Tag Archives: antiquated

Wisconsin Protesters Go OFF on Trump Electors! WATCH!

In case you've spent the past 24 hours in your bunker, reading up on Canadian citizenship requirements, Donald Trump won the Electoral College vote yesterday, thus ensuring that he'll be our groper-in-chief come January 20. Historically, the EC vote has been something of a formality, but given the surprising and potentially apocalyptic results of this year's election, there was hope that the electors would take steps stop Trump . That may sound rather undemocratic – and feel free to take to the comments and call us a bunch of globalist, PC, snowflake cucks for suggesting it might not be – but it wouldn't be hard for anti-Trump electors to justify the move. The so-called Hamilton Electors movement called the nation's attention to first treasury secretary and prominent Broadway musical inspiration's argument that it's the duty of electors to prevent demagogues who are beholden to foreign powers from assuming office. So there was hope that this antiquated institution would pull off a last-minute stonewalling, right? Eh, not really. Only one GOP elector came forward to say that he would not be voting for Trump ahead of yesterday's vote. In total just five broke ranks, casting votes for politicians as diverse as Colin Powell and a Native American tribal leader Faith Spotted Eagle. So yeah, a rough day for those holding out hope for one last gasp from the #NeverTrump movement. But a pretty solid day for those who enjoy seeing middle-aged women in non-matching purple sweatsuits positively lose their sh-t. Check out the scene in Wisconsin yesterday, and start counting the days until January, 21, 2021:

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Wisconsin Protesters Go OFF on Trump Electors! WATCH!

Super Eco reads: Edible Estates

Have we convinced you yet that there are better things to do with the water, equipment, fuel, energy and pesticides that go into maintaining a traditional lawn ? If we haven’t, add this voice into the mix: Edible Estates: Attack on the Front Lawn by Fritz Haeg. This expanded second edition won’t overwhelm you with how-to minutiae or examples of perfection you could never hope to achieve on your own. Instead, you get a steady stream of inspiration: region-by-region prototypes, planting calendars, yes, but also full-blown essays by sustainability supporters such as Michael Pollan and Lesley Stern. “By attacking the front lawn,” writes the author, “an essential icon of the American Dream, my hope is to ignite a chain reaction of thoughts that question other antiquated conventions of home, street, neighborhood, city, and global networks that we take for granted. If we see that our neighbor’s typical lawn instead can be a beautiful food garden, perhaps we begin to look at the city around us with new eyes. The seemingly inevitable urban structures begin to unravel as we recognize that we have a choice about how we want to live and what we want to do with the places we have inherited from previous generations. No matter what has been handed to us, each of us should be given license to be an active part in the creation of the cities that we share, and in the process, our private land can be a public model for the world in which we would like to live.” Will we be able to overcome our American preoccupation with lawns that project the right image to the neighbors? It’s a major shift for many—but perhaps planting a book like Edible Estates on your neighbor’s coffee table might inspire more fruitful plantings in the front yard. (Photo credit: woodleywonderworks, flickr ) People: Michael Pollan Glossary: Organic , Sustainable , Pesticides , Water

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Super Eco reads: Edible Estates