Right to Marry
Ms. T at Surviving the Workday has just posted something compelling and intelligent about marriage, social justice and descrimination. Check it out.
adventures in domestic activism and activity
Ms. T at Surviving the Workday has just posted something compelling and intelligent about marriage, social justice and descrimination. Check it out.
Posted by Elizabeth at 4:40 PM 1 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 1:00 PM 2 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 12:24 PM 0 comments
Fernando, my local sustainability guru, forwarded me a message which seems rather important.
As Fernando says, "I think this is an easy way to do something for the planet."
(I must also admit that I've been angry at Mobil ever since it dropped its long-time support for PBS's Masterpiece Theatre shortly after it became ExxonMobil in 1999. Grrrr.
Same thing happened when Texaco ended sixty-four years of sponsorship of the Metropolitan Opera's Sunday afternoon live radio broadcasts after it merged with Chevron.
If you are a greedy oil company that is sucking the planet dry, contributing to global climate destruction and making oodles of profit, the least you can do is sponsor the arts!)
But back to Fernando's email, which he passed on to me and others from either ThePetitionSite or the Care2 website:
What would you do with nearly 40 billion dollars in profit?
Well, if you were ExxonMobil, you'd continue opposing solutions to global warming and funding junk science, despite the fact that climate change could lead to the extinction of thousands of irreplaceable wildlife species. You'd keep trying to drill in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge despite its importance to America’s vanishing polar bears and other wildlife. And you’d be one of the only major oil giants still refusing to invest a dime into clean, renewable energy sources.
That’s what ExxonMobil is doing with its second consecutive year of record-breaking profits, and we need your help to stop them.
Wildlife supporters from across the country have banded together to successfully defeat ExxonMobil's attempts to industrialize the Arctic Refuge. But we must do even more to push the company to start being a part of the solution to global warming and other threats to wildlife.
Sign this petition to tell ExxonMobil’s CEO Rex Tillerson that you're boycotting the company until it stops double-crossing America on global warming and the Arctic Refuge.
Have you ever participated in this type of protest before? When you see an Exxon or Mobil gas station, drive right by and know that you are one of hundreds of thousands of people refusing to support ExxonMobil’s bad policies on global warming and the Arctic Refuge. And sign this petition to Exxon’s CEO so he knows why ExxonMobil’s clout is waning.
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:15 PM 0 comments
In my search for less toxic and more environmentally friendly cleaners, I've been wanting to make the homemade laundry soap recipe from kidsorganics.
However, it calls for grated castile or glycerin soap flakes. Where do you buy that? Not at Wal-Mart. I can't even find good old-fashioned Ivory soap flakes anywhere. (Can you?)
So my thrifty self thought of a way to gain access to grated soap for free: you know those bits of soap bars* that are too big to throw away but fairly annoying to use? I started collecting them.
When I had a pile--actually, when I ran out of my Seventh Generation Natural Laundry Detergent --I put the bits of saved soap in the Cuisinart and pulverized them. (Here I learned that soap grinds to a very fine powder--which wafts everywhere and makes one sneeze furiously.
I didn't have the required eight cups of flakes--I had two. Adjusting the recipe, I added three cups of borax and four cups of baking soda, along with the little bit of bergamot essential oil I had left in my little jar (less than 1 tablespoon).
The result is nine cups of very beautiful smelling laundry soap, made for very little cash or labor. Also, according to kidsorganics, I need use only 1/8 cup (that's two tablespoons) for every load. If my math is right, that makes 72 loads. Wow.
If it works, it will be fine value indeed--recycling soap and using cheap, natural, non-petroleum, phosphate-free ingredients.
Can't wait to do laundry!
*I'm talking real soap, not detergent bars. To learn about the difference, please read The Dope on Soap.
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:06 PM 8 comments
What a weekend!
It took two and a half hours to drive up to Jemez, via Espanlola and Pojoaque (where we stopped at a gas station where a man had just shot himself in the leg--no one seemed very surprised), up and down and past the road to Bandelier National Monument (an exceptional stop if you are ever in the area), through the Valles Caldera (that's my intellectual friend Joe, reading educational and scientific Caldera information) and finally to Jemez Springs, where we checked in to what was a delightful and affordable boutique motel, the Jemez Mountain Inn.
