Tuesday, February 05, 2013

Detroit's M.L. Liebler braves spring jackalope roundup for gig in Rock Springs

Detroit's M.L. Liebler
Wyoming's Jackalope
Our Detroit pal, M.L. Liebler, will be returning to Wyoming in March. His last stop in WYO was last June in Casper. In the spring of 2010, he served as one of the judges for the Wyoming Poetry Out Loud finals in Cheyenne. He was traveling with Peter Lewis whom some of you of a certain age will remember as one of the founding members of the psychedelic L.A. band Moby Grape. M.L. and Peter gave a concert at the Historic Atlas Theatre and also taught a songwriting workshop at the Laramie County Public Library. The workshop was especially memorable as it's the only time that I've actually written a song and then tried to sing it in front of an audience. No Grammy for me, I'm afraid.

Here's the info on M.L.'s visit:

On Friday, March 1, 7:00 p.m., spoken-word poet M. L. Liebler will perform with Grammy-winning Eminem producer and musician Steve King at Western Wyoming Rock Springs Community College in Rock Springs. Free & open to all. We've warned M.L. to watch out for the Jackalopes on the highways to the gig as it's roundup time. Contact Professor Rick Kempa at RKEMPA@wwcc.wy.edu or go to http://www.wwcc.cc.wy.us/

Go out right now and buy Cowboy Tough at your local bookseller

Listen up, people!

Joanne Kennedy, my friend and one-time colleague in the Cheyenne Area Writers Group, debuted her new novel today. It's entitled Cowboy Tough. On the cover is a hunky cowboy, and this blurb: "HOT! HOT! HOT!" So says New York Times bestselling author Carolyn Brown. If you don't believe me that Joanne is one hot writer, better believe Carolyn, who's the author of the upcoming Blue Ribbon Jalapeno Society Jubilee. According to the book jacket, everything is big in Cadillac, Texas, especially the jalapenos.

I've read a lot of Joanne's writing but I'm not so hot on cowboy romances. That may seem hard to believe but it's the truth. Here's what Night Owl Reviews had to say about her previous novel, Cowboy Crazy: "A fast-paced, delightful read that will leave readers longing for a cowboy of their own." Sigh!

Lest you doubt my veracity as a writer and reader, won't you trust my word as an arts administrator? How many Wyoming-based cowboy romances do you know that open with references to Picasso, Modigliani and Van Gogh?

There I've gone and ruined it for you...

"Ladies in Red" event Feb. 9 raises awareness for women's heart disease

The good people at the Cheyenne Regional Medical Center's Heart and Vascular Institute saved my life after a recent heart attack. Turns out that February is heart month and the American Heart Association is promoting women's heart health. Why? Heart disease is the number one killer of women in the U.S., with 500,000 dying every year. A number of my colleagues going through cardiac rehab with me are women who've had stents or bypasses. They are outnumbered by us hard-living men, guys who never gave up smoking or Big Macs or stress. But the women's heart disease stats are a revelation.

The 4th annual "Ladies in Red" seminar and fund-raiser will be held on Saturday, February 9, 9 a.m. to noon, in the Kiwanis Community House at Lions Park in Cheyenne. Nationally recognized speaker Donna Hartley will offer insight and humor to share what she’s learned from her own journey of surviving a plane crash, melanoma and open-heart surgery.

To register, call (307) 633-6050 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. $25 registration fee, includes brunch and giveaways. The completed form must be mailed to Cheyenne Regional Medical Center with payment. Or you can call (307) 633-6050.

Monday, February 04, 2013

High-speed rail map envisions a 22-minute trip from Cheyenne to downtown Denver

This was on Facebook today: New map: US High Speed Rail System. This map is inspired by ideas from various agencies and advocacy groups including Amtrak, The Transport Politic, Wikimedia Commons, Florida High Speed Rail, SkyscraperPage Forums, Southern High Speed Rail, Southeast High Speed Rail, Ohio Department of Transportation, California High Speed Rail Authority, Midwest High Speed Rail Association, US DOT Federal Railroad Administration, Texas High Speed Rail and Transportation Corp. Get PDFs and posters at https://sites.google.com/site/californiarailmap/us-high-speed-rail-system

Sunday, February 03, 2013

New Greenpeace video about our Powder River Basin coal

New video about plans for our Powder River Basin Coal (includes model trains and special effects).

Friday, February 01, 2013

Groundhog may make appearance at Cheyenne Winter Farmers Market

The Cheyenne Winter Farmers Market is located inside the historic train depot the first Saturday of each month from November through April starting at 10 a.m. and ending at 2 p.m. Next winter farmers market is Saturday, Feb. 2 -- Groundhog Day.

All vendors sell items that are produced in Wyoming or northern Colorado, but within a 150 miles of Cheyenne. All items are produced by the vendors behind the tables, NO FOOD BROKERS OR FOOD RESELLERS are allowed.

Get more info here.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

"Go Red for Women" Day is Feb. 1

Men and women both have heart attacks. Funny thing is, most people think that heart disease is an older guy's disease. An an older guy who's recently had a heart attack, I am secure in the fact that guys have heart disease. Most of my colleagues in the cardiac rehab program are men. But there's also Brenda from the post office who had heart surgery earlier in the year and Paula, a heart patient who taught high school kids for 30 years. I was also surprised to find that, of the many nurses who lead us through our paces in rehab, many have been heart patients. One has a pacemaker, another has had four heart operations, and yet another has two stents. They are heart patients looking after heart patients. What could be better than that?

Friday marks the tenth anniversary of the American Heart Association's "Go Red for Women" Day. People will be wearing red to mark the fact that more than 500,000 women die each year from heart disease, making it the number one killer among women.

Wear red tomorrow. I am. Do it for the women you love.

FMI: http://www.goredforwomen.org/wearredday/about/

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Rep. Sue Wallis (R-Recluse) explains HB168 cowboy poet style

It was quite educational listening to the debate on HB168 today in the Wyoming House. HB168 is the Domestic Partners Rights and Responsibilities Act. Many of us were surprised when it made it out of committee on a 7-2 vote. That one small victory enable the bill to be aired in public, so both naysayers and supporters could sound off.

Most eloquent of the supporters was Rep. Sue Wallis (R-Recluse). Rep. Wallis is a rancher and cowboy poet, one of the founders of the annual Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko. One of my favorite Wyoming moments was listening to Sue and her late husband, Rod McQueary, talking turns reciting cowboy poetry at a humanities conference two years ago in Riverton.

Rod passed away in December. Rep. Wallis is still grieving. As she works on behalf of her constituents in the Wyoming House, she is missing the Cowboy Poetry Gathering. This year's event celebrates Italian cowboys and their poetry. Wish I was there to hear that. That's what makes Elko so special. The organizers include something new every year. It might be Basque poets or Native Americans or Mexican gauchos or the horsemen of Mongolia.

