-wide. To me, it’s also a real good example of what dedication, teamwork and appropriate funding can accomplish.
For more on this one:

Thank you, I think, to the reader who sent me this link to a site with some cool exercises, diet tips, etc. to ward off Alzheimers. I’m not sure what, if any, personal implications to draw from this one but I had a good time with the puzzles and games and apparently I’m eating the right foods.
So yep, to check it out:

THE CAPITOL HILL BEAT

We caught part of Goldman Sachs v. The United States Senate hearings this week and were as appalled, outraged and disgusted as those conducting these proceedings seemed to be. Northstar does not invest in stocks, bonds or securities but we see no reason why the rules should be any different than they are for antiques, art, jewelry, land, patents, etc.

I certainly would not want those whose advice I sought making their money from a competing investment source. It’s apparently not illegal and since no one I watched from Goldman Sachs seemed to have a problem with the ethics or the morality of it, I’m staying clear of those kinds of financial speculations until Congress legislates a Wall Street conscience.

I’m also glad I don’t have any friends in the investment world. After those hearings, I doubt I would now.
For an excellent analysis of this:
CRITTER STUFF

I do so love it when Canadians go proactive over protecting one of the humbler of all creatures great and small. And I appreciate it even more when ~ with all due respect ~ neither Victoria (in this case) nor Ottawa was consulted or buttonholed for tax dollars.

For all the suspicions, fears (apparently) or convictions that Canada is or intends to become socialistic, America’s northern neighbor knows what that actually means and that it does not always require a bureaucracy and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police to protect even something as small as the Western Painted Turtle. Sometimes it just takes regular folks getting together behind an inter-species act of social responsibility and good will.

Yep, for more on this one, by all means:

This second one comes to us out of Alaska and I loved it because the passion I have for cats is also shared with dogs and I have been privileged to share my life with several fine examples of the canine species.

One of my favorite all-time movies,
Homeward Bound: The Incredible Journey, is about these two dogs and a cat who get left behind in a move and paw it over some real bad mountains to rejoin their human family. I’m also really into Jack London, as well and this one, because of its far north setting, is more like what he wrote.

This is about Buddy, a German shepherd, and how he saved the home of his family from being burned to the frozen ground. Even the reporter who covered this one compared it to American movies and television programs like Lassie and Rin Tin Tin. There’s also a short video from the dashboard camera of the rig of the Alaska State Police trooper who responded to a neighbor’s call but who got lost when the GPS system in his patrol car failed. Buddy found him and led him to the scene.

I’m a firm believer that all good dogs go to Heaven, albeit not the same one that cats do. And if that’s true, that Alaska native and good and faithful servant is going to be resting his front paws on the skirts of the robe of the Creator of Us All. Way to go Buddy.

Yep, for more on this one:

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP

Well, it’s not that this didn’t happen. It’s just that it didn’t happen exactly as my media peers reported it. I happen to have inside sources, furry ones. My Maine coon cat Sasha’s best friend is a raccoon named Ralph. Ralph knows people and, to paraphrase the venerable Curt Vonnegut, so it goes.

This is about that ferret who decided it needed to get out of town but didn’t have passenger fare. So it boxed itself up and ~ we suspect with the help of friends ~ managed to get itself on a plane and go as air freight. Its attempt to defraud the commercial aviation industry was discovered, however, and to some chagrin to all concerned. In one of the finest examples of inter-species cooperation we’ve seen all week, a deal was worked out.

The ferret promised both not to try it again and to discourage his friends from engaging in such illegal, if not extremely embarrassing practices. The ferret got a new home with a baggage handler and airline officials decided not to press charges.
For the video on this one:

Well, that’s it for now. Before you leave though, you might want to check out Northstar Recommends. We’ve added (and will continue to do so) cool things we find. And if you’re in a shopping mood, we invite you to peruse our amazon.com ads and our reader-generated
Northstar General Store.

We’re also opening up the Northstar Journal for weekly sponsors. It’s a way of helping to support this modest enterprise and get yourself, your business, organization or nonprofit noticed by email subscribers in seven countries. If you’re interested
, email me for details and we’ll put something together.

Take care, stay well, thanks again for the ear and we’ll see you next week. Hang tough, gang. We’re going to make it and come out better for the learning, then, eh?

Rusty

NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

RESOURCES


Maker Culture: Taking Things Into Our Own Hands - For 12 weeks in the fall of 2009, 45 online journalism students at Ryerson University and the University of Western Ontario worked together to document the evolving Maker Culture community.

Maker Culture? That's coders, fabricators, foodies, artists, educators, activists, citizen and even scientists grabbing the Do-It-Yourself ethic with both hands and changing our world in the process.

These are people who aren't just making things, they're making a point of sharing what they've learned, what they've made, and why. Often, for free.
Makers are responding directly, locally to globalization, commercialization, copyright and central command and control.

This is the introduction to a fascinating series on how to become more self-reliant, live a lot more economically and enjoy the company of others doing the same. If you’re looking for ideas, inspiration and resources to get through hard times or just to simplify you life, we highly recommend this one.

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.

Stalking Resource Center division of the National Center for Victims of Crime – Internet harassment, stalking and abuse in general is now against the law. If you’re being victimized or if you know of someone who is, this is an excellent resource.

FUN STUFF

If you share my passion for American History,
you’re going to love AmericanWest.com This is historical society stuff that is also extremely interesting to read. So yep, just in case you didn’t get it the first time, check it out here.

Houston At Night and other totally cool images are available at the Earth Observatory, along with an incredible array of other outer space images. This is one of NASA’s more engaging websites and it’s here, as well, that you can subscribe to their online newsletter. Whether you’re an aerospace/astronomy buff or simply enjoy stargazing, this is an excellent site.