We ate some of the picnic lunch I had made and took a short walk around Jemez Springs.
We then made our way to the Giggling Springs, located just next door.
Despite the cold weather (twelve degrees below freezing), we were very toasty as soon as we entered the spring.
We had it all to ourselves for three hours, and we simply soaked and talked, letting our muscles relax and our skin delight in the mineral-rich water. (Lots of calcium, magnesium and iron.)
We've had a hard winter, and I haven't been outside much for the past few months. It was a great delight to spend HOURS outside in the sun and the open air.
After our amazing three-hour soak, other people started to arrive, so we relinquished our spot and returned to the Inn to dry off and plug in our crock-pots--fondue in one, tangine in the other. Al and I went across the street to the Los Ojos Bar for a beer--a roaring fire and a lively family crowd greeted us.
Back at the Inn, we popped the cork on the cava and settled in to an evening of grand food and conversation.
The next morning, we breakfasted, packed, checked out and headed a few miles up the road to Spence Hot Springs--truly wonderful springs in a pristine alpine setting (see picture above).
The 20-minute hike over a river and up a hill was steep, muddy and icy--but worth it. Again we had luck--we were the only ones there for an hour and a half. Once several other groups arrived, we dried off, packed up and hiked back down to the car.
We headed home by completing our loop, going through Jemez Pueblo. We picnicked in some rather fierce wind in front of the dramatic red cliffs across from the Visitors Center.
Driving through the pueblo, we noticed much activity--and then heard the drums. What luck! It was a Feast Day, and they were dancing!
We made our way to the main plaza to see.
Jemez Pueblo is closed to visitors except on special feast days--and no photography is ever allowed. I wish I could show you what they looked like today--we saw a buffalo dance, and the costumes were stunning: pelts and evergreen boughs and antlers and feathers and the softest, softest moccasin boots I've ever seen. (The photo shown is one from a historic collection, but it is similar to what we saw.)
The non-dancers of the pueblo sat all along the main street, wrapped in colorful blankets. Kids played and watched. Wood smoke wafted. Dust blew.
We watched until the end of the dance, then got in the car and drove the 140 miles back home.
Posted by Elizabeth at 6:56 PM 3 comments
We’re going away this weekend with friends to Jemez Springs.
Our overnight accommodation has a living area but no kitchen, so our menu preparation involves make-ahead picnic things and crock-pot cuisine.
I am in charge of two picnic lunches, an appetizer and dessert.
I get very geeked when it comes to menu planning.
For the lunches, we’ll have a picnic buffet:
Posted by Elizabeth at 8:30 PM 1 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:03 PM 0 comments
I am going to try not to become too, too political on this blog--but at the moment I am so stunned that I can't help it.
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:05 PM 3 comments
I just did something very scary--I messed around with my HTML template code so that my posts' labels are now in a lovely little cloud (see sidebar), rather than a boring list.
Many thanks to phydeaux3 for the excellent instructions and for doing the hard work of creating the code.
Posted by Elizabeth at 4:28 PM 0 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 10:44 AM 0 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:38 PM 0 comments
SYDNEY, Australia, Feb. 20, 2007 -- In an effort to reduce greenhouse gases, the Australian government announced today it will phase out energy-inefficient incandescent light bulbs in favor of compact fluorescents.
Australia is aiming to gradually phase out all old-style light bulbs and fully enforce new lighting standards legislation by 2009 or 2010. The step should reduce Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions by 4 million tons by 2012 and cut household lighting costs by up to 66 percent, said Environment and Water Resources Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
“The most effective and immediate way we can reduce greenhouse gas emissions is by using energy more efficiently,” Turnbull said. “Electric lighting is a vital part of our lives; globally it generates emissions equal to 70 percent of those from all the world’s passenger vehicles. But it is still very inefficient. We have been using incandescent light bulbs for 125 years and up to 90 percent of the energy each light bulb uses is wasted, mainly as heat.”
The heat loss of normal light bulbs represents millions of tons of CO2 emitted globally into the atmosphere, he said. Compact fluorescents use around 20 percent of the electricity of traditional bulbs to produce the same amount of light and also last between four and 10 times longer.
Posted by Elizabeth at 4:55 PM 3 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 4:22 PM 1 comments
Follow-up to my recent sign-up euphoria with Lala.com.
