blognetnews.com
» New Mexico

The Westerner

  • Global WarmingGate: What Does It Mean?

    Late on the night of of November 19, news broke on PJM and elsewhere that a large amount of data had been stolen from one of the major climate research institutions by an unknown hacker and made available on the Internet. The institution is the University of East Anglia Climate [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:42am EST
  • Competitive Enterprise Institute Sues NASA in Wake of Climategate Scandal

    Today, the Competitive Enterprise Institute filed three Notices of Intent to File Suit against NASA and its Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), for those bodies’ refusal — for nearly three years — to provide documents requested under the Freedom of Information Act. The information sought is directly relevant to [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:40am EST
  • Three Things You Absolutely Must Know About Climategate

    This may seem obscure, but the science involved is being used to justify the diversion of literally trillions of dollars of the world’s wealth in order to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by phasing out fossil fuels. The CRU is the Pentagon of global warming science, and these documents are its [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:39am EST
  • Climategate: When Scientists Become Politicians

    Over thousands of years, at each step, the response of the scientists was to continually adjust and refine their theories to conform to the data, not the other way around. This is how science is done and how we developed the knowledge that has given us such tremendous and accelerating [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:38am EST
  • Wilderness bill opponents map out alternative plan

    A group of opponents to a federal wilderness bill for Doña Ana County gathered Tuesday to outline its alternative to the proposal and ask New Mexico's senators to hold a field hearing locally about the matter. The group, including ranchers, off-road vehicle users, the Greater Las Cruces Chamber of Commerce [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:36am EST
  • Obama official slams oil industry

    Interior Secretary Ken Salazar fired back at critics of the federal government's oil and gas leasing program on Tuesday, saying the oil industry was acting “like an arm of a political party.” In a conference call with reporters to announce oil and gas lease sales on federal land for 2010, [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:35am EST
  • Conservation is seen as key to dealing with state's water woes

    Compared to building new reservoirs, recycling or seawater desalination, conservation is one of the cheapest, quickest and least environmentally damaging ways for the state to get more water. "I think we have a water crisis in California, and I think conservation is the only solution that can be implemented in" [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:34am EST
  • Coyote sightings worry rural residents

    Tara Emery's rural Chandler area neighborhood is under attack by a pack of coyotes that devoured seven of her chickens last weekend and some of her neighbors' poultry. All that's left of a flock of White Leghorn laying hens that provided her family with eggs is an injured rooster, one' [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:31am EST
  • Is the Senate health plan anti-gun?

    "There is a broader issue here," said Dave Kopel, research director of the Independence Institute of Colorado, a libertarian think tank. "The more you socialize costs, the more you empower the argument that the government has the authority to control private behavior." Kopel pointed to the Japanese health care system, [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:30am EST
  • Rancher jailed after housing homeless

    A California rancher who houses homeless people on his property chose to serve 90 days in jail rather than accept probation after being convicted of misdemeanor safety violations. Dan de Vaul says the terms of probation offered Monday would prevent him from sheltering about 30 people who reside at his [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:28am EST
  • He Created a New Kind of Western

    Kelton wound up writing something almost as ambitious: a book that may go down as the Great Texas Novel. When Kelton died in August at the age of 83, many of the obituaries cited "The Time It Never Rained" as his finest achievement. The story of rancher Charlie Flagg and [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:27am EST
  • 'Other Men's Horses'

    Cletus Slocum stole Donley Bannister's best horse and crip pled it. Now Slocum lay facedown in the dirt, as dead as he would ever be. Bannister was known locally as a horse trader, finding them in faraway places and bringing them to the West Texas hill country for sale. He [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:25am EST
  • It's All Trew: Well, in the past, water was work

    The most significant problem facing the first Panhandle settlers was lack of water for their families and livestock. Hand-dug wells along creek bottoms came first. Hauling water gathered from the few surface springs into wooden whiskey barrels mounted on sleds was practiced where possible. When the Rock Island Railroad arrived, [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:24am EST
  • Song Of The Day

    File Factory is not working this morning and won't let me upload today's selection.

