Hypertext pioneer Ted Nelson once described people like him with ADHD as having "hummingbird minds."
!->
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Bad company: Ayn Rand, Paul Ryan and Cynthia Lummis
What do Ayn Rand, Paul Ryan and Cynthia Lummis all have in common? A lot, as it turns out. Read Rodger McDaniel's new blog post at http://blowinginthewyomingwind.blogspot.com/2012/04/what-do-ayn-rand-paul-ryan-and-cynthia.html
Labels:
1%,
99%,
blogs,
Cheyenne,
Democrats,
hypocrisy,
Lummis,
progressives,
Republicans,
U.S. House,
Wyoming
Bid on work by local artists during May at the Cheyenne Family YMCA silent auction
Works by local artists Marlin Glasner, Tom Shaffer, Aaron Curry, Win Ratz, Joyce
& Casey Stone will be up for bids at a silent auction held during May by the
Cheyenne Family YMCA. The artwork may be viewed beginning May 1 in the swimming
pool lobby. Proceeds go to the YMCA's Community Support Campaign. Hours 5 a.m.-9
p.m., M-F; Saturday 7 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sunday noon-4 p.m. FMI: Chris Shay at 307-634-9622.
Labels:
artists,
arts,
Cheyenne,
community,
creative placemaking,
creatives,
creativity,
family,
fund-raiser,
localarts,
Wyoming
Check out the new Cheyenne Botanic Gardens web site -- and the proposed new building
![]() |
| Architect's rendering of the proposed Cheyenne Botanic Gardens building |
The Cheyenne Botanic Gardens has grown dramatically during my two decades in Cheyenne. It recently added the Paul Smith Children's Village and its new facility will be on the next sixth penny tax ballot. The renovation/expansion cost is $14 million, with an additional $2 million for operations maintenance. And, yes, I'm voting for it. The only time I've voted against a city building project was the bloated $55 million rec center project of a couple years ago. The 2012 ballot has another proposal for a rec center that makes more sense.
Why is it important to have a new CBG building? On the aesthetic side -- the current building is way too small and cramped. Not enough space to grow seedlings for the gardens and to educate the public about our High Plains oasis. More room is needed to showcase those plants and flowers that grow in more tropical climes.
People have never been more interested in sustainable living. Everyone is a gardener, it seems, and no better place to feed the frenzy than the Cheyenne Botanic Gardens. There are two community garden plots adjacent to the CBG grounds. People need guidance on how to coax their own veggies from this rocky, high altitude soil. I've been fighting the good fight for years, folks -- it ain't easy.
My wife Chris and I love the summer evening concerts and plays on the CBG grounds. A larger facility will enable Director Shane Smith and staff to program more year-round events. Our community is growing and so is the demand for quality events.
Finally, projects such as the new Botanic Gardens building show that Cheyenne is serious about being a great place to live. Our public library has been voted the best in the U.S. We boast one of the region's best greenway systems. The Historic Depot Plaza downtown is a gem, although the rest of downtown still needs a lot of work. But things are looking up with the Hynds Building project and the Dinneen complex which will hold the first 17th Street Art Fair in its parking lot this summer.
To sum it up -- if you believe in a vital Cheyenne, you need to vote yes on the Cheyenne Botanic Gardens.
Labels:
agriculture,
arts,
Cheyenne,
community,
creative economy,
creative placemaking,
creatives,
design,
future,
gardening,
locavore,
sustainability,
Wyoming
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Laramie's Meg Lanker-Simons taking Cognitive Dissonance to Netroots Nation 12

Labels:
blogs,
community organizers,
Laramie,
Netroots Nation,
progressives,
radio,
writers,
Wyoming
Wyoming Democratic Party moves headquarters back to Cheyenne
This news was announced over the weekend at the county caucuses. Here's coverage from today's Casper Star-Tribune:
After spending more than a decade in Casper, the Wyoming Democratic Party is moving its headquarters back to Cheyenne, a party spokesman said Tuesday.