I just recieved this email:
Hello Elizabeth,
The member agreeing to send you State Of The Heart by Mary Chapin Carpenter has notified us that they cannot ship this CD. We have voided this trade and reset the status of this album on your Want List.
If for some reason this CD has been billed to you it will be credited on your next bill.
We apologize for the inconvenience.
Sincerely,
Support @ lala
Good news! The following CD on your Want List has been shipped to you!
Shooting Straight In The Dark by Mary Chapin Carpenter
Shipped on
02/20/2007
Posted by Elizabeth at 3:39 PM 0 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 12:41 PM 1 comments
This web site asks people how happy they are, and then shows the average happiness level broken down by country. The site automatically locates users' countries by IP address.
I remember seeing an article a few years ago (in the Economist?) which reported that the happiest countries in the world were Nigeria and Mexico, and the saddest was Romania.
Having taught jaded teenagers from about 60 countries, I have to say that sort of fits. In fact, my Romanian student and my Mexican student both agreed with the assessment.
I remember that the US and the UK were reported as being not so happy. And places of turmoil (like Nigeria) were.
It seems that affluence and happiness do not correlate.
read more digg story
Posted by Elizabeth at 6:58 PM 4 comments
Since I have chicks on the brain...
I'm roasting many things, and it all smells hugely comforting.
I'm making the "World's Best Roast Chicken," according to Kate Manchester, who wrote her recipe in a little yellow box in the first print issue of Edible Santa Fe alongside the article about Red Label Chicken .
I cannot find this recipe anywhere on their web site, so I can't link you to it, and I shouldn't post any particulars without permission. Rats!
Suffice it to say, it involves my cast iron skillet and it is working really, really well. Alas, I am not using a Red Label chicken, but I am using an organic, free range one from Trader Joe's.
And, alongside the bird is a huge tray of Jae's Maple Roasted Roots. (Yes, there is a recipe at this link!)
Happy, happy me.
Posted by Elizabeth at 5:07 PM 5 comments
Posted by Elizabeth at 1:03 PM 2 comments
I like it because it is fast, because I can put whatever I want on it, because baking an egg makes it perfect and beautiful, because I do not have to mess around with making pizza dough, and because there is almost no cleanup--the cast iron pan is basically clean at the end since it is protected by tortilla.
Here’s my recipe:
1 cast iron skillet (essential!)
2 rashers bacon
1 flour tortilla
1 tomato
1 green onion (scallion)
other vegetables (as available and desired)
1 egg
Sliced or shredded cheese of choice
Seasonings of choice
1. Preheat your oven to 500 degrees. (Yep, it’s HOT.)
2. Partially cook two rashers of bacon.
While the bacon starts to warm and sizzle, assemble the pizza. You really do need a cast iron skillet. This is essential because (a) you can shove it into a 500-degree oven with no worries and (b) it conducts the heat in such a way that you get a nice, crispy pizza crust.
3. Place a floured tortilla (frozen or thawed—I keep my tortillas in the freezer) into the cast iron frying pan. No oil needed. A burrito-sized tortilla fits perfectly into my 10-inch Lodge skillet. Do not use low-carb tortillas—for some reason, they do not crisp up like ordinary tortillas (?).
4. Slice a tomato and arrange slices on the tortilla. Leave an empty spot in the middle of the tortilla. You an add other vegetables also--I usually sprinkle sliced green onion, add some avocado if I have any, etc..
5. Crack an egg into the empty well in the middle. The tomatoes and other things that you’ve pout on the tortilla should keep the egg form oozing out.
6. Drape the two rashers of bacon around the egg.
7. Sprinkle all of it with sliced or shredded cheese. Season as you wish with red chile, black pepper, etc.
8. Stick it all in the oven and cook until the egg has baked (but the yolk is still runny!). This can take between 5 and 10 minutes, depending on how quickly you’ve made the pizza and how fast your oven preheats. I shove the pizza in even if the oven isn’t fully pre-heated and check it after five minutes.
9. The pizza should easily lift out of the skillet—the tortilla should be crisp, the cheese melted, the egg white firm.
Et voila!
Another recipe I tried for the first time this weekend comes from the just-arrived April 2007 issue of Cuisine At Home*: the chipotle bacon breakfast sandwich with tomato avocado salsa.