Rep. Wallis is cut from the same cloth. She thinks big.

She rose in support of HB168. She also is one of the co-sponsors. She recalled that when Rod died in December, she was accorded all courtesies and privileges that attached to being a survivor heterosexual spouse in Wyoming. She was at Rod's side the entire time and saw his out of this world. All the paperwork came to her, as did all property and possessions. Nobody questioned her choices of burial plans.

"I have numerous friends, colleagues and relatives who are in a relationship with members of the same sex," said Rep. Wallis. "Some of these couples have been together for decades. One couple - two elderly gentlemen -- have been together for 40 years." She paused for emphasis. "They are good and decent in every sense of the word."

But something terrible happens at the end of a relationship. "When one of my elderly friends loses his mate, on top of the heartbreak of losing his mate he will have to go through all sorts of contortions to justify himself."

"This is not just in any way, shape or form."

Rep. Wallis knows her Bible. She sounded astonished at some of the comments of the naysayers, people using The Good Book to justify their hatred and prejudices. She cautioned them not to cherry-pick certain passages that may or may not apply to the present situation.

"You don't get to cherry-pick what you like and then deny someone else the opportunity to love in all of its facets," she said, noting that the main tenet of the New Testament was Jesus's words to "love your neighbor as yourself."

But it was a passage from the Old Testament that got her fired up. She noted that some in the House chambers had quoted a passage that referred to a man lying with another man as "an abomination." She quoted some other "abominations" quoted in the Bible. She asked her rancher colleagues to pay particular attention to Leviticus. It's considered an abomination "to not cut the hair at the sides of your head or clip the edges of your beard." She wondered aloud how many of Wyoming's bearded ranchers knew they were committing abominations with their razors.

Leviticus also warns against "sewing your field with mingled seed" and "mixing your herds."

Said Rep. Wallis: "Maybe you didn't know that cross-breeding your herd for hybrid vigor was an abomination to the Lord."

I'm a city boy. I barely know one end of a cow from another. But Rep. Wallis does. She lives on a family ranch in the most remote part of Campbell County. Her family's been on the land for generations.

She summed things up in a straightforward Wyoming way: "This is about simple common human decency and respect for our fellow human beings."

And then she sat down.

"Rent" auditions set for Feb. 3-5 in Cheyenne

Auditions for the rock musical "Rent" will be held on Sunday, February 3, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Monday, February 4, 4:30-6:30 p.m., and  Tuesday, February 5, 6:30-8:30 p.m. Call-backs will be Wednesday, February 6, 6:30-8:30 p.m. All auditions held at the Historic Atlas Theater in downtown Cheyenne 

Here's more info from the Cheyenne Little Theatre Players web site:
To audition, we ask that you sing a song from the show "Rent" or another contemporary musical. You may bring your own accompanist or an accompanist will be provided. There will be no cold readings of dialog. We may ask you to sing a song from the show after your initial audition. You will also be learning and performing a short dance. For call-backs, we will be assigning songs from the show "Rent," including duets.  
IMPORTANT!! The Director, Brenda Lyttle, is looking for singing actors who are confident and fearless. "Rent" is an adult show with adult roles, language and situations. The characters must be believable and real. The singing must be strong and confident. This show is set in the Lower East Side of New York City. Racial diversity is crucial. We strongly encourage singing actors of African-American and Hispanic descent to audition.  
Go to this link for more details: Rent Auditions

HB168 debate going on now in Wyoming House

Listen now to the debate on Wyoming House bill HB168: http://legisweb.state.wy.us/lsoweb/session/AudioHWindows.aspx

Ten Sleep's "Trailer Park Troubadour" performs in Cheyenne Feb. 9

Jalan Crossland
The Jalan Crossland Band will perform in concert on Saturday, Feb. 9, 7 p.m., at the Terry Bison Ranch just off of Terry Ranch Rd. on I-25 South. Exit before you get to to the Colorado border! Doors open at 6 p.m. Tickets are available at Ernie November in downtown Cheyenne. Tickets are $12 or $15 the day of the show.

This info comes from a press release:

If you've never experienced Jalan Crossland, you're in for a jaw-dropping experience. He has won many prestigious awards, including second in the National Fingerstyle Guitar Competion and first place in the state Flatpicking Contest. He has toured multiple times with Robert Earl Keen, and toured in Europe and Australia. He has been often showcased on NPR, made multiple TV appearances and been in the New York Times. Jalan is featured in a cover story in the winter issue of Wyoming Artscapes, the quarterly magazine of the Wyoming Arts Council.
The complexities of his combination of edgy, alt-country and traditional guitar and banjo picking seem effortless as he weaves tales of heartbreak, the sometimes-dark crevices of small town America, and most of all the joy, humor and love that can be found in every rusty-lining. 
Hell froze over and his band is back together. The massively talented duo of Shaun Kelley, who plays upright and electric bass and Andy Phreaner plays trapset, wackadoo, harmonica and percussion. You want a show? Well, folks, here's something you'll never forget. And don't taze him, bro! 
Jalan Crossland will receive a 2012 Governor's Arts Award Friday, Feb. 8, at the annual GAA Awards Gala at Little America in Cheyenne. He'll be performing a few of his trademark songs to wrap up the night's festivities. If you want more, and you probably will, catch Jalan and his band the next night in concert. Tickets are still available for the Governor's Arts Awards Gala Feb. 8, 6 p.m., at Little America. Call the Wyoming Arts Council at 307-777-7742.  

Wyoming Legislature may need therapy for gun obsession

The Wyoming State Legislature is obsessed with guns.

Guns in the classroom. Guns at public meetings. Silencers on hunting weapons. 


And legislators don't want the federal gubment to get in the way of Wyomingites owning semi-automatic weapons and high capacity ammo clips. How many rounds does it take to kill a deer or an antelope, anyway?


Yesterday, the so-called Wyoming Firearms Protection Act advanced out of committee. It has the has drawn national media attention by proposing to ban enforcement of all federal gun regulations within the state.


So, as the feds move closer to requiring universal background checks and forbidding the type of rapid-fire weapons that killed 20 six-year-olds in Connecticut, Wyoming moves closer to the margins of Gun Cuckooland. 


Federal law trumps state and local law except in the minds of Tea Party conspiracists and their fellow travelers in the legislature. Nullification! Freedom! Second amendment! Morons!