    Since some of you missed out on our earlier selections, click here to listen to Song Of The Day #001, Cliff Carlisle singing Black Jack Davey.' [...]
    Posted: November 25, 2009, 5:21am EST
  • Been getting ready for ...

    Been getting ready for a news conference-letter signing this afternoon on the anti-rancher Bingaman wilderness bill. Will get back to The Westerner tonight. [...]
    Posted: November 24, 2009, 5:46am EST
  • Hage estate wins again

    A federal judge has added $150,000 to the original $4.22 million judgment won by the estate of rancher Wayne Hage in a years-long battle over property rights. The federal government had asked Senior Judge Loren Smith to throw out the judgment. Instead, he increased it. Hage, a leader of the [...]
    Posted: November 24, 2009, 5:34am EST
  • Lawsuits place global warming on more dockets

    The lawsuit seeks damages from a group of 33 energy companies, including ExxonMobil and coal giant Peabody Energy, electric utilities, and other conglomerates for allegedly emitting greenhouse gases that the litigants say contributed to global warming. That, the litigants claim, caused a rise in sea levels and increased air and [...]
    Posted: November 24, 2009, 5:26am EST
  • Waffle-pocalypse!!! An open letter to President Obama

    It seems our nation faces the dire consequences of a waffle shortage and Jason Sheehan wants the Obama administration to do something about it. He has written a letter to the President proposing a National Strategic Waffle Reserve and blesses the National Maple Syrup Reservoir currently under construction.
    [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 4:38am EST
  • Judge: Corps' Negligence Caused Katrina Flooding

    A federal judge ruled Wednesday that the Army Corps of Engineers' failure to properly maintain a navigation channel led to massive flooding in Hurricane Katrina. U.S. District Judge Stanwood Duval sided with five residents and one business who argued the Army Corps' shoddy oversight of the Mississippi River-Gulf Outlet led [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:38am EST
  • Public land gone to pot

    Clear Lake and Lake County are known worldwide for its excellent bass fishing. But the county also owns the dubious title as the "Marijuana Capitol of California." For the past three years more marijuana plants have been eradicated in the county than anywhere in the state. In fact, so far [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:36am EST
  • Gibson Guitar plant in Nashville raided by feds

    An international crackdown on the use of endangered woods from the world's rain forests to make musical instruments bubbled over to Music City on Tuesday with a federal raid on Gibson Guitar 's manufacturing plant, but no arrests. Agents of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service made a midday appearance [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:34am EST
  • WWP Wins Summary Judgment On 100,000 acre Byner Complex Allotments

    Western Watersheds Project's Arizona Office has been granted Summary Judgment by Administrative Law Judge Harvey C. Sweitzer in a successful appeal of a grazing permit decision issued by the Kingman Field Office, Bureau of Land Management. Judge Sweitzer agreed with WWP that the BLM violated the National Environmental Policy Act [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:32am EST
  • Wolf hunt an orderly success

    It was historic, to say the least, that Montana just completed the first regulated wolf hunt in the lower 48 states this week. Montana’s Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks deserves kudos for managing the hunt to a tee, closely monitoring it with a reporting system that ensured that the [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:30am EST
  • Spreading wildfires could bring 'an inferno on earth'

    Fire patterns have changed over time as human populations have grown and altered landscapes by clearing forests, allowing pasture animals to overgraze grasslands, and importing new plant species. Across parts of the western United States, for example, cheatgrass, an invasive annual adapted to frequent burns, has supplanted native brush, desert [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:28am EST
  • Warming's impacts sped up, worsened since Kyoto

    Since the 1997 international accord to fight global warming, climate change has worsened and accelerated — beyond some of the grimmest of warnings made back then. As the world has talked for a dozen years about what to do next, new ship passages opened through the once frozen summer sea [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:26am EST
  • From worms to used motor oil, green gets a lift at ski resort

    Worms that eat coffee grounds. Old motor oil that heats workshops. Patio furniture made of recycled milk jugs. Colorado ski resorts are going beyond standard recycling in an effort to green up their industry — and lure skiers and snowboarders concerned about the impact their sport is having on the [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:23am EST
  • Sheryl Crow Takes up Cause of Wild Horses in West

    Sheryl Crow is joining the call for a halt to federal government roundups of wild horses in the West, branding them as inhumane and unnecessary. The Grammy Award-winning singer is asking President Barack Obama and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar to scrap a proposed roundup of 2,500 mustangs in northern Nevada. [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:19am EST
  • Is There Such a Thing as Agro-Imperialism?

