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  • I don't believe it's helpful to be hyperbolic about these things or to come to conclusions supported only by speculation and innuendo. Let's please be clear-eyed in how we handle the coming shit storm.

    Noted Trump sycophant Bondi did NOT "admit" there is an enemy list. That's opinion on the part of TNR and it takes a certain amount of hand waving to get to "there is an enemy list". She said "There will never be an enemies list within the Department of Justice".

    I'm not saying there isn't an enemy list - there is in Patel's book after all - but this headline is at best deceptive.

  • I used to make a lot of bread and things like pizza dough. I've even grown and ground my own wheat and other grains.

    And then my partner developed and/or decided they have a gluten sensitivity. Yes I've tried making gluten-free whatever but it's not the same. I want my gluteny-goodness.

    I will harbor this resentment forever.

  • Absolutely. They could also have given us a lot of important information on how to handle it all through cultural burning. Instead we made their practices illegal and jailed/killed native americans for doing what they've done for millennia in part to "protect" timber "resources" but mainly to drive them off their land.

    An interesting tangent here is that the ecosystems here are co-adapted to these cultural practices. IOW, native burning of areas has co-existed with and altered the landscape over thousands of years. The notion that this land was "untrammeled by man" is racist fiction.

    Yosemite Valley is a good example of this and you can even compare what it looked like in photos from the 19th century. It was predominantly wide-open meadow with widely spaced very large trees that were extremely resistant to fire. We suppressed fire and now it's incredibly susceptible to it. Duh.

    The good news is that we are finally waking up to the importance of this historical native knowledge and their practices.

    Here's an interesting recent article on this: https://www.savetheredwoods.org/redwoods-magazine/autumn-winter-2024/banned-for-100-years-cultural-burns-could-save-sequoias/

    And this one talks about Yosemite and nearby areas in particular: https://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/how-indigenous-practice-good-fire-can-help-our-forests-thrive

  • You are correct - I had forgotten (been quite a while). I still think it's funny but thanks for pointing this out.

    But 宝 (Bǎo) means "precious" or "treasured" and 红宝书 probably only gets translated as little red book because it sounds better in English.

  • I merely meant that type of plane is important since they have different roles.

    In fact the air resources on the LA fires are significantly greater than you outlined. I haven't been following it at that level but for the Palisades fire alone Watchduty says there are 5123 Personnel, 540 engines, 66 dozers, 60 water tenders and 44 helicopters. I haven't seen a list for fixed wing but it's way more than 3 tankers - they've been drawing S2s, LATs and VLATs from all over the state. And there are of course more aircraft from other states.

    BTW if you are interested the Watchduty app is great for this info. I also use FlightAware and/or FlightRadar24 to see aircraft in the sky. And yes I nerd out on this stuff - I used to do fire reporting for my community.

  • Great post but I have one quibble.

    Californians did not build their houses in wildfire country

    In fact we did. Most of the state is comprised of fire-adapted ecosystems. I think it would be more correct to say that we built in wildfire country when the impacts of wildfire were manageable.

    I only mention this because I believe it's important to accept that fire is good and a part of these ecosystems that we need to embrace if we are going to live in them. It's not that climate change has "introduced" fire it's that it, the scale of human development, and over a century of misguided fire management has made it so dramatically impactful.