Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property DUP_PRO_Global_Entity::$notices is deprecated in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/duplicator-pro/classes/entities/class.json.entity.base.php on line 244

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/duplicator-pro/classes/entities/class.json.entity.base.php:244) in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/bluehost-wordpress-plugin/vendor/newfold-labs/wp-module-ecommerce/includes/ECommerce.php on line 197

Notice: Function wp_enqueue_script was called incorrectly. Scripts and styles should not be registered or enqueued until the wp_enqueue_scripts, admin_enqueue_scripts, or login_enqueue_scripts hooks. This notice was triggered by the nfd_wpnavbar_setting handle. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 3.3.0.) in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6078

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-content/plugins/duplicator-pro/classes/entities/class.json.entity.base.php:244) in /home2/imszdrmy/public_html/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
Rangers Archives - Occasional Planet https://occasionalplanet.org/tag/rangers/ Progressive Voices Speaking Out Fri, 10 Feb 2017 20:23:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 211547205 Park rangers go rogue on Trump https://occasionalplanet.org/2017/01/28/park-rangers-go-rogue-on-trump/ https://occasionalplanet.org/2017/01/28/park-rangers-go-rogue-on-trump/#respond Sat, 28 Jan 2017 14:39:05 +0000 http://occasionalplanet.org/?p=35914 Everybody loves park rangers. You know, those folks in the Smokey-the-Bear hats. Friendly, courteous, helpful. Now they are emerging as rogue force of resistance

The post Park rangers go rogue on Trump appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>

Everybody loves park rangers. You know, those folks in the Smokey-the-Bear hats. Friendly, courteous, helpful. Now they are emerging as rogue force of resistance to Donald Trump. Scientists and people who love nature are not to be trifled with.

According to a Washington Post story by Darryl Fears and Kayla Epstein, It started with tweets by a former Badlands National Park Service employee who wanted to re-educate Trump on climate change. The initial tweets by the Badlands employee were quickly taken down, but not before earning the hashtag, #Badasslands.

Shortly after the initial Badlands tweets were removed, the whole thing morphed into the Twitter site, AltUSNatParkService. It bills itself as “The Unofficial ‪#Resistance team of U.S. National Park Service. Come for rugged scenery, science facts & climate change information. Run by non-gov individuals.”  In its first day, the site garnered nearly half a million followers.

Contributors to the site are remaining anonymous. They told the Post, “We will not be identifying ourselves due to the anger and threats coming from President Trump’s loyalists. We are just here to push the science that is being dismantled by the current administration.”

Other protest accounts soon sprouted according to a list called Twistance created by Alice Stollmeyer. Stollmeyer is a digital advocacy strategist and founder of the consultancy @StollmeyerEU. Her list includes accounts such as RogueEPA, AltMuirWoods, Rogue NOAA , Stuff EPA Would Say and lots more.

Jenna Ruddock is owner of one of the rogue sites. According to her,

The major impact is that people are taking note, and it’s raising red flags all over the place. One of the riskiest things would be for censorship, whether it’s of journalists or of scientific institutions, to go unnoticed. Censorship is a very slippery slope.

Timothy Egan commented in The New York Times,

It started at the inauguration, when the uniformed protectors of America’s front lawn took in the sweep of humanity at the National Mall. It seemed obvious that the crowd for President Trump was not nearly as large as that for Barack Obama in 2009. Somebody in olive green retweeted the obvious, using comparative pictures.

This small act of historical clarification by the keepers of our sacred sites and shared spaces would have been no big deal, had not the response from the new president sounded like an edict from the Dear Leader. A gag order on public servants was issued, and the National Park Service tweet on crowd size vanished, replaced by a picture of a bison.

But then, flares of defiance! The response to the dawning realization that a crazy man had taken over the White House was truth.

Egan wraps things up with this encouragement,

Here’s a suggestion: Go rogue, you lovable park rangers and biologists; tell the truth about science, you nerds in funny hats and badges. Let Trump’s thought police come after you at Golden Gate for tweeting that “2016 was the hottest year on record for the third year in a row.” Oh, the audacity of science!

Now the fight has begun. I always knew I could depend on those folks in the Smokey-the-Bear hats.

 

The post Park rangers go rogue on Trump appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>
https://occasionalplanet.org/2017/01/28/park-rangers-go-rogue-on-trump/feed/ 0 35914
Women graduate from US Army Ranger School: Pro and con https://occasionalplanet.org/2015/08/21/women-graduate-from-us-army-ranger-school-pro-and-con/ https://occasionalplanet.org/2015/08/21/women-graduate-from-us-army-ranger-school-pro-and-con/#respond Fri, 21 Aug 2015 16:52:19 +0000 http://www.occasionalplanet.org/?p=32404 When the U.S. Army recently announced that two women had successfully completed its toughest training regimen, my initial reaction was, “Good for them, and

The post Women graduate from US Army Ranger School: Pro and con appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>

womenrangersWhen the U.S. Army recently announced that two women had successfully completed its toughest training regimen, my initial reaction was, “Good for them, and good for the U.S. Army. It’s about time!” But rather quickly, my feminist joy became tempered by a healthy dose of sadness and misgiving.