    The American scientist was catching a glimpse of an emerging test of the world’s food resources, one that has begun to take shape over the last year, largely outside the bounds of international scrutiny. A variety of factors — some transitory, like the spike in food prices, and others intractable, [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:17am EST
  • Iowa to Host First USDA Meeting on 'Competition in Agriculture'

    A series of public workshops looking at competition in agriculture and the role of federal anti-trust laws and their enforcement will take place at five locations across the nation in 2010. The first of those meetings, to be held jointly by USDA and the U.S. Department of Justice, will be [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:12am EST
  • Land swap angers hunters, governor

    Hunters are ticked off and so is the governor as the State Land Office pushes a trade that would turn a chunk of pristine mountain wilderness over to private ranchers. Hunters think they'll be left out, and Gov. Bill Richardson issued a statement Friday calling the swap a "behind-the-scenes deal"' [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:11am EST
  • Tampa cattle drive rounds up history

    Cowboys and cowgirls mounted horses Saturday and drove 18 wide-eyed cattle through downtown Tampa, past hundreds of people who lined up outside the Tampa Bay History Center. Nick Dotti brought his 2-year-old son and 4-year-old daughter — each decked out in little cowboy hats and boots — from South Tampa [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:09am EST
  • On the edge of common sense: Hindu practices differ little from traditional dairy

    The Hindu dairymen, represented by the Hare Krishna in the United States, have much in common with dairymen from California, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. The HK dairy is in West Virginia and is called New Vrindaban. They refer to themselves as a cow sanctuary. The big distinction is they never cull [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:06am EST
  • Song Of The Day #187

    Ranch Radio will get that foot tappin' this Monday morning with Baby I Want You So by Charlie Adams and The Lone Star Playboys.

    The tune is available on his 30 track CD Cattin' Around on Bear Family Records.


    [...]
    Posted: November 23, 2009, 3:03am EST
  • Song Of The Day #186

    Ranch Radio's Gospel tune this Sunday morning is I Pushed Through The Crowd by the wonderful blue grass singer Dale Ann Bradley.

    The song is on her 12 track CD Songs of Praise and Glory.


    [...]
    Posted: November 22, 2009, 5:17am EST
  • Cowgirl Sass & Savvy

    Who gets the turkey leg?

    Julie Carter

    Everywhere I turn, I hear people making plans for next week. A trip, shopping, cooking and the inspiration for it all -Thanksgiving Dinner.

    In the peripheral, there are bets on football games and plots for spending vacation [...]
    Posted: November 22, 2009, 4:43am EST
  • More On Joe Delk's Patriotic Fiddle

    Several editions of The Westerner ago I wrote about Joe Delk's activities on behalf of rural New Mexicans and posted a picture of Joe playing the National Anthem at the PRCA Turquoise Circuit Finals.

    Dona Ana County rancher and author Steve Wilmeth saw Joe perform our anthem at [...]
    Posted: November 22, 2009, 4:42am EST
  • It's The Pitts: Picture This

    Lee Pitts

    If I didn't make my living as a writer I think I'd like to be a cartoonist. There's really only one thing holding me back: I can't draw. (There are some critics who say I can't write either but that hasn't stopped me from being a' [...]
    Posted: November 22, 2009, 4:40am EST
  • Thousands turn out for King's funeral - video

    Posted: November 22, 2009, 4:39am EST
  • Second Amendment Protects All Americans, Supreme Court Told