Ever been told you look like someone famous? Ever not been told that but would like to have been? Find a photo of yourself, go to this site, MyHeritage.com, upload it and get a gallery of celebrities you resemble, to one degree or another. Yep, it’s a total waste of time and an unabashed indulgence of ego. Probably two reasons why I totally loved it, even though a couple of my own pix didn’t turn up any results. It’s fun to play with so enjoy.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

Grub you libido will love.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Ever get so stressed you feel like you’re really jammed up against it? Take a deep breath and check out you’re surroundings is the advice of Dr. Roberta Lee in her book The Superstress Solution. We have and what I’ve generally found is that the outside reflects the inside. If I’m real busy, jackets get tossed over chairs, used coffee cups appear magically on window ledges and desk top clutter takes on a total biosphere all its own. Perhaps not surprising, dealing with the outside can really help you relax. And although we don’t recommend you try this at home, if you wait long enough, it can be also be real good exercise. This is a mental health must so check it out here. We’re reading Dr. Lee’s book now and we bought it here.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Take this test to see how your memory compares with the average.

Click here for fun games to improve your memory.

There’s a new book out now which could make a dramatic difference in the way toward the way women experience the passing of years. Despite major industries involved ~ cosmetic, fitness, elective surgery, to name three ~ the idea that women become less attractive as they grow older has also very likely contributed to more anxiety, high blood pressure, depression, etc. than any other single factor in a woman’s life except cancer and childbearing.

We also suspect that it has probably cost men just as much, if not more, than it has cost women, even in a nation historically known for its tolerance of a double standard. The book is entitled Face It: What Women Really Feel as Their Looks Change. Read about it here and if you decide you’d like to purchase it online, you can buy it here. I especially recommend this to men. It’s time our gender took more responsibility for this.


FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE






































And for a truly unique shopping experience, drop by and browse THE NORTHSTAR GENERAL STORE.

Press Releases, Product Reviews, Promotional Copy, Digital Photography, Online Research and Investigation, Ghost Writing, Special Projects. Seattle-based and wired into the International Community. For more information, email to minstrel312@aol.com or go here -> Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist.

GOOD “READS”

Books


If you’d like to read something which combines the best elements of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and a neo-eco Mickey Spillane detective thriller, you’ll love this one.

“In the brave new world of the Internet, FedEx and an international taste for the exotic, wildlife poachers steal everything from elk horns to geoducks, the world's largest clam. In the waters of Puget Sound in Washington state, state wildlife agents stalk these thieves on land and at sea. In "Shell Games: Rogues, Smugglers, and the Hunt for Nature's Bounty," Seattle Times environmental reporter Craig Welch joins these detectives on the trail of one of the region's most notorious geoduck thieves.”

Welch, a Seattle Times environmental reporter is a compelling writer and this excerpt from the book would be worth the experience even if we were not also fascinated by the subject. If, after reading this extract, you’d like to buy the book, you’ll find it for sale here.

News


BBC Best source of international news.

Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (multi-media), the Toronto Globe & Mail and the Vancouver Sun -- outstanding sources for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

KING 5 News Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

New York Times Best source of American news.

Reuters Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Seattle Times Best source for news of the city and the Puget Sound. Its reportage is unbiased but their columns and other opinion pieces do reflect the predominant values of the Pacific Northwest.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

Entertainment

BBC Knowledge Magazine designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

TomatoMan Times -- For those who love good writing, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsmen out there now than professionally known as Tomatoman Mike. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck is, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

See you next week, eh?


Thursday, April 22, 2010

HAPPY EARTH DAY


Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget. It has certainly been an interesting week and a dramatic one. Maybe a little too exciting, at least for me and no, I’m not wimping out here.

It’s just that when there’s so much tension in the world and therefore in my life, I sometimes miss things that are also out there that would balance my perspective and make me feel better.

I’m a lot better at stress management than I’ve been in the past. I actually remembered, during all this fire and brimstone, that today, Thursday, April 22, is the 40th anniversary of Earth Day.

I was serving in the American armed forces in the Vietnam theater of operations on April 22, 1970 and was just several weeks past my 21st birthday. We were at sea a lot, within sight of land but not regular mail delivery. Back then, there was no Internet, no cell phones.

And even if there had been, because of the nature of what we were doing, we would not have been allowed to use them anyway. Totally understandable. It was a tough war and the military did not want us to have anymore to think about than we already did.

To be distracted, to have images of burning buildings, tear gas, dogs, police and fire hoses on the main streets of America, would not have served either the war effort or the survival of those engaged in it.

That policy was not infallible and some news from back home got through. To the extent that such information encouraged disobedience, desertion, the proliferation of dugs and going into an operation stoned or strung out, it was not in the best interests of anyone but the enemy.

There was nothing, however, that anyone could have done about it, historians notwithstanding. Sunday morning quarterbacking a war seldom accomplishes very much because no two of the bloody things are enough alike.

So I never heard about it, just like I was not totally aware of all the protesting, the rioting, the violence and the angst on more fronts “at home” than there were where I was.

But I think that even if I had known about the birth of Earth Day, I seriously doubt whether I would have believed it. My reality wasn’t about preserving the planet. It was about destroying enough of it to force the enemy into surrendering. It was napalm and carpet bombing and sowing good earth with land mines that are still killing people wherever they’ve been used, long after those who planted them have gone.

I learned about it after I got back and I ended up leaving Southern California, where I went to school after my enlistment ended, to not only return to Northern California, where I was raised, but to explore a lifestyle I ultimately ended up adopting. For awhile, I left cities to explore the mostly rural forests, mountains and coasts of Oregon and Washington state.

I’ve seen the Green Movement evolve first hand and I’ve also personally benefited from the healthier environment it has helped create, both inside and out. I’m particularly pleased that during the worst Recession in my lifetime, it is also creating new industries and new jobs and that the labor and commerce itself, the processes involved, are healthier for all of us than those they seek to replace.

Happy Earth Day, folks.

For an much larger perspective than I’ve rendered:

Well, for me personally, not since the eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington State, has the planet been quite this interesting. I’ve got Scandinavian blood and though I’ve never been to Iceland, I have been to Yellowstone National Park and I was raised in the shadow of California’s Mount Lassen. I’ve also fought a couple of forest fires. All of which is to say that even though I’m not where this is going on, I have a small idea of what it could become and what I profoundly hope it does not.

