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from "The Fracking of Rachel Carson: Silent Spring’s lost legacy, told in fifty parts" by Sandra Steingraber

8/17/2013

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1. Rachel Carson, the ecologist who kicked the hornet’s nest, wrote a book that needed no subtitle. Published fifty years ago this September, Silent Spring rocketed to the top of the bestseller list, prompted a meeting with the president’s science advisers, occasioned congressional hearings, and circled her neck with medals of honor. It also let loose swarms of invective from the pesticide industry. Throughout it all, Carson remained calm. Friends and foes alike praised her graceful comportment and gentle voice. Also, her stylish suits and trim figure. Nevertheless, her various publicity photos (with microscope; in the woods; outside her summer cottage in Maine; at home in Maryland) look as if the same thought bubble hovers above them all: I hate this.


2. In the later portraits, Carson was dying of breast cancer. It was a diagnosis she hid out of fear that her enemies in industry would use her medical situation to attack her scientific objectivity and, most especially, her carefully constructed argument about the role that petrochemicals (especially pesticides) played in the story of human cancer. But behind her unflappable public composure, Carson’s private writings reveal how much physical anguish she endured. Bone metastases. Radiation burns. Angina. Knowing this, you can imagine her patience running out during the interminable photo shoots. The wretched wig hot and itchy under the lights. The stabbing pains (cervical vertebrae splintered with tumors) that would not, would not relent.


3. In the iconic Hawk Mountain photo, Rachel Carson is truly beautiful. Her smile looks natural rather than forced. Posed on a rocky summit, she is wearing a badass leather jacket and wields a pair of leather-strapped binoculars. So armed, she scans the horizon. At her feet, the whole of Berks County, Pennsylvania, unfurls, forest and valley, field and mountain, like a verse from a Pete Seeger song.


4. Hawk Mountain, along the Appalachian flyway, is an officially designated refuge for raptors. As with so many sanctuaries, it started out as a hunting ground with bounties. By the mid-1930s, it had become the spot in Pennsylvania to witness the annual fall migration of hawks. Rachel Carson loved it here. She wrote about her experiences in a never-finished, never-published essay titled “Road of the Hawks.” According to biographer Linda Lear—who gathered the fragments into the collection Lost Woods: The Discovered Writing of Rachel Carson—the essay is notable not only for its careful analysis of bird behavior and knowledge of geology but also because Carson traced the origin of her airy lookout to Paleozoic marine organisms.

5.
And always in these Appalachian highlands there are reminders of those ancient seas that more than once lay over all this land . . . these whitened limestone rocks on which I am sitting . . . were formed under that Paleozoic ocean, of the myriad tiny skeletons of creatures that drifted in its waters. Now I lie back with half closed eyes and try to realize that I am at the bottom of another ocean—an ocean of air on which the hawks are sailing.

6. She sat on a mountaintop and thought about oceans.


7. The marine inhabitants of the ancient seas that once overlay Appalachia transformed, when they died, into gaseous bubbles of methane. Pressed under the accumulated weight of silt sifting down from nearby mountains, the seafloor solidified into what’s now called the Marcellus Shale, a layer of bedrock that’s located under thousands of feet of what we would call the earth, but the mining industry callsoverburden: the material that lies between the surface and an area of economic interest. To extract methane bubbles from the area of economic interest, the natural gas industry is now blowing up the state of Pennsylvania.


8. High-volume, slickwater, horizontal hydrofracking would be considered a crime if the requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act, which regulates underground chemical injections, pertained.


-- from "The Fracking of Rachel Carson: Silent Spring’s lost legacy, told in fifty parts" by Sandra Steingraber (published in the September/October 2012 issue of Orion Magazine). Click here to read the rest of the article. 
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Fracking Links

8/17/2013

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Organizations
Artists Against Fracking
Catskill Citizens for Safe Energy
Don't Frack New York
Environmental Working Group
Frack Action
Frack Check WV
Frack Free Sussex
Frack Off
Loretto Community
No Frack Illinois
No Frack Ohio
Stop the Frack Attack
Stop the Frack Attack on Illinois
Students Against Fracking
Treasure Karoo Action Group


Articles
"The Fracking of Rachel Carson: Silent Spring’s lost legacy, told in fifty parts" by Sandra Steingraber (Sept./Oct. 2012 issue of Orion Magazine)
"Video: Meet the Singing, Anti-Fracking Nuns" by James West (Mother Jones, 8/15/2013)
"World joins South Africans in fight against Fracking" (wecanchange.co.za) 

Note: This is a new, ongoing list...check back soon for more updates. 



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Artists Against Fracking

8/17/2013

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articles: 
"Let's Give Clean Water a Chance" by Yoko Ono
links:
Artists Against Fracking
Artists Against Fracking Ireland
Artists Against Fracking UK


Yoko Ono and Artists Against Fracking Find Out What Fracking Has Done to Pennsylvania from JFOX on Vimeo.

