PLEASE READ: To register, turn off your VPN (iPhone users- disable iCloud); you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.
Why they try to tear the mountains down to bring in a couple more
More people, more scars upon the land
So, guilt by association?Of course...
But in a 'Hold My Beer' moment....![]()
We are already in the process of removing colonialist monuments, including shifting statues to museums....but I think you might be missing the point of the original poster's observation about destroying an entire mountainside to memorialize the guys. Who may be the most important four men who ever walked the face of the earth and would have gloried in being made so big and heroic.So, guilt by association?
All cliff carvings are damned because white supremacists created one after the fact?
So, by your standard, you can condemn anything if someone nefarious later imitates it?
A poor argument, if prime propaganda. Replace relevance with redirection, and voila!
Will Victoria be taken down soon from Parliament, as a legacy of the colonial oppression? Or is it OK to enshrine an emperor in a land taken from the indigenous?
![]()
Oh man! Don't rain on my John Denver memory.Sadly, as much as I love Mr. Deutschendorf and his music, that doesn't make him a good poster boy for not exploiting native lands.
First, he was the son of a US Air Force soldier in New Mexico, a beneficiary of an occupying force, since virtually all of New Mexico was Indian Territory by federal policy that relocted Eastern tribes to the barren Southwest. As such, he was raised in much better circumstances than the poor natives who still occupy New Mexico. He arguably succeeded in part due to his (relatively) privileged family, even if not rich.
Second, and certainly not outweighing the good he did in visiting China and Russia, his own conservation of the land doesn't serve as any exemplar for environmentalists. He built a huge mansion in Aspen, so it ill-behooves him to complain about sculpting mountains to bring in more wealthy homeowners.
Additionally, he was an avid golfer, a hugely damaging sport in wasteful consumptiton of freshwater to maintain artificial turf, cleaing natural landscapes to create Disneyesque courses, and for using incredble amounts of herbicides to keep the greens monocultures.
When I lived in Anchorage in 2007-2010, I saw an attitude there about not allowing more immigrants (from the States) into Alaska. Despite having the most vast, least occupied land within the nation, they felt selfish about it, as if it was somehow their private park. Never mind that they were not native there. Never mind that their existence there was only made possible by the waves of gold rushers, oil drillers, and tourists.
It's all well and good to adopt idealized standards for wilderness while ignoring one's own privilege or impacts.
What John Deutschendorf did for the world was a good thing, but that lyric doesn't ring true when looking at his own life.
It is a shame he died too young. I didn't learn until today that his plane crashed because he didn't understand how to calculate his fuel consumption. He literally died because he ran out of gas and crashed in a plane he built. Apparently there was a reserve tank on board, but the cabin was designed in such a manner as to not enable him to reach it, or the control to it, from the pilot's seat. Very sad.
When I start seeing the Queen Elizabeth highway and honorifics renamed, I'll be more convinced Canada is not making token gestures.We are already in the process of removing colonialist monuments, including shifting statues to museums....but I think you might be missing the point of the original poster's observation about destroying an entire mountainside to memorialize the guys. Who may be the most important four men who ever walked the face of the earth and would have gloried in being made so big and heroic.
This isn't a fight. I would have been beyond appalled by anyone defacing a natural landscape in Canuckistan for the aggrandizement of anyone.
But you have to admit...Nathan Bedford and the KKK being memorialized on the face of Monument Mountain was a bit over the top.
and by the way..the Crazy Horse monument is also a piece of schlock garbage.
He was and is a beautiful piece of American pop culture, and from a time when it was a pleasure to turn on the radio and hear the latest tunes.Oh man! Don't rain on my John Denver memory.
Rocky Mountain High in dropped D tuning sounds gorgeous on a young boy's new Epiphone guitar. Add a campfire and a few friends and its almost heaven.![]()
I understand the attitude. Outsiders moving in tend to ignore the local culture and bring their own, drive up prices, fight to regulate how other people get to use their own property, work to shut down access to public lands . . . . It's not a matter of a "private park", it's a matter of people doing cultural imperialism with no respect for the neighbors they chose to live with and locals wanting to preserve their own culture.When I lived in Anchorage in 2007-2010, I saw an attitude there about not allowing more immigrants (from the States) into Alaska. Despite having the most vast, least occupied land within the nation, they felt selfish about it, as if it was somehow their private park.
The problem with the attitude in Alaska is that the ones expressing it were among the previous generations who had done exactly the same things as newcomers.I understand the attitude. Outsiders moving in tend to ignore the local culture and bring their own, drive up prices, fight to regulate how other people get to use their own property, work to shut down access to public lands . . . . It's not a matter of a "private park", it's a matter of people doing cultural imperialism with no respect for the neighbors they chose to live with and locals wanting to preserve their own culture.