As of May 1, the state Democrats will set up shop in a converted house at 1909 Warren Ave., according to spokesman Brodie Farquhar.
The Democrats have had their headquarters in downtown Casper since 2000. Farquhar said several Democratic legislators in southeast Wyoming – about the only area of the state that still has Democratic lawmakers – pushed for the move to Cheyenne so they could have access to the party office and so party staffers could help them during the legislative session.
Labels:
2012 election,
99%,
Cheyenne,
Democrats,
Laramie County,
legislature,
progressives,
Wyoming
Monday, April 16, 2012
Wyoming Democratic Party hires Brodie Farquhar as new communications director
This is good news:
The Wyoming Democratic Party has hired Brodie Farquhar as its new communications director.
Farquhar came to Wyoming in 2000 and has written extensively for state and regional media.
Farquhar has written for the Casper Star Tribune as a staff writer and as a freelancer, covering natural resources, politics, education, the state legislature and more. He served two years as managing editor for the Wyoming Business Report, building a cadre of freelance writers around the state. He has also written extensively for New West, High Country News, Yellowstone Journal, Billings Gazette and Wyofile.com, which he co-founded.
Farquhar has also served public relation stints for the Colorado School of Mines, Crested Butte Mountain Resort and Michigan chapter of The Nature Conservancy. “I know how to work with reporters, from small-town weeklies to major dailies and networks,” he said. Guiding reporters around the West’s energy development sites was a particularly valuable experience when Farquhar worked with the Energy & Minerals Field Institute at Mines.
He has a bachelor's degree in journalism and a master's in natural resource policy from the University of Michigan, where he was a Scripps Fellow for Environmental Journalism.
Farquhar said he's always striven to maintain journalistic objectivity, but is looking forward to an opportunity to be an advocate for the Democratic Party and progressive values. "I believe most people have beliefs and values firmly rooted in fairness, common sense and the progressive tradition, contrary to the drumbeat of right-wing talk radio. I want to help Wyoming citizens look beyond the surface, to the real core and context of today's issues," said Farquhar.
Farquhar has covered every conceivable beat in his journalism career, but has developed expertise in covering such natural resource issues as energy development, western water rights, agriculture, wildlife, the Endangered Species Act, snowmobile use in Yellowstone, wolf and grizzly bear recovery plans. In his coverage of the 2006 Wyoming legislative session, Farquhar first wrote about the American Legislative Exchange Council, which writes corporation-friendly legislation, and more recently, voter ID and “shoot to kill” bills.
Farquhar and wife Sharon have three children and one grand-daughter, as well as a mellow golden retriever and calico cat.
"Good Night, Ryan:" Yet another Iraq veteran dies by his own hand
The film that accompanies Nicholas D. Kristof's New York Times story makes me incredibly sad -- and pisses me off. Why isn't more being done to take care of these young people that we send to war?
THERE’S a window into a tragedy within the American military: For every soldier killed on the battlefield this year, about 25 veterans are dying by their own hands.
An American soldier dies every day and a half, on average, in Iraq or Afghanistan. Veterans kill themselves at a rate of one every 80 minutes. More than 6,500 veteran suicides are logged every year — more than the total number of soldiers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq combined since those wars began.
Labels:
99%,
depression,
drugs,
Iraq,
journalism,
mental health,
military,
Ohio,
PTSD,
suicide,
tragedy,
veterans,
war
Investigative reporter Ari Berman to speak at Wyoming Democratic Party state convention May 26
Delegates, alternates and interested
parties are invited to hear Ari Berman speak at the Wyoming Democratic Party’s
state convention luncheon on Saturday, May 26, noon-1:30 at the Hilton Garden
Inn in Laramie. Tickets are $25.
Berman is a contributing writer
for The Nation magazine and an Investigative Journalism Fellow at The
Nation Institute. He has written extensively about American politics, foreign
policy and the intersection of money and politics. His stories have also
appeared in the New York Times, Rolling Stone and The Guardian,
and he is a frequent guest and political commentator on MSNBC, C-Span and NPR.