    Gun rights advocates have sketched out arguments they hope will convince the U.S. Supreme Court that no state can be a Second Amendment-free zone. In a 73-page legal brief filed on Monday, the groups representing four Chicago residents asked the Supreme Court to overturn the city's extremely restrictive firearms laws, [...]
    Posted: November 22, 2009, 4:35am EST
  • The EPA's Paranoid Style

    Dr. Alan Carlin, a 37-year agency veteran, was muzzled earlier this spring. Dr. Carlin offered a report poking holes in the science underlying the theory of manmade global warming. His superior, Al McGartland, complained the paper did "not help the legal or policy case" for Team Obama's decision to regulate [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 7:05am EST
  • EPA Workers Question Obama Gag Order - Video

    Posted: November 20, 2009, 7:04am EST
  • Lawsuit Abuse Charge by Western Lawmakers Enrages Enviro Groups

    Poor government oversight has allowed advocacy groups to squander taxpayer money on frivolous lawsuits that drain the budgets of federal land management agencies without the knowledge of the public or Congress, a group of Western lawmakers told Attorney General Eric Holder in a letter released this week. Specifically, members of [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 7:01am EST
  • Should private cattle graze on public lands?

    It's a battle that has ranchers pitted against environmentalists. An ongoing legal dispute over grazing practices in the Malheur National Forest has many Eastern Oregon ranchers worried about their livelihoods and the future of their ranches. Environmentalists are concerned grazing on certain parts of the public forest is degrading habitat [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:58am EST
  • A Leviathan of Land

    ...With this reinvigorated discussion of how big is too big, it is worthwhile to remind Americans of just how massive the Federal government already was before our current woes began. There are few more striking measures of the government’s size than the land mass of the Federal estate. The vast [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:57am EST
  • Pine Beetles Not a Good Reason for Climate Change Legislation

    Last week Senator Max Baucus joined several mainstream environmentalists in adding pine beetle outbreaks to a long list of things that can be blamed on climate change. Baucus is referring to the recent breakout of pine beetles in Montana. These insects bore their way into pine tress and lay their [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:54am EST
  • Seas Grow Less Effective at Absorbing Emissions

    The Earth’s oceans, which have absorbed carbon dioxide from fuel emissions since the dawn of the industrial era, have recently grown less efficient at sopping it up, new research suggests. Emissions from the burning of fossil fuels began soaring in the 1950s, and oceans largely kept up, scientists say. But [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:52am EST
  • A climate threat, rising from the soil

    Across a patch of pineapples shrouded in smoke, Idris Hadrianyani battled a menace that has left his family sleepless and sick -- and has wrought as much damage on the planet as has exhaust from all the cars and trucks in the United States. Against the advancing flames, he waved [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:50am EST
  • Fight Climate Change With Free Condoms, U.N. Population Fund Says

    The battle against global warming could be helped if the world slowed population growth by making free condoms and family planning advice more widely available, the U.N. Population Fund said Wednesday. The agency did not recommend countries set limits on how many children people should have, but said: "Women with" [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:47am EST
  • Corn-based ethanol producer says it will soon compete with gasoline

    The nation's largest producer of corn-based ethanol said it has slashed the cost of producing cellulosic ethanol from corn cobs and that it will be able to compete with gasoline in two years. POET, which currently produces 1.5 billion gallons a year of ethanol from corn, said its one-year old [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:45am EST
  • Studying Fertilizers To Cut Greenhouse Gases

    gricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists have found that using alternative types of fertilizers can cut back on greenhouse gas emissions, at least in one part of the country. They are currently examining whether the alternatives offer similar benefits nationwide. Nitrogen fertilizers are often a necessity for ensuring sufficient crop yields, [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:43am EST
  • Fed court upholds Maine's trapping regulations concerning Canada lynx species

    A federal court ruling on Tuesday upheld Maine's trapping regulations by denying a request from two animal welfare organizations for a permanent injunction because they failed to prove Canada lynx as a species is irreparably harmed under the regulations. The ruling from U.S. District Court Chief Judge John A. Woodcock [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:40am EST
  • ‘The Light of Day’ Exposes the Green Movement’s Roots in Tyranny