It's true enough to say Wyoming has a strong gun culture. My neighborhood may be better armed than most Midwestern cities. I've lived here for seven years and nobody's been shot that I know of. It's entirely possible that our low crime rate and incidences of B&E may be due to criminals never know who has a gun and who does not. When I walk neighborhoods for Democratic candidates, which in itself may be a cause for suspicion, I often see stickers on doors and windows. "Protected by Smith & Wesson" is a favorite. So is "C'mon, punk, make my day" that usually comes with an illustration of a bullseye or a big Dirty Harry handgun. I have never been confronted with a drawn gun, although I was reported as a suspicious character when I canvassed a south side neighborhood last fall. I must admit to looking slightly shady. I was wearing a ballcap and a blue T-shirt and carrying around a fistful of leaflets for a Dem running for the legislature. It was an October Saturday and I wasn't at home or at a bar watching college football, suspicious in itself. Cops rousted me, although they kept their sidearms holstered and didn't frisk me. BTW, I was old enough to be their grandfather and at least their father. But you never know -- I could be a frontman for a cadre of Colorado-based break-in artists. Can't be too careful.


Home protection and hunting and collecting and gunsmsithing I can understand. Right-wing whackadoodle paranoia I can understand too, but it scares me. Seems like our legislators are only too eager to sign on with the paranoid few.

House reps need to hear from us today in support of Domestic Partners Rights and Responsibilities Act

The Domestic Partners Rights and Responsibilities Act (HB168) will have its first reading in the Wyoming House today. Jeran Artery at Out in Wyoming posted an action alert last night, urging supporters to e-mail their reps in support of equality in The Equality State. The fundies have apparently been very busy contacting their reps with the same hateful and exclusionary messages they spewed at the committee hearings on Monday. Don't let the haters win. Imagine the good vibes and national recognition Wyoming will receive by taking this giant step for equality. And what a signal we would send to the rest of the world about acceptance and diversity. This isn't an exclusive LGBT issue. It's also about family and friends and fairness. Get more info at Out in Wyoming. The list of Wyoming House members can be found here.

We have winter-hardy strawberries in the High Plains thanks to the USDA Horticulture Research Station

Ogallala strawberries. Winter
won't last forever.
On Tuesday, Feb. 5, 8:30-8:30 p.m., in the Laramie County Public Library's Cottonwood Room, learn how the USDA High Plains Horticulture Research Station helped to settle the region and how the City of Cheyenne has acquired, and hopes to develop, 62 acres as a public arboretum. Presented by Shane Smith, Cheyenne Botanic Gardens Director. Lecture followed by cooking demonstration and food provided by Triumph High School Catering: warm salsa, pico de gallo and tortilla chips. Free and open to the public. This is part of the "Key Ingredients" series held in conjunction with the Smithsonian's traveling exhibit at the library and Botanic Gardens.

Farming is a challenge at 6,200 feet. The growing season is ridiculously short, the weather is capricious, winds are brutal and water is scarce. And that’s in the age of air-conditioned tractors and, irrigation and genetically-engineered crops. Imagine what it was like 100 years ago in the Great American Desert. Let’s say you were rolling into Laramie County, Wyoming, by train, having left the lush forested clime of Ohio or Tennessee a week earlier. You might have been tempted to say, “WTF,” or immediately get back on the return train. The United States Department of Agriculture established its High Plains Horticulture Research Station outside Cheyenne in 1928. At the station…
Over 1,300 varieties of tree fruits, (apples, pears, plums, cherries, etc.) and 300 varieties of small fruits (raspberries, strawberries, currants, and gooseberries) were tested for hardiness to drought and cold. To find a winter-hardy strawberry for the High Plains 42,000 native strawberries were collected from Montana to New Mexico. This work led to the release of several superior varieties, including Radiance, Ogallala and Fort Laramie. 
My modest strawberry patch has a selection of Ogallala and Fort Laramie varieties. I cover them with mulch every fall and they’re blooming when I uncover them in May. The station eventually moved on to study grasslands and grazing but it had a big impact on the area during its 80-something years. Its director during the 1970s was family friend Dick Hart, a cowboy poet and unofficial poet laureate of Cheyenne. He also recreates Teddy Roosevelt on occasion. His wife Helen is an artist and once led the Cheyenne Artists Guild. They’re retired now but remain active in the community. They've made a huge difference to their adopted land.

Interesting to note that the feds brought this oasis of fruits and vegetables to the Great American Desert.  Your taxpayer dollars at work.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Barrasso and Enzi among Republican hypocrites on Hurricane Sandy relief bill

From ThinkProgress:
When the Senate passed the long-delayed $50.5 billion Hurricane Sandy relief package Monday, 36 Republicans voted against the bill. But of the 32 no-votes from Senators who are not brand-new members, at least 31 came from Republicans who had previously supported emergency aid efforts following disasters in their own states. 
While opponents complained that the bill contained too much unrelated “pork,” each of the 30 of them who had been present earlier this month when the Senate passed the much-smaller $9 billion Sandy relief bill also voted no. All five top members of the Senate Republican leadership voted no on both. 
Most incredible among the no voters were Senators Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) and Pat Toomey (R-PA). Those two had not just backed disaster aid in the past — they actually sought disaster aid for their own states for relief from Hurricane Sandy. And Sen. John Boozman (R-AR) endorsed disaster relief for snow storms damages in Arkansas just four days before casting his “nay” vote. 
The “hypocritical” list includes: 
John Barrasso (R-WY), Republican Policy Committee Chair: Requested disaster aid after flooding.
Mike Enzi (R-WY): Requested disaster relief after flooding.
Not one of the opponents has co-sponsored Sen. Harry Reid’s (D-NV) “Extreme Weather Prevention and Resilience Act” which would encourage Congress to “prepare and protect communities from extreme weather, sea-level rise, drought, flooding, wildfire, and other changing conditions exacerbated by carbon pollution” and “reducing pollution, promoting the use of clean energy sources, and improving energy efficiency.”
We'll see how this Senatorial duo reacts the next time flash floods swamp Kaycee or Lander, wildland fires burn their way through thousands of acres of pine-beetle-ravaged Wyoming forest, a tornado lifts roofs off houses in Wright, drought wipes out Big Horn Basin crops, a plague of locusts descend on Wheatland or a 100-year blizzard inundates Cheyenne.
Here's the complete Senate roll call vote:

Monday, January 28, 2013

Star-Trib: Wyoming House panel advances domestic partnerships legislation

This is big news: Wyoming House panel advances domestic partnerships bill. This is the first time that this legislation has made it out of committee to be discussed on the floor. One small step... Drinking Liberally Dems gather to celebrate at the Plains Hotel downtown at 6 p.m.

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.: "You've got to be kind"


“Hello babies. Welcome to Earth. It's hot in the summer and cold in the winter. It's round and wet and crowded. On the outside, babies, you've got a hundred years here. There's only one rule that I know of, babies -- "God damn it, you've got to be kind.”

This is yet another memorable quote by the late Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. He valued kindness even while skewering the unkind -- book banners, know-it-alls, warmongers. One of the coolest things about the quote is that he's advising us to be kind while swearing at us. Very Vonnegut. And maybe that is just what we need for emphasis.