His first book, Herding Donkeys: The Fight to Rebuild the Democratic Party
and Reshape American Politics, was published in October 2010 by Farrar,
Straus, and Giroux. He graduated from the Medill School of Journalism at
Northwestern University with a degree in journalism and political science.
The registration deadline for guaranteed event seating is midnight on Thursday, May 10, 2012. Register at http://www.wyomingdemocrats.com/ht/d/RegisterForConvention/i/1374582
Berman is a contributing writer
for The Nation magazine and an Investigative Journalism Fellow at The
Nation Institute. He has written extensively about American politics, foreign
policy and the intersection of money and politics. His stories have also
appeared in the New York Times, Rolling Stone and The Guardian,
and he is a frequent guest and political commentator on MSNBC, C-Span and NPR.
His first book, Herding Donkeys: The Fight to Rebuild the Democratic Party
and Reshape American Politics, was published in October 2010 by Farrar,
Straus, and Giroux. He graduated from the Medill School of Journalism at
Northwestern University with a degree in journalism and political science.The registration deadline for guaranteed event seating is midnight on Thursday, May 10, 2012. Register at http://www.wyomingdemocrats.com/ht/d/RegisterForConvention/i/1374582
Labels:
2012 election,
99%,
books,
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Democrats,
journalism,
progressives,
writers,
Wyoming
Anti-bullying program on the agenda at tonight's LCSD1 school board meeting
Laramie County School District No. 1 put out a press release on April 3 about its new arrangement with Wyoming non-profit UPLIFT to serve as ombudsman for its anti-bullying program. Not everyone is town is happy with the news. I happen to know that UPLIFT already has a great track record working with families whose children have "emotional, behavioral, learning, developmental or physical disorders." The topic will be discussed tonight at the school board meeting in the Storey Gym. It's also awards night for district students, followed by a bit of official business. The meeting begins at 6 p.m. I am attending as a parent whose children (now in college) have benefitted from UPLIFT's expertise. Here's info from the press release:
Officials at Laramie County School District 1 have announced plans to continue offering bullying ombudsman assistance for families in the community as part of the district’s overall package of services offered to address bullying and provide for safe schools.
The ombudsman advocacy service will be provided through UPLIFT, a family support network dedicated to the hope, health, and well-being of Wyoming children and families. This service will complement the existing prevention programs and problem-solving efforts of the district.
“An ombudsman is available to advocate and support kids and families during instances when people believe their concerns have not been addressed through standard processes,” said Dr. Mark Stock, LCSD1 superintendent of schools.UPLIFT"s phone number in Cheyenne is 778-8686.
Call for entries: 17th Street Art Festival in Cheyenne
17th Street Art Festival – Call For Entries
Festival is August 17-18 in Historic Downtown Cheyenne at the new 17th Street Dinneen Plaza
Application materials postmarked May 1, 2012
Contact: Lynn Newman lynnnewman@bresnan.net
Mail entries to Lynn Newman, 921 Ranger Dr., Cheyenne, WY 82009
Entries Due By May 1, 2012!
Festival is August 17-18 in Historic Downtown Cheyenne at the new 17th Street Dinneen Plaza
Application materials postmarked May 1, 2012
Contact: Lynn Newman lynnnewman@bresnan.net
Mail entries to Lynn Newman, 921 Ranger Dr., Cheyenne, WY 82009
Saturday, April 14, 2012
WyoPoets holds writing workshop April 28 in Casper
![]() |
| George Vlastos |
Between time spent on his family’s olive farm on
Crete, teaching language arts at Star Lane Center, an interdisciplinary problem-based
high school in Casper, and his duties as Young Authors District Coordinator for
the Natrona County School District, George Vlastos writes poetry. He recently was named the winner of the Neltje Blanchan Memorial Writing Award from the Wyoming Arts Council. He has
published several collections, including Strophe (1997), Dreams, Grotesques
& Hours (2003) and 9 Cross Sections (2005). Previously in WordBand, a
former WAC roster artist literary group that performed choral poetry, George
approaches the “mythic procession of community and culture” in his workshop
presentations, and “the processes necessary to move from thought to written
expression.”