    This book, by emerging author James Byrd, paints a telling portrait of the true agenda of the Green Movement. It successfully exposes the underlying agenda of collective power in the hands of the State; at the expense of the individual. Mr. Byrd creates a world of dynamic characters, their interrelations, [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:38am EST
  • U.S. food safety likely to get overhaul in 2010

    A U.S. Senate committee voted unanimously on Wednesday to increase government oversight of food safety but the first significant overhaul in 50 years may not happen until 2010. Pressure to overhaul the food safety system has grown following several high-profile outbreaks involving lettuce, peppers, peanuts and spinach since 2006 that [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:37am EST
  • Idaho Power's cloud seeding efforts keep water flowing over dams

    Cloud seeding once was seen similar to well divining, medicine shows and miracle healers. But today Idaho Power Co. is investing up to $1 million to seed the clouds above Idaho's mountains - in hopes of increasing the snowpack that holds the water that will drive the hydroelectric turbines to [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:33am EST
  • Mad Science? Growing Meat Without Animals

    Winston Churchill once predicted that it would be possible to grow chicken breasts and wings more efficiently without having to keep an actual chicken. And in fact scientists have since figured out how to grow tiny nuggets of lab meat and say it will one day be possible to produce [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:30am EST
  • Song Of The Day #185

    This morning on Ranch Radio is Ernest Tubb & Red Foley and their 1952 recording of Too Old To Cut The Mustard.

    It's available on the 4 disc box set Texas Troubadour (99 songs and a booklet for $25.98).




    [...]
    Posted: November 20, 2009, 6:23am EST
  • Albert Perez 1922-2009

    ALBUQUERQUE — And the Lord said, “Good job, my shepherd — now come on home.” Friday, Nov. 13, 2009.
    It is a sad day for the Albert Perez family — but what a great day in Heaven. There, it’s just breaking daylight. The sky is magenta, pickup engines are being [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 11:15am EST
  • Feds buy green cars, auction rejects

    If you missed out on Washington's cash incentive program to trade in your old clunker, Uncle Sam still has a deal for you: The government will sell you rejects from its own fleet, even as it makes dealers scrap all those old cars that were collected from the public. The [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:12am EST
  • EPA, BLM dispute slows progress on Superfund site

    Bureaucratic snags threaten to slow cleanup of the state's dirtiest abandoned mine, a Superfund site in southern Oregon that leaches 5 million gallons of fish-killing, acid rock drainage into nearby creeks each year. The Formosa mine, a source of copper and zinc until 1993, is on a mix of private [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:11am EST
  • Forest Service should change firefighting policies, report says

    Sharply questioning the U.S. Forest Service's aggressiveness, the Los Angeles County Fire Department says in a report on the deadly Station fire that the federal agency should change its policies to allow night flying by water-dropping helicopters and make greater use of local reinforcements to attack any blaze in the [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:09am EST
  • Area politicians support recommendations in county's Station Fire report

    The day after the county in a report on the Station Fire called for a "vastly different approach" in the way the U.S. Forest Service fights fires, the agency announced it will reconsider its policies. Area politicians supported taking legislative action to enact the recommendations. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, lauded [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:07am EST
  • Idaho to pay $50K to settle grazing lease lawsuit

    Idaho agreed Tuesday to pay $50,000 and pledged to follow anti-discrimination rules to settle a federal lawsuit against state officials who awarded grazing leases to ranchers, not the environmentalist who had offered more money. The Idaho Board of Land has also committed to revising its rules to allow conservation groups [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:05am EST
  • Dust Up About Dust

    A federal regulatory proposal, that is being “fast tracked” to adoption, poses a new threat to the survivability of businesses in Montana, most especially agriculture, according to the Western Business Roundtable (WBRT). The new regulations will reduce the allowable level of dust particles in the air to one-tenth current standards [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:03am EST
  • Grizzly Bear Defenders Fight Logging Projects

