Globalism’s Failed Promise

SUBHEAD: Individuals’ self-identity will be tied not so much to country of birth as to their smart phones.

By Curtis Ellis on 20 May 2014 for The American Conservative -
(http://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/globalisms-failed-promise/)


Image above:Half a dozen mouthpieces for corporate globalism/ Left to right; Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Thabo Mbeki, Tony Blair, Bono, Olusegun Obasanjo in photo-op at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos Switzerland in 2005. From original article.

The crisis in Ukraine and the missing Malaysian Airlines Flight have done more than expose weaknesses in regional security and international air safety arrangements. They have exposed fundamental flaws in the bedrock assumptions underlying that secular faith known as globalization.

George Ball, liberal State Department and Wall Street apparatchik, stated the first axiom of globalism in his famous 1967 testimony to a congressional Joint Economic Committee when he declared nation states “obsolete.” This has been unquestioningly accepted as an article of faith by the smart set. Western elites have come to believe nations will wither away in a brave new economically integrated world.

As a corollary, we are to believe flags are simply vestiges of a bygone era rather than touchstones of pride and identity. Individuals’ self-identity will be tied not so much to country of birth as to their smart phones, whose parts have crossed more borders than five generations of Mexican migrants. “iPhone or Android” will mean more to homo modernicus than “American or Brazilian.”

We were promised deracination would lead inevitably to world peace. The original Cobdenite told us nations that trade with each other don’t go to war with each other. Free trade apologists have been repeating this utopianism ever since, facts notwithstanding. (Germany and France were major trading partners before World War I.) No rational head of state would upset the harmonious workings of the global economy; nationalist passions would be tempered by “market realities.”

It’s clear they didn’t get the memo in Russia and Ukraine. They have been significant trading partners, yet economic realities did not trump nationalism. To be sure, many of the Maidan protestors coveted their own flag more than designer goods from the EU. It is a modern Western conceit to view human aspirations strictly through a materialistic lens. Alexander Solzhenitsyn decried Western society’s tendency to focus on the accumulation of material goods to the exclusion of all other human characteristics.

This stubborn insistence on seeing the world in purely economic terms blinded us to anticipating that Vladimir Putin could do exactly what he did. Putin wasn’t supposed to risk upsetting “the market”—but he did. He was supposed to fear sanctions and economic backlash—but he didn’t. The only possible explanation is that he is disconnected from reality, as Angela Merkel reportedly said.
 
Blind faith in economism informs the solutions to foreign conundrums proposed by many across the political spectrum. Economic sanctions will promote good behavior in Eastern Europe, while economic engagement will promote human rights and religious tolerance in East Asia. In Ukraine, we can conveniently have it both ways, sanctions and engagement: exporting loads of cheap American natural gas will reward our friends and punish our enemies.

Just as events in Ukraine show us nationalism is not a spent force, the Malaysian Airlines mystery shows us the limits of global technocracy.

We have come to believe that raising everyone to the Western standard of living will spread our values. The assumption is that having the same material goods makes everyone the same—the software goes with the hardware. President Clinton used this formulation to sell PNTR (Permanent Normal Trade Relations) with China: democracy would flourish in China in tandem with a middle class.

Since Malaysia’s Boeing 777 is the same as American’s Boeing 777, the Malaysians will operate it as just as Americans do. We now see how naive that is. National pride trumped a dispassionate pursuit of truth, and had as much to do with excluding the FBI, NTSB, and others from the Flight 370 investigation as concerns about revealing military intelligence assets (or lack thereof). Nationalism and national differences are alive and well.

Despite developments in Ukraine and Malaysia, the Obama administration and its globalist fellow travelers in think tanks, on K Street, and in Congress continue to pursue their post-nationalist agenda.

The Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and the Trans-Pacific Partnership would merge the U.S. economy with the EU and other countries around the world, among them Malaysia. These agreements are part of the transnational project envisioned by George Ball and David Rockefeller 50 years ago. They are based on the assumption that nationalism is a thing of the past, and that people around the world think, believe, and conduct business in the same manner as Western elites.

Those who have the courage to look will see that those cherished notions died in the waters of the Indian Ocean, and on the shores of the Black Sea.

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Worse than you think

SUBHEAD: Our Federal, State and County governments are not going to protect us from the dangers ahead but be a part of them.

By Juan Wilson on 21 May 2014 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2014/05/worse-than-you-think.html)


Image above: SWAT teams and military operating in Watertown, Massachusetts in the aftertmath of the explosion of two backpack pressure cooker bombs on 4/15/13 in the cityof Boston by two young brothers. The region was under the control of what could only be called a police state operation that included federal, as well as regional and local militarized units. Constitutional rights were abandoned. This could happen anywhere in America during a "disturbance".  From (http://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2013/apr/19/boston-police-watertown-in-pictures).

THE PROBLEM
A combination of man-made factors have created a situation so dire a threat to the status quo that the subject cannot be spoken of in polite company or even contemplated in private without unpleasant emotional after effects.

The problems that face humanity are multiple but originate in techniques we have developed for exploiting the environment for irreplaceable resources - and then consuming, burning or trashing those resources.

Initially, when we were hunter-gatherers, our exploitation was in the form of driving to extinction easily hunted mega-fauna. later is was deforestation to allow for agriculture based on annual grains to be grown (primarily rice, wheat, corn). Then in quick succession we used timber for fuel followed by coal, then oil and natural gas.

These energy exploits have just about used up the hydrocarbons of a hundred million years of sunlight in just a few centuries. 

After the implementation of agriculture and prior to the use of hydrocarbons the human population remained well under a billion.

But subsequently we have demanded more and more of the of the planet to support our growing numbers. The mechanization, energy, fertilizer, and pesticides available with those hydrocarbons permitted the expansion of human population to reach seven-billion.
 
It is no longer a case of human settlements being circled and whelmed by the surrounding wilderness. We have tamed Earth and now allow wilderness only into designated preserves that don't have oil or natural gas reserves.

And even then those sacred "wild" areas have been overwhelmed by trekkers,  campers, off-road bikers, and vacation RVs. Even the environmentalists are out in the wilderness fitting wildlife with ID tags, radio collars and head-cameras in order to "save" them.

Is that the sound of an Exxon helicopter overhead? How about we stop entering the wilderness and instead begin to convert human settlements into something wilder?

Without relief, the response by nature will shortly be to throw humanity off its back like a dog shaking off fleas. To my way of thinking the definition of vermin is too many of any one creature in a place. In our great numbers humans have become vermin.

Relief is coming to the planet. Unfortunately, because of our delay of half a century in handling the problem ourselves, Nature's solution will be quick and widespread. It will be to transform much of the planet into a place inhospitable for those creatures larger than micro-organisms (with the exception of rats, roaches and crabgrass).

In the meantime, to keep us sated,  we comfortably watch our various flatscreens, tablets and phones in the air-conditioning while snarfing on "Soylent Orange" - the industrialized GMO corn substitutes for food.

"Soylent Orange" includes the patties of GMO-corn fattened chicken-beef-pork meat-like substances that we flush-down with a 64 ounce carbonated cola sweetened with GMO high-fructose corn syrup. And don't forget to get a bag of "Flamin' Hot" crunchy puffed GMO-corn Cheetos for between meals.

I used to call this phenomena 'Soylent Yellow" after the color of corn, but I have recently preferred 'Soylent Orange" after the color of Cheetos.

THE REACTION
The response of human society to the Problem highlighted above has been funny and tragic. Besides the expected self-denial and lethargy there has been a tsunami of techno-optimistic claptrap about desktop fusion running our computers and green algae filling our gas tanks.

The most profitable sectors of our economy have employed the creation of money out of debt (banking) and the investment in diminishing returns (energy industry) to be productive. But even these profit centers are faltering. Needless to say these are suicidal distractions from the real solutions.

The real solutions seem outside of the purview of government, industry and the military. While trans-national corporations are running all three of these sectors - they are running on fumes. There simply is not enough cheap energy to keep all the balls in the air.

As a result all these sectors are "going medieval".  By that I mean they are expecting and participating in a transformation of our current industrial nation states that espouse democracy and the rule of law into a neo-feudal oligarchy controlled by a privileged elite.

FEDERAL: In the United States, since 2001, the post-traumatic stress of 911 has allowed a trade of our freedom for greater security. Torture, murder, drones and other abominations have been directed not only at our foreign enemies but at our own citizens.

We now have several federal agencies that are arming themselves to contend with the American civilian population as an enemy of the state.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Transportation Security Agency(TSA)  is only the tip of the iceberg. There is also the Drug Enforcement Administration, The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF).

These departments have been militarized by arming up and adding increasingly heavier armored equipment.

Even the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) is engaged in militarizing itself.

A solicitation (replete with spelling errors) posted on the Fed Biz Opps website states;
“The U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of Inspector General, located in Washington, DC, pursuant to the authority of FAR Part 13, has a requirement for the commerical (sic) acquisition of submachine guns, .40 Cal. S&W, ambidextrous safety, semi-automatic or 2 shot burts (sic) trigger group, Tritium night sights for front and rear, rails for attachment of flashlight (front under fore grip) and scope (top rear), stock-collapsilbe (sic) or folding, magazine – 30 rd. capacity, sling, light weight, and oversized trigger guard for gloved operation.”
Is this to protect crop fields of Genetically-Modified-Organisms (GMOs) from organic farmers or cow feedlots from People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) members? One wonders.

Efforts to protect financial banking interests above the that of American citizens continues with about $100 billion of bailouts every month with lending set at zero percent. What ponzi-bank crime syndicate couldn't make money with that backing?

And where does the money come from? Stripping social safety nets, leading college student into penury, driving the middle-class into poverty.