Aran Gupta: "The Wonderful, Unpredictable Life of the Occupy Movement"
Progressive journalist Aran Gupta has been reporting on the Occupy Movement since it began Sept. 17 with Occupy Wall Street. Here's his latest report: The Wonderful, Unpredictable Life of the Occupy Movement. Last fall, he toured the U.S. and stopped in Cheyenne to interview local Occupiers. Read my post on that here.
Labels:
99%,
Cheyenne,
Occupy Cheyenne,
Occupy Wall Street,
progressives,
Wyoming
Thursday, April 12, 2012
"There's nothing left to do but sing" -- Climbing Poetree performs April 19 at Center for the Arts in Jackson
Performance poetry group Climbing Poetree will take the stage at the Center for the Arts in Jackson on Thursday, April 19, 7 p.m. FREE! Brought to you by pARTners. This is an amazing chance to see art for social justice in action.
Wednesday, April 11, 2012
News from the Equality State Book Festival
Most states have at least one statewide book festival. Some, such as Arizona, have several. Wyoming's Equality State Book Festival has been held every other year since 2006 in Casper. It's organized by a committee made up of Casper College faculty and staff and members of the community. And me, Mike Shay of Cheyenne, fiction writer and the individual arts specialist at the Wyoming Arts Council. This year's co-drectors are Holly Wendt and Laurie Lye of Casper College. They just sent me this exciting news:
Equality State Book Festival organizers are pleased to announce this year's festival date has been set for Sept. 14-15 in Casper. This celebration marks the 26th anniversary of the annual Casper College/ARTCORE Literary Conference, which has been called "The Equality State Book Festival" every other year since 2006, this being our fourth venture in that spirit.
For the two-day event, more than 15 authors and illustrators will share their talents, giving readings, leading craft talks, emceeing a poetry slam, visiting local schools, and participating on panels. This year's group includes poets, novelists, memoirists, essayists, illustrators, and publishers.
Among the participants slated are state-wide and regional favorites: Pat Frolander, current Poet Laureate for Wyoming; Zak Pullen, Cat Urbigkit, Kendra Spanjer and Karla Oceanak who will be making school visits; Alyson Hagy and David Romtvedt, faculty from University of Wyoming's MFA program, who will give readings and lead craft talks; and essayist and poet Linda Hasselstrom. From further regions, we are also joined by Rebecca O'Connor and Renee d'Aoust.
The Wyoming Arts Council will be announcing their annual Creative Writing Fellowship awards which celebrate poetry this year and will be judged by Brian Turner. Our friends at Natrona County Public Library are sponsoring a visit from Luis Carlos Montalvan.
We hope you can join us to appreciate the good company of fellow readers and writers and help celebrate books and the written word Sept. 14-15, 2012, at Casper College and a few other Casper locations, all to be detailed on this web site soon.
For more book festival information, please contact Laurie Lye at llye@caspercollege.edu or 307-268-2639.
Equality State Book Festival organizers are pleased to announce this year's festival date has been set for Sept. 14-15 in Casper. This celebration marks the 26th anniversary of the annual Casper College/ARTCORE Literary Conference, which has been called "The Equality State Book Festival" every other year since 2006, this being our fourth venture in that spirit.
For the two-day event, more than 15 authors and illustrators will share their talents, giving readings, leading craft talks, emceeing a poetry slam, visiting local schools, and participating on panels. This year's group includes poets, novelists, memoirists, essayists, illustrators, and publishers.
Among the participants slated are state-wide and regional favorites: Pat Frolander, current Poet Laureate for Wyoming; Zak Pullen, Cat Urbigkit, Kendra Spanjer and Karla Oceanak who will be making school visits; Alyson Hagy and David Romtvedt, faculty from University of Wyoming's MFA program, who will give readings and lead craft talks; and essayist and poet Linda Hasselstrom. From further regions, we are also joined by Rebecca O'Connor and Renee d'Aoust.