    Environmentalists say the U.S. Forest Service is paving the way to grizzly bear deaths by opening one of America's five remaining grizzly bear habitats to road construction and logging. The Alliance for the Wild Rockies says the Forest Service's approval of three new projects will hurt the 45 grizzlies that [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 6:00am EST
  • Forest Service says trees can slow climate change

    National forests can be used as a carbon "sink" with vast numbers of trees absorbing carbon dioxide to help slow global warming, the Forest Service chief said Wednesday, but that goal must be balanced. He's also concerned about the risk of catastrophic wildfires that produce massive amounts of carbon dioxide. [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 5:57am EST
  • Researchers studying link between climate change and cattle nutritional stress

    The lab measured the amount of crude protein and digestible organic matter retained by cattle in the different regions. The pattern of forage quality observed across regions suggests that a warmer climate would limit protein availability to grazing animals, Craine said. "This study assumes nothing about patterns of future climate" [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 5:54am EST
  • Smiths produce quality horses in Wyoming

    When a world champion bronc rider marries a collegiate national all-around cowgirl, it's pretty easy to assume that horses will remain a vital part of their lives. That's exactly what happened for Bill and Carole Smith. The former rodeo champions have turned their love of horses into a thriving business, [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 5:52am EST
  • Song Of The Day #184

    Ranch Radio brings you Take An Old Cold Tater And Wait by Little Jimmy Dickens.


    The tune was recorded in 1949 and is available on his The Hits: 16 Biggest Hits and also on I'm Little, But I'm Loud: The Little Jimmy Dickens [...]
    Posted: November 19, 2009, 5:47am EST
  • Washington, D.C Leads The Nation...in STD's

    Washington, D.C., had the dubious distinction of beating all 50 states to post the highest rates in the nation for the sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) Chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis, according to a new report released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta...CNS

    That's what [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:17am EST
  • DOJ supoenas news site's readers list and issues gag order

    In a case that raises questions about online journalism and privacy rights, the U.S. Department of Justice sent a formal request to an independent news site ordering it to provide details of all reader visits on a certain day. The grand jury subpoena also required the Philadelphia-based Indymedia.us Web site [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:15am EST
  • Mexico's gang wars spawn vigilante justice

    The bodies of four alleged gangsters, stuffed into a parked car near President Felipe Calderon's compound in this capital city, carried a message of divine retribution: “The wicked are denied their light, and the upraised arm is broken,” proclaimed the biblical passage, Job 38:15. Scrawled with a marker on the [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:14am EST
  • Bush aide urges weapons ban to slow Mexican drug war

    The former head of U.S. Customs and Border Protection called Monday for the U.S. to reinstitute the ban on assault weapons and take other measures to rein in the war between Mexico and its drug cartels, saying the violence has the potential to bring down legitimate rule in that country. [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:13am EST
  • TSA bans snowglobes

    The TSA says you can't carry a snow-globe onto a plane, even if it fits in your freedom baggie, because they can't measure how much liquid it contains, and therefore it must contain more than three oz of potential explosive, um, water. "Snow globes are not permitted to be carried" [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:09am EST
  • Army drops appeal of Pinon Canyon ruling

    The Army has dropped its appeal of a federal court ruling in September that rejected a 2007 environmental study intended to justify sending more troops, more often to train at the Pinon Canyon Maneuver Site northeast of Trinidad. The motion to dismiss was filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court. Justice [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:07am EST
  • Bishop: Environmental rules impeding border security

    Rep. Rob Bishop charges that environmental laws are delaying the effort to secure the U.S.-Mexico border and hindering law enforcement officials from pursuing drug smugglers. The Utah Republican, the ranking GOP member on the House Natural Resources subcommittee over public lands, says that documents he obtained show Homeland Security officials [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:06am EST
  • In Senate, coal fuels climate deals

    Forget the debate over green jobs, wind farms and solar power. In the Senate, all deals on climate change run through coal country. Black gold has maintained a tight hold over the climate bill — despite a damaging lobbying scandal this summer, growing public health concerns and a destructive toxic [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:04am EST
  • 100 Things Blamed on Global Warming