The two women, Capt. Kristen Griest, 26, a military police platoon leader, and 1st Lt. Shaye Haver, 25, an Apache attack helicopter pilot, knew that they were blazing a new trail. Griest said, “I was thinking really of future generations of women that I would like them to have that opportunity so I had that pressure on myself.”

Of course, equal opportunity is a good thing. I’m glad to see these women getting the chance to show that their physical strength, endurance and toughness match—even surpass—that of the men who tried out for Ranger status. [Let’s not forget that women have been demonstrating courage and resilience for ages—just in other ways: as mothers, breadwinners, healers, inspirers, caregivers and teachers–to name just a few such roles. It’s just that these types of strengths have, traditionally, not been equated with the “real” courage of men in battle.]

I’m glad that Griest and Hayer got the opportunity to self-actualize in a way that is meaningful for them—a way that had previously been not available to women. And I’m happy to note, too, that it was a government institution that was willing to give them that chance.

We may not be able to, as Hillary Clinton recently said, “Change people’s hearts,” but, as she also said, “We can change laws.” That, in my mind, is an excellent and appropriate role for government: to lead progressive social change, sometimes by enacting laws [expanding voting rights, for example] and sometimes by example, which is what happened when President Harry S Truman instituted racial desegregation in the US military in 1948—long before integration became acceptable among the general American population.Truman may have reasoned that integrating the military—an organization revered by the American public [at least in the era immediately following World War II]—would have a trickle-down social effect on the rest of the country.

Truman was doing what government does best: tackling the big issues and projects that individuals can’t. I don’t love that he did it through the military—whose track record tends more toward destruction and harm than it does toward helping people—but I respect the impulse to use government to do the really big things.

Retired U.S. Army Colonel Jack Jacobs, appearing on the Rachel Maddow Show, noted that the Army could have taken a more gradual approach to gender equality.

The original assumption was that if they’d wanted to see if women could be in combat units, they’d stick them in combat units in the States, where they were in garrison..doing war games and small-unit tactics, and then, maybe, much later on, they’d send them to the toughest school.They didn’t do that.They did it exactly the opposite way.They sent women to the toughest school first. And the result of that, of course, is that it’s difficult to engender any support for the idea that women can’t take it.

If you stick them in a regular unit, but don’t send them to ranger school, people can say, ok, they’re in a regular unit, but they can’t make it in ranger school. But if you put them in ranger school and they complete it, and 40% to 60% of the men don’t complete it, you’re way down the road to putting them in combat units. Which I think is the ultimate objective.

So I must applaud the Army powers-that-be for taking the boldest route to showing that women can do all the jobs previously restricted to men.

However, there’s also a downside to the particular form of progress exemplified by the women graduating from Ranger School.

The ability of women to become Army Rangers means that the military has a whole new demographic that it can recruit into the top ranks of its war machine. There’s a whole new population—women—that can be thrown into the toughest battlefield assignments—whether battle is justified or not. A whole new demographic that can be injured, maimed or killed in the most dangerous assignments in nonsensical, no-win wars like Iraq and Afghanistan, and who knows where else in the future.

The availability of women for the top ranks of combat jobs might even embolden the military to undertake more adventures, because they’ll have the additional person-power to do so. No more complaining that there aren’t enough highly qualified troops for the most high-risk operations.

Of course, I know that women have been serving in the military for many years now. And don’t forget that, at the same time that they have been barred from official combat roles, they’ve been driving trucks and flying supply planes into very risky areas–resulting in many injuries not specifically recognized as combat-created.

And look, I can understand why women want to—and deserve to—achieve full gender equality in the military: For a military-minded women—as for a man—serving in the elite units means moving up in the ranks, earning more pay, and fulfilling the quest for leadership positions. The sad part is that all of that takes place in the military, where the metrics of success are invasion, occupation, subjugation, colonization, economic plunder and body counts.

As an aside, I have long been bemused by the “gentlemanly” and “chivalrous” argument that women shouldn’t be allowed in combat. Hah! In fact, women have always been involved in combat—as invading and occupying armies overrun their homes; kill their husbands, brothers, sons and daughters; terrorize and injure them with bombs, bullets, cannonballs, howitzer shells and drones; steal their food and money; force them to pick up what few belongings they have and flee; and rape them as war trophies. The only difference now is that women will be allowed to be the leading-edge invaders and the assassins.

Don’t get me wrong: I want women to enjoy all of the same societal rights and economic opportunities afforded to men. I just want us to think about whether, bottom line, the opportunities afforded by a gender-equal military career—for women and for men—are ultimately good for anyone.

The post Women graduate from US Army Ranger School: Pro and con appeared first on Occasional Planet.

]]>
https://occasionalplanet.org/2015/08/21/women-graduate-from-us-army-ranger-school-pro-and-con/feed/ 0 32404