The Wyoming Arts Council will be announcing their annual Creative Writing Fellowship awards which celebrate poetry this year and will be judged by Brian Turner. Our friends at Natrona County Public Library are sponsoring a visit from Luis Carlos Montalvan.
We hope you can join us to appreciate the good company of fellow readers and writers and help celebrate books and the written word Sept. 14-15, 2012, at Casper College and a few other Casper locations, all to be detailed on this web site soon.
For more book festival information, please contact Laurie Lye at llye@caspercollege.edu or 307-268-2639.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Attention Dems: Get your asses to the caucus on Saturday!
We NEED every
registered Democrat in Laramie County to caucus and cast a ballot on April
14th. Please come to the Laramie County Community College Training Center.
Registration begins at 9:30 AM, and the caucus will begin promptly at 11:00 AM.
Caucus Chair Ken McCauley has penned an invitation requesting your participation:
Your vote to show support for the Democratic Party is very necessary this year, and that begins by supporting the county convention. One neoconservative challenger predicts that the turnout of Wyoming Democrats will be so low that he will be able to make a mockery of our convention by encouraging lifelong Republicans to change their party affiliation and subvert our process. This candidate has already sent out illegal robocalls to forward his purpose.
Wyoming Democrats care about the people of Wyoming. We believe America should be a land of opportunity for everyone, not just for a privileged few. We believe in the freedom our founding fathers worked so hard to protect. We believe in Americans -- the workers and thinkers who built this nation. If you believe in these values, please come to the Training Center building #16 at Laramie County Community College on 14 April and cast a ballot to help us continue working toward a better Wyoming. Wyoming needs your voice!
If you have questions, please call:
Linda Stowers, Laramie County Chair, 307.220.1219
Ken McCauley, Vice-Chair, 307.630.4973
Lori Brand, Communications Director, 307.631.3410
Caucus Chair Ken McCauley has penned an invitation requesting your participation:
Your vote to show support for the Democratic Party is very necessary this year, and that begins by supporting the county convention. One neoconservative challenger predicts that the turnout of Wyoming Democrats will be so low that he will be able to make a mockery of our convention by encouraging lifelong Republicans to change their party affiliation and subvert our process. This candidate has already sent out illegal robocalls to forward his purpose.
Wyoming Democrats care about the people of Wyoming. We believe America should be a land of opportunity for everyone, not just for a privileged few. We believe in the freedom our founding fathers worked so hard to protect. We believe in Americans -- the workers and thinkers who built this nation. If you believe in these values, please come to the Training Center building #16 at Laramie County Community College on 14 April and cast a ballot to help us continue working toward a better Wyoming. Wyoming needs your voice!
If you have questions, please call:
Linda Stowers, Laramie County Chair, 307.220.1219
Ken McCauley, Vice-Chair, 307.630.4973
Lori Brand, Communications Director, 307.631.3410
Labels:
2012 election,
99%,
Cheyenne,
community,
Democrats,
diversity,
grassroots,
progressives,
Wyoming
Sunday, April 08, 2012
In search of spring's Pink Moon
After reading about “the pink moon” on Facebook for several days, my daughter Annie and I decided to take a look for ourselves.
Each full moon has its own name and stories. The Pink Moon is April’s moon. Here’s how it’s described by the Farmer’s Almanac:
That night, I saw the same moon from my Cheyenne backyard. A fast-moving storm was rolling in. I called my wife Chris and daughter Annie to come out and take a look. But within minutes, the moon was hidden by clouds.
“What moon?” they said.
“It was here a minute ago.”
Friday night brought more commentary and another smashing photo from Susan. I watched the moon emerge from behind my neighbor’s house. Not pink but still glorious. Even though I was wearing a jacket, the cold wind drove me inside when all I really wanted to do was stand and stare.
Last night, I decided to view the moon’s rising. I found the time and Annie and I jumped in the car and drove down Dell Range to the Culver’s parking lot. It was after nine but people were still diving into those butter burgers. We found a strategic spot and watched the moon rise.
“It’s pink, I think,” I said.
“Looks more yellow,” said Annie.