And there is a difference in this one. It’s largely invisible. In two of the chatrooms I frequent for public reaction, I heard two Londoners describe the weather as beautifully spring. I also read about John Cleese paying $1,500 for a cab ride from Oslo to Brussels and another about the new Dunkirk Expedition, where the English are once again braving the channel to bring some of their people home. And with the same thing going on in the tunnel under the English Channel.

I understand the inconvenience. And the expense to the airlines. Having worked at Boeing aircraft, I also know what this “invisible” cloud of volcanic glass can do to both a jet engine and any other internal combustion engine.

So it bothers me that the European Union’s No Fly Zone restrictions might become subject to compromise by an commercial aviation industry losing millions of dollars. It aggravates me even more than even if subsequent flying bans are imposed, individual airlines may choose to ignore it. Good luck seduces a fool so bad luck can finish the job.

And I certainly empathize with the airlines from the perspective that they also employ people who depend on the commerce and that this Recession has already forced them to lay off workers. Managers are people and the hardest thing I ever had to do as one was tell somebody they no longer worked for us.

But I’m also aware of a profit margin and the incredible gap between management and those who fly, serve, handle baggage, take tickets and certainly those who direct all this stuff from a tower. I figure that there’s enough of that difference to keep workers on the payroll, if the executives have to take it out of their own bonuses.

So if those planes hit the air while Mother Earth is expressing her latest disappointment in our species and one of them crashes, I’m going to assume a certain amount of responsibility for that carnage on those who made the decision to let those plane take off and those who pressured them into doing it.

It may just be time to slow down and look at other options. For once, this isn’t a problem we brought on ourselves. This isn’t a war among nations or even a spat among families.

This is about recognizing that it’s not ours to control. It’s about adapting. Darwin said it. Several earthquakes in the last twelve months have suggested it. And now a volcano is reminding us.

It’s going to be real interesting to me to see how many of us are listening. Might just mean the difference between building a few more arks during a heavy rain and depending on one with a cranky old man and a bunch of animals. And as much as I won’t want to, I’ll still hold a wake for the passengers of such a misguided decision.

In either event, it seems to be clearly our call.

Related Links
Flights resume in Europe but many remain stranded
Track the Cancellations – A New York Times Interactive Feature

CROSSING OVER

Sometimes, grief is not about mourning the famous.
Death comes in many ways and sometimes, as quietly as a falling leaf and a falling leaf among many. Among so many trees in autumn or hard times and so many leaves, there seems no apparent reason to single out one over another.

Those are nice words for a philosopher but I’m not one. I’m a magazine editor who this past week lost someone who first came to my attention as a reader of this modest publication and, like others of you, became a friend and a member of the Northstar family. I never met her face to face but she commented on stories and talked to me online, as some of you have as well.

She was young, blonde, beautiful and quietly articulate. She was an artist who loved the sea and the sand and sculpted and created works of art using sand dollars, driftwood and the other things the sea gives up to those who understand what they truly mean.

She made a modest living at it, in the community in which she lived, and that’s all she ever wanted. Her work drew offers from New York and beyond but Sandy desired neither the money nor the attention. It was enough for her that those she loved and cared about, and was there for as a human being, also appreciated her art.

She died as unassumingly as she lived, in her early thirties, with no fanfare, parades or fancy funerals. Her sculptures are of the earth and the simplest forms of it. No matter how carefully preserved or profoundly cherished, eventually, those artifacts, those tangible reminders of one slender, incredibly beautiful young woman who understood so much and left so little behind, will be gone.

That seems to be the apparent way of it now, then, eh? Perhaps for some, maybe even for most. But not for me. That pure sweet soul taught me more about the real meaning of the potential of our species for compassion and understanding than all the other people I have ever met and all the books I have ever read.

She’s in Heaven now and even though I’ll be joining her by and by, for the rest of the time I’m in this life, I will miss her some.

Sandy, you’re one helluvan act to follow now then, aren’t you, sweetheart?

April 16, 2010

Dear Rusty,

Yesterday, America lost a hero.

Dr. Benjamin L. Hooks was among the greatest Americans of the 20th century. A crusading lawyer who fought against oppression and a courageous, committed organizer who used communication to move mountains -- Dr. Hooks lifted the Civil Rights movement, breaking down racial barriers.

But above all else, he was a believer -- a believer in righteousness, justice and truth.

I'll never forget being a young organizer, watching Dr. Hooks address the '93 March on Washington. He stood there in front of the Washington Monument in his blue blazer and starched white shirt. In my eyes, Dr. Hooks was Superman. For those of us who came of age in the '70s and '80s, he was the most visible advocate for civil and human rights, the man who dared to push corporate America to opens doors to people who looked like us.

My thoughts and prayers are with the Hooks family in this tragic time. Will you take a moment to share your stories or sympathies with them?

As we grieve over the loss of this incredible individual, we must remember to be thankful for the legacy he leaves behind and continue to honor Dr. Hooks by fighting with 'truth, justice and righteousness on our side.'

Yesterday, we lost a hero, a patriot and above all a friend. But in Dr. Hooks' passing his legacy remains -- a legacy that will improve the lives of generations to come.