    Late for a party? Miss a meeting? Forget to pay your rent? Blame climate change; everyone else is doing it. From an increase in severe acne to all societal collapses since the beginning of time, just about everything gone wrong in the world today can be attributed to climate change. [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:03am EST
  • Forest Service Open to Allowing Mountain Bikes on Continental Divide Trail

    Along its 3,100 miles that wind from the Canadian border down to Mexico, the Continental Divide Trail is one of the most rugged, and in parts one of the most visually spectacular, hiking trails in the country. Now the U.S. Forest Service says the route could be opened in places [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 4:01am EST
  • Idaho Gov. Otter objects to ESA listing

    Gov. Butch Otter said the federal government has let down the ranchers and others in Idaho who stepped forward to help a rare flowering bush that grows in the Foothills and in wet areas of Southwest Idaho's desert - even though it was not protected under the Endangered Species Act. [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:53am EST
  • Wolverine settles in Colorado

    State wildlife biologists say they think M56, the solo male wolverine that migrated more than 500 miles to Colorado from Wyoming last spring, appears to have settled in at the snowy edge of Rocky Mountain National Park, raising hopes for the survival of the species and other threatened carnivores. Climate [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:51am EST
  • Critics Say UN Food Summit Wasteful, Ineffective

    Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe, blamed for plunging his people into starvation, used his platform as Tuesday's opening speaker at the U.N. anti-hunger summit to decry what he called his neocolonialist foes. Another longtime African strongman, Moammar Gadhafi, held another nightly soiree at a villa in the Italian capital in the [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:49am EST
  • Fielder promotes new book “Ranches of Colorado”

    Tucked into every corner of the Colorado landscape are places where legends still live. The ranches of the West, and the ranchers who run them, embody what is true about America, and what Americans want to be true: self sufficiency, determination, independence, competence, fearlessness, and an abiding reverence for the [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:47am EST
  • "The Weak Ones Turned Back, The Cowards Never Started: A Century of Ranching in Montana"

    A century ago, Montana was vast and untamed. Without irrigation, drought was devastating. Harsh winters killed entire cattle herds. Considering the conditions, the book title, "The Weak Ones Turned Back, The Cowards Never Started: A Century of Ranching in Montana," may be even a bit understated. The book compiles the [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:45am EST
  • Seabiscuit and Woolf immortalized

    Cardston jockey George Woolf and Seabiscuit — the horse he rode to victory in 1938 — will soon be immortalized in bronze, more than likely on the grounds of the Remington Carriage Museum, in Woolf’s home town. The sculpture, commissioned by Cardston-area rancher Jack Lowe for $130,000, will be completed [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:44am EST
  • Song Of The Day #183

    Ranch Radio presents Faron Young's 1955 recording of It's A Great Life (If You Don't Weaken).

    It's available on his The Complete Capitol Hits of Faron Young and several other of his collections.



    ' [...]
    Posted: November 18, 2009, 3:40am EST
  • Binding climate treaty may slip far into 2010

    A binding international treaty to limit greenhouse gas emissions will slip to mid-2010 or beyond and a summit in Copenhagen next month will fall short of its ambitions, the United Nations and Denmark said on Monday. The United Nations' top climate official said a treaty could be wrapped up at' [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:54pm EST
  • Environmental laws put gaps in Mexico border security

    In the battle on the U.S.-Mexico border, the fight against illegal immigration often loses out to environmental laws that have blocked construction of parts of the "virtual fence" and that threaten to create places where agents can't easily track illegal immigrants. Documents obtained by Rep. Rob Bishop and shared with' [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:55am EST
  • Western Legacy Alliance Applauds Efforts of the Western Caucus to Bring Attention to EAJA Abuse

    In an open letter to the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), dated November 2, 2009, members of the Congressional Western Caucus expressed great concern to Attorney General Holder regarding the ongoing and apparent abuse of the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA) by certain organizations including environmental and special interest [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:36am EST
  • Wolf hunt shut down in Montana after quota filled