I forgot to bring the camera but that probably was a good thing. Snapshots would not have done it justice. The moon’s big face looked down on us. That’s how Annie described it.
We sat in the lot and watched the moon slowly shed its pink and take on more of a yellowish cast. It began to brighten to white. We talked of space travel and some of the sci-fi movies we both like. 2001, A Space Odyssey; Apollo 13; Star Wars; Star Trek, etc. I spoke about our country’s space program. My father – her grandfather – had been a part of the race to get a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s. I talked about Alan Shepard and Yuri Gagarin and John Glenn and how Gus Grissom and his crew died in that terrible launch pad fire. We talked about walking on the moon – what a thrill that must have been. It was thrilling enough to watch on black-and-white TV. And what a view that must have been, to see earth from a rock 238,000-some miles away!
Sitting there in the front of the Ford, we spoke of the vastness of space. So wonderful but yet so frightening. Annie said that, given the chance, she probably wouldn’t go into space. I had to agree. It frightened me too. I have been having trouble lately dealing with my own “inner space.” I have depression and lately have been struggling with it. If I can’t handle this tiny space I inhabit, how could I possibly face the vastness of space? I could easily be crushed by the universe!
But that won’t happen. The wonder and curiosity in Annie’s voice helps me realize that embracing the universe and its marvels only expands my inner self. Pink moons. Spiral nebulae. Black holes. Vast, empty stretches of space.
On this night in the Culver’s parking lot, we sit together, my college student daughter and I, gazing on the Pink Moon of April. She was born under another full moon, the Full Worm Moon of March (Farmer’s Almanac), the time when earthworms begin working the soil and the robins and the crows reappear and the snow begins to crust over as it thaws by day and freezes by night. Annie was born with a full head of dark hair with silver tips. I told her she had been kissed by the full moon. It was a pretty good story at the time and it seems as good an explanation as any.
On this Saturday during Easter weekend, moonlight shines down on us and the Cheyenne streetscape. We eventually head for home. I am feeling comfortable in my body for the first time in months. Perhaps the light of the Pink Moon carries some healing powers. But I suspect the brightening of my mood has more to do with what’s happening right here on earth, within the orbit of my own loving family.
Each full moon has its own name and stories. The Pink Moon is April’s moon. Here’s how it’s described by the Farmer’s Almanac:
The name came from the herb moss pink, or wild ground phlox, which is one of the earliest widespread flowers of the spring. Other names for this month’s celestial body include the Full Sprouting Grass Moon, the Egg Moon, and, among coastal tribes, the Full Fish Moon, because this is when the shad swam upstream to spawn.Susan Tweit, a nature writer out of Salida, Colo., had mused about the pink moon for several days. Susan has a fine moon-viewing venue in the Colorado mountains. On Thursday night, she posted a gorgeous photo of the full moon. It wasn’t pink (at least to the camera’s eye) but it was big and bright, lighting up wispy high-altitude clouds and what looked like a jet’s contrail.
That night, I saw the same moon from my Cheyenne backyard. A fast-moving storm was rolling in. I called my wife Chris and daughter Annie to come out and take a look. But within minutes, the moon was hidden by clouds.
“What moon?” they said.
“It was here a minute ago.”
Friday night brought more commentary and another smashing photo from Susan. I watched the moon emerge from behind my neighbor’s house. Not pink but still glorious. Even though I was wearing a jacket, the cold wind drove me inside when all I really wanted to do was stand and stare.
Last night, I decided to view the moon’s rising. I found the time and Annie and I jumped in the car and drove down Dell Range to the Culver’s parking lot. It was after nine but people were still diving into those butter burgers. We found a strategic spot and watched the moon rise.
“It’s pink, I think,” I said.
“Looks more yellow,” said Annie.
I forgot to bring the camera but that probably was a good thing. Snapshots would not have done it justice. The moon’s big face looked down on us. That’s how Annie described it.