Share your stories or sympathies with the Hooks family:

Sincerely,
Benjamin Todd JealousPresident and CEONAACP

Benjamin Todd Jealous
President and CEO
NAACP

We bit farewell to pioneer civil rights activist Dorothy Height, whose involvement in the African American struggle for freedom and equality spanned eight decades. Ms. Height died in Washington, DC, at the age of 98. For more about this remarkable individual whom many considered the “grande dame” of her times:

GOOD NEWS

Well, it looks like the Green Revolution has come to the prison system in Washington State
and with results which strongly suggest that recycling, composting, mattress recycling, wheelchair repair and organic gardening are not only healthy but that they can reduce operating costs and actually produce surpluses that can be donated to local communities, making prisons more of an asset than simply the local employment they provide. Yep, for more on this one:

We applaud the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for moving to restrict the amount of salt in processed foods. Nutritionists and other heath experts say that Americans consume twice as much salt, daily, than is good for them. The damage that does to the personal health of those involved is then translated as a financial negative in terms of time lost from work, medical treatment and, in some cases, funeral arrangements. Yep, for the details:

Vancouver, British Columbia Monday joined a growing number of North American cities, including Seattle and Portland, Oregon which have banned tobacco smoking in such public places as parks, beaches and trails. Nice going, countrypersons mine. Yep, for the details:

In response to the Obama administration’s decision to redefine government’s role in the exploration of space, at least during these economic hard times, NASA is looking at ways to better use existing programs and the orbital and interplanetary vehicles involved. One of the most enduring of these is the Cassini spacecraft, which for the last six years, has been exploring and sending home reams of data and some spectacular photos of Saturn, its rings and its moons. Scientists have decided to extend Cassini’s life and mission by another seven years and this one stands to me as a good example not only in terms of what should be done, but how, as well. For more:

As a rather late reminder, this is Cancer Awareness Week and we found an excellent website for those of you are involved, as we are, in eradicating this disease in all its forms. It won’t be new to many of you but it’s one I’ve bookmarked because it’s also the best source I’ve found for the progress that is being made, the new options available, and how all of us, in our own communities, whether we’ve got an hour a week or a weekend, can make a difference. We encourage you then to visit the American Cancer Society.

COOL STUFF WE FOUND ON THE NET AT A GOOD PRICE
(Free is a good price, right?)


For the environmentalist in all of us, this week we found not one but a host of ways to green up your life, add life to your computer and integrate your computer into your life as a time, energy and environmental enhancer. Yep, for this one:

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

Instead of seeking full time employment, many of those who have been lost their jobs to the Recession are now opting for temporary employment and finding it out there. Known variously as “contingent work,” “flexible” and “alternative” staffing, the philosophy behind it is that it is better to be available for shorter term hiring than it is to risk returning to the environment which cost them their jobs in the first place. Many economists are suggesting that this might be another appropriate survival strategy. For more:

HEALTH NEWS

Apparently, according to a study published in the medical journal Lancet recently, the number of women who die during pregnancy or give birth is declining significantly all over the planet. For more on this one:

We were absolutely delighted to see what might be the future of health insurance come together proactively in the fight against Type 2 diabetes. New York Times health writer Reed Abelson reports:

“This could be one glimpse of the future of health insurance.

“The UnitedHealth Group, one of the nation’s largest health insurers, is teaming up with the Y.M.C.A. and retail pharmacies to try a new approach to one of the nation’s most serious and expensive medical problems: Type 2 diabetes.

“Rather than simply continuing to pay ever-higher medical claims to care for its diabetic customers, UnitedHealth is paying the Y.M.C.A. and pharmacists to keep people healthier. The result, they hope, will be lower costs and lower premiums for everyone."
Yep, for more on this one:

In our ongoing, albeit not real subtle campaign to save human beings because they’re part of the planet we’re trying to clean up and restore, we keep running across these little gems from the Real Age: Live Life To Its Youngest website. Here’s another one entitled 5 Keys To Making Healthy Changes.

SEATTLE FACTS AND FIGURES
Seattle Rainfall in Comparison To Other US Cities
For more information about Seattle
For live cameras on Seattle, the Puget Sound and Washington State

CRITTER STUFF


As we’ve mentioned before, we do not swim with creatures for whom the top of the ocean is like Mount Everest to human beings. We nonetheless feel a special affinity for them. They breathe the same air, we do, procreate and care for their young, and, perhaps unlike us, kill to eat and don’t go out of their way for much more. That’s pretty much what’s been documented and there’s more than enough anecdotal evidence to bunker up what I also sense.

They’re smarter than we are and they know their environment a lot better than they do ours. Most of our planet is ocean and because there are no national boundaries, fences, telephone wires, etc. where they live, they all know pretty know much all of it.

They’re a link between land dwelling mammals and those who breathe oxygen but live in the sea. They’re that flipping missing link we’ve been instinctively searching for in the stars. And we know far less about the depths of our oceans than we to the skies we’ve so diligently explored in the hopes, I suspect, of finding another species with whom to share the loneliness of feeling like the only intelligent life form on the planet.

I’m talking about orcas and they’re making a real comeback up here. The population of the three “resident” pods here is on the increase. That means, among other things, that the Puget Sound is cleaner than it has been in times past and that human environmental efforts in these regards have paid off. This is again a place where not only these noble and endearing creatures can make love and bring new life into the world, but where a lot more marine life can as well.

Yep, for more on this one, by all means:

Related Link:
Pacific Northwest's endangered orca population rose in 2009
Increasing orca population is a sign we can save the Sound

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP.

Okay, this doesn’t quite qualify as totally weird but it’s strange to me. There are lots of exotic words for it like kismet, cosmic resonance and coincidence. Most of them sound like they belong with Rod Serling and an Algonquin Roundtable of dead science fiction writers. I am not for a moment denying that the realities they created do, in fact, exist. Somewhere. Like cruise destinations. But, with all due respect, hopefully not on my street.

I have a thing about goats. It’s not a love/hate relationship by any means and my life doesn’t get any weirder than that so don’t go there either. It’s more that I have no reason to think about these cloven hoofed creatures. They look nice and all in the background of a Heidi movie and quite honestly, that’s about as close to them as I ever want to get.

But they keep coming to my attention because they’re becoming not only vogue but extremely useful as four-legged lawn mowers and weed eaters. If I’d ever been a hippie, I’d probably say, “far out.” People in other parts of the world have benefited in a multitude of ways from the society of lots of animals I would just as soon experience only on television. But I also have to share this one because now, apparently, goats are being used to keep the foliage in wine vineyards down so the grapes can grow to their fullest potential. I’m fond of my glass of chardonnay so while I’m still not a hippie, I’ll pronounce this one cool and herd (hey, it was just too tempting) you to the story which brought this up in the first place. So yes, for more:

Well, that’s it for now. Before you leave though, you might want to check out Northstar Recommends. We’ve added (and will continue to do so) cool things we find. And if you’re in a shopping mood, we invite you to peruse our amazon.com ads and our reader-generated Northstar General Store.