Posted by Elizabeth at 8:35 AM 2 comments
I'm in a housecleaning, de-cluttering mood, and I've just discovered lala.com.
They have over 1.8 million CD titles to choose from, and you can trade-in your old CDs for CDs you really want for only $1 each. (If you are desperate, you can also buy new CDs from their store.) Signing up is free.
I listed one pile of old CDs (see below), and within five minutes, I made my first trade!
Unfortunately, they do not have all the artists I am looking for in their database, and I need to figure out how to alert them to Jonathan Coulton's Thing a Week, as well as the existence of Jim Geezil.
This seems to me the kind of sustainable business that Steph recently blogged about.
Lala.com also reports that it has established the 'Z' Foundation, inspired by Charlie Chaplin's visionary creation of the Motion Picture Relief Fund and United Artists:
The "Z" Foundation is a non-profit that seeks to unite working musicians to address the economic challenges they face. Like Chaplin's endeavors to assist and empower entertainment industry workers nearly a century ago, the "Z" Foundation is a collaborative effort. The "Z" Foundation will initially be funded with monthly contributions of between $10,000 and $50,000 from lala.com and its members (actual amounts may vary based on CD trading volume on lala.com.) The "Z" Foundation will focus on providing health and dental care that is often inaccessible to working musicians.
In addition, For the first time, musicians will receive economic support directly from their fans. Each time a lala.com member trades a CD from a 1.8 million-title catalog with another member, 20% of the trading revenue will be contributed to performing artists. This new model for direct contributions is enabled by lala.com's social accounting technology.
Click here to get any of my CDs for $1
Posted by Elizabeth at 10:35 AM 3 comments
In producing natural soaps and spa products, female workers receive intensive workforce preparation and skills development including paid employment, work and life skills training, individualized career planning, high school equivalency preparation, technology training, financial planning and a variety of other support services.
I first bought their product in bulk from Overstock.com, but they now successfully manage their own store from their own web site. Each product includes the mission statement on its label and is signed by the woman who packages it; I have given these soaps as gifts (along with my own hand-knitted cotton chenille washcloths).
When I’m feeling thrifty, I buy good soap in bulk from Amazon.com, such as Olivella Face and Body Soap, All-Natural 100% Virgin Olive Oil from Italy, 5.29-Ounce Bars (Pack of 12). For liquid soap. I look for a vegetable castile soap and try to buy it in bulk, such as the excellent Dr. Bronner - Pure-Castile Soap Peppermint, 1 gallon, which I dilute for liquid hand soap and also use to make my own shampoo.
A longevitiy tip: if you dry out bar soap, it lasts longer. I unwrap my fancy bar soaps as soon as I buy them and put them in my clothing drawers. They make my clothes smell great, and when I need a new bar of soap, they ar sufficiently dry so that they last a good, long while.
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:42 AM 5 comments
Aack! How can it be that a whole week went by and I didn't blog at all??? (Bad blogger, bad, bad, bad!)
I really should be blogging about something useful: answering Stephanie's question about soap scum removal or writing an ode to grass-finished beef--but maybe that can wait until my chocolate high has worn off (?).
I am in a state.
Following HELL WEEK, this week offered another round of randomly weird events and discoveries:
Another not-so-smooth week. Cosmos out of kilter. Not too harmonious. Not enough knitting.
But then, today, a GLORIOUS Friday dawned. I escaped to Santa Fe to play with my friend Anne, and I am rejuvenated.
Mostly, we walked around Santa Fe looking at Pretty Things and eating very well.
I discovered Cinzano Rosso at Il Piatto (yum!) and then tasted an amazing variety of chocolate things (chocolate with ancho chile, chocolate with rosemary, chocolate with Calvados) as we made our way to a few of Santa Fe's remarkable chocolate shops: we visited both ChocolateSmith and Todos Santos, but we saved our holy pilgrimage to Kakawa Chocolate House for next time.
We also somehow found room for some scoops at an organic ice cream parlor serving ice cream with flavors like sage, saffron and garam masala. Sigh.
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:59 PM 1 comments
For those not attending Deb Stoller's Curiously Lonely anti-Valentine's Day party tomorrow, you might be thinking of giving (or getting) flowers.