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Fracking Futures

8/17/2013

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FRACKING hell or fracking bliss? An art installation at Liverpool's FACT gallery gives visitors a chance to decide what they think of this controversial gas extraction technique. A miniaturised fracking "rig" simulates the sounds, tremors and flames that a real one might produce, and appears to drill right through the gallery floor.

-- from "Art installation brings you face to face with fracking" by Kate Ravilious (New Scientist, 7/31/2013)



Picture
An installation in Liverpool explores the future of fracking for shale gas in the UK. Photograph: Christopher Thomond (The Guardian, 8/15/2013)



HeHe - Fracking Futures from FACT on Vimeo.

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"Listen"               by Marian O’Brien Paul 

8/15/2013

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1968
























2013
























    
“He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says ...” Rev. 3:22

Springtime, I a new bride
my spouse a dairy farmer’s son
now an Airman First Class
sent to serve at NORAD

Our first house, a cottage perched
on the rim of a mountain-made bowl
the Indians named Manitou Springs
because of healing mineral waters …

Gift of the Manitou, the Great Spirit
medicinal springs where no killing
could occur, where ailing members
of enemy bands came without fear …

Comfy on my couch, door screen
sieving pine scent from the wind
Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring
open on my lap, I read her words

Eager to share, I soon discerned
a boy who grew up on a farm
in the heyday of pesticides
was not ready to listen

Though the residues persist, we
are forbidden to poison earth
except to fight malaria; but
lusting after oil is lawful

Puncturing the ocean floor like
adolescents popping pimples
hydraulically flushing the soil
for fuel, no matter the scars …

Let the Manitou, Great Spirit
declare the earth off-limits
forbid its fracture; let humans
frail creatures, let us listen ...


*   *   * 


Born in Kansas City, Missouri, Marian O’Brien Paul has lived in Turkey, Ireland, and in several Midwestern states but mostly Nebraska. A retired teacher of writing and literature, in 2007she moved to Chicago, Illinois. In April 2013 her poem “Cahokia Mounds, Illinois” appeared in The Midwest Prairie Review (Univ. of Wisconsin, Madisonl), and “Legacy of Apple Trees” appeared at  Spherical Tabby.  Other of her poems can be found in the “Poetic Asides” column, Writer’s Digest (Feb. 2011) and in The Stony Thursday Book (Limerick, Ireland, 2010), as well as in various journals, magazines, and e-zines over the years.



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from "THUMB NOTES ALMANAC -- Hitchhiking The Marcellus Shale" by Craig Czury

8/14/2013

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Because all signs say this traffic has work to do
standing between my potholes across from Allen’s Garage

The day is blue sky with storm clouds
wind warm any colder would be snow

Because people around here are frugal
maybe a $15,000 kitchen remodeled here or a new roof there

Because now the heat’s off the meth labs

The heat’s off off the farmers’ chemical fertilizers
draining into the Chesapeake

America’s largest labor boom
America’s loudest mic check

Despite the money these guys make   the hours

Despite the gag clause

Hearing my name called from under the SouthTown Market overhang

Even though owning this land when I sold the gas
what exactly will I own what will the gas company own

How will what has belonged in my family for generations
be compromised or lost

Or if I sell
Or as long as I hold out

Athough it was raining like hell I was drenched
I got a ride from a guy with heater in the back
then he fired up a doobie and I was in Scranton

She says she’d like having a steady winter
not snow one day and 70s the next


Even though he was an odd but likable character

She was driving a company truck
took a side road up to a well pad to measure 4- or 6-inch bolts

Because you’re a writer aren’t you I’m not supposed to be talking to you

Because even though Joe’s is closed someone’s in there with an airbrush

Yes but I’m not that kind of writer

There’re no complaints now (points to the grassed-over pipeline track)
there’ll be snowmobilers all over this in another month

She takes off her glasses gives them to Kolosky
she has video screen eyes they don’t focus

Because it’s warm 
Because the sun’s clouded-over 
Because it’s late afternoon  

already getting dark

Because this is going-home traffic
deer hunters and company trucks

Because 20 more minutes it will be too dark
and I’ll walk back up the hill call it a night

All because I decided to go out for a walk
All because it’s a 7 mile interview to P.J.’s to watch 48 hour softball

Because I signed early with the gas
enough to get me over the hump each month
+ veteran’s disability

Where did you live growing up?

Compromised or lost?