We’re also opening up the Northstar Journal for weekly sponsors. It’s a way of helping to support us and get yourself, your business, organization or nonprofit noticed by email subscribers in seven countries. If you’re interested, email me for details and we’ll put something together.

Take care, stay well, thanks again for the ear and we’ll see you next week. Hang tough, gang. We’re going to make it and come out better for the learning, then, eh?

Rusty

NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

RESOURCES


Maker Culture: Taking Things Into Our Own Hands - For 12 weeks in the fall of 2009, 45 online journalism students at Ryerson University and the University of Western Ontario worked together to document the evolving Maker Culture community.

Maker Culture? That's coders, fabricators, foodies, artists, educators, activists, citizen and even scientists grabbing the Do-It-Yourself ethic with both hands and changing our world in the process.

These are people who aren't just making things, they're making a point of sharing what they've learned, what they've made, and why. Often, for free.
Makers are responding directly, locally to globalization, commercialization, copyright and central command and control.

This is the introduction to a fascinating series on how to become more self-reliant, live a lot more economically and enjoy the company of others doing the same. If you’re looking for ideas, inspiration and resources to get through hard times or just to simplify you life, we highly recommend this one.

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.

Stalking Resource Center division of the National Center for Victims of Crime – Internet harassment, stalking and abuse in general is now against the law. If you’re being victimized or if you know of someone who is, this is an excellent resource.

FUN STUFF

If you share my passion for American History,
you’re going to love AmericanWest.com This is historical society stuff that is also extremely interesting to read. So yep, just in case you didn’t get it the first time, check it out here.

Houston At Night and other totally cool images are available at the Earth Observatory, along with an incredible array of other outer space images. This is one of NASA’s more engaging websites and it’s here, as well, that you can subscribe to their online newsletter. Whether you’re an aerospace/astronomy buff or simply enjoy stargazing, this is an excellent site.

Ever been told you look like someone famous? Ever not been told that but would like to have been? Find a photo of yourself, go to this site, MyHeritage.com, upload it and get a gallery of celebrities you resemble, to one degree or another. Yep, it’s a total waste of time and an unabashed indulgence of ego. Probably two reasons why I totally loved it, even though a couple of my own pix didn’t turn up any results. It’s fun to play with so enjoy.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

Grub you libido will love.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Ever get so stressed you feel like you’re really jammed up against it? Take a deep breath and check out you’re surroundings is the advice of Dr. Roberta Lee in her book The Superstress Solution. We have and what I’ve generally found is that the outside reflects the inside. If I’m real busy, jackets get tossed over chairs, used coffee cups appear magically on window ledges and desk top clutter takes on a total biosphere all its own. Perhaps not surprising, dealing with the outside can really help you relax. And although we don’t recommend you try this at home, if you wait long enough, it can be also be real good exercise. This is a mental health must so check it out here. We’re reading Dr. Lee’s book now and we bought it here.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Take this test to see how your memory compares with the average.

Click here for fun games to improve your memory.

There’s a new book out now which could make a dramatic difference in the way toward the way women experience the passing of years. Despite major industries involved ~ cosmetic, fitness, elective surgery, to name three ~ the idea that women become less attractive as they grow older has also very likely contributed to more anxiety, high blood pressure, depression, etc. than any other single factor in a woman’s life except cancer and childbearing.

We also suspect that it has probably cost men just as much, if not more, than it has cost women, even in a nation historically known for its tolerance of a double standard. The book is entitled Face It: What Women Really Feel as Their Looks Change. Read about it here and if you decide you’d like to purchase it online, you can buy it here. I especially recommend this to men. It’s time our gender took more responsibility for this.


FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE






































And for a truly unique shopping experience, drop by and browse THE NORTHSTAR GENERAL STORE.

Press Releases, Product Reviews, Promotional Copy, Digital Photography, Online Research and Investigation, Ghost Writing, Special Projects. Seattle-based and wired into the International Community. For more information, email to minstrel312@aol.com or go here -> Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist.

GOOD “READS”

Books


If you’d like to read something which combines the best elements of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and a neo-eco Mickey Spillane detective thriller, you’ll love this one.

“In the brave new world of the Internet, FedEx and an international taste for the exotic, wildlife poachers steal everything from elk horns to geoducks, the world's largest clam. In the waters of Puget Sound in Washington state, state wildlife agents stalk these thieves on land and at sea. In "Shell Games: Rogues, Smugglers, and the Hunt for Nature's Bounty," Seattle Times environmental reporter Craig Welch joins these detectives on the trail of one of the region's most notorious geoduck thieves.”

Welch, a Seattle Times environmental reporter is a compelling writer and this excerpt from the book would be worth the experience even if we were not also fascinated by the subject. If, after reading this extract, you’d like to buy the book, you’ll find it for sale here.

News


BBC Best source of international news.

Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (multi-media), the Toronto Globe & Mail and the Vancouver Sun -- outstanding sources for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

KING 5 News Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

New York Times Best source of American news.

Reuters Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Seattle Times Best source for news of the city and the Puget Sound. Its reportage is unbiased but their columns and other opinion pieces do reflect the predominant values of the Pacific Northwest.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

Entertainment

BBC Knowledge Magazine designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

TomatoMan Times -- For those who love good writing, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsmen out there now than professionally known as Tomatoman Mike. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck is, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

See you next week, eh?


Wednesday, April 14, 2010

97 Die So The World Will Never Forget, China Rocked By Massive Quake, And Gray Whale Mugged By Gangsta Orcas In The Puget Sound

Hi again from the ramparts of the Bastion on the Puget. In some ways, this has been one of the more interesting and certainly tragic weeks in recent memory. And while it’s not our intention to bring anyone down, we do intend to address the losses as well as the gains. That’s what we do here.