We sat in the lot and watched the moon slowly shed its pink and take on more of a yellowish cast. It began to brighten to white. We talked of space travel and some of the sci-fi movies we both like. 2001, A Space Odyssey; Apollo 13; Star Wars; Star Trek, etc. I spoke about our country’s space program. My father – her grandfather – had been a part of the race to get a man on the moon by the end of the 1960s. I talked about Alan Shepard and Yuri Gagarin and John Glenn and how Gus Grissom and his crew died in that terrible launch pad fire. We talked about walking on the moon – what a thrill that must have been. It was thrilling enough to watch on black-and-white TV. And what a view that must have been, to see earth from a rock 238,000-some miles away!
Sitting there in the front of the Ford, we spoke of the vastness of space. So wonderful but yet so frightening. Annie said that, given the chance, she probably wouldn’t go into space. I had to agree. It frightened me too. I have been having trouble lately dealing with my own “inner space.” I have depression and lately have been struggling with it. If I can’t handle this tiny space I inhabit, how could I possibly face the vastness of space? I could easily be crushed by the universe!
But that won’t happen. The wonder and curiosity in Annie’s voice helps me realize that embracing the universe and its marvels only expands my inner self. Pink moons. Spiral nebulae. Black holes. Vast, empty stretches of space.
On this night in the Culver’s parking lot, we sit together, my college student daughter and I, gazing on the Pink Moon of April. She was born under another full moon, the Full Worm Moon of March (Farmer’s Almanac), the time when earthworms begin working the soil and the robins and the crows reappear and the snow begins to crust over as it thaws by day and freezes by night. Annie was born with a full head of dark hair with silver tips. I told her she had been kissed by the full moon. It was a pretty good story at the time and it seems as good an explanation as any.
On this Saturday during Easter weekend, moonlight shines down on us and the Cheyenne streetscape. We eventually head for home. I am feeling comfortable in my body for the first time in months. Perhaps the light of the Pink Moon carries some healing powers. But I suspect the brightening of my mood has more to do with what’s happening right here on earth, within the orbit of my own loving family.
Saturday, April 07, 2012
No Wyoming panel at Netroots Nation 12 -- but we are sending at least one progressive blogger to Providence
I'm a bit disappointed that Democracy for America has turned down our panel proposal for Netroots Nation 12. More than 400 panels were proposed for the June 7-10 gathering of progressive bloggers in Providence, R.I. Ours was one of 150 proposals that made it to the final round, but it wasn't selected for one of the 70 panels to be presented at the conference. We still think it's a pretty cool idea, one that comes with an embedded literary reference. So, the Southeast Wyoming Progressive Blogosphere may only be sending one of our group to NN12, and that's Meg Lanker-Simons from Laramie. In case you haven't noticed, Meg is number two in the NN12 scholarship sweepstakes. Top three vote getters get scholarhips. Go vote for her now! Have your entire family vote for her. I did.
Here's the NN12 proposal. See what you think.
Panel proposal: “Where I’m Blogging From: On-line Progressives in Red State Wyoming”
It’s mighty red out here, people!
In 2008, Wyoming voters went for John McCain over Barack Obama by a 65-33 percent margin. This was the lowest percentage of “blue” voters in any state, outdoing even neighboring Utah and Idaho (34 percent). In 2010, Republican Matt Mead was elected governor by a 3-to-1 margin. All five elected offices were swept by Republicans and the GOP-dominated Legislature upped its “R” margin to 76 out of 90 seats.
Democrats are an endangered species in Wyoming. This is a state where sporting an Obama bumper sticker is a radical act. Many Democrats are afraid to speak up in public because they are so tragically outnumbered. In some cases, jobs are on the line.
The four bloggers in this proposal are not the state’s only outspoken progressives, but they represent voices unheard in Wyoming’s mainstream media. While they have been active in Democratic Party politics (one has served in the legislature), they often find themselves at odds with a party structure that is timid in the face of Republican onslaughts.
In this session, the presenters will speak about our prog-blogging journeys, and offer tips about making on-line connections in the wide-open conservative spaces. They also will discuss those ground-breaking bloggers in neighboring states who nurtured them.