Because we are always trying to find ways to carry more stuff

Name specific trees flowers animals natural landmarks
secret hiding places images from recurring dreams

Because these rolling green hills no longer clear my mind


Early morning methane mist

Coffee at Lockharts

List the names of farm equipment tools and vehicles
List the names gas equipment tools and vehicles

She looks over at him before she answers

How’d you get so isolated up here with this mess

Sitting over my shadow writing this
reading the old roads
the old train beds trolley beds

Because every farm under its soil has a rock quarry

Because I’m driving my tractor to church join me

Despite all these kids being dead by now
or having serious problems by the time they’re my age
I see them
with their heads down on their desks throwing chalk
spiders have woven their hair into a skein of window light
spiders
those mystical ghosts erasing this dusty schoolhouse
begging to be clapped

No there won’t be a workers’ dispute

although I cut the girl’s hair with my pocket knife
with what they get paid
until they start coming down with something

No there won’t be a Union

So then she went into what I consider borderline stuff
a sinister undertone of poverty and secrecy

Although the men look just as gruff in the black & white
photo of bridge workers just as foreign

Although we’ve all suffered from what we do

living with a local girl around Elk Lake
she’s a landman


ice cooler  gas can   diesel can   kerosene

one step up from a rough neck a well hand
I was surprised he wasn’t wearing a cap

Despite it’s pitch dark straddling the drainage ditch and road kill
Despite the slow stare down when the headlights catch me

Because I haul junk all day I haul junk copper and brass
the out of staters’ summer homes in winter

Despite the parking lot full of Mexican gas workers
I’d jump in there and take a baseball bat to every damn one of them

Someday you’re going to bring your education over here
and we’re all going to be full of information

Despite people around here thinking they’re getting rich
all they’re getting is a new truck or a new barn

Deer with cow cut-outs under apple tree

Because they’re just ripping everything up
look at that (points to pipeline swath) just a raceway for four-wheelers

Because I see an old lawnmower and throw it in the back of my truck
an old bicycle in a yard sell it for gas money at the scrapyard

Flashlight and pepper spray

I’m less scared of what the gas industry is doing to our future
than I am computers instant karma texting

Despite the chores and the animals
The Veterans On-The-Farm Training
we worked the farm and went to Keystone part time

Because my brother put himself through college in the ‘40s
trenching the Tennessee pipeline

I came back from the Air Force a pacifist

It’s a ballast against the wind
to hold the roof on tight and weigh it down

The gas was a big surprise

Although working at Proctor & Gamble
rolling paper towels out of chemicals into sheets

Although working at the prison
I did way worse things than a lot of them inside

Despite losing my leg scuba diving in the Keys

Because
we are what
we repeatedly do Aristotle

Because just saying hello becomes a gas issue
never mind the trucks

The colorful used-lot triangular grand opening string of flags

Country good ol´boys coming up to live among country good ol´boys

Although they’re not Mexicans they turn into Mexicans simply
being gas workers          

The clash and gaps

Despite another language from another century
passed down by moss-weathered elders

Somewhere in the background I’ve been looking for you

Configuring these short rides I can see my breath



*   *   *   *


"MARCELLUS JOURNAL" by Craig Czury appears in Vigil for the Marcellus Shale, edited by Dwain Wilder and Bart White. 



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WTFrack 2013

8/14/2013

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Over the past several years we have witnessed examples of how fracking (hydraulic fracturing) can potentially cause a lot of harm to people and the environment. The Borderbend Arts Collective is inviting artists to contribute works in response to fracking. We are looking for: 
  • writings (poetry, fiction, essays, hybrid genres)
  • visual art (photography, painting, collage, etc.)
  • new media
  • works in other media

Borderbend has collaborated with many artists and organizations -- to present dynamic arts initiatives via performance, online and other platforms. "Silent Spring" at 50, Charles Mingus at 90, Bloomsday 2012 & "Ulysses" 90th are several such examples. WTF 2013 follows in this tradition. 



In particular, WTF 2013 continues some themes that were explored in "Silent Spring" at 50; many people have asserted that some of the same kinds of problems that Rachel Carson exposed in her masterpiece Silent Spring are still present with us today -- including persistent denials that humans have caused environmental problems (climate change, destruction of the Mississippi Delta by oil exploration, dangers regarding fracking, etc.), attacks on scientific evidence that oppose corporate interests, and so on. 

WTFrack 2013 contributions will appear in online media galleries, and contributions will also be part of an 
Eighth Annual Chicago Calling Arts Festival event that happens in Gary, Indiana. 

Please send us an email, with "WTFrack 2013" in the subject line, to find out more. There may be a standalone website for this project, but this media gallery is here for now...

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    WTFrack 2013

    Click here for more info about WTFrack 2013.


    Contributors

    Gloria Betlem
    Rev. David Breeden
    Peter Neil Carroll
    Craig Czury
    Jacques del Conte
    Karla Linn Merrifield
    Marian O'Brien Paul
    John Roche
    Michael Forster Rothbart
    Steven Schroeder
    Dwain Wilder
    Alice Zinnes


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