Our hearts go out to the people of Poland, who last week lost their president and dozens of their country’s military and political leaders, when an aircraft carrying those dignitaries crashed while attempting a landing in thick fog at the Smolensk Airport in Russia.

The Polish delegation flew there, to this site of the 1940 Soviet Army execution of 20,000 of the Polish Army’s elite officer corps in the Katyn Forest, to join their former adversaries in a nations-healing exercise of profound significance to both peoples. It was a ceremony of reconciliation.

In Poland and Russia, we have two proud nations who have far more in common than they have different, mourning a massacre neither of them ~ because they weren’t there at the time ~ is responsible for. They are remembering so they never forget and so that it will never happen again.

That kind of healing occurs in families, sometimes, and nations are nothing more than big families. Now, these two countries have something else to commemorate. And because there were 97 people on that plane from Poland who had to die one more time to make sure things like the Katyn Forest Massacre, the Warsaw Ghetto and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising never happen again, they both have something else to never forget.

For more on this one:

Related links:
Katyn Forest Massacre Memorial site (In Polish and English)
Time Magazine: The Katyn Forest Massacre
Inside Poland: News, Facts, Figures & Other Information
Poland - Wikipedia
Poland Mourns Nation’s Loss, Begins to Rebuild

Even as we’re publishing, we’re reading about the massive earthquake which struck China this morning near its border with Tibet. Despite the remoteness of the province and county involved, preliminary reports cite a death toll of 400, 10,000 injured and still others buried under debris and rubble. For more on this one:

Our hat goes off to the leaders of both America and Russia for hammering a few more swords into ploughshares. We’re well aware that both nations will still have enough in their respective nuclear arsenals to turn Planet Earth into a big black cinderball but the message here is as clear as the direction. Nuclear war is apparently passing out of fashion as an instrument of foreign policy or international diplomacy by two of the three nations who made it an option in the first place. Lots of gnarly stuff flows down hill. I hope this does too. Nice going, guys. Please carry on. For all our sakes.

The list of this year’s Pulitzer Prize winners has been published and we are proud to report that one of our favourite newspapers, The Seattle Times, was one of them. So was a play which originated in a neighboring community across Lake Washington. Considering the teasing I’ve taken down the years about living in a gloried trading post that had to be rebuilt because the tides kept making its sewers back up, this was especially sweet. Yep, for more on this one:

Under the It’s Definitely Not Necessarily Good News But We Need to Know It Anyway, if anyone has any illusions about how this Recession has changed, literally, the course of human history, they won’t after reading this Washington Post and Washington Tribune story headlined Millions of Unemployed May Never Recover. It’s a grim read but an informative one and I did not, strangelyi perhaps, walk away from this one depressed, even though I happen to be one of those millions mentioned. Yep, for more:

And for those who still may not believe in miracles, you might want to check out the story of Nadia Bloom, an eleven year old Florida girl who spent five days in an alligator and water moccasin infested swamp and was found alive and complaining a little about all her mosquito bites. If you believe, as I do, in guardian angels, this young lady has a flock of them. It makes me wonder what great things she’s destined to do with the rest of her life. Go, Nadia Bloom. You rock, girl. For more and a video:

Starting in June, Washingtonians will be paying more for candy, gum, bottled water and non-microbrewery beer. In order to close a budget shortfall of $2.8-billion, a sales tax has been levied against these commodities. To see what other measures lawmakers in Olympia took to keep government and its services running:
Being both a student of, and to a certain extent, a victim of hard times past and present, I’ve seen and done some pretty shabby things to survive but one thing I’ve never done is rip off a church. The closest I’ve ever come is spending all day in a theatre in Long Beach, California, watching a movie about this kid sailor who cleaned out the collection box of the base chapel and ended up getting sentenced to Portsmouth Prison for like twenty years. Yep, The Last Detail.

This really exemplary robbery I’m talking about now was actually the theft of the plumbing, which in this particular structure, was copper. There’s apparently quite a market for it and other places in the past have been stripped of wiring and fixtures made of the stuff.

I had just enough fire and brimstone in my religious upbringing to actually be afraid for what’s ultimately going to happen to these thieves when they die and go before Judgment. I wonder what the punishment in Heaven is for doing a House of God? What do you suppose copper’s going for Up There these days?

CROSSING OVER

We return to Montcoal, West Virginia to mourn the last four of 29 miners trapped deep underground when methane gas exploded at the Upper Big Branch mine April 5th. Both the US Senate and House have promised to investigate and Gov.
Joe Manchin III called for a national moment of silence at 3:30 Monday afternoon. For more on this and to contribute to a fund for the families left behind:

We bid a fond farewell to American television star Dixie Carter, who died of cancer in her Los Angeles home, her husband, American television and film actor Hal Holbrook, at her side. Perhaps best remembered for her role as Julia Sugarbaker on the hit series “Designing Women,” the native Tennessean was nominated for an Emmy for her work on ABC’s “Desperate Housewives”. Ms. Carter was 70.

The American television community lost another beloved member with the passing of actor John Forsythe. The star of Bachelor Father, he later went on to win fame and professional awards as Blake Carrington in Dynasty. What many may not realize is that he was also the voice of Charlie on Charlie’s Angels. A total professional but a modest one, he once offered this estimate of his own talent. “I figure there are a few actors like Marlon Brando, George C. Scott and Laurence Olivier who have been touched by the hand of God. I’m in the next bunch.” Mr. Forsythe, a native of New Jersey, died at his home in Santa Ynez, California, of pneumonia, after a year long battle with cancer. He was 92.