Kindness is not a rare commodity if you know where to look for it. I recently went looking for it at our local hospital. I didn't set out to do so -- congestive heart failure brought me to the place where they address such things. Once I stepped in the door, all I received was kindness. Competence, too, but those things seem to go together. 

It's difficult dispensing daily kindness. CRMC nurses work 12-hour shifts and take care of sick people. Sick people are cranky and demanding. I found myself asking people to do things that I've done myself for most of 62 years. It's humbling and frustrating. Wires and tubes trailed from various parts of my body and it was a chore just to get up and go to the bathroom. I thought unkind thoughts but didn't take it out on those around me. If I had been in the hospital another few days, that may have changed.

I once considered a career in medicine. I considered several career fields before deciding on English and creative writing. During my college years, I worked as an orderly and nursing assistant at several hospitals. I'm not sure if hospitals have orderlies anymore. They do have CNAs or Certified Nursing Assistants. I was never certified, with most of my training happening on the job. My first hospital job was shuttling patients back and forth to X-Ray and other treatment rooms. I was 21 and s college dropout and happy to have a job. I was young so hauling around old people was easy. A lot of lifting and pulling and pushing. Patients were not always happy to see me. "X-Ray again? Harumph!" But I could handle eight hours a day of crankiness as the beach was waiting for me when I got off, as was life with friends and family. I didn't give much thought to the end of life, that place where most of my patients dwelled. It was a long way off and I had nothing but time. After doing the transportation bit for six months, I transferred over to a regular ward where I worked as a CNA taking vitals, changing beds and answering the call buttons of cranky patients. The work was harder but I got to work with a CNA named Sharon whom I had a crush on and later dated and lived and traveled with. That made all of the difference. She was very kind to me and I wasn't so good but that's another story.

I worked two other hospital jobs, One was the night shift at a Shriners Burns Institute in Boston. The hospital liked me so much that it wanted to send me to nursing school and pay for it. I probably should have done so as writers need actual jobs to survive. Instead, I moved back to Florida and went back to college as an English major. I went to work as an orderly in the drunk tank at the county hospital. Not glamorous work but steady enough to get me though a year of community college. I worked he 3-11 shift. Most of my work was supervising and wrangling alcoholics and drug addicts. That should have turned me away from booze forever, as I witnessed some gruesome deaths. Me and my fellow orderlies also responded to the psych ward when some muscle was needed. Sometimes it took three or four of us to subdue a raging mental patient. That's where I learned about straight jackets and psychotropic drugs and the hard realities of being crazy in America. Nurses and orderlies did hard duty in this ward, as most of them had scars to show off. This gave me a chance to see the other side of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," one of my favorite books. 

I had one other hospital job. At the University of Florida, I spent one summer working as a cafeteria cashier in the world-renowned Shands Teaching Hospital. My only contact with patients was taking their money for salads and roast beef sandwiches. When you're a cashier at a busy cafeteria, people don't really see you. They're hungry and they're chatting with friends or they're concerned about a patient or maybe they've just experienced a death. I rang stuff up with a minimum of fuss and tried to be friendly and kind. Most people didn't notice. I was free to observe people's faces and behaviors. This was a good place for a writer. There were always stories passing in front of me. I imagined them later in my journal. 

I was kind and observant.

Thanks for all of your kindnesses, CRMC staff! I won't forget it.

Time changed for "We Mean Business" rally for Equality at State Capitol

If you're interested in participating in the Wyoming Equality rally Monday at the Capitol, the time has been changed from 11 a.m. to 9 a.m. Here's an update:

Equality Coalition of Wyoming
University of Wyoming Queer Action Network
Contact: Will Welch (608) 575-9455
‘We mean business’ rally for Equality at the Capitol Building in Cheyenne
When: Monday, 9 AM on the front steps of the Capitol Building in Cheyenne.
Come dressed for business because we mean business for Wyoming!  
Our rally will be calm, cool, and collected with slick black and white signs. If you’d like to make your own signs (encouraged!), go for simple, clear messages that lend themselves to black and white photography.
If you’d like some ideas for messages we’d like to hit, see the briefs below.
We’ll be rallying to support three bills:
  1. Marriage Equality (HB0169). Background brief here.
  2. Domestic Partnerships Rights & Responsibilities (HB0168). Brief here.
  3. Anti-Discrimination (SF0131). Background brief here.
See you on the front steps of the Wyoming Capitol at 9:00 AM sharp on Monday!

Saturday, January 26, 2013

This week at the Wyoming State Legislature: Guns, gays and abortion

Monday begins an emotional week at the Wyoming State Legislature. No less than five gun-oriented House bills will be considered. These bills are over and above the gun bill that's already been a hot topic, whether to allow silencers on hunting weapons. In case you missed it, silencers are still not allowed. Game wardens testified that the sound of gunshots is what allows them to catch poachers. The bill didn't make it out of committee.

Security has been beefed up at the Capitol as these emotional gun bills enter the fray. Today's Casper Star-Tribune reports that threats have been made in the lead-up to the debate. The main threat seems to have come from someone on Facebook who threatened the family of Rep. Kendall Kroeker, the source of several of these bills. The threat said that Kroeker has the blood of children on his hands and opined that someone should shoot the Rep and his family. Other threats were reported as "uncivil" and were from gun owners who thought that the House was trying to kill all the gun bills by bundling them together.  These bills call for the arming of teachers and make it OK to bring a weapon to government meetings. HB105 allows people with concealed carry permits to have guns at schools. Utah has a similar law. The idea is that armed teachers can be an effective counter-measure to lunatics with automatic weapons. I'm not a gun guy but this bill doesn't bother me. In Wyoming, I'm surrounded by guns. I don't feel safe and I don't feel threatened. This is Wyoming.

There are some gun bills that do bother me. HB103 aims to let local governments overrule any federal gun laws. This is just wild-eyed, anti-Obama paranoia. HB104's goal is to punish federal agents if they try to enforce gun laws that ban "semi-automatic guns, limit magazine sizes or other limitations on firearms." More NRA-inspired lunacy.

I'm looking forward to the discussion around HB168 and HB169. The first allows "people in domestic relationships the same rights as a spouse." The second "defines marriage as a contract between two natural persons, not between a man and a woman." These bills have Democratic sponsors but Republican co-sponsors. Coming on the heels of the 2012 election, these bills may have more legs than they have in previous legislatures. Wyoming is conservative but not fundie conservative. Its live-and-let-live traditions may trump right-wing religious tendencies. For supporters, the ACLU of Wyoming has up-to-date into on its web site, including e-mails for the members of the Corporations committee and other info on bringing marriage equality to the Equal;ity State. Wyoming Equality in staging a rally at 11 a.m. on Monday at the Capitol in support of the bills.

As expected, there's a an anti-abortion bill in HB97. That should go down in flames as both women and men are growing weary of old guys interfering in a woman's right to choose.