STATE: The government of the state of Hawaii has made every effort to pander to the military, corporatists, speculators, developers, and sleazeballs with such promotions as the Hawaiian Superferry in 2007. That was a deal to have the Hawaii use public funds to promote the development of a prototype navel littoral combat vessel that would be used as a commercial ferry and means to transport the Stryker Brigade armored vehicles throughout the state. This was beaten back by public outrage.

In 2011 Governor Abercrombie tried to set up The Public Land Development Corporation (PLDC).  The PLDC was supposed to let private speculators develop public lands in partnership with the state to generate revenues through the Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR). This might include industrial development, fuel farms or even casino resorts (if a Native American label could be assigned to Hawaiians through legislation). This too was beaten back by public outcry.

Recently the Governor has moved to make it easier in an "emergency" or "disaster" to have our constitution abrogated. A proclamation of such a state of affairs would allow state and county agencies to interfere with control of private property, guaranteed freedoms, and other rights.

Do not expect any help from our state government to make Hawaii more self reliant, sustainable or ecologically sound.

COUNTY: The government of the County of Kauai has been at odds with the residents of the island for some time. The property taxes levied on residents are a primary source of income for county employees. They must cover overtime and pension benefits as well as perks like vehicles and gas-cards. The county government appears to want less democracy for Kauai if that could be arranged.That would help give the green light for every half-baked scheme to monitize the island.

The Kauai County Charter Revision Commission meeting on Monday, may 19th had a busy agenda. This was an email from Ken Taylor (taylork021@hawaii.rr.com):
Not only were they attempting to increase the requirements to place a citizen's petition for amendment on the ballot from 5% to 20%, (Item 2), But they are also considering abolishing the County Auditor and County Treasurer's offices, transferring them to Dept of Finance (Item 5B) AND abolishing the offices of elected County Clerk and County Attorney (Item 5C).  For the finale, Item 7 proposes to allow the county the OPTION of publishing proposed amendments in a newspaper of general circulation in the county OR publishing on-line!   I expect they thought  that everyone would leave after the first item on the agenda. Democracy is at risk, big time!

Our County Mayor has been fighting the peoples' interest to regulate pesticide use by the GMO Chemical companies. He vetoed the County Council Bill 2491 that had popular support and has shown little interest in defending the county in the following legal suit from the GMO companies.

Forget about our county slowing down militarization or our police, the growth of GMO fields, or the paving over and upscale suburbanization of Kauai.  

This top down phenomena has been expressed in big-box corporate stores that shoot for the lowest common denominator and undersell Main Street local businesses; militarization and weaponizing of our local police departments in the name of security and safety; the erosion of personal freedom and rights in a trade-off for corporate interests and control.

THE SOLUTIONS
The answer does not lie in throwing out the bums and replacing them with the "goodguys". The "goodguys" who are willing to serve office honestly and with dedication are few and far between.  The "goodguys" are often transformed by temptations or so outnumbered as to be ineffective. That doesn't mean to me that those who are dedicated should not try to maintain freedom and fairness. I does mean I do not expect much from the effort.

In America this phenomena exists at every strata of government - Federal - State -  County. They are all corrupted and in the thrall of money and personal security. The one-percenters and corporations hand them trinkets to our representatives to sell us down the river.

My advise is to unravel yourself from dependence on government, corporate and the security apparatus as much as possible. Slip between the seams. Become invisible. Be self-reliant.

FOOD: We will likely soon see how even temporary interruptions to food, power and infotainment (information & entertainment) systems will create havoc. Global warming will play a part in this with draughts, brown-outs and fire storms.

In addition we will will likely have food shortages due to increasing GMO crop failures from insect and weed resistance to pesticides as well as increasing problems with the production of food dependent on antibiotics and hormones.

Need I mention the health problems that are now being associated with HFCS and glyphosate ingestion. Heart disease, obesity, diabetes, celiac disease, autism, etc.

 Solution: Organically grow as much of your own food as possible. Trade for what you need and don't have.

ENERGY: The bright energy future brought to you by fracking for oil and gas is about to become the dim past. Besides diverting huge amounts of water needed for other purposes the fracking industry poisons the water it uses and any water nearby. The drop-off in productivity in gas and oil wells is so dramatic as to be unprofitable. We cannot frack our way out of this problem.

Moreover, we cannot nuke our way out of it either. Nuclear power will not save civilization. In fact it is capable of ending it all by itself. If you haven't noticed, nobody has a clue how to end the ongoing catastrophe that is Fukushima Daiichi. You will be long dead before that mess is "cleaned up". The entire northern Pacific Ocean is already effected.

 For those on the continental United States read up on meltdown at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) in Carlsbad NM on last Valentine's Day. WIPP that is the only repository for all sorts nuclear paste (including plutonium and uranium). It has been shutdown for an unspecified duration and truckloads of nuclear waste are backing up at our crumbling 40 year old nuclear facilities.

Solution: Use less and make your own. Your energy budget is set by your ability to utilize the energy from the sunshine that fall where you live.

INFOTAINMENT: Read books, write letters, play an instrument. This is one time it is all about you.

UNKNOWN UNKNOWNS
All this is not to say if you do all the right things you will find bliss. There is likely to be great variation in the negative effects of the PROBLEM we face. There will be hot-spots for ecological damage, industrial disasters, and government repression. War can exist anywhere.

However, all-in-all the more self reliant you are, right now, where you are, the better your chances.

See also:
Ea O Ka Aina: Soylent Grain
8/13/10
Ea O Ka Aina: Down with King Corn 2/28/08


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River of Human Folly

SUBHEAD: Without even noticing we are entering an era of Apocalypse and Full Spectrum Neo-Feudalism

By Ray Jason on 13 May 2014 for the Sea Gypsy Philosopher -
(http://theseagypsyphilosopher.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-river-of-human-folly.html)


Image above: The Aventura on the Rio Chagres in Panama. From original article.

It was a self-imposed exile. My initial diagnosis was “world weariness,” but after a few days of solitude on the Rio Chagres, it became clear to me that my true ailment was “human weariness.” How could my species be so foolish, so destructive, so self-absorbed, and so unaware of the consequences of its actions? It saddened me and it astonished me. So I had come here to escape from humanity in order to contemplate it more clearly.

Twice a day I would row as far up the river as the strength of the contrary current would permit me. Then I would lazily drift back down to AVENTURA in my inflatable dinghy.

As I floated downstream, I savored a tapestry of exquisite beauty – the threads included shimmering water and bird song and fish play and monkey trees in the jungle. By the fifth day, clarity was emerging as the river breezes and the exotic night sounds healed me.

The paradoxical magic of Solitude blessed me once again. For days on end there was not a single human in view, but this absence intensified my focus on the human project - until it seemed as sharp as the vision of the osprey that circled overhead.

Here is what I saw. Civilization seems to be hurtling down two disastrous paths that are contrary to each other and yet connected to each other.

The first course is a societal ruination that is so catastrophic that I refer to it as apocalyptic collapse - or to create a term – APOCOLLAPSE.

The second course is a steady but accelerating reshaping of the western democracies into tyrannical police-surveillance states. I call this FULL SPECTRUM NEO-FEUDALISM.

APOCOLLAPSE
There are three meta-systems that individually or in combination could de-stabilize the planet so profoundly that the world that we take for granted could vanish with paralyzing swiftness. I call them the Big Bad “E”s and they stand for Energy, Economics and Ecology.

ENERGY
Our modern techno-industrial society is so dependent on enormous inputs of fossil fuel products that as Peak Oil intensifies prices will skyrocket and supply chains will break-down. And so huge swaths of daily living that we take for granted will be compromised or eliminated.

The fragility of supermarkets that only stock three days worth of food will be revealed when the trucks can’t deliver the groceries because diesel fuel is unavailable or unaffordable. The industrial farming system which uses oil and natural gas in tractors, combines, fertilizer, insecticides, and pesticides will wobble to a halt. The electrical grid will go down as the fuel dribbles away, thus leaving millions of people either sweltering or shivering in the dark.

As for the recent rash (a most appropriate noun) of feel good energy stories - they are a callous and malicious charade underwritten by the energy giants to keep the illusion going … until it just stops going. A good comparison is the believability of the tobacco industry which deceived and lied and distorted until even their most expensive public relations campaigns could no longer disguise the truth.

ECONOMICS
 I would characterize our modern economic system as a perverse mating of absurdity and evil. At least the villainous Robber Barons of the 19th century actually “made things.” They may have been ruthless and greedy, but they produced steel and railroads and light bulbs. But our current financial titans have only one real talent. They are masters of deceit – of smoke and mirrors and collusion and corruption. Try heating your home with credit default swaps or try filling your car’s gas tank with collateralized debt obligations.

These financial demigods acquire their obscene fortunes not by producing anything of worth to society, but by a dark web of manipulation. They own the politicians of both parties. The government agencies that should police them are packed with “regulators” that used to work for the very banks that they are supposed to monitor.

They are the owners of and the beneficiaries of the Federal Reserve. This omnipotent agency, which many mistakenly assume works for The People via the government, is actually a creation of the biggest and most powerful banks. I think of the Fed as the pool boy for the Too Big to Jail banks.

This financial criminality has led to a global economic panorama that is appalling and suicidal. Most of the banks of the first world are insolvent. Their true assets vs. obligations portfolios have been hidden by money pumping from the central banks and the IMF which, ironically also has no real money. The fiat currency system, which is the foundation for all of this insanity, is now being called into question more and more frequently.