GOOD NEWS

Well, according to
National Bureau of Economic Research, the Recession is over. Most Americans are apparently reluctant to believe it and even the government is not out buying party supplies. New York Times economic reporter Floyd Norris takes a look at the last seven Recessions to determine why. For more on this one:


Awhile back, we reported on how the
City of Portland, Oregon managed to turn its drainage system into a tourist attraction. I thought the whole thing was a little loopy but since it was working, I just shrugged and went, “sounds like something they’d try down in San Francisco.” One of these days, I will learn. Maybe. The City of San Francisco has decided to make a tourist attraction of its Tenderloin District. Apparently, despite a certain amount of gentrification over the years, there are still enough drug addicts, panhandlers, disabled and mentally incurable people living there to make it some form of urban exotica. I almost split my Kevlar over the name they’ve come up for it. Check out San Francisco’s new spin on Reality Tourism. There’s nothing more I can possibly say that beats the story itself. For more on this one:

Doctors at the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance have come up with a far less invasive way to diagnose lung cancer where the lymph nodes are involved. It doesn’t require surgery. It doesn’t take as long and it’s not nearly as expensive. For more on this one:

COOL STUFF WE FOUND ON THE NET AT A GOOD PRICE (FREE)

The trouble with cleaning most computer screens is that you can only get the smudges, dust, etc. that are on your side of it. Wouldn’t it be fantastic if you could do BOTH sides? And enjoy the company of humankind’s best friend in the process? Thanks to the wizardry of cyber science, now both are possible. For the cleanest screen on your street:

And just in case, in this anxiety ridden age, you don’t think you have enough to worry about, take a minute or two and watch the population of the planet grow before your very eyes. I don’t normally recommend a stress-INDUCER but after a coffee break with this one, somehow a lot of my own worries assumed a more manageable perspective. For the World Population Clock:

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

Sometimes what keeps me going are outrageous but successful examples of outside the box thinking. I know, as well, that just because you’re not punching the proverbial time clock doesn’t mean you can’t make a living. Since the start of this Recession and as we’ve shared with you in numerous articles, we’ve seen the proliferation of “cottage industries” started by a few daring and inventive souls who proved to their neighbors and communities that a lot of people could get in on this one.

I also find it a tad disconcerting that somehow, goats keep cropping into this weekly ezine. I’m not a fan of them, their milk, or their cheese. The only thing I have ever been accused of having in common with them ~ aside from a tendency to batter and butt stuff so that when I stop, I get a rush ~ is the indiscriminate palate attributed to these cloven hooved creatures of a Creator with a profoundly weird sense of humor.

It all comes together in Associated Press reporter Jeremy Hsieh’s story headlined “Goat farms spur growth in Alaskan cheese making”. So baa and stuff. And enjoy.

HEALTH NEWS

The next time you’re in pain, relief might only be a breath away. Researchers have determined that taking deeper breaths than usual and holding them for a couple of seconds not only reduces pain but anxiety as well and make people generally happier overall.
Yep, to check it out:

Medical science has apparently positively determined that Recessions are a real pain. If it doesn’t give you one, it’ll make buddies with those aches, bruises and strains you already have and invite them over for a party. On you. And in you.
To see what you can do about Recession Pain doing a home invasion number, yep, to check it out:

CRITTER STUFF

Well, it happens but it’s rare. Whale watchers on a tourist boat Sunday got to see a gray whale mugged by a gang of transient orcas who are not part of the three pods which frequent the Puget Sound. These hooligan killer whales rammed their victim several times and then took off for waters unknown. The gray, familiar for the last 19 years to local wildlife enthusiasts and known as “Patch,” swam to shallower waters to recover and was seen Monday, swimming with others of his kind, apparently unhurt. The exact identity of the perpetrators of the assault have not been established and no arrests were made.

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP

If I told you guys there was a three-year-old girl in China who tightrope walks above tigers, even though she’s afraid of them (and you hadn’t seen The Today Show Tuesday), would you believe me? To those of you who nodded, I guess I’m not the most gullible person in the whole world. I mean, I wouldn’t believe me. And I’d be wrong. Nope, I’m not making this up. She’s tethered so when she slips, which she does occasionally, she doesn’t hurt herself. When we watched the video on this, we got the impression the child was not totally enthusiastic about this. But all concerned said all the safety regulations were being obeyed. I assume that also means keeping those tigers the best fed and happiest on the planet. No, I do not consider this a sane form of employment for any human being, much less a young one. But I also don’t live in China and I am not about to tell 1.3 billion people I don’t know what constitutes an appropriate after school job for kids. For a video, more on this and to share your feelings on the subject:

Well, that’s it for now. Before you leave, you might want to check out Northstar Recommends. We’ve added (and will continue to do so) cool things we find. And if you’re in a shopping mood, we invite you to peruse our amazon.com ads and our reader-generated
Northstar General Store.

Take care, stay well, thanks again for the ear and we’ll see you next week. Hang tough, gang. We’re going to make it and come out better for the learning, then, eh?

Rusty
NORTHSTAR RECOMMENDS

RESOURCES


Maker Culture: Taking Things Into Our Own Hands - For 12 weeks in the fall of 2009, 45 online journalism students at Ryerson University and the University of Western Ontario worked together to document the evolving Maker Culture community.

Maker Culture? That's coders, fabricators, foodies, artists, educators, activists, citizen and even scientists grabbing the Do-It-Yourself ethic with both hands and changing our world in the process.

These are people who aren't just making things, they're making a point of sharing what they've learned, what they've made, and why. Often, for free.
Makers are responding directly, locally to globalization, commercialization, copyright and central command and control.

This is the introduction to a fascinating series on how to become more self-reliant, live a lot more economically and enjoy the company of others doing the same. If you’re looking for ideas, inspiration and resources to get through hard times or just to simplify you life, we highly recommend this one.

PC World – This is the best source we’ve found yet for totally free, useful, reliable and secure (no viruses) downloads ranging from games through utilities and with a nice selection of screen savers, etc. What I particularly appreciate about it is how easy the site is to navigate. They also have a daily letter featuring two “daily downloads.”

Free People Search – This is an American online White Pages that I found really simple, quick and user friendly. I looked for myself under the several versions of my name and it found them all. It’s also free and doesn’t involve anything to download.