The Heart Failure Chronicles: Part II

My blockage was in the Left anterior descending artery (LAD) which supplies blood to the front and bottom of the left ventricle and the front of the septum. Thanks to the Cleveland Clinic for the artwork. 
Beware the Widowmaker.

That's the potent nickname for the heart's main trunk artery. Get a blockage in that big boy and, well, it's all over but the mourning.

I beat the Widowmaker. My cardiologist was a bit stunned by it. He tells me that Widowmaker-caused heart attacks that come into the ER usually don't make it. He told me this after inserting a big stent into my artery. I appreciate him not bringing this up the day I brought myself and my blockage into CRMC in the hopes that the crew there could save my life.

I'm here, am I not?

I was on the path to recovery the moment I reached the ER. It didn't seem like it, not at first, because I was a sick lad with a clogged heart and a bad pump and congestion in my lungs. A week later, I had a tube in the Widowmaker and was on the way home.

The care was superb. I don't have much to compare it to as I haven't been a hospital patient for approximately five decades. In 1960, I was in a Mercy Hospital ward with other children. The nurses wore white uniforms and stiff white caps. Nuns in black habits ran the hospital. On Saturdays, they let the kids come over to the nunnery to watch "Mighty Mouse" and "Sky King." The docs were rarely seen but were officious and efficient when they arrived, always attended by a nurse hovering in the background. An antiseptic smell wafted through the air. Shots were administered in huge glass hypodermic syringes with long needles. That may be just how I remember them, as I was a little kid with a fear of needles.

Fifty years later in Cheyenne, I had my own room that overlooked the construction of CRMC's new cancer center. Several times a day, choppers buzzed my room on their way to dropping off emergency cases on the CRMC helipad. An efficient procession of nurses, CNAs, phlebotomists, doctors, chaplains and therapists trooped through my room. My heart was monitored by the folks in the telemetry unit. I ordered my meals from room service. Everyone was kind and caring.

I was admitted to the hospital on Monday. On Wednesday, I was scheduled for the cath lab. People spoke of the cath lab in hushed tones, as if it were a special place, a shrine to modern medicine. The cath lab nurse arrived and described the procedure. Dr. Chapman the cardiologist looked in on me. Mid-morning, two nurses arrived with a wheelchair and guided me to the cath lab. When we reached the inner sanctum, I was greeted by a group of doctors and nurses and technicians. Led Zeppelin blasted from the stereo. The room was cold and brightly lit. I was unloaded on a table. I was hooked up to an IV and Foley and my right groin was shaved. That was the site for the insertion of the catheter. Dr. Chapman was in the control room behind a glass window. "We're going to give you something to relax you," said the tech. Suddenly, I was so relaxed that I missed the whole procedure. When I awoke, I couldn't breathe. They hooked me up with a breathing machine and wheeled me back to my room. The stent is in, someone said. And I was glad. Blood was flowing in my heart again and maybe I was going to be all right.

Not so fast, bucko.

My heart was damaged. I'd gone for a week or two with a blocked or partially blocked artery, which deprived the heart muscles of blood. Sometimes those muscles can go into hibernation for a time and a renewed blood flow brings them back to life. Sometimes. My pump's efficiency was about half of what it was supposed to be. They plied me with drugs that lowered my blood pressure and helped my heart pump more efficiently. They gave me a drug called Effient that coated my platelets so that they would coagulate at the stent site. I now take Lipitor to lower my cholesterol. I probably should have been taking this all along.

Get thee to the ER. That's the cardiologist's refrain these days. When people complain of heart attack symptoms, they don't mess around. EKGs are administered in the ambulance and if it's a heart attack, they want to get that patient treated quickly. The quicker they can open the artery, the less damage is done.

I wish I would have known that. I wish that I'd had an inkling that the pains in my belly were heart attack symptoms. I was my doc had thought of administering an EKG while I was in his office. I wish a lot of things. I pray that my heart returns to normal over time. If not, I'll be fitted with an internal defibrillator which will monitor my heart rhythms and shock me back to normal should I go into arrhythmia. Right now I'm wearing an external defibrillator. It's a vest with sensors that track my heartbeat. It's also equipped with paddles that will shock me back to life should I have a weird rhythm. I wear a book-sized battery pack around my neck. It's a great conversation starter.

I've learned a few things. You may be having a heart attack even if I doesn't seem like a heart attack. Your symptoms may be atypical. Get thee to the ER. You may save your life or, at least, avoid damage to your heart.

--To Be Continued--

Friday, January 25, 2013

Poetry and Equality and Tunes on Cognitive Dissonance tonight

Meg Lanker-Simons hits the airwaves tonight. Listen in as Will Welch talks about the Equality Day rally Monday in Cheyenne. Great tunes, too:
Tune into 93.5 KOCA tonight, 10PM-1 AM and keep your dial locked for fab music + Legit Conservative + d-bag o' the week. Our special guest tonight is Dylan Przygocki, who's going to read poetry. Also, listen in for GetEQUAL WY and QAN @ UW state organizer Will Welch talking about what you can do to support equality in Wyoming this MONDAY!
Don't forget to send The Legitimate Conservative some questions! 
Listen online and talk to us in the live chat! Check outhttp://myradiostream.com/cognitivedissonance to listen at 10 PM andhttp://chat.myradiostream.com/FSHs11p6864/ for the chat!
Taking your requests for songs, dedications & d-bag nods til 8 PM. Laramie Civic Center, rm #255

Bobby Jindal to RNC: "We've got to stop being the stupid party"

Wyoming Republicans: Bibles in schools, roadkill in the freezer, silencers on hunting weapons, an aircraft carrier on Crow Creek, a Dept of Ed Director who's ruining the schools, highest suicide rate in the nation, crumbling roads, Rep. Gerald Gay who says that gays are evil, "coal is your friend" classes for middle school students, what global warming?, the earth is 6,000 years old, "public employees are bums," "Obamacare is a commie plot," Dick Cheney, Agenda 21, Tea Party, wolves are four-legged terrorists, drug tests for poor people, etc. Stupid is as stupid does, Gov. Jindal. 

The Heart Failure Chronicles: Part I

Leonardo da Vinci heart illustration, 15th century.
I had a heart attack but didn't know it was a heart attack. It's flu season and my belly hurt. I was at work on Monday and it was almost closing time so I headed home so as not to ralph all over my workplace. You would have done the same thing. My boss Rita had the norovirus the week before. So did her husband Mike. She came home from work one evening to find Mike writing in pain on the front room floor. She took him to the emergency room where the docs looked him over and said, "Norovirus" or "stomach flu" or something like that and sent him home. He and Rita both had bodacious stomach cramps for two days, accompanied by ralphing and the other thing. Two days later, my coworker Annie and her entire family came down with the crud.

Meanwhile, I was at home with a belly ache watching crappy daytime TV. You'd think 500 channels would offer something beside Judge Judy reruns and a whole channel that shows "Frasier" 24/7. There's one for "Seinfeld" too.

