The Festival of Endless Gratitude

spirit of orr presents:
the festival of endless gratitude
in brattleboro vermont

evening sets at the tinderbox
afternoon sets at the weathervane music hall
both venues on elliot street

saturday july 28 & sunday july 29 2007
sets start at two pm.

——–saturday july 28 evening at the tinderbox
fat worm of error
spectre folk
byron coley
soil sing through me
mr. tyte
bunwinkies
john levin (starts at 7 pm)

———saturday july 28 afternoon at the weathervane music hall
red favorite
meara o’reilly
chris carmody
hatched and hungry
christopher weisman
fieldwire (starts at 2 pm)

———–sunday july 29 evening at the tinderbox
mv & ee with the golden road
tarp
noho wools
burnt hills
jow jow the death knell rung
shrinnirs
sunburned hand of the man (starts at 7 pm)

—————– sunday july 29 afternoon at the the weathervane music hall
asa irons
dredd foole
matt krefting
kyle tomzo
ruth garbus
kurt weisman (starts at 2 pm)

"A Case of Cheney Paranoia" by Charles Potts

A Case of Cheney Paranoia

To go with the case of Chivas Regal.
I am the first vice president of the United States
To actually be the president of the United States
Simultaneously, but really I am
President of the Senate and in the legislative branch
So subpoenaing me about documents related to executive privilege
Will be futile since I am between branches
No law actually covers me
And everything the president does, as Nixon said, is legal.
Like conservatives everywhere
I hate and fear the government except when we can milk it like
The cash cow it is.
Since I am the government
I hate and fear myself.
And you wonder why I’m trying to keep it a secret.


Will trees suffer from water stress?

arthurblog_treeco2.jpg

Trouble for forests of the Northern U.S. Rockies?

published Science News, June 16, 2007; Vol. 171, No. 24 , p. 382

Climate change expected to occur in the coming decades may cause forests in northern stretches of the U.S. Rockies to stop absorbing carbon dioxide and even to release some to the atmosphere, exacerbating the planet’s warming.

Trees pull carbon dioxide from the air as they grow. Much of the carbon from that gas is stored in wood and foliage, but some ends up in material littering the forest floor and in the underlying soil. From there, it can make its way back into general circulation, says Céline Boisvenue, an ecologist at the University of Montana in Missoula.

She and her colleague Steven W. Running used computer models to estimate how three climate-change scenarios might affect carbon storage at forest sites in Idaho, western Montana, and northwestern Wyoming.

The good news: By 2089, the growing season in the forests will be at least 3 weeks longer than it was in 1950. The bad news: Over that same period, higher temperatures will cause the trees to suffer water stress—slowing or stopping their growth—for an additional 8 weeks each year. Even under a climate scenario with higher precipitation than at present, trees will have insufficient water for 54 more days each year in 2089 than they did in 1950.

By the year 2020, under a scenario with reduced precipitation, dieback of trees and decomposition of leaf litter at three of the six studied sites will cause the forests to emit more carbon dioxide than they absorb. By the year 2070, the forests at five of those sites will be net producers of carbon, says Boisvenue.

reported by Sid Perkins from the American Geophysical Union meeting in Acapulco, Mexico.

"Assholes of the Week" by Paul Krassner

In the ’60s, “Assholes of the Month” was a feature in my satirical magazine, The Realist. In the ’70s, “Asshole of the Month” was a feature in Larry Flynt’s Hustler. Currently, on MSNBC’s Countdown, Keith Olbermann has a feature, “Worst Person in the World,” which is usually Bill O’Reilly. And now I’m posting “Assholes of the Week” in this cyberspace. I avoid targets like President Bush and Cardinal Mahony, because they’re such ongoing, obvious choices. The beauty of Comments is that readers can post their own asshole selections that I neglect to include. Here are mine for this week:

*Scholastic, publisher of the Harry Potter series, for setting midnight Friday as the opening salvo for sales of the latest book, thereby forcing countless children to stay up way past their bedtime. Just for that I’m going to reveal how it ends. Harry and his friends and enemies are all having dinner at the same restaurant, but when you turn over the final page, it’s totally blank.

*Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki, for telling reporters, “We say in full confidence that we are able, God willing, to take the responsibility completely in running the security file if the international forces withdraw at any time they want,” but the next day his advisor announced that Maliki meant that efforts to bolster Iraq’s security forces would continue “side by side with the withdrawal.” Dick Cheney had called to remind Malaki that those videos of him humping a camel during Ramadan were hidden away in a safe place.

*The unknown White House official who ordered Dr. Richard Carmona–George Bush’s Surgeon General for four years–to mention Bush’s name three times on each page of every speech he gave. He was fired for writing this sentence: “When it comes to abstinence, you can be sure that George Bush practices what he preaches.”

*Lousiana Governor Kathleen Babineaux, for signing legislation that penalizes doctors who perform a late-term abortion–they would face fines up to $10,000 and prison up to ten years–making her state the first to restrict such surgery since the federal ban in 2003. The new law allows the procedure only when a woman’s life would otherwise be endangered. However, it will be considered a crime if the pregnancy is expected merely to cause health problems. That’s not a joke.

*The owners of several medical marijuana dispensaries in California, for–if it’s true, as alleged by the Drug Enforcement Adminstration–profiteering from the illegal distribution of pot by charging patients two or three times the street value. Presumably, other government agencies will follow the lead of the DEA and coerce other businesses to stick to free-market protocols.

*Nebraska Judge Jeffre Cheuvront, for ordering a college student who was raped not to use the words “rape,” “victim,” “assailant” or “sexual assault” on the witness stand for fear of prejudicing the jury. Perhaps she can testify that “He stuck his thing in my thing against my will.” George Carlin is expected to introduce a bit in his next HBO performance about “The five words you can’t say in court.”

*Food and Drug Administration commissioner Dr. Andrew von Eschenbach, for insisting that the FDA’s decision to close seven of its 13 laboratories would enhance the agency’s ability to target unsafe food–this in the face of severe criticism from Congress–but he is as determined as salmonella swimming upstream.
——-
Paul Krassner is the author of One Hand Jerking: Reports From an Investigative Satirist, and publisher of the Disneyland Memorial Orgy poster, both available from paulkrassner.com.


"It relaxes you," explained Chief Selwyn Garu, enjoying his second cup at dusk. "In fact, I'm struggling to talk right now!"

Vanuatu defends its famous drink
By Andrew Harding

BBC News, Vanuatu – Wednesday, 18 July 2007

The tiny Pacific nation of Vanuatu is battling to defend the reputation of its national drink, a bitter peppery concoction called kava, which is famous for its medicinal, stress-relieving properties.

Since 2000, kava has been banned by many European countries, following claims that the herbal remedy can cause severe liver damage.

Now Australia has imposed tight new import restrictions because of concerns that it is being abused in some Aboriginal communities.

But in Vanuatu, kava drinking remains an essential evening ritual, as the roots of the Piper methysticum plant are washed, chopped, mashed (ideally with a stick of dry coral) and strained into coconut cups.

“Everyone knows here that kava is not dangerous,” said Dr Vincent Lebot, a kava expert and enthusiast, based in Vanuatu.

“It is not like alcohol or nicotine. It is not addictive.”

Many people on these remote islands believe that kava has been unjustly demonised.

They claim that the herb – once widely available globally in pill form as a natural treatment for stress and anxiety, and known as “kava kava” – was encroaching on the turf of international pharmaceutical companies.

Now Vanuatu’s case has been strengthened by a new report from the World Health Organisation which appears to rule out a link between kava and liver damage.

“Kava cleared!” a recent headline in the local newspaper in Port Vila proclaimed.

Instead, local people point to Kava’s stress-relieving properties.

“It relaxes you,” explained Chief Selwyn Garu, enjoying his second cup at dusk. “In fact, I’m struggling to talk right now!”

“Beer makes you excited. It sets people at each others’ throats. But kava makes you want to sit still.”

Despite the new restrictions imposed by Australia, kava traders in the Pacific are now hoping to revive their export industry, which has been badly damaged by the bans in Europe and elsewhere.

Chief Selwyn – one of Vanuatu’s most senior tribal chiefs – is optimistic.

“If you think about big markets, if they open up to kava, then it’s going to be [as popular as] the Cuban cigar.”

But Vincent Lebot is more wary.

“I’m not sure. In Europe, consumers are already scared. The damage is already done.”