Know Thy Elected Officials - Just type in your zip code and this site will supply you with the names and contact information for your legislators from the state level up. This is a two click site with a host of other relevant features.

Stalking Resource Center division of the National Center for Victims of Crime – Internet harassment, stalking and abuse in general is now against the law. If you’re being victimized or if you know of someone who is, this is an excellent resource.

FUN STUFF

If you share my passion for American History,
you’re going to love AmericanWest.com This is historical society stuff that is also extremely interesting to read. So yep, just in case you didn’t get it the first time, check it out here.

Houston At Night and other totally cool images are available at the Earth Observatory, along with an incredible array of other outer space images. This is one of NASA’s more engaging websites and it’s here, as well, that you can subscribe to their online newsletter. Whether you’re an aerospace/astronomy buff or simply enjoy stargazing, this is an excellent site.

Ever been told you look like someone famous? Ever not been told that but would like to have been? Find a photo of yourself, go to this site, MyHeritage.com, upload it and get a gallery of celebrities you resemble, to one degree or another. Yep, it’s a total waste of time and an unabashed indulgence of ego. Probably two reasons why I totally loved it, even though a couple of my own pix didn’t turn up any results. It’s fun to play with so enjoy.

If you’re into a real interesting and visual escape, we certainly recommend The Art In LA website. It’s a virtual art gallery created by a real gentle, occasionally obnoxious but totally good-hearted soul with standards as fine as those of any engineer I’ve ever met. It’s also a good place for healthy meditation. If you’re lucky, you might just run into the artist herself. Her name is Colleen and she’s a trip, trust me. Yep, she was born under the fourth flag on our masthead.

HEALTH

Ten foods that really do help prevent cancer.

Grub you libido will love.

If you’d like to know whether your eating habits are either adding years to your life or taking them off, take this RealAge quiz. It will not only score your real age against your health age but give you a program for improvement. I’ve been working this one for about a month now and yep, I feel a lot better.

Ever get so stressed you feel like you’re really jammed up against it? Take a deep breath and check out you’re surroundings is the advice of Dr. Roberta Lee in her book The Superstress Solution. We have and what I’ve generally found is that the outside reflects the inside. If I’m real busy, jackets get tossed over chairs, used coffee cups appear magically on window ledges and desk top clutter takes on a total biosphere all its own. Perhaps not surprising, dealing with the outside can really help you relax. And although we don’t recommend you try this at home, if you wait long enough, it can be also be real good exercise. This is a mental health must so check it out here. We’re reading Dr. Lee’s book now and we bought it here.

Want to know how to live to be 100? Try this one.

Take this test to see how your memory compares with the average.

Click here for fun games to improve your memory.

There’s a new book out now which could make a dramatic difference in the way toward the way women experience the passing of years. Despite major industries involved ~ cosmetic, fitness, elective surgery, to name three ~ the idea that women become less attractive as they grow older has also very likely contributed to more anxiety, high blood pressure, depression, etc. than any other single factor in a woman’s life except cancer and childbearing.

We also suspect that it has probably cost men just as much, if not more, than it has cost women, even in a nation historically known for its tolerance of a double standard. The book is entitled Face It: What Women Really Feel as Their Looks Change. Read about it here and if you decide you’d like to purchase it online, you can buy it here. I especially recommend this to men. It’s time our gender took more responsibility for this.


FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE






































And for a truly unique shopping experience, drop by and browse THE NORTHSTAR GENERAL STORE.

Press Releases, Product Reviews, Promotional Copy, Digital Photography, Online Research and Investigation, Ghost Writing, Special Projects. Seattle-based and wired into the International Community. For more information, email to minstrel312@aol.com or go here -> Rusty Miller, Freelance Photojournalist.

GOOD “READS”

Books


If you’d like to read something which combines the best elements of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and a neo-eco Mickey Spillane detective thriller, you’ll love this one.

“In the brave new world of the Internet, FedEx and an international taste for the exotic, wildlife poachers steal everything from elk horns to geoducks, the world's largest clam. In the waters of Puget Sound in Washington state, state wildlife agents stalk these thieves on land and at sea. In "Shell Games: Rogues, Smugglers, and the Hunt for Nature's Bounty," Seattle Times environmental reporter Craig Welch joins these detectives on the trail of one of the region's most notorious geoduck thieves.”

Welch, a Seattle Times environmental reporter is a compelling writer and this excerpt from the book would be worth the experience even if we were not also fascinated by the subject. If, after reading this extract, you’d like to buy the book, you’ll find it for sale here.

News


BBC Best source of international news.

Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (multi-media), the Toronto Globe & Mail and the Vancouver Sun -- outstanding sources for Canadian national, provincial, and world news.

KING 5 News Best source of video news of Seattle and the Greater Puget Sound.

New York Times Best source of American news.

Reuters Best source of an international perspective on American headlines.

Seattle Times Best source for news of the city and the Puget Sound. Its reportage is unbiased but their columns and other opinion pieces do reflect the predominant values of the Pacific Northwest.

Sightline Daily (formerly Tidepool) – Best source of Pacific Northwest regional news. Delivered daily by email, it covers Alaska, British Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington. They also put out an excellent weekly environmental edition.

Entertainment

BBC Knowledge Magazine designed to give the American magazine National Geographic the proverbial run for its money,

TomatoMan Times -- For those who love good writing, there are fewer finer contemporary craftsmen out there now than professionally known as Tomatoman Mike. He’s as Northern Californian as John Steinbeck is, albeit with a dash of Sam Clemmons, Bret Harte and Robert W. Service in him. He’s a romp to read, trust me.

U Got Style is a monthly ezine dedicated to independent films. Fully illustrated, it features hard news, interviews, reviews and a wide variety of other information. It’s also fun to read.

Vinyl Cafe with Stuart McLean Live from the smallest record store in North America. Canadian humor, entertainment and commentary at its maple leaf best. Popular on National Public Radio in the States.

See you next week, eh?