On Wednesday, I went to the doctor.

"I have a bellyache," I said.

"There's a lot of norovirus going around," said the doc.

"That's what I hear. I have a bellyache."

"Any vomiting," asked the doc. They usually don't say "ralphing."

"No."

"Diarrhea?"

"No."

He looked pensive. He wore a dark suit and a stethoscope around his neck. He's an old-timey GP, with extended office hours and a staff that's seen me through sinus infections, bronchitis, assorted infections. He gave me a physical in September and pronounced me fit as a fiddle.

He never asked me about my heart. I have no history of heart trouble. My family has no history of heart trouble. My blood pressure is always 118/78. I swim every other day at the YMCA. I lost 30 pounds this year and feel fit as a fiddle most of the time.

He gave me an anti-nausea shot and sent me home. "Get plenty of rest and drink lots of fluids," he said. I've heard that before. I did as ordered. The next morning, I awoke with a horrible pain in my stomach and along my left side. I called the doc. He sent me over for X-rays. He called later. "Pneumonia," he said. "We'll order some antibiotics."

Crap. Pneumonia was an ancient scourge with me. I hadn't had it much as an adult but was hospitalized several times with it during childhood. I was 10 the last time I had it and that was the last time I spent a night in the hospital as a patient.

I took my antibiotics. The pain began to subside. Ten days of antibiotics with lots of fluids. I wasn't eating much but suddenly had a hankering for egg mcmuffins. Because I was sick, Chris was willing to grant me almost anything in the way of comfort foods. This was a bad thing, as it turned out.

It was Christmas week. I was camped out on the couch. Don't remember much except somebody gve me a cast iron frying pan. Not sure why I had asked for a cast iron frying pan although I'm a pretty good cast iron cook during summer camping trips. I'm an old Scout and learned a lot back in the days when when out scoutmasters were crusty old Army guys who smoked a lot and were very bad examples that way. I suppose they also brought booze to our winter campouts in Colorado's Collegiate Range and sat around telling old war stories while we snoozed.

Turns out, I didn't have pneumonia. But I'm getting a little ahead of myself. I was home for two weeks. I wasn't feeling much better but two weeks is two weeks and I had deadlines to meet. I watched a lot of football on New Year's Day. I was wearing a groove in the couch cushions. It was time to go back to work.

The next day was Jan. 2. A damn cold Tuesday. I took my daughter to school and then went to the store. Not sure what I bought but I dropped the groceries off at home I sat on my couch. I couldn't breathe. It was like an asthma attack, although I hadn't had one of those in decades. I called Chris.

"I can't breathe," I said.

"What do you mean you can't breathe?" She was at work and I could hear the hubbub in the background. I tried to think of what I would say if she called me at work and said she couldn't breathe.

"I'll be right home," she said.

I sat there alone, gasping for breath. We live at 6,200 feet. One sometimes sees athletes playing the Broncos at 5,280 feet hooked up to oxygen. I felt that I needed some oxygen. That's odd as I've been living a mile high for decades.

Chris arrived home and said, "Let's go to the hospital."

I stood. Walked to the door. And that's as far as I got. "I can't make it to the car."

I stood gasping at the bookshelf.

Chris got on the phone and called 911. I returned to the couch. Five minutes later, the EMTs were swarming around me. Two young men and a woman. They brought out some oxygen and hooked me up. That was better. Took my vitals. Guided me out to the gurney. I lay down and they covered me up and it was cold as hell. They boosted me into the back of the ambulance and hooked me up to some sort of vaporizer to help me breathe. The woman EMT told me to relax and I said I was too scared to relax. They fired up the siren and zoomed me to the ER. They put some sensors on my chest and took some sort of reading which I found out later was an EKG. By the time I got to the ER, the diagnosis was already floating around the halls. "Congestive heart failure."

I'd had a heart attack some time during the past two weeks. Maybe several heart attacks. In minutes, I had an IV in my right arm and a guy was drawing blood. They hooked me up to another breathing machine. A nurse came in and asked where the pain was.

"I have a bellyache." As I said it, I realized I was saying the same exact thing I'd been saying for two weeks.

"Where?"

I circled my stomach with my left hand. "All over."

"Hmm," she said. I'd been hearing this for two weeks.

"Any vomiting?"

"Why do people keep asking me that?"

"We've had some bad cases of stomach flu."

I felt like saying, enough with the stomach flu already -- I've been through that and pneumonia and I still have this fucking belly ache.

An orderly appeared and took me to X-ray. The X-ray tech looked familiar. She introduced herself and said she'd been the Wyoming Arts Council's Poetry Out Loud winner the first year we conducted the competition.

I remembered her name. Kamaria.

"What are you doing here?"

"Poets gotta make a living."

I thought that was pretty funny. I laughed but my lungs ached. Kamaria put me on my back, injected some sort of truth serum into me and sent me into the maws of a large machine. I couldn't breathe. She told me to take a deep breath. Don't poets have more empathy? The machine moved me out. "One more time," she said. I remembered her up on the Atlas Theatre stage, reciting Langston Hughes and Walt Whitman. I tried to remember the names of poems. "I hear America singing." Walt taking care of Civil War wounded at D.C. hospitals. His brothers was one of the wounded. Now there's some empathy for you. Maybe Kamaria was following Walt into the medical field. Wish I'd done that, once upon a time wanting to be a nurse like my mother and my grandmother.

Channeling Walt Whitman at the CRMC telemetry unit.
I was still thinking Civil War when I returned to my slot in the ER. I was happy to have a room. There were people lined up in the hallway. People coughing. A young woman with a freckled back. Doctors and nurses hovering and typing stuff into a bank of PCs. I thought of the Atlanta scene in "Gone with the Wind," all those casualties lined up, most of them dead or dying or about to be left behind as the Yankees closed in.

"Congestive heart failure." A doc I hadn't seen before looked at me. He was Indian or Pakistani or something else. A young nurse stood at his elbow. "Dr. Khan," he said. "I'm head of cardiology."

"Congestive heart failure."

Dr. Khan nodded. "You had a heart attack."

"When?"

"You tell me."

"I've been sick for two weeks."

He looked over at his nurse. She scribbled on a pad.

"Can you lie down for an hour?"

"I can't lie down for five minutes."

The nurse again took notes.

"We want to take a look at your heart," said the doc. "We have a great cath lab. We want to see your heart and open up any blockages."

This was all new to me. "Open heart surgery?"

He shook his head. The nurse took notes. "We try to get our heart patients up to the cath lab ASAP."

"What's a cath lab?"

He explained the catheterizing lab to me. Lie me flat on a table and give me some drugs to relax. Put some dye in my heart. Go through my groin and put a camera up to the heart, check out the arteries. Open to blockages with balloons and maybe install a stent if needed.