    Montana is shutting down its first public hunt for gray wolves since their removal from the endangered species list after state officials said they expected to meet the season's quota of 75 by Monday evening. The quota was met two weeks before the season's scheduled close. The 75 killed equals [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:34am EST
  • Australia exempts agriculture from cap & trade

    Australia's opposition expressed confidence on Tuesday that it would reach a deal with the government to pass laws for a domestic carbon trade scheme, with a final government offer on negotiations due next week. The opposition's climate change negotiator, Ian Macfarlane, told Australian media he was optimistic he would secure [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:32am EST
  • Britain cuts down forests to keep ‘green’ power stations burning

    Britain is set to plunder the lungs of the world to feed its growing hunger for wood to burn in power stations. A series of biomass-fired plants are being built in the UK that will trigger a 150 per cent surge in timber imports from 20 million tonnes today to [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:30am EST
  • Groups file suit to stop Grand Canyon uranium mine

    Environmental groups are suing the federal Bureau of Land Management over its decision to allow a uranium mine to reopen north of the Grand Canyon. Canadian mining firm Denison Mines Corp. received the final state permit needed to move forward on its Arizona 1 Mine in September. The BLM says [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:21am EST
  • Feds to buy 5,000 acres for conservation

    Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced Monday their agencies are buying seven parcels totaling 5,026 acres in Colorado, Montana and Nevada - including 4,573 in Canyon of the Ancients National Monument - as high-value conservation land. The acquisitions, private holdings surrounded by or adjacent [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:18am EST
  • Mustang roundup moratorium rejected

    Wild horse advocates say they have no recourse but the courts after federal land managers rejected their request for an immediate moratorium on mustang roundups. The Bureau of Land Management plans to remove more than 30,000 horses from Western rangelands over the next three years to deal with soaring numbers [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:17am EST
  • Food summit turns down UN funding appeal

    Pope Benedict XVI decried the steadily worsening tragedy of world hunger on Monday after a global summit rebuffed a U.N. call to commit billions of dollars a year for a new strategy to help poor countries feed themselves. The meeting at the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization did unite nearly [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:15am EST
  • Boy,11, shoots bear on family's porch

    An 11-year-old boy killed a bear at point-blank range last Wednesday night after it wouldn’t leave his family’s porch. The boy was at home with his younger sisters and after seeing the bear on the front porch and not being able to get it to leave, the boy retrieved a [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:13am EST
  • Turkey on turnpike causes havoc

    Authorities have stopped trying to capture a wild turkey that calls Interchange 14B on the New Jersey Turnpike home. The bird has been causing havoc for toll collectors and motorists as it runs across toll booths, plays in traffic, and sits atop toll collectors' parked cars. Turnpike Authority spokesman Joe' [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:12am EST
  • Building community in Two Dot

    After 82 years, residents of Two Dot still chuckle over the March 29, 1927, fire that destroyed the Congregational Church and parsonage. Not that it was particularly funny at the time. Loss of the church undoubtedly resonated as a tragedy in the little ranching town within viewing distance of the [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:09am EST
  • Two Dot (population: 76) hangs on long after heyday

    Not much remains of Two Dot, one of the many Montana pioneering communities that thrived in the homestead years in the early 1900s and then faltered in the farm crisis of the 1920s and the Depression of the 1930s. The census in 2000 put the number of residents at 76, [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:07am EST
  • Boot communication

    Hey, Answer Girl -- Why do some fence posts around Casper have old cowboy boots on them? -- Liz Much like with shoefiti (the art of throwing tied-together shoes over light poles), a few rumors exist as to why cowboys would put boots on their fence posts. 1. In the [...]
    Posted: November 17, 2009, 4:06am EST

Blog Info:
The Westerner

» http://thewesterner.blogspot.com/

Categories

Conservative

BNN Traffic Index

Alexa: 2,376,791
43,024

Compete: No data
0

Quantcast: No data
2

BNN Traffic Index: 43,024

BNN Influence Index

Rank

This week: Not ranked this week.

Last week: 5

12-week Average:

BNN Authority Index

Technorati: 0

Google: 0

BNN Authority Index: No data

» Subscribe to the The Westerner feed