Stephanie's post about flowers for Valentine's Day --and the related human rights and toxicity issues she mentions--reminds me of a flyer I found on our coffee table yesterday: Organic Bouquets in support of Amnesty International.
Organic Bouquet sells flowers that are grown and harvested using practices that aim to improve the quality of farm working conditions, minimize damage to ecosystems, conserve biodiversity, and enhance environmental quality for future generations.
Organic Bouquet has partnered with Amnesty International USA to educate consumers about the benefits of purchasing sustainably grown and certified organic flowers and to support Amnesty International’s efforts in protecting human rights. With each flower purchase, 10% will be donated to Amnesty International U.S.A.
They have also partnered with several other charities--Red Cross Roses, Jane Goodall Calla Lilies, etc.
Posted by Elizabeth at 3:38 PM 0 comments
Yep.
So what seems to happen a lot is that Steph finds interesting online tid-bits--and I get to blog about them. (Cool!)
Here's her latest discovery: Woolly breasts appeal goes globalWhy?
The knitted facsimiles are used to show new mothers how to breastfeed and how to express milk.
The knitting pattern for the breasts is allegedly being made available online for volunteers to download--but I have searched and searched, and all I find are references to the fact that the pattern is being made available online for volunteers to download and that the source of the pattern is the Lactation Consultants' Association.
But I find no pattern.
And I would charitably knit some of these beauties in a heartbeat and send them to Liverpool ASAP if I could get a pattern.Liverpool, are you out there? Could you please post your pattern?
Knitted breasts reminds me of a similar pattern I came across several years ago and have wanted to knit ever since just for the hell of it--or for novelty gifts for like-minded girlfiends. Check this out (and pause to appreciate the artfully hilarious pictures): knit your own womb.
The creator of the pattern, MK Carroll, has some follow-up on her blog here, including a two-needle version of the pattern and discussion of other knitted body parts.
My only slightly related project was a knitted thong with fur trim which I made for a fairly large man but which seems to fit yours truly (when worn on top of clothing)...
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:17 PM 10 comments
So I found someone who wanted my funky hats that are part of my charity knitting effort!
I was in the coffee shop with a crafting group I recently joined. (We drink coffee and knit/paint/embroider for an hour or so on Thursdays. Heaven!)
The coffee shop is a gathering place of local artists and activists who like good coffee and today's New York Times, and I ran into the director of the local Peace and Justice Center. When I told her that I was looking for an outlet for my charity knitting efforts, she said she needed door prizes for a benefit event happening this Saturday. Et voila!
Posted by Elizabeth at 8:38 PM 1 comments
Just got this invite in the email, and if I didn't live over a thousand miles from New York City, I'd be tempted to go.*
It's "A DIY Valentine's Day for One: Therapeutic Crafts for the Bruised, Blackened and Broken Hearts of New York City."
To read the fine print in the invitation above, click here.
*I should clarify that I do not have a bruised or broken heart (lest Mom worry about the State of My Marriage!), but I really like the emphasis here on sisterhood and crafting!
Posted by Elizabeth at 7:16 PM 3 comments
Please consider sending an email to the Department of Labor whdcomments@dol.gov), which is reviewing the Federal Medical Leave Act (details here: http://www.dol.gov/esa/whd/fmla/)
This law provides unpaid leave for parents of new children, for people with long-term illnesses, and for people caring for those with long-term illness. You may not need it now, but you certainly might at some point. And if you don't, no doubt someone in your family qualifies.
We have very few laws to protect workers compared to other developed countries (see http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16907584/) .
Email your comments (e.g., I support FMLA in the current form without any additional restrictions or I used FMLA after the birth of my child and do not support any modifications to it) to whdcomments@dol.gov and mention FMLA in the subject line. You have until 2/16, but why not do it now.
And you know how this works---it's the volume of emails that counts, not necessarily the eloquence, so just write something, anything. And please forward to people who might be interested. Thank you!
Posted by Elizabeth at 6:46 PM 1 comments
Home Comforts: The Art and Science of Keeping House
Secrets of the Spas: Pamper and Vitalize Yourself at Home (Life's Little Luxuries)
Joy of CookingWorms Eat My Garbage: How to Set Up and Maintain a Worm Composting System