"What's a stent?"

He explained that it was a tube that the docs put in the artery to keep it open after it was clogged by plaque and cholesterol and inflammation.

This was a lot stuff to take in. "Cath lab is open 24 hours a day," he said. "We've been here since 4 a.m."

I told him that I doubted if I could lie flat for the time needed for balloons and stents and cameras. He nodded. The nurse took notes. And they disappeared.

Another nurse came. She said they might take me to the cath lab as time was of the essence. I was feeling a bit scared and would have felt more scared if I wasn't hurting so much. Some time passed. My wife was making calls, alerting the troops, calling my work to say I probably wouldn't be in today.

All told, I was in the ER for a couple hours. Not bad, when you consider all the horror stories people tell about 12-hour ER waits. The hospital's building a new ER right outside the doors. It will be three times the size of the current one which should take care of that "Gone With the Wind" congestion.

I was admitted to the hospital with congestive heart failure, heart failure or just massive heart attack. I heard other terms later. I was transported to a room on the telemetry unit where I was wired for sound along with the rest of the floor. They monitor our hearts in a bunker full of computers and computer geeks. I was glad to be so monitored, as I'd never had a heart attack before.

Thus began my first night in the hospital....

--To Be Continued--

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Singing songs from "Rent" at Broadway Karaoke Night in Cheyenne


In memoriam: Gaydell Collier

Gaydell Collier and her dog Maxie
Gaydell Collier was gracious and generous. She shared her expertise in writing and publishing with anyone who asked. She was also one of those people whom writers admire unconditionally: a librarian. She knew books, but people were her specialty. Gaydell passed away January 18 at Rapid City Regional Hospital, across the border from her beloved ranch in Crook County, Wyoming. Here's the obit that appeared on the Wyoming Arts Council blog:

Gaydell came from the East Coast and as a child told people she would eventually make her home in Wyoming.
She attended the University of Wyoming, and met her then-future husband, Roy Hugh Collier. While living in Laramie and the Harmony area, Collier worked as circulation manager at the UW library, and collaborated with Eleanor Prince in producing three publications: Basic Horsemanship: English and WesternBasic Training for Horses: English and Western; and Basic Horse Care.
She and her husband purchased their Crook County Ranch in 1977. Collier took over the Crook County Library Director position and was there for 14 years, while also operating her ranch bookstore, Backpocket Books.
She was co-editor along with Nancy Curtis and Linda Hasselstrom on three anthologies: Leaning Into the Wind: Women Write from the Heart of the West in 1997; Woven on the Wind: Women Write about Friendship in the Sagebrush West, in 2001; and Crazy Woman Creek: Women Rewrite the American West in 2004.
Her publications continued in periodicals, reviews, anthologies, and magazines. Her last book was the memoir, Just Beyond Harmony, published in 2012. She received a Governor’s Arts Award in 2004. She was a charter member of Bearlodge Writers in Sundance and of the statewide writers group, Wyoming Writers, Inc., as well as a sustaining member of Women Writing the West and Western Writers of America.

Cuddly jackalopes have a dark side

Thousands of tourists buy those cuddly plush toy jackalopes every summer as they cruise through Wyoming. These cutesy-pie jack rabbit/antelope hybrids are ubiquitous in gift shops from Cheyenne to Jackson and everywhere in between. Douglas, of course, is the animal's ancestral home and the city's mascot, with a neat downtown statue and thousands of artsy jackalopes embedded in a new North Platte River Bridge.

A bill wending its way through the 62nd Wyoming Legislature would make the jackalope the state's official mythical critter. That's fine. But the animal also has a dark side, one that's been celebrated in music by Steve Earle, the Supersuckers and Wyoming's own Gary Small and the Coyote Brothers. Steve Earle's "Creepy Jackalope Eye" offers these chilling lyrics:

I got a jackalope face
I'm a jackalope guy
And I'm staring you down
Creepy jackalope eye

Is it so hard to imagine
Is it so hard to believe
Something so outrageous
Something so far fetched
Well how 'bout adam and eve?

Gary Small's "Snaggle Tooth Jackalope" deserves a little respect as it preys on unsuspecting turistas:

16 motor homes are still missing
Not a trace of human parts was ever found
Just a bloody boot and a shred of Bermuda shorts
On top of a prairie dog mound.
Tourists beware of the snaggle tooth jackalope
A cold-blooded killer...

Yikes.

Where to go for updates on bills before the 62nd Wyoming Legislature

Interested in tracking all of the bills in this legislative session? From A-Z, from the ridiculous to the sublime? Go to the Wyoming Legisweb Bill Tracker.

If you're interested in those bills affecting public employees, go to the Wyoming Public Employees Association web site.

Wyofile provides daily updates on the legislature. Go here.

The Casper Star-Tribune does the best job covering the Lege of any of the state's newspapers. OK, others do a pretty good job but the CST has the best web site.

What about bloggers? You can find info about hot issues on the WY Progressives blogroll on this blog's right sidebar. Marriage equality will be a hot topic next week. Medicaid expansion is another one. Revamping the Dept of Ed has been a big issue since the start of the session Jan. 8.

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Wyoming Rep. Tim Stubson plans to punish state employees by taking away benefits

Wondering what Republicans talk about when they have time on their hands?

If you're Rep. Tim Stubson, House Majority Whip, an attorney and an independently wealthy man-about-town from Casper, you think to yourself: "Those state employees make too much money and have too many benefits. Let's take something away from them just for the hell of it."

Stubson's spouse, Susan, should know better, as she once served on the Wyoming Arts Council board. Stubson also has two sons, one of whom served as a page at the legislature. Said the Rep. Stubson to his son: "This is how we Republicans stick it to state employees, son."

Here's Stubson's big plan:
House Bill 0079 - Redefining vacation as unpaid wages: Sponsored by Representative Tim Stubson, it passed the State House last week and is awaiting introduction in the State Senate.  It would remove vacation pay as a "unpaid wage" in the case of termination from employment, effectively removing it from the worker's final paycheck.  We do NOT SUPPORT this bill in the Senate, and believe it would harm workers in this state greatly by withholding necessary income that they earned during the time they were employed.  Please contact your Senator and let them know you do NOT support this bill! Tell your senator you don't believe in punishing state employees: Just in case you didn't know....the State of Wyoming changed all of the Legislator's emails this year to a uniform email address: Firstname.Lastname@wyoleg.gov
Shame on you, Rep. Stubson.

What the heck is wrong with these stingy, right-wing politicians from Casper?