 This scrutiny is well deserved since there has not been a single fiat currency in the history of the world that survived. The supremacy of the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency and as the petro-dollar is also being challenged. China and Russia would love to terminate this advantage, which has given the U.S. a “get out of debtor’s jail” free pass for decades.

In summary, the economic big picture is horrendous. The gap between the rich and the poor has become so gigantic that the disgruntled underclass is starting to become angry. The enormous debts of many nations are now so ludicrous that these countries have to borrow money just to pay the interest on previously borrowed money. And there is an enormous pool of financial dark matter circling the planet like an invisible Death Star. This is the multi-trillion dollar derivatives swindle.

One day, in the form of an enormous black dragon swan, it will darken the sky above the executive “team-building” picnic of a major corporation and divest them of their “all is well” delusions.

ECOLOGY
 There are two diametrically opposed trends on the environmental landscape. On the one hand the vast majority of climate scientists are continually adjusting their previous predictions because their “worst case scenarios” were not worst case enough. Not only are they altering the severity of the various calamities, but also the speed at which they are occurring.

The methane vents in Siberia are expanding faster than predicted. There are severe droughts in most of the world’s primary bread baskets. The Arctic ice shelf might completely disappear in the next few summers. The wettest forest in the world – the Amazon - is regularly catching fire. I could list a dozen other examples, but the trend is that things are deteriorating more significantly and at a faster pace than expected.

On the opposite hand, the “climate change denial” camp is growing. The fact that the obscenely rich oligarchs have funded thousands of lobbyists in Washington to sway the opinions of Congress is the main factor in this increase. And the fact that these politicians are handed bullet points based on “scientific” studies that these same industrialists bankrolled, is repulsive. What sort of sick sentient being would bequeath his grandchildren a smoldering planet just so that he can move further up the Forbes Richest People list?

So, in conclusion, the APOCOLLAPSE seems inevitable. There is no reason to believe that some sort of Tesla energy miracle will suddenly appear out of nowhere. The economic insanity that threatens our way of life is utterly monumental due to the interwoven nature of global finance and commerce in the 21st century. And we are approaching so many ecological tipping points that it will become impossible for 7 billion people to continue to survive at our current standard of living.

FULL SPECTRUM NEO-FEUDALSIM
Any honest analysis of 21st century American democracy must conclude that it is a sham. Certainly there is still the façade, but it is as phony as a Hollywood movie set. The trappings of a republic are still there, but the actual “power of the people” has vaporized. It has been supplanted by the power of the RICH PEOPLE. If the wealthy campaign contributors want a war in Iraq, it does not matter that 80% of the population is against it.

No matter which political party is in power, the results are still basically the same. And that’s because mega-wealthy individuals and enormous corporations donate to both campaigns, so that regardless of the outcome, the victor must grant them access and influence. Even the two party system itself, is symptomatic of the corruption at the core of our pseudo-republic. Any third party candidate who poses a genuine threat to the status quo is attacked and marginalized. Instead of citizen legislators, it has become a world of millionaire career politicians. And the phrases “term limits” and “genuine campaign finance reform” are not permitted in polite company.

It is bad enough that the U.S. political scene has become an exclusionary zone where only the prominent have access, but what is worse is the direction that this Plutocracy is headed. It feels like the country of my youth has disappeared and been replaced by an imposter. Here are some examples:

  • The Middle Class, which should be the bulwark of democracy, is being knowingly destroyed.

  • Instead of being outraged by the use of torture, my government now commits it.
  • The power of the press has been neutered. They have forsaken their role as societal watch-dogs, and have instead become political lapdogs.
  • Instead of supporting “self-determination” the U.S. is despised around the world for its imperial policies in support of its gigantic corporations.
  • The Posse-Comitatus Act, which forbids the use of the military in domestic police duty, is being overtly and covertly undermined.
  • The NDAA act gives the President the power to indefinitely detain (imprison) almost anyone that is perceived as a threat to the State.
  • The nation is being rapidly turned into an Orwellian nightmare whereby the government can spy on all of your communications.
Instead of being honored and encouraged, whistleblowers are being vilified and imprisoned.

Local police forces all across the country are being militarized as though the powers that rule are preparing for revolution. Cops have morphed from crime stoppers into enforcers.

All of these bullet points are symptomatic of a government that seeks more and more control of its citizens. The inescapable trend is towards a society in which a tiny group is extremely rich and powerful and the vast majority is an underclass of modern serfs that run the machines that spew out the profits. It has all of the markings of a science fiction nightmare that is turning into reality.

Now that I have outlined these two powerful forces - APOCOLLAPSE and FULL SPECTRUM NEO-FEUDALISM - allow me to discuss the dynamic between the two. The big issue is whether the tyrants, who seek massive domination of humanity through their thugs and surveillance, will succeed with their control freak fantasies before civilization either suddenly implodes or gradually falls over. If the Big Bad “E”s do initiate a societal meltdown, then large governments will suddenly be neutered. The seemingly almighty rulers will swiftly be transformed from harem masters into eunuchs, as everything becomes smaller and more local.

If on the other hand the demagogues do manage to impose their Orwellian nightmare on large parts of the world, I believe that the APOCOLLAPSE will still occur. And that is because even a Soylent Green world needs energy and a livable biosphere and an economic system that is not laughably dysfunctional.

Therefore, to me, the major question is whether the world will unravel before the Malignant Overlords have managed to fully erect their wet dream control grid. It would certainly be preferable if a few generations of serfs did not have to live under police state oppression as the lights flicker out and the erupting methane vents make breathing a hellish ordeal.


As for how an individual or a family can respond to these tragic scenarios, these are my beliefs. I know that I can’t stop any of the Big Bad “E”s from continuing down the seemingly irreversible paths that lead to APOCOLLAPSE. Nor do I think that any citizen or group of people can derail the hideous locomotive of FULL SPECTRUM NEO-FEUDALISM. I suspect that both non-confrontational methods and revolution in the streets are both doomed to failure.

But I do believe that a wise person and his loved ones can prepare themselves so that they have at least a chance of escaping and surviving. And for those who succeed, they will face a difficult but wondrous challenge. Their mission will be to sculpt a new human living arrangement that combines the best elements of civilization with the best aspects of pre-civilized tribal cultures.

For over ten thousand generations we human animals GOT IT RIGHT! We lived in a manner that was sustainable, communal, joyous, egalitarian and compassionate. And we showed awe and reverence for the non-human world that cocooned us. We have lost our way only in the last few thousand years when Agriculture ended tribal society and ushered in Civilization. Unfortunately, the shining benefits of this new societal structure blinded us to the devastating side effects. We did not realize that hierarchy and division of labor would lead to rulers and priests and armies and wars and rich and poor and destruction and despair.


Personally, I no longer choose to “rage against the machine.” It seems like a hopeless task and a misuse of my time, energy and intellect. Instead, I believe that there is greater wisdom in attempting to conceptualize what might arise “on the other side of Collapse.” That strikes me as a worthwhile and incredibly vital pursuit. My essay on that topic is already pretty well sketched out. I am tentatively calling it “On the Far Side of Oblivion.”

But its completion will require more time on the river – in sacred harmony with the whispering water - and the creatures that it nurtures.  

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The End of the End of Nature

SUBHEAD: I knew that wilderness in any meaningful sense no longer existed anywhere on earth.

By Christy Rodgers on 14 May 2014 for The Dark Mountain -
(http://dark-mountain.net/blog/the-end-of-the-end-of-nature/)


Image above: Illustration from the 1972 movie "Silent Running" that takes place in a future when all plant life on Earth has become extinct. A few specimens have been preserved in enormous, greenhouse-like geodesic domes attached to a fleet of space freighters, currently just outside the orbit of Saturn. From (http://gazzatrek.deviantart.com/art/Silent-Running-173568513).

Backpacking in the Marble Mountain Wilderness of California last summer I had a revelation. I stood looking up at a glowing, ancient peak over a small, clear lake a dozen miles from any road with no sign of any human presence but my campsite anywhere in view.

And for the first time in such a situation I seemed to feel the contingent, circumscribed nature of the place I was in compared to the vastness of the human-built and intervened-with world that bounded it on all sides. I also understood that its official designation, ‘wilderness area’, was an unredeemable oxymoron. I knew that I was in a park, not the wild. Even more: I knew that wilderness in any meaningful sense no longer existed anywhere on earth. In that moment, at that place, I had cognitively entered what scientists have named the Anthropocene.

The end of the wild as a separate thing, a thing that surrounded civilisation and was never fully penetrable by it, always a threat to its sense of order, to its sense of power – that end was not near; it had come. I was living in it. Now, here and anywhere on the planet’s surface, it was the wild places that were surrounded, besieged. When, ever before in history, had mountains or forests been called ‘fragile’? Our so-called wilderness areas were bounded and gated off, but they were utterly porous too.

Legions of backpackers (sustained, as I was, by factory-made gear and industrial food grown and packaged by somebody else) marched up the Pacific Crest Trail every year through this one, making the trail a dust-stream an inch thick. Planes flew overhead almost hourly. Cattle and sheep grazed at the verges, and frequently managed to stray inside. Firefighting crews helicoptered over or plunged in to fight ever more-frequent wildfires.

Cellphone signals were retrievable from all the high places; GPS coordinates had mapped every square foot. And principally, and likewise invisibly, as Bill McKibben had written decades before in The End of Nature – the effects of civilisation were warming the air, drying out the summers, seeping into every molecule of the wild. No atom of ‘wilderness’ on land, sea or air was untouched by civilisation any more.

But then again, the existence of the wild as a separate thing was itself historical. Before civilisations began to emerge it wasn’t a separate thing; it was our home. Once they had emerged, they rose and fell, and the wild returned where the cities fell, even if it was a desert wild, no longer a forest or a marsh. The people who continued to live closest to the unbuilt (I use this term for lack of a better one to replace ‘natural’, which has fatally slippery definition problems) ecosystems on which they depended directly for survival had no concept of wilderness.