Here's the NN12 proposal. See what you think.
Panel proposal: “Where I’m Blogging From: On-line Progressives in Red State Wyoming”
It’s mighty red out here, people!
In 2008, Wyoming voters went for John McCain over Barack Obama by a 65-33 percent margin. This was the lowest percentage of “blue” voters in any state, outdoing even neighboring Utah and Idaho (34 percent). In 2010, Republican Matt Mead was elected governor by a 3-to-1 margin. All five elected offices were swept by Republicans and the GOP-dominated Legislature upped its “R” margin to 76 out of 90 seats.
Democrats are an endangered species in Wyoming. This is a state where sporting an Obama bumper sticker is a radical act. Many Democrats are afraid to speak up in public because they are so tragically outnumbered. In some cases, jobs are on the line.
The four bloggers in this proposal are not the state’s only outspoken progressives, but they represent voices unheard in Wyoming’s mainstream media. While they have been active in Democratic Party politics (one has served in the legislature), they often find themselves at odds with a party structure that is timid in the face of Republican onslaughts.
In this session, the presenters will speak about our prog-blogging journeys, and offer tips about making on-line connections in the wide-open conservative spaces. They also will discuss those ground-breaking bloggers in neighboring states who nurtured them.
Presenters
Jeran Artery, Cheyenne, blogs at Out in Wyoming, LGBT activist and Director of Social Change for Wyoming Equality, actor and visual artist, a native of Wheatland in very conservative Platte County, Wyo. Blog: http://outinwy.blogspot.com
Meg Lanker, Laramie, blogs at Cognitive Dissonance, hosts a radio show by the same on KOCA FM every Friday night. Meg brought a successful lawsuit against the University of Wyoming when it refused to let 1960s radical turned education reformer Bill Ayers speak on campus. She also organized a fund-raiser for LGBT groups when ultra-conservative commentator Ann Coulter spoke in Laramie earlier this year. She’s a member of the National Writers Union and a U.S. Navy veteran. Her web site is included in Tumblr's featured politics and government directory at http://www.tumblr.com/spotlight/politics and her site has over 3,000 followers. Blog: http://cognitivedissonance.tumblr.com/
Rodger McDaniel, Cheyenne, former Wyoming state legislator, one-time director of Habitat for Humanity in Nicaragua, retired director of Wyoming Mental Health and Substance Abuse Division, ordained minister, Blowing in the Wyoming Wind blogger. Sponsors a Monday night “Beer and Bibles” get-together each week at a Cheyenne bar where Bible stories are explored from a social justice angle. Rodger is a frequent guest columnist for the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle. Blog: http://blowinginthewyomingwind.blogspot.com
Michael Shay, Cheyenne, fiction writer, essayist and blogger on hummingbirdminds since 2005. One of Michael’s short stories is featured in the 2010 anthology “Working Words: Punching the Clock and Kicking Out the Jams” from Coffee House Press. Other poets, writers and musicians in the anthology include U.S. Poet Laureate Phil Levine, Wanda Coleman, Diane DiPrima, Bob Dylan, Eminem, Li-Young Lee, Dorothy Day and Daniel Berrigan. Michael’s blog was recently named by the Washington Post as one of the top state-based political blogs in the U.S. He was a scholarship attendee at NN11 in Minneapolis. Blog: http://hummingbirdminds.blogspot.com
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Wyoming DemoCatz: See you at next Saturday's Laramie County Democratic Convention
You never know, but the Wyoming DemoCatz may show up for next Saturday's Laramie County Democrats' convention and caucus. Registration begins at 9:30 a.m.; convention begins at 11 a.m. For more info, go to the convention invitation page on Facebook.
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Rodger McDaniel: "When they say 'it isn't about race,' you can bet it is"
We don't have to go to Central Florida to find racism in action. It can strike close to home -- and has! Great column by Rodger McDaniel. Posted on his blog and on the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle's op-ed pages. For the original, go to http://blowinginthewyomingwind.blogspot.com/2012/04/when-they-say-it-isnt-about-race-you.html?spref=fb
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