Poet and labor activist Mark Nowak is eminent-writer-in-residence at UW in February

Poet and labor activist Mark Nowak in coming to Wyoming:

For the much of the past decade, Mark Nowak has been extricating the poetry workshop from the academic classroom and re-employing it in factories, workplaces, and other labor/working-class spaces. These workshops include his early transnational "poetry dialogues" with autoworkers at Ford plants in St. Paul, Minnesota (through UAW 879) and Port Elizabeth and Pretoria, South Africa (through NUMSA, the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa), another series of workshops with Muslim/Somali nurses (through Rufaidah, a Somali nurse support organization), and his current ongoing project with members of Domestic Workers United <http://www.domesticworkersunited.org/> in New York City (to be featured in the 2012 PEN World Voices Festival). 
While at the University of Wyoming, Mark hopes to work with graduate students and other community members in facilitating a Wyoming version of these creative writing workshops with workers in the area. In advance of his visit, he would like to work with interested students in identifying potential groups to work with, making initial contacts, and selecting a group of Wyoming workers with whom several creative writing workshops could be facilitated. As always, the goal is to also produce an event at the end of these workshops (and the end of Mark's residency) in which the participants read the work they produce to their family, friends, co-workers, and the larger community. 
Mark Nowak, a 2010 Guggenheim fellow, is the author of Coal Mountain Elementary (Coffee House Press, 2009) and Shut Up Shut Down (Coffee House Press, 2004). He frequently speaks about global working class policies and issues, most recently on Al Jazeera, BBC World News America, BBC Radio 3, and Pacifica Radio’s “Against the Grain.” A native of Buffalo, New York, Nowak currently works as director of the graduate creative writing program at Manhattanville College in Purchase, NY. 
Mark Nowak will be on campus February 18th - March 1st.  Public workshops will be held between February 17th and February 27th and will culminate in a Reading and Celebration the Gryphon Theater on February 28th.  There will be a public reading by Mark Nowak on February 22nd at Second Story Books. 
Website

Big equality vote next week in The Equality State

Jeran Artery at Out in Wyoming writes about next week's votes for equality in The Equality State. Jeran names name and challenges us all to contact our reps on the Corporations Committee. These are good people who can be reached with persuasive, cogent arguments from constituents. However, they often represent rural conservative constituencies. This is when you see a clash between fundie anti-gay arguments and Wyoming's live-and-let-live traditions. You just never know... There will be a rally at 11 a.m. at the Capitol on Monday. Get more info here. Stay active. Use those e-mails and smartphones to make these people accountable:
We are ready to rock and roll with Marriage Equality (HB169) and Domestic Partnerships (HB168) here in Wyoming. These two bills have been assigned to the Corporations Committee in the House of Representatives.  They are going to be heard at noon on Monday, January 28th.
All of the committee member names below are linked to take you to their legislative website.  The website contains phone and email contact information. 
Here are my notes on what you can do to help:
Madam Chairwoman Rosie Berger,  Needs lobbied.  Needs emails from across the state and especially from LGBT residents and allies living in Sheridan County.  Could become friendly but is going to take some work.
Rep. Gregg Blikre  I spoke with Rep Blikre this morning and he doesn't know where he stands.  He said he wants to hear all the arguments and make a decision from there.  So please email him and ask him for support, especially if you live in Gillette or Campbell county.  Again, I think we can get his support but he needs to hear from all of us.
Rep. Dan Kirkbride  I spoke with Rep. Kirkbride this morning and he said he is a probably a no vote on both bills.  He doesn't think his constituents in Platte County are favorable. Personally I know Rep. Kirkbride and he is good man.  I expressed how important these are to me personally and he promised to keep an open mind a listen to our arguments.  He really needs to hear from LGBT members and allies in Platte County.
Rep. Jerry Paxton  I have not had a chance to visit with him yet.  I'm hearing that he is moderate and persuadable.  His district includes parts of Albany, Sweetwater, and Carbon Counties.  Emails and phone calls of support would be great.
Rep. Gerald Gay  A 100% no vote.  Don't waste your time on lobbying efforts.  This is the guy that publicly stated on the house floor that out of respect to his last name "we should call these people what they are, homosexual sodomites... not gay."
Rep. James (Jim) Byrd  100% yes vote.  Co-sponsor of both bills.
Rep. Matt Greene 100% yes vote.  Co-sponsor of Domestic Partnerships and supports marriage equality.
Rep. Ruth Ann Petroff 100% yes vote.  Also co-sponsor of both bills and an absolute delight to work with.
Rep. Dan Zwonitzer 100% yes vote. Co-sponsor of both bills and a tremendous ally.
Much more here.

Wyoming Republicans look to the future with Dick Cheney as keynote speaker

Watching the inauguration festivities on Monday in D.C. made me feel old and out of it. A wonderful African-American First Family with their two beautiful daughters and Richard Blanco reciting a poem celebrating the 21st century in America and a huge crowd of people of all ages and ethnic backgrounds and origins. This is the future and this old guy wants to be a part of it as long as possible. The Republicans, on the other hand, have proved themselves to be the political party of old ideas and old ways and selfishness. There may be hope to Repubs in the likes of Marco Rubio and Bobby Jindal and those who look ahead instead of back into the previous century. Even some of the young leaders are burdened with the hatreds and prejudices that were born in the pre-Civil Rights era, back when I was a kid growing up in the American South. Nothing says outdated and old like having a remnant of the latest Repub administration as the keynote speaker at your annual banquet. Here's news from the Wyoming Republicans:
Former Vice President Dick Cheney will be the guest speaker at a Wyoming Republican Party dinner next month.  
Cheney will speak Feb. 9 at the dinner being held at the Little America Hotel in Cheyenne. The party says the event is open to the public. 
Tickets are available by contacting the party's office in Casper at 307-234-9166.

Monday, January 21, 2013

"In the Shadow of the Buddha" author to be keynote speaker at WY Dems' Nellie Tayloe Ross banquet

Matteo Pistono will be the keynote speaker at the Wyoming Democratic Party's Nellie Tayloe Ross banquet on Saturday, Feb. 16, at the Plains Hotel in Cheyenne. A cocktail reception starts at 6 p.m., followed by dinner, awards ceremony and keynote at 7. Get more info at http://wyodems.org
For more than a decade, Matteo Pistono has lived in Nepal and Tibet, and worked in the fields of human rights and religious freedom. Matteo Pistono has been heralded as "The James Bond of Tibetan Buddhism" and has worked with some of the world's greatest teachers, including His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Sogyal Rinpoche, and the late Khenpo Jikmé Phuntsok.

President Obama's inaugural address aimed at all of us progressives who elected him


It's worth watching again...

Sunday, January 20, 2013

UW Days of Dialogue features screening of film about civil rights pioneer Bayard Rustin

The Martin Luther King, Jr., Days of Dialogue at the University of Wyoming in Laramie features a full slate of events Jan. 21-25. On Tuesday, Jan. 22, 6:30 p.m., there will be a screening of the film, "Brother Outsider: The Life of Bayard Rustin." It will be followed by a reception with the Cheyenne NAACP. Location: Wyoming Union West Ballroom. FMI: http://www.mlkdod.com/