Wilderness was never an intrinsic condition; it was a concept that depended for its existence on its opposite, civilisation. It was always the construct of a worldview whose mechanism for understanding and operating on the world was essentially binary. Environmental historian William Cronon, writing about the peculiar history of US wilderness areas says unequivocally: ‘There is nothing natural about the concept of wilderness.’

So what has died in my generation is not ‘wilderness’, because it never existed. What has died is an idea that fired human hearts and minds, and survived many efforts to eradicate it until, pummelled under the unprecedented onslaught of the Industrial/Information Age, it finally gave way almost everywhere: that there was a sustaining and necessary mystery to the living, unbuilt world that humans could never penetrate, even though we were inextricably interwoven with it. The world was alive, at every level, as we were alive, but infinitely more powerful and wise than we.

This mystery may have had many elements that were malign and frightening, but in its essence it was benign. If it bore any likeness to our species here below, it was that it was in some fundamental sense maternal. But even more profoundly it was harmonic and indestructible.

It was a mystery that we simplified rather hopelessly by attributing early on to humanlike gods, and then degraded utterly by projecting into a lone male anthropic God. One who instructed his followers that the world was entirely disposable, a kind of temporary horror that would be cast off like a foul skin. We were thus ordered not to love the fascinating, complex, endlessly creative place that birthed us.

It was a mystery that we degraded as much by scientific hubris, sadly, as by our intolerant and hierarchical religions.

Where the unbuilt world is concerned, science tends to proceed in the way Rupert Sheldrake (a much-vilified biologist who dares to propose that there may actually be a kind of sympathetic purpose in nature, and we might even be able to determine this by experiment) describes as ‘burning down a building and sifting through the ashes to try to understand the architecture.’

 The cosmos limned by ultra-materialist Western science is almost entirely made up of dead stuff acting mechanically according to unchanging (if elegantly complex) formulae.

Life is a rare freak of chance and has no ultimate purpose beyond replication. Humans alone are self-conscious beings and even our consciousness is theoretically reducible to mechanical processes. Life may be fascinating in its potential for variety, but except for its origin, which remains irritatingly elusive, it possesses no real mystery. It is defined chiefly by the presence of a fully identified set of molecules that can be rearranged in ways that we design for ourselves.

All matter, organic or inorganic, can be further reduced to particles that when split open release an energy that is instantly and enduringly deadly to all life – this is the single most powerful force our science has unlocked.

And finally, anything that happens inside your head – all that wild feeling: longing, sadness, joy, compassion, desire, thought of any kind except mathematical – is totally irrelevant to a real understanding of the deepest forces at work around you.

But what is it that has truly been degraded by banishing the overarching mystery of a living cosmos? Not the unbuilt world as such, because the cosmos, which we have neither created nor can destroy (whatever it is actually made of), has functionally infinite spans of time and space to play in, to create new, rich, unimaginable environments, and let them grow and decay and seed new ones. Not the wild of this planet either, because, as I say, it never existed, except in the minds of the civilised. What is left?

Only ourselves. In the name of mastery over the living world, we have degraded ourselves, and the species whose fates are most closely tied to our own. All civilisations created hierarchies that relegated some living beings – humans, animals and plants – to the status of objects: possessions, slaves. Now we are trying to do the same even with their constituent molecules.

If the experience of human chattel slavery has anything to teach, it should be that being a slave owner is even more degrading than being a slave. In any morality worth the name, no one would be more degraded, because no one has reduced the potentialities of our species and its consciousness more than the perpetrator of oppression.

But what enables slavery and oppression? The ability to conceive of other living things as if they were essentially dead matter. And this is what all of us have learned to do.

People pay for what they do, said the great James Baldwin, and they do so very simply – by the lives they lead. If we create horror for others, we then live for the rest of our lives in the emptiness of the horror we’ve created, the impossibility of meaning, of belonging, of full consciousness. The bizarre documentary film The Act of Killing (2012) demonstrated this by focusing on the Indonesian perpetrators of mass murder, who live in absolute impunity decades after the killing time, the seeming beneficiaries of their actions.

The killers have become creepy comic book versions of human beings, affable but empty automatons. They are like zombies, eating the substance of life out of compulsion and habit, walled off from their own consciousnesses, unable ever to be fully alive again. It’s not an adequate punishment because it hasn’t allowed their surviving victims, or the families of the dead, any redress, any chance to confront their horror and have it consoled and the conditions that permitted it eliminated or even diminished. That would be the only justice. But the perpetrators’ self-created hell is still of vital concern.

This is because while the perpetrators are extreme cases, we products of civilisation are all on the continuum. Ours is a civilisation that metaphorically and literally eats its own, even as we project the horror of cannibalism into all our mythology.

Witness one of the greatest of the European humanist writers, Michel de Montaigne. His musings never complacently come to rest in stark binaries – he invented the essay form as a vehicle for his iconoclastic thought. He understood four centuries ago that people who actually ate real human flesh were very likely less dangerous and degraded than those who professed a horror of the practice, while following a belief system that institutionalised intra-species predation through enormous imbalances of power.

The self-described civilised imbued some humans with an absolute authority over others, while turning their enemies into sub-humans instead of honouring their shared humanity as the ‘real’ cannibals did.

In the contemporary world, Montaigne’s nuanced understanding remains apt – and just as irrelevant to mainstream discourse as it was in his own day.

As the last areas from which civilisation had earlier withdrawn or failed to penetrate fully come under another period of siege – and this time, for the first time, everywhere on the planet at once – the indigenous peoples still living in them have become visible to ‘civilised’ peoples once again.

Civilised peoples generally divide into two camps on indigenous peoples: the first, that they should adapt to our civilisation and give up tribal life because civilisation is an advance on the way they live, so it would vindicate our faith in the rightness (or at least the necessity) of our way of life.

The second: they should stay where they are and retain all their ancient behaviours because by doing so they help us feel better about who we are – we can accommodate ‘diversity’, we are liberal and tolerant, we don’t have to destroy or consume everything to live well ourselves – and also because they will thus accomplish what we have failed to do: protect large swaths of ‘the wild’ from civilisation, from us.

Neither one of these mindsets actually has much if anything to do with indigenous peoples themselves. They are not equally and fully real to either mindset; they are simply a metaphor for the empty place in our psyche, and the way we try to fill it.

Those who desperately want a token number of indigenous people to remain in small, bounded reserves safe from rapacious extraction – just as other charismatic megafauna remain in safari parks – so that we can enjoy their lives aesthetically, so that the civilisation from which we benefit can redeem itself, are still on the same continuum as the civilisers, just as the vacant-eyed consumers are on the same continuum as the perpetrators of mass murder.

They are still trapped in non-sequiturish thinking, in a false consciousness that requires massive suppression of all that has been and is being sacrificed – in their own bodies and minds as well as elsewhere – in order for civilisation to be maintained.

Joshua Oppenheimer, the director of The Act of Killing, made this explicit in an interview responding to a question about how the perpetrators realised but suppressed their culpability ‘in the same way I realise that the shirt I’m wearing was made in Bangladesh, and the people who made it may well now be buried in a pile of rubble. Thanks to that I can buy the shirt for six dollars.’

The extraction must be slowed and ultimately stopped – whether it’s on the land of the Inuit, a colonial African farm, or in a Texas exurb – and the oppression abolished because we realise they are undermining the aliveness of our life, all our lives. Unless that collective realisation dawns, they won’t be stopped except by a colossal failure from which the species will learn nothing, because this civilisation’s lessons will not be transmitted to the next to arise.

And because of the void in our psyches where a sense of transcendent mystery, purpose and belonging longs to be, made permanent by our radical dissociation first from our unbuilt habitat and now, more and more completely, from one another—we are all struggling psychically to experience life, rather than simply being fully alive. We keep trying to ingest experience – or more frequently, technologically enabled imitations of it – in whatever form we can to fill the emptiness.

Or simply out of habit, which our own best musicians, artists and writers still try valiantly to shake themselves, and us, out of. And at which even they can only succeed momentarily.

Only a social system that does not rely on false consciousness to maintain itself could provide a more durable and complete identity for us. The empty place in our psyches is permanent as long as this civilisation lasts, and superfluous consumption of various kinds is an attempt to fill, and when that inevitably fails, wall it up, bound it and make that menacing emptiness as irrelevant as we have made the threat of the wild.

In other words: we feared the wild, we neutralised the wild, and now we have to neutralise the psychic consequences we have wrought upon ourselves in doing so.

We are not condemned to this situation by any external fate, by gods or genes. We are condemned by the daily choices of the powerful to whom we submit, and our own collaboration with them, to hunt for solutions to the problems our civilisation creates, which then generate more problems, for which we then produce even less adequate and enduring solutions. If that isn’t the epitome of the ‘progress traps’ social critic Ronald Wright has attributed to the decline of previous civilisations, you tell me what is.

I have said the broadly collective idea of living nature as both mysterious and purposeful has died, and my generation is living in its aftermath. But such understandings, unlike individual humans or societies, can be resurrected if the material conditions of human life allow them growing space in our psyches. Just as ecosystems rebound with surprising facility when civilisations retreat from them.

In 1983, David Rains Wallace wrote a book called The Klamath Knot, describing various aspects of the regional ecosystem in which the Marble Mountain Wilderness is located. He described the large-scale interventions of mining and logging in the 19th century, which reshaped whole features of the landscape with axes, poisons, furnaces, and dynamite. That landscape reconfigured itself yet again after they retreated, so that hunting for evidence of their presence now is almost like hunting for geological fossils.

