There is no Eden. There never was.

In September, author Michael Crichton spoke to the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco on “what I consider the most important challenge facing mankind.” He had “a fundamental answer. The greatest challenge facing mankind is the challenge of distinguishing reality from fantasy, truth from propaganda.” Crichton has some intriguing and provocative ways of thinking about the environment and environmentalism.

Looks too real not to be fake

Slate’s Today’s Papers closes today with this:

Wall Street Journal says fake Christmas trees—or “faux” trees, as the high-end sellers call them—are going upscale. The faux models now account for 70 percent of the trees found in U.S. homes, and some even come with a small bag of loose needles one can spread on the floor to enhance the effect. After testing out a tree handcrafted from goose feathers, the WSJ gives the Kmart Martha Stewart Everyday 7-and-a-half-foot Mount Rainier tree the thumbs down. Its “too-perfect triangular shape and aggressively green color” are a little disconcerting, says the author. In other words, Martha’s creation looks far too real not to be a fake.

Public Law 102-201…

was signed by President Bush on this date in 1991: “The Custer Battlefield National Monument in Montana shall, on and after the date of enactment of this Act, be known as the ‘Little Bighorn Battlefield National Monument’…”

The Law also called for a monument at the battlefield “to honor the Indian participants in the battle.” That monument was dedicated on June 25, 2003, the 127th anniversary of the battle.

Illegally scaring deer

From The Associated Press (via KING5.com)

A western Pennsylvania woman who honked at hunters because she was upset they were in a tree stand that had been her late grandson’s will be cited for illegally scaring deer.

Norma Kramer, 77, of Export, Westmoreland County, will be cited for “creating an intentional interruption of the hunting process,” according to a state police report.

There’s Only One Answer: Playoffs

Michael Wilbon argues for a playoff.

Let me declare my baggage right now: I hate the BCS. I hate figure skating for pretty much the same reason. Anything that focuses attention on something other than the actual competition is inadequate, and often winds up being unfair. The debate becomes the issue, not the contest. The process runs too big a risk of providing a final result that is unfulfilling, or in this case ridiculous.

A web site well worth exploring

HubbleSite

At the Space Telescope Science Institute, we’re working hard to study and explain the once-unimaginable celestial phenomena now made visible using Hubble’s cutting-edge technology. In the course of this exploration we will continue to share with you the grace and beauty of the universe… because the discoveries belong to all of us.

Check out the site if only to marvel at the beauty of space.

Fans of Dharma & Greg…

may or may not know that at the end of each episode Chuck Lorre posted a Vanity Card with a few thoughts — whatever was on his mind. All 107 of those cards, which appeared for only two seconds at the end of each show, are on line. Some are amusing, some are clever, some are thoughtful, some are worthless. Together they’re rather interesting.

Jeanette Rankin…

cast the sole vote in Congress against the U.S. declaration of war on Japan on this date in 1941. She had also voted against entry into World War I.

When elected in 1916, Rankin was the first woman member of the U.S. House of Representatives. She was not re-elected in 1918, after voting against entry in the First World War, but was returned to Congress for one term in 1940.

Jeanette Rankin was a social worker and a lobbyist for peace and women’s rights. She died just before her 93rd birthday in 1973. She is one of the two Montanans honored in The National Statuary Hall Collection of the U.S. Capitol.

One game short

Tony Kornheiser on the System Crash

The irony is that the BCS unwittingly got it right in one sense. It set up the perfect semifinals. LSU, at home in New Orleans, against Oklahoma in one game; USC, at home in California, against Michigan in the other. All that’s missing is the next game: The true national championship final.

Well, I guess

USC Coach Pete Carroll said Sunday, “It seems so crazy that I’m watching Hawaii against Boise State at midnight and it matters to us. I don’t have all the answers but I think it’s clear there are some issues.”

He Hopes They Won’t Be the Toast of the Town

From Morning Briefing in the Los Angeles Times

The Lakers are 16-3, have won eight in a row and talk of records has already started.

TNT’s Steve Kerr, a member of the 1995-96 Chicago Bulls team that set the NBA record by finishing the regular season 72-10, said he doesn’t think the Lakers can top that.

Taking a cue from the 1972 Miami Dolphins, Kerr said he’ll have a champagne toast once the Lakers lose their 11th game.

This is not a drill

From The Writer’s Almanac

It was on this day in 1941 that Japanese bombers attacked Pearl Harbor. The attack came after the United States had frozen Japanese assets and declared an embargo on shipments of petroleum and other war materials to Japan. On the morning of December 7, soldiers at Pearl Harbor were learning how to use a new device called radar, and they detected a large number of planes heading toward them. They telephoned an officer to ask him what to do. The officer said they must be American B-17s on their way to the base, and he told the soldiers not to worry about it. A sailor named James Jones, who would go on to write the novel From Here to Eternity (1951), was in the mess hall that morning. Because it was Sunday, there was a bonus ration of milk to go along with breakfast. Jones said, “It was not till the first low-flying fighter came . . . whammering overhead with his [machine guns] going that we ran outside, still clutching our half-pints of milk to keep them from being stolen.”

The Japanese planes dropped bombs and torpedoes, and ships started capsizing and sinking. Men jumped and fell from the boats into the water, which was covered with burning oil. Most of the damage occurred in the first thirty minutes. The U.S.S. Oklahoma capsized, and the California, Nevada, and West Virginia sank in shallow water. The U.S.S. Arizona was completely destroyed, killing more than 1,500 soldiers aboard. When Nurses arrived for morning duty they found hundreds of injured men all over the base. The nurses ran around, administering morphine, and to prevent overdoses they wrote the letter M on each treated man’s forehead.

There were ultimately 2,390 Americans killed at Pearl Harbor and 1,178 wounded. Two days after the attack, the Navy passed out postcards to the survivors and told them to write to their families, but not to describe what had happened. A man named George Smith said, “My mother didn’t get that postcard until February. . . . When the mailman got [my] card at the post office, he closed down and ran all the way to my house . . . woke up my [parents] and told them, ‘Your son’s OK.’ I would not see my mother for two and a half years.”

Franklin D. Roosevelt called December 7, “a date which will live in infamy,” and he used the event as the grounds for leading the United States into World War II.

See NewMexiKen’s slideshow of the Arizona Memorial [1.2MB Windows Media file].

Delaware,

“The First State,” ratified the Constitution on this date in 1787. Photo is of the Delaware capitol, Legislative Hall, dedicated in 1933.

[NewMexiKen photo, 2002]