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Name: Rural Anorak
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Difficult Choices

What is wrong with people these days?  They appear to wait for someone, anyone, to take care of them.  This spring/summer, when the Midwest was being flooded, I saw a gentleman on the news stating that he was waiting to see what the government was going to do to fix his problems.  Why?  Why couldn't he start to rebuild himself?  What has happened to the "can do" spirit of previous generations?
A few years ago, Tom Brokaw wrote about "the Greatest Generation" and what they went through with the Great Depression and the second World War.  They did what needed to be done.  Go back to the 19th Century as the pioneers expanded into the West; go back to the 18th Century to the Revolution; go back to the 17th Century and the founding of the Colonies.  Go back to all these eras and you will see that difficult choices were made, they had to be made. 
For all that the difficult choices had to be made, there were still the individuals who wanted to be taken care of.  Everyone wants to be taken care of at some level, the key is that we recogize when we have to make the tough decisions and get the job done.  Lets take a look at Jamestown.  We all know that Jamestown was the first permanent English colony in the New World.  Why?  Why did it succeed when twenty-two years prior the Roanoke Island colony failed.  Jamestown wasn't in a better location, it was established in a swamp surrounded by mosquito infested, brackish water.  Why did it succeed?  The early colonists had members who were treasure hunters, they wanted the gold, they were willing to wait for the ships to bring supplies from England.  It took someone to make a stand before the colony began to survive.  That someone was Captain John Smith.  What did he do?  He instituted several practices that put the colony first, he began to barter with the Powhatans, the said "he that will not worke, shall not eate."  This idea worked from 1607 to 1609 when Smith left the colony.  After his departure, the treasure seeking element came to the fore and the collection of provisions declined.  The summer of 1609 was very hot, a drought to be exact, but the colonists were content to wait for supplies.  Summer turned to winter and the winter of 1610 was brutal.  The supplies hadn't arrived.  This period of 1609-10 is known as the Starving Time and almost ended the colony of Virginia.  By the time the supply ship arrived (it had been delayed by storms and other weather conditions) there were only sixty-five survivors.  Had they made the difficult choices of putting aside their greed and working toward building the colony, there may have been more survivors.
Hindsight is a wonderful thing, it shows us where the mistakes were.  The problem is we don't understand how something so obvious could have been overlooked.  Its a difficult choice for that reason.  The gentleman I mentioned earlier was going to wait until FEMA came through to give hime money to rebuild his home, because he didn't have insurance.  The difficult that he faced, before the flood, was does he sped money on insurance every month that he may or may not need, or does he spend money on something more "fun."  Whatever the reasons he had, he choose not to purchase the insurance and is now waiting to be taken care of.   So why isn't this man taking a lead in his own rebuilding?  So he didn't have insurance, that doesn't mean he cannot take an active role in putting his life back together after the flood.  Waiting puts a drain on the resources available to the extent that when people are finally assisted they only get the barest minimum.  By making the difficult choice of working to meet the goals, then the final outcome will be much more than the minimum.  
 
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An Environmental Truth

It is accepted by most people that the Earth is somewhere in the neighborhood of 4.5 BILLION years old.  The universe is between 12 and 18 BILLION years old, depending on which way the telescope is pointed.    These are large numbers, way beyond what most people deal with on a daily basis.  I want to focus in on just the age of the Earth.  
At 4.5 BILLION years old, the planet has experienced many things.  The continents have shifted around from one large land mass, called Pangea, to the seven smaller landmasses we recognize today.  I'd call that change.  I think that as the continents shifted there were alterations in the local evnironments.  Some of these alterations were ultimately beneficial to life as it existed and exists on the planet.  However, there were, I'm sure those changes that were not beneficial.  Guess what?  The planet is still here.  Earth still rotates on its axis and still revolves around the Sun.  And one more thing, the continents are still moving. 
Let's move to a smaller time scale; not in BILLIONS of years, but in MILLIONS of years.  For a period of time from about 245 MILLION years ago to 65 MILLION years ago (a period of 220 MILLION years) the dinosaurs were the dominant creatures.   Where are they now?  Their skeletons are in museums because 65 MILLION years ago a very large chunk of matter smashed into the planet.  Guess what? That wasn't the first large impact on the planet.  Guess what else?  The Earth is still here. 
Let's move on the more recent times.  Approximately 10,000 years ago, there was ice extending from the poles.  North America was covered to a point south of the present Great Lakes.  Since that time the Earth has warmed to such an extent that the ice retreated back toward the poles.  Everyone who has lake front property along Lakes Superior, Michigan, Huron, Ontario and Erie should all be thankful for this warming trend, because without it, there would be no Great Lakes. 
I realize that I've been rather simplistic in these examples.  My point was to show that there is an evironmental truth that is being overlooked.  Earth changes.  This planet has done wonderful things before humans gained the ability to appreciate and describe her beauty.  Earth will continue.  The environment will continue.  Will it remain as we see it today?  Who knows, probably not because that is what the Earth does:  It changes.
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Recycling

Being a country boy, I have seen that rural folks are more likely to recycle that city folks and have been doing so for a far longer time.  In fact, we were doing it long before someone in the city called it recycling.  How so?  Well look at how rural folks live.  We live very close to the land, we are very conscious of what we do and do not have.  And in so realising, we make the best of what materials we have access to.   A farmer builds a shed for equipment, livestock whatever; after several years, the shed ceases to be useful.  The farmer dismantles the shed and saves the materials of the shed for another project.  You didn't throw away anything that could be used at a later date.  An argument could be made that we are packrats, and to some extent this is true.  We also recognize that events happen at inopportune times and you have to make do with what you have.
Using myself and my home as an example of rural recycling.  I have hardwood floors that came from the house my great grandparents lived in and those same floor boards actually came from yet another house. I live in a thirty year old house with 130 year old flooring.  My television is sitting on a cabinet.  Ok, the cabinet was the frame to an old console televsion.  My father gutted the TV decades ago, but kept the cabinet.  We use is as a small book/display case and the stand for the current television. 
This is the type of recycling that rural folks have been doing for centuries.  It is not a feel good type of recycling, it is a practical use of material to its best advantage.  
What I have noticed, however, is that as more people move out here from the city, there are more disposable goods being used.  Instead of reusing material until it cannnot be used, items are being replaced continually with the newest and flashiest.
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Plastic (Bags and stuff)

Twenty years ago, I started my first job.  It was my senior year in high school and I was a bag boy at a grocery store.  I still remember my first day when I was trained to bag groceries for customers.  We used paper bags and where shown to build up inside the bag, creating support that allowed the bags to hold a fair amount of merchandise purchased.  While I was there, the plastic shopping bag was introduced to the store.  We were told to use plastic more than the paper because it would be better for the planet to use plastic.  We would be saving the trees.
Fast forward twenty years, and plastic bags are frowned upon.  We need to recycle them so they don't fill up the landfills and sit there for years and years and years.  People are encouraged to use cloth bags when they shop and the good old fashioned paper bag is still in use. 
Since the price per barrel of oil has risen past $100 I have been hearing from people on the left that we have to do away with all of our dependence on oil.  OK, fine.  Let's just do that.  Please lead the way, by getting rid of all that you have that is oil based.  You know, your television, stereo, iPod, computer, cell phone, clothes (anything with Nylon and polyester).  Plastic is in more stuff than most people realise. 
Everyone is talking about lessening our dependence on oil and all they are thinking about is fuel.  What a lot of people are not realising is that there is much and more made from oil.  Let's think about that before we embark on a course of action that will have more consequences than benefits.
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