He also gave a kind of evolutionary history of the region’s geology, flora, fauna, and water systems that was full of the sense of time as the prime mover, the one force sine qua non for the true expression of life. His evolutionary perspective was sanguine. Its surprising conclusion: the real lesson of geological spans of time is that overall, living things are more durable, more resilient than non-living things.

It seems that this is because the relationship to time itself is different. Living things are more flexible, more creative, more capable of a variety of approaches to the problem of existence – and with quantities of time they can produce true novelty, while non-livings things are condemned to a much narrower spectrum of behaviour and incapable of adaptation to, or creating, a changed environment in the same way. Wallace gave the example of blue-green algae, possibly a progenitor species of much of the living world. It is still proliferous in the region’s lakes, and has been in existence far, far longer than any of the peaks that shadow those lakes.

Contemporary civilisation’s idea that machines and mechanical processes are more durable than living things and represent desirable enhancements upon life and even a kind of next-phase triumph over the living world comes to seem particularly shortsighted – in fact retrogressive, in this light.
Montaigne claimed at the outset that his writing was only an effort to understand and present himself.

 (And so he has been touted as a seminal figure in the Rise of the Individual – Western civilisation’s ghost god, its necessary pillar of consumerism, but in reality more like the villages it keeps ‘[destroying] in order to save.’) But when you read the essays he slyly warns the reader not to waste her time upon, you find that self often engaged in a subtle and thorough critique of the brutally violent, hierarchical, and hypocritical society from which he had withdrawn to write.

And what does he offer, not as its binary opposite but as the exemplary, ineradicable, fundamental mystery that continues to offer it guidance and wisdom? Nature, conceived as something pre-existing and at the same time innate in humans and non-humans both. ‘Nature always gives us happier laws than those we give ourselves.’

Still, Montaigne offers no general prescriptions; he only provides the example of trying to see life more fully for its own sake, because he finds it necessary to do so. He finds no collective identity within civilisation that is not in some way toxic or built on air. He has come to a place I find myself familiar with.

It made me see the need to begin to look at things again, from a simpler place: What behaviours still make us humans lively, vivid, in the truest sense of those words? I found myself noticing people interact in ways that weren’t mediated by much if any technology – talking on park benches, in cafes, or on street corners, doing voluntary manual work together in living places like parks or gardens, or simply, quietly, observing the unbuilt living world wherever it could be found.

 It seems obvious: to be fully alive you have to interact directly, respectfully and in physical proximity with a variety of other fully living things as much as possible. There is no substitute.

There is no ‘end of nature’ to fear, no end of the ‘wild’. There is only the loss of our own vividness and dignity, and the rich and complex identity that could come from an understanding of kinship with many other living things and the benign mystery that connects and sustains all. That vividness is still accessible to us, even if it seems ghostly in the glare of screens or like a bad joke in the lives of the enslaved, hungry and impoverished. It continues to slip the bonds of all our attempts to neutralise it. And if it really is cosmological in nature, as other humans have guessed, it will always do so, until we learn from it or fade before it.

For now it waits, a possibility, in the immanence of any day in any place where you can lift your eyes from the glow of the screen or the darkness of an interior space and find it inherent in sunlight on leaves, a bird settling on a wall, a fearless and face-to-face conversation with a stranger or a loved one.

That is not enough. But that is what we have to work with now, we the civilised. The emptiness at the heart of civilisation will never be perfect, and that is our chance.

.

RIMPAC now and then

SUBHEAD: The history of RIMPAC exercises tells us that this year will be more of the same. Destruction to life in the Pacific Ocean.

By Juan Wilson on 16 May 2014 for Island Breath -
(http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2014/05/rimpac-now-and-then.html)


Image above: Oops! A submarine launched Trident missile goes off track during a test. From (http://www.fas.org/nuke/guide/usa/slbm/d-5.htm).

As I have said before, it is my opinion that the US Navy is the single most destructive organization in the world. The ten nuclear powered aircraft carrier strike groups alone are capable of dominating all the oceans in the world. Each strike group includes Nimitz-class nuclear aircraft carrier, a Ticonderoga-class Cruiser, two Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, a Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarine, and a last combat support ship.  

This does not count the nuclear powered Ohio-class submarines each carrying over a dozen nuclear warheads each tipped with multiple thermonuclear weapons. A mere 14 of these subs carry approximately fifty percent of the total US active inventory of strategic nuclear warheads. They prowl all the oceans and are alone capable of ending all life (but bacteria and viruses) on earth.

The Trident missile are now carried on a number of other surface crafts as well. The Trident system was tested and perfected right here on Kauai at the PMRF. It's no misnomer.  "PMRF" stands for  the Pacific Missile Range Facility.

Here in Hawaii we are at the eye of a nuclear powered storm. And RIMPAC is the spoon that stirs this poisonous brew.

The RIMPAC 2014 motto is "Capable, Adaptive, Partners". The question is what are those capable partners adaptively engaged in and why. 

This year’s exercise includes forces from Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Colombia, France, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, People’s Republic of China, Peru, the Republic of Korea, the Republic of the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Tonga, the United Kingdom and the United States. 

The USS Ronald Reagan nuclear aircraft carrier strike force is scheduled to lead in this year's exercise. The Reagan and other of its task force members were contaminated with radiation during the meltdown and explosions of atomic reactors at Fukushima Daiichi in 2011. The USS Reagan was so severely damaged that it was in drydock for a year and a half afterwards for decontamination. After RIMPAC it is scheduled to be permanently stationed in Japan.

One thing the history of RIMPAC tells us - the destruction of the Pacific Ocean by the US Navy will go on and on.  There are several categories of activities that the Navy conducts that we on Kauai should be concerned about. Among them are:

Firing Depleted Uranium Munitions
There is spewing uncounted tons of depleted uranium (DU) munitions into the ocean as "live" fire. Virtually all calibers of navel guns fire depleted uranium shells.

Given the increasing radiation pollution due to the oceanside meltdown of multiple nuclear reactors and the continuing increase of radioactivity in Pacific Ocean due to hundreds of tons of radioactive cesium and strontium do we really need to add tons of DU into the ocean as well?

Using High Energy Active Sonar
For every exercise like RIMPAC the Navy seeks to get approval for a number of "takes" (or "killings") of ocean creatures including whales, dolphins and seals. Each kind of explosive device that affects the ocean has a circle within which a acceptable number of takes of various species is allowed by the EPA, NOAA and other agencies.

The Navy's responsibility is to make observations before a live fire event or scheduled explosion and be sure that "only" an agreed upon number of sea life is destroyed. Is this the kind of Navy we need to "protect" us?

Amphibious Practice Landings
Such practice with heavy assault equipment can be destructive to reefs, beaches, and dune structures. Oahu has "hosted" several such landings. Kauai's Barking Sands was hit by such an attack in 2002 (see below).

How appropriate that the USS Reagan, a nuclear ghost ship, should be leading this pack through the radioactive waters of the Pacific Ocean.

We can look forward to tons of fuel burned, uncountable DU munition rounds fired, massive explosions and brain-shattering sonar waves to contend with.

But let us not forget the past impacts of RIMPAC exercises on Kauai and Hawaii.

I know this is a lot of material, but it does show a bit of the RIMPAC history in the last twelve years.



RIMPAC 2012
Eco-activists want to torpedo a war game
By Sara Reardon on 5 July 2012 for New Scientist
(http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg21528724.900-ecoactivists-want-totorpedo-a-war-game.html#.U3Vm6C-M5IY)


Image above: A live-fire exercise during RIMPAC 2012 sank the ex-USS Niagara Falls in waters 15,480 feet deep, 63 miles southwest of Kauai using RGM-84, GBU-10, GBU-32 explosive missiles and and 30mm depleted uranium munition impacts. From (http://comthirdflt.wordpress.com/2012/07/16/sinkex/).

Off the coast of Hawaii in the next few months, three old US navy ships will go down in a blaze of glory. As part of the navy's biennial Pacific training exercise, called RIMPAC, warships, planes and submarines from 22 nations will use the vessels for target practice.

Environmental activists are up in arms. The navy has sunk 109 ships in "Sinkex" training exercises in US waters over the past 12 years. Activists say that each potentially contains in its structure hundreds of kilograms of polychlorinated biphenyl compounds (PCBs) - which accumulate in sea animals and may be neurotoxic - as well as asbestos and heavy metals. They cite military experts who say there are viable alternatives, such as using inflatable targets or simulations.

So how big are the eco-impacts of Sinkex? Hard to say. This year's targets were built before PCBs were banned and before shipbuilders were made to report the toxic chemicals they use. The navy and US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reckons each ship contains about 50 kilograms of PCBs. That is based on similar ships and could be off by hundreds of kilograms, says Colby Self of the Basel Action Network in Seattle, which campaigns against the dumping of toxic chemicals.

Rainer Lohmann at the University of Rhode Island did a rough calculation for New Scientist and estimated that PCB levels would only rise above normal ocean concentration within 1 kilometre of the ships and are unlikely to harm marine life even in that area. "It's not an ethical thing to do," Lohmann says, but he doubts that it is a big problem.

Behind the activists' concerns lies a greater problem: it's easy to suspect that blowing up stuff harms the environment, but no one really knows by how much. More than any other industry, the military gets away with not declaring the impact of its activities on the environment, and dismissing the impacts that are known. Historically, the US military's reporting of training operations has been patchy - even activists admit the need for some secrecy - but there's reason to think the noncombat environmental impact is large.

Military bases, where much of the training on US soil takes place, make up 10 per cent of the EPA's list of most contaminated sites. In a rare assessment of a training exercise, researchers found in 2010 that fish and sea mammals living near the USS Oriskany - an aircraft carrier sunk for training in 2006 - had raised levels of PCBs. The EPA considers any exposure to be toxic, and dumping PCBs, asbestos and heavy metals in US waters is illegal for everyone except the navy: Sinkex is exempted.

Slowly, change may be afoot. This year the navy documented potential impacts of its Pacific exercises, including RIMPAC, in 1000 pages - the most extensive documentation so far. It describes, in very broad terms, a list of ocean pollutants, from PCBs and plastics to sonar noise and the by-products of weapons testing. No one else could get away with this contamination, says Self. "By saying 'This is for national security' they get the EPA to look the other way."

Armed with the Oriskany results, three environmental groups filed a federal complaint against the EPA in December, aiming to end Sinkex's exemption. "The navy should play by the same rules as everyone else," says Todd True of Earthjustice in San Francisco, which represents the groups. The case is pending. Neither the navy nor the EPA had responded to requests for comment as New Scientist went to press.



RIMPAC 2010
Whales and Dolphins Sacrificed for Security
By David Rosenfeld on 10 August 2010 for DC Bureau
(http://www.dcbureau.org/20100810757/natural-resources-news-service/qyoure-killing-meq-how-whales-and-dolphins-sacrifice-for-national-security.html)


Image above: US Navy Sonar Technicians monitor contacts on an AN/SQQ-89V15 Surface Anti Submarine Combat System at sea. Photo by James R. Evans/U.S. Navy. From (http://www.kpbs.org/news/2012/may/14/thousands-marine-mammals-may-be-harmed-navy-sonar-/).

The largest international naval exercise in the world off the waters of Hawaii known as the 2010 Rim of the Pacific or RIMPAC exercise involved 14 nations including South Korea, Thailand, Colombia, Peru and Malaysia with a total of 32 ships, five submarines, more than 170 aircraft and 20,000 personnel.

One of the primary threats the month-long series of exercises were designed to address comes from quiet diesel-engine submarines, which national security experts say North Korea, Iran and other potential adversarial nations possess. The best way to detect something as quiet as a submarine running nearly entirely on battery power – as opposed to a noisy nuclear sub – is with high-intensity active sonar, which sends out pulses of mid-frequency sound as loud as a rocket blast underwater.

The general consensus, with which courts over the past decade have largely agreed, says high-intensity mid-frequency sonar can kill whales and dolphins. The National Marine Fisheries Services – part of the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration – explicitly allows Navy sonar tests and training exercises to result in the deaths of specific numbers of whales and dolphins as long as they have a negligible impact to the population.

The largest international naval exercise in the world off the waters of Hawaii known as the 2010 Rim of the Pacific or RIMPAC exercise involved 14 nations including South Korea, Thailand, Colombia, Peru and Malaysia with a total of 32 ships, five submarines, more than 170 aircraft and 20,000 personnel.

One of the primary threats the month-long series of exercises were designed to address comes from quiet diesel-engine submarines, which national security experts say North Korea, Iran and other potential adversarial nations possess. The best way to detect something as quiet as a submarine running nearly entirely on battery power – as opposed to a noisy nuclear sub – is with high-intensity active sonar, which sends out pulses of mid-frequency sound as loud as a rocket blast underwater.

The general consensus, with which courts over the past decade have largely agreed, says high-intensity mid-frequency sonar can kill whales and dolphins. The National Marine Fisheries Services – part of the National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration – explicitly allows Navy sonar tests and training exercises to result in the deaths of specific numbers of whales and dolphins as long as they have a negligible impact to the population.

It’s under an exception to the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 that NOAA authorized the Navy this year in the waters around Hawaii to inadvertently harass thousands of marine mammals and kill up to 20 whales and dolphins among 10 different species during the course of its sonar exercises, including RIMPAC. (See attached)

Similar authorizations exist for training grounds bordering the entire west, east and gulf coasts of America including the Mariana Islands and Alaska, several of which the Navy is in the process of expanding.

High-intensity sonar appears to cause bleeding from the head in some whales found stranded. It can also cause confusion and mass stranding into shallow bays. For whales that dive deep for food, biologists believe sonar may cause them to repeatedly dive, creating a severe case of decompression sickness that leads to death.

RIMPAC concluded August 1 without a controversial whale stranding, unlike the last RIMPAC in 2008. That doesn’t mean, however, there were no marine mammals harmed or killed by the sonar used by the U.S. and other navies, says Marsha Green, PhD, founder of the Ocean Mammal Institute and one of the first to challenge the U.S. Navy on its sonar use in the mid-1990s.

“There aren’t that many whales and dolphins dying from sonar, compared to entanglements from fishing lines for instance, but the problem is we don’t have a clue,” Green says. “Most are going to sink to the bottom or be eaten by sharks and you’re never going to know.”

It’s been 10 years since the Navy last admitted in the Bahamas that sonar caused a whale stranding, while environmental groups point to at least seven strandings in U.S. waters since then and others worldwide.

Despite the Navy spending $20 million each year – reportedly half of all marine mammal research globally – through the Office of Naval Research, much of the science about how sonar affects whales is still widely debated.

“Most of the time when marine mammals strand, despite the best scientific evidence, no one can really tell what causes them to strand,” says Ken Hess, Navy chief of Naval Operations Energy and Environmental Readiness Division. “We have not seen any cases (since the Bahamas) where we can scientifically show that the Navy’s activities could have affected the marine mammals.”

The lack of whale strandings at an event such as RIMPAC could mean the Navy is getting better at mitigating its ocean noise impact, Hess says. “Ever since the stranding in the Bahamas the Navy began to take a look at this and try to better understand what we could do to protect marine mammals and implement protection measures that we feel have been pretty successful.”

Sonar comes primarily from ships at mid-frequencies up to 235 decibels or from helicopters that can strafe an area with sonar from above. The Navy is also looking into expanding its use of low-frequency sonar sometimes referred to as Continuous Active Sonar that can cover greater distances and may have a lower impact on marine mammals.

But Green and others who’ve pushed the Navy to address the links between sonar and whale strandings still aren’t buying it.

How exactly sonar affects whales and dolphins depends on whom you ask. A paper in the March 2010 issue of Marine Policy found a possible research bias depending on the funding source. The report catalogued 131 primary research papers from 2006-2007 based on funding. (See attached)

“When author affiliations were used…conservation-funded literature was always cited as showing an effect of noise, while military-funded literature was 2.34 times more likely than other literature to be cited concluding no effect,” the report found. When author affiliations were not used, “there was no statistically-significant bias.”

“This indicates that much of the bias in military-funded literature was in work carried out at military institutions, rather than in studies funded by the military but carried out at universities and other institutions,” according to the paper.

The Office of Naval Research was proud to announce in November 2009 that a Navy-funded study by a team at San Diego State University and UC San Diego suggested whales might have more difficulty hearing sonar than scientists thought.

“The study suggests mid-frequency active sonar sounds are largely filtered, or ‘muffled,’ before reaching the animal’s ears. The findings also suggest that higher frequencies used by whales to hunt prey are heard at amplified levels without any dampening,” according to an ONR press release.
Mark Matsunaga, Navy environmental public affairs officer for the U.S. Pacific Fleet in Hawaii, stressed that two dozen marine mammals strand on beaches in Hawaii each year and that there’s still much about the ocean and whale behavior that scientists don’t fully understand.

“People need to understand how little we know about sound and marine mammals,” said Matsunaga, a native Hawaiian and former newspaper reporter in Honolulu. “Unfortunately, a lot of people are very quick to point a finger at sonar when the science doesn’t back that up. There is still so much to be learned. There’s stuff the native Hawaiians knew that has been lost.”

For many biologists, the science is clear at least in the most extreme scenarios. In Cuvier’s beaked whales that dive deep for food, high-intensity sonar can possibly cause them to dive repeatedly or drive them away from feeding areas.

For other species, sonar generally confuses marine mammals that depend on sound to communicate and search for food. It can disrupt feeding habits and even put up a blanket of noise, driving them into shallow waters. Affected species include Melon-headed whales, Bottlenose dolphins and Striped dolphins.

NOAA requires a series of mitigation measures – many the result of lawsuits – that include powering down active sonar by specific decibels, depending on how far away animals are visible, to listening for them underwater with passive sonar and waiting until they are no longer heard for a certain number of minutes. However, the findings and requirements imposed by NOAA, like much of the science related to the effects of sonar on marine mammals, are subject to considerable debate.

Jim Lecky, director of NOAA Fisheries Protected Resources, says determining the exact number of animals that might be harmed is always difficult. “There’s a lot of machination of numbers and theory that goes into that so there’s pretty big room for criticism,” Lecky says. “At the end of the day, we have a fairly good understanding of what the mechanisms are for injury and we think that for some species we have good mitigation measures.”

The decade-long effort by conservation groups to limit the Navy’s use of underwater sonar culminated in a November 2008 U.S. Supreme Court ruling. By a 6-3 decision, justices struck down increased mitigation steps imposed by the lower courts in California, saying they jeopardized national security.

“The Navy has not at all been shy about talking about the national security importance of what they are doing,” says Paul Achitoff, attorney for Earthjustice in Hawaii who challenged the Navy over a series of training exercises in 2008 around the same time as the Supreme Court ruling.

“Before our lawsuit, the Navy had a list of mitigation measures. It’s a long list but it all boils down to virtually nothing more than some sailors standing on deck with binoculars. As soon as the judge’s order in our case expired, they went back to doing what they had been doing before.

Immediately following the lawsuit, which ended in January 2009, two whales and thousands of dead fish washed up on a beach in Kauai. Green says she filed a Freedom of Information Act request to find out what happened, but the Navy never responded, which is against the law.

“There were scientists doing research off the island of Kauai,” Green says. “They made scientists leave the area so it could have been more than sonar.”

Navy officials are now taking part in ongoing talks with NOAA and the Natural Resources Defense Council on further mitigation, while at the same time the Navy is proposing to build a new training range in an area that infuriates environmentalists.

Conservationists were shocked in 2009 to learn the Navy planned an Undersea Warfare Training Range outside Jacksonville, Florida about 30 miles from the only birthing grounds of the North Atlantic Right whale, of which there are only about 350 left.

“How can you pick a worse place?” says Green, whose group along with several others including Earthjustice in Washington, D.C., and the NRDC are suing the federal government to stop it.They don’t use any common sense,” Green says. “Most of the environmentalists would be willing to work with them if they are willing to be reasonable.”

The federal government hadn’t acknowledged Navy sonar could, in fact, kill whales until attorneys with the NRDC and others sued the federal government more than 10 years ago. Attorneys argued successfully that the Navy had broken environmental law for decades without account. And while the documents produced by the Navy now run more than 1,000 pages each, environmental law attorneys often find them inadequate, says Michael Jasny, senior policy analyst for NRDC in British Columbia, Canada.

“They run a lot of pages and they seem like they present a lot of information, but every court that has looked at the Navy’s environmental compliance documentation has found it deeply flawed and inadequate,” Jasny says. The same goes for the Navy’s mitigation steps, he continues. “There hasn’t been any change this year to existing Navy exercises, which is of great concern to us.”

Green and Achitoff don’t hold much hope for the current negotiations with NOAA, Navy and NRDC. Green participated in a similar three-year effort with the Navy and environmental groups that ended in 2006 with panel members quitting in disgust and the Navy accused of influencing scientists.

“After three years, the Navy backed out,” Green says. “They sabotaged the whole thing. It was so underhanded it was unbelievable.” Green is also part of the Ocean Noise Coalition, which for the past eight years went to the UN Conference on Oceans and the Law of the Sea where, she says, ocean noise was a hot topic at its latest meeting in June.

High-intensity active sonar is one in a multitude of artificial sounds – mostly engine noise from container ships – that’s made the oceans roughly a thousand times louder than a century ago, she says from her summer home in Maine. “The Navy has been working very hard at the UN to keep noise from being considered a pollutant. We don’t talk much about whales and sonar because it’s a volatile issue. But when we talk about noise from ships and air guns from oil drilling, everyone pays attention.”


RIMPAC 2008
Group cites RIMPAC in whale deaths
By William Cole on 30 July 2008 for the Honolulu Advertiser
(http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2008/Jul/30/ln/hawaii807300392.html)


Image above: An example of a female Cuvier beaked whale that was stranded. These ocean mammals use a subdued sonar for hunting and navigation. From (http://wildiaries.com/articles/66).

An environmental group is pointing a finger at sonar and the Navy's Rim of the Pacific exercises in the stranding and death of a 15-foot Cuvier's beaked whale Monday on Moloka'i, but the National Marine Fisheries Service said it doesn't yet know what caused the juvenile male animal to enter the shallow water.

U.S. Pacific Fleet spokesman Mark Matsunaga, meanwhile, said it's "premature, speculative and irresponsible to link naval activities to this stranding."

A veterinarian who examined the 2,500-pound deep-diving whale, which stranded itself at least twice, determined it was sick and would not recover, said Chris Yates, who heads the protected resources division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Fisheries Service here.

Officials were made aware of the stranding at 8:30 a.m. Monday, and Yates said the decision was made to euthanize the whale at about 4:30 p.m.

"The animal was sick, would obviously have not lived being pushed out on its own, and would have suffered more," Yates said.

A Molokai public works crew transported the whale to the airport, and the Coast Guard flew it in a C-130 aircraft to Honolulu. A necropsy still was being conducted yesterday at Hawai'i Pacific University.

"Obviously, we want to do this as quick as we can," Yates said. "They could call me up and say, 'Oh, gosh, look what we found. This animal had some major problem.' " On the other hand, a cause of death may not be found, he said.

The environmental law firm Earthjustice said the stranding came as the Navy conducted its multinational Rimpac exercise in Hawaii waters.

Ten nations, 35 ships, including the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk, six submarines, 150 aircraft and 20,000 military personnel participated in the month long Rimpac which had a heavy focus on sonar use for anti-submarine warfare training.

"Deep-diving whales have come into the international spotlight as mass strandings around the world have regularly been linked to naval mid-frequency active sonar use," Earthjustice said.

NOAA Fisheries determined that the use of midfrequency Navy sonar was a "plausible, if not likely" contributing factor to the mass stranding of up to 200 melon-headed whales in Hanalei Bay, Kaua'i, during Rimpac naval exercises in 2004.

One contributor to the finding, Brandon Southall, later said the report did not conclude that Navy sonar caused the stranding. "We do not know what caused it," Southall said.

Earthjustice and the Natural Resources Defense Council have sued the Navy multiple times over active sonar use.

Yates said officials have no idea why the beaked whale stranded itself, but acknowledged that noise can be an issue for marine mammals.

"They hear just like we do," he said. "But on the other side of that, we also want to make very clear that marine mammals strand all the time for various reasons, and it would really be unfortunate and premature to jump to conclusions about the cause of the stranding when we really don't have any idea."

Yates said there are typically about two dozen strandings a year in Hawai'i. Monday's was the eighth whale or dolphin stranding of 2008. A past estimate placed the number of Cuvier's beaked whales around the Hawaiian Islands at more than 12,000.

There had been five Cuvier's beaked whale strandings reported in Hawai'i before Monday, in 1950, 1970, 1981, 1996 and 1998, NOAA Fisheries said.

The Navy said it conducted a 10-nautical mile search yesterday by air for other possible strandings, but none was seen. During Rimpac, NOAA Fisheries researchers tagged some marine mammals to see how they reacted to the naval maneuvers.



RIMPAC 2006
Navy Seeks Repeal of Judge's Ban on Sonar
By Tony Perry on 7 July 2006 in the Los Angeles Times
(http://articles.latimes.com/2006/jul/07/nation/na-whales7)


Image above: Harbor porpoise killed by sonar of USS Shoup in Haro Straight 5 March 2003 and examined by NOAA Fisheries National Marine Mammal Laboratory at Sand Point, Seattle, WA. From (http://www.islandbreath.org/2006Year/15-peace/0615-12RIMPACimpact.html).
Lawyers say the order, which temporarily bars use of the sound waves in an exercise off Hawaii, harms U.S. security. At issue is marine life safety.

A judge's order banning active sonar during a naval exercise off Hawaii will damage national security, embarrass the United States in front of allies, and make it difficult to form future coalitions to "deter aggression," Navy lawyers charged in a federal appeal to lift the ban.

District Judge Florence-Marie Cooper on Monday issued a temporary restraining order keeping the Navy from using active sonar in its Rim of the Pacific exercise until a July 18 hearing.

Cooper also ordered the Navy to meet with Natural Resources Defense Council attorneys by July 12 to consider their lawsuit alleging that the sound waves would hurt whales and other marine mammals.

The biennial Rim of the Pacific exercise, set to run through July 28, involves the naval forces of the U.S., Britain and six Pacific Rim nations, with 40 ships, six submarines, dozens of aircraft, and 19,000 military personnel. The active sonar portion of the exercise was set to begin this week.

The Navy, backed by lawyers from the Justice Department, wants judges from the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to quash Cooper's order. Waiting until a July 18 hearing would be too late in the exercise, the Navy says.

The Navy insists that the use of midfrequency active sonar in the exercise is needed to help sailors learn how to hunt for quiet submarines similar to the kinds Iran, China and North Korea are using as the centerpieces of their naval forces. It contends that the mitigation measures agreed on during negotiations with the National Marine Fisheries Service are sufficient to safeguard the whales.

But the Natural Resources Defense Council says in its lawsuit that the Navy should move its exercise farther from the Hawaiian Islands, expand the "quiet" zone where active sonar will not be used and add more spotters so that the sonar can be turned off if whales are discovered.

Also, the council says the Navy manufactured "a purported emergency" by waiting until the exercise had begun to finish its environmental review and receive a permit from the fisheries service. The Navy's "tactics should not be rewarded," the group says.

In 2004, during a similar multinational test of active sonar, 150 whales herded into a shallow bay. Federal scientists later concluded that the sonar was the reason for the abnormal behavior.

In the court documents filed in the appeal, Rear Adm. John Jay Donnelly, deputy commander and chief of staff for the Pacific Fleet, says allowing the ban to remain in effect "from a foreign relations perspective would be an embarrassment to the United States and would seriously undermine our ability to build coalitions to address future threats in the Pacific Theater."

After the Natural Resources Defense Council filed its lawsuit last week, the Department of Defense authorized a six-month exemption for the Navy from the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

But Cooper ruled that the exemption did not cover another federal animal protection law, the National Environmental Policy Act -- an assertion that Department of Justice lawyers are contesting.



RIMPAC 2004
Safeguards can protect whales during sonar use

By Editor on 1 September 2004 in the Honolulu Star Bulletin
(http://archives.starbulletin.com/2004/09/01/editorial/indexeditorials.html)


Image above: RIMPAC sonar causes Melonhead whales to be stranded on Kauai in Hanalei Bay on July 3, 2004. They swam in circles until rescued. Photo by Gretchen Johnson. From (http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/health/mmume/event2004jul.htm).

The Navy has acknowledged that sonar was used in the hours before a pod of deep-water whales swam into Hanalei Bay.

New information calls into question the Navy's contention that the use of sonar during maneuvers off Kauai had nothing to do with driving a large pod of deep-water whales into Hanalei Bay during the Fourth of July weekend.

The information further validates a collection of evidence, which the Navy dismisses, that sonar presents a danger to marine life and buttresses arguments for some restraints.

About 200 melon-headed whales alarmed residents and marine biologists they were spotted in the bay about 7:30 a.m. July 3, swimming in a tight circle about 100 feet from the beach. These whales normally stay at least 15 miles off shore. Specialists and volunteers managed to herd the whales out to sea, but a newborn calf became separated from the pod and eventually died of starvation.

At the time, Rim of the Pacific naval exercises were being conducted about 20 miles northwest of Kauai, but Navy officials said no sonar had been used before the whales were seen in the bay. A spokesman told the Star-Bulletin that active sonar-tracking simulations had not begun until 8 a.m. while another told the Washington Post the exercises began at 8:30 a.m.

The Navy now acknowledges that ships had used their sonar at intervals through about 20 hours before the whales appeared in the bay and specifically from 6:45 and 7:10 a.m. on July 3, according to the Post.

The Navy still maintains that the ships' distance and the time frame do not mesh with the near-stranding, but its conclusions appear as uncertain as its credibility.

Growing evidence suggests that sonar can kill marine mammals by causing their organs to hemorrhage or by frightening them so they beach, as the Navy has admitted happened in the Bahamas four years ago. There have been dozens of other incidents -- off the coast of Washington State, the Canary Islands, northwest Africa, the U.S. Virgin Islands and in Greece -- when strandings and deaths have coincided with sonar exercises.

Moreover, scientists suspect that most of the mammals harmed by sonar use aren't even tallied since their deaths may occur at sea.

The Navy says exercises are necessary to prepare sailors and Marines to counter a substantial and growing threat from diesel submarines that can only be detected by active sonar, but safeguards may be in order. Training can be conducted in low-risk areas and sonar signals can be reduced to minimize risk to ocean wildlife. Protecting whales and other marine animals need not be at odds with national security.

See also:
(http://jeb.biologists.org/content/214/14/2409.full.pdf)



RIMPAC 2002
Amphibious Assault At PMRF Beach
By PMRF Staff on 19 July 2002 for US Navy
(http://www.navy.mil/submit/display.asp?story_id=2693)


Image above: U.S. Marines from Battalion Landing Team 2/3, Special Purpose Marine Air Ground Task Force Three, off load from Landing Craft Air Cushion (LCAC-47) as part of a beach assault exercise during the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2002 multinational amphibious training exercise.
On the morning of July 15, the beaches of the Pacific Missile Range Facility (PMRF) at Barking Sands were under assault. From original article.

Invading forces hit the beaches in Marine Corps assault amphibian vehicles (AAVs) and Navy landing craft air cushioned (LCACs) - loaded with High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWVs) and Light Armored Vehicles (LAVs).

Luckily, the attack by friendly U.S. forces was the amphibious portion of the Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) 2002 exercise.

RIMPAC 2002 is a multinational training evolution that includes military forces from the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Chile, the Republic of Korea, Peru, Japan and the United States. The training enhances the amphibious combat readiness of international and U.S. mainland and Hawaii-based military forces.

The amphibious assault showcased elements of a capable Navy-Marine Corps team, specifically - the abilities of the Tarawa Amphibious Readiness Group (ARG) and the Marine Air Ground Task Force (MAGTF).

The first Marines to hit the shore were transported in the AAVs - tracked landing vehicles that deployed from ships off the coast, plowed through the waves and surf, and drove up on the beach. The 28-ton, all-terrain vehicles are capable of carrying up to 21 fully armed combat-ready troops in water and over land.

The next crafts to come ashore were the LCACs. These immense vessels are capable of high-speed over water, and over the beach transits with up to 60 tons of cargo. In this case, the LCACs were fully loaded with HMMWVs (or Humvees) and LAVs. The eight-wheeled LAVs, which have an amphibious capability all their own, are a formidable platform capable of reaching speeds in excess of 60 mph on land.

Observers closely watching all the activities associated with the beach assault weren't all wearing uniforms. Capt. Don Wilson, the commanding officer of PMRF, invited a number of key community leaders to watch the amphibious assault, and to get a better idea of the vital role that PMRF plays in our nation's defense.

Garden isle visitors included Hawaii State Senator Jonathan Chun; Hawaii State Representatives Bertha Kawakami, Ezra Kanoho, and Hermina Morita; Kauai County Councilmen Brian Baptiste and Gary Hoosier; Ron Sakoda, Sen. Inouye's Kauai representative; Rhoda Libre of the Kauai Watershed Council, Pam Parker of the Kauai Economic Development Board; Navy League President Dr. Jack Layton and his wife Bette; and Marine Corps League representatives Betty and Charles Kingsbury.

Additionally, several key community leaders from Oahu traveled to Kauai to watch the exercise and tour PMRF. Guests from Oahu included Hawaii Supreme Court Chief Justice Ron Moon; State Senator Cal Kawamoto, Retired Maj. Gen. Alexis Lum - Senator Inouye's military liaison; Alan Furuno - military liaison for Congressman Neil Abercrombie; Dave Carey - President and CEO of Outrigger Hotels; Tom Smyth - State of Hawaii Dept. of Business, Economic Development and Tourism; and Carolyn Walsh - Medical Nurse Management, Arcadia Homes.

When all of the sand and dust settled from the roar of the LCACs, there seemed to be a consensus of opinion that the invitation to observe this critical training operation was an honor, and the guests further agreed that the exercise was a critical element in training for this country's national defense.

Bertha Kawakami, the West Kauai legislator for the State House of Representatives (14th District), said she was "thrilled to be watching an operation of this magnitude for the first time." Kawakami, a lifelong Westside resident and popular political leader who has served in the House of Representatives since 1987, commented on the fact that PMRF is an ideal location because of its isolation.

"It is my hope to keep the (Barking Sands) area surrounding PMRF free from encroachment for these exercises and other tests, especially in these times of new warfare," Kawakami said. "Working in the legislature, I see how important this is in relationship to the this new era of terrorism, for both our protection locally and nationally, as well as for purposes of international safety."

Hawaii State Representative Hermina Morita (12th District) admitted that she had no idea what to expect when she received the call to come visit PMRF for the RIMPAC exercises.

"You always hear about PMRF but have no idea what these operations entail," said Morita. "It is clear that the base is important to national security.

It looks so easy on television, but we just don't realize the amount of preparation and training that our troops must undergo to maintain freedom." Morita added that while she would like to endorse peace, this isn't always a reality.

"We must do what needs to be done to defend our nation," she said. "The transition to technology (as an economic base for) Kauai also benefits civilians and brings professional jobs to the island."

Morita's brother is a retired Air Force electronic warfare specialist, and her nephew is serving with the U.S. Marines.

When the amphibious assault concluded, Capt. Wilson and members of his staff escorted the guests to the Range Operations Center for an overview briefing on the mission of the Pacific Missile Range Facility. At the conclusion of the briefing, the group was taken on a windshield tour of PMRF, and rounded out their visit with a lunch with the commanding officer.

The guests also commented on the fact that they recognize the need for missile testing, improved technological capabilities in warfare, and the reality that having the defensive edge - all critical aspects of national security - have taken on greater meaning and urgency since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. These facts were not lost on Kauai County Councilman Gary Hoosier.

"Being at PMRF today really makes me appreciate the degree of sophistication our armed services possess and the importance of training troops for readiness," Hoosier noted.

As an elected official, Hoosier said that representing Kauai, where PMRF is a leading commercial employer and business enterprise that is critical to the nation's defense, gives him "a real sense of pride."

"We live in a different world today," Hoosier said during an interview at Major's Bay where amphibious landing craft were storming the beach in the background. "In light of the world situation, and as an important part of our community, I'll do whatever I can to support the mission of PMRF."

County councilman Brian Baptiste, agreed with Hoosier.

"PMRF is an integral part of the community and it is very important to Kauai's West Side," said Baptiste. "As a main cog in (the wheel of) the Westside economy, there is no question of the value PMRF has to our community, our island, and our nation as a whole."

Rhoda Libre, representing the Kauai Watershed Council, took the time to praise PMRF, and the base's new leadership.

"PMRF is excellent in the technical realm, doing things like testing these unmanned aerial vehicles," Libre said, indicating that PMRF's role in this cutting edge technology is a major advancement toward peacekeeping efforts.

"Homeland security needs community participation. Right now we are all walking on rice paper. We must be prepared for future acts of terrorism and copy cat scenarios."

Libre also spoke positively about PMRF's new leadership under Commanding Officer (CO), Capt. Don Wilson. "It is apparent that with the new CO, we - the community and community representatives - can work together. PMRF's new leadership is listening to the people more than ever before. In the past local people felt that they weren't being heard, but the new CO is innovative in his strategy of working with the community," said Libre.

Libre added that she was "very honored and privileged to have been invited to PMRF to observe the RIMPAC 2002 amphibious assault, tour the facility, and receive briefings from PMRF leadership.

Capt. Wilson summed up his impressions of the day by saying, "it is always a privilege to have our bosses around for such an impressive event. Each and every American taxpayer is our boss, and the men and women in uniform don't take our responsibilities lightly. I'm glad we had the opportunity to showcase the capabilities of our Sailors and Marines during the amphibious assault, and then to highlight the tremendous capabilities of PMRF and all the wonderful people who work here."

For more information about RIMPAC 2002, go to www.cpf.navy.mil/RIMPAC2002.
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