2/22/26

May: white privilege will save Native kids from their cultures

George Washington was a warlord because enslaved people afforded him cannon, muskets, powder and ball. And, if they were alive today he and President Jefferson would be horrified to learn the US is operating on a manual written in the Eighteenth Century. But, blurring one line between church and state America's founders extolled the virtue of education as local schools were run both by christian sects and by local municipalities under the Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution. 

But it was not until 1867 and Reconstruction made public education a federal prerogative when President Andrew Johnson created a Department of Education as a proxy for race politics. Missionaries were hired then dispatched to the Deep South to provide schooling for whites and Negroes alike and Roman Catholics were enabled in the American West to assimilate Indigenous youth. Congress was incensed then demoted the Education Department after a year making it part of the Interior Department yet abuses continued. 

The concept of a charter school began in 1971 as a progressive movement but especially in red states has since been hijacked by the far white wing of the Republican Party to advance the New Apostolic Reformation. Dominion theology supposes christians must control the seven “mountains” of government, education, media, arts and entertainment, religion, family, and business in order to establish a global christianic theocracy and prepare the world for Jesus’ return. Many catholic schools are in the Hillsdale bubble because the curriculum ignores the church’s role in the Native American Genocide.

Today, Abraham Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt would be putting American Indigenous in concentration camps arguing it’s for their own protection, the United States has become the Hamiltonian Empire Thomas Jefferson warned us about and resistance is futile. 

Liz May is a white christianic Earth hater who clearly ignores historical trauma and institutional racism but represents District 27 in South Dakota's demented legislature anyway. She blames the victims of Manifest Destiny for being part of the Fourth World.

We Protected the System. The Children Are Still Waiting. By Rep. Liz May, District 27 

SB 218 was not about policy theory. It was about children like the ones a teacher recently described to me — children most of us will never see inside our comfortable circles. “Almost every home is broken,” she said. “Nearly all have at least one addict parent. Some came to us suicidal.” 

These are kids who walk into classrooms carrying trauma most adults would struggle to survive. They are not worried about test scores. They are worried about whether there will be food at home, whether a parent will be sober, whether they are safe. 

I don’t read about this in reports. I live it. In many rural communities and on or near our reservations, geography alone limits opportunity. There are no specialized campuses down the road. No statewide autism centers within driving distance. No dyslexia intervention programs readily available. Families raising children with autism, dyslexia, or other learning disorders often face hours of travel for services — if services exist at all. In some areas, there is simply nothing beyond the traditional model. When your child needs specialized support and your zip code determines whether that help exists, “choice” is not theoretical — it is nonexistent. 

I grow weary of hearing that the problem is simply parenting. Yes, family instability is real. Addiction is real. Trauma is real. Poverty is real. But if we stop there, we are not diagnosing the problem — we are excusing ourselves from trying to break the cycle. Children do not choose the homes they are born into. They do not choose addiction. They do not choose instability. If anything, those realities make the role of education more urgent, not less. 

If generational cycles are the challenge, then education must be part of the solution. Otherwise, we are simply describing a cycle we have no intention of breaking. Every single session, we admit the system is not reaching every student. We file bills to carve out behavioral health exceptions. We create pilot programs for one county. We authorize limited alternative placements. We stand on the floor and acknowledge — again — that something is not working. But instead of confronting the structure itself, we patch around the edges. We build carve-outs because we are unwilling to question the foundation. If the model were truly working for all children, we would not need a steady stream of exceptions to keep it standing. 

This was not the first attempt at reform. Over several legislative sessions, proposals for expanding educational flexibility have been introduced. Each time, the response has followed the same pattern: narrow carve-outs are acceptable, but structural change is not. When reform begins to alter governance or funding authority, the establishment pushes back. Not because the need disappears — but because the structure is threatened. 

SB 218 would not have dismantled public education. It would have created structural flexibility. It would have allowed communities to design schools that fit their students — not force students to fit a single governance model. It would have made many of those yearly carve-outs unnecessary. 

The South Dakota Education Association, aligned with the national NEA, advocates for a district-centered system. Its affiliated political action committee, EPIC, supports candidates who share that priority. That is legal. That is transparent. And it is effective. When elections consistently reinforce protection of the existing structure, reform becomes harder — even when reform is aimed at the children who are struggling most. 

That is not conspiracy. It is politics. 

But politics does not sit in a classroom with a child who is suicidal. Politics does not walk into a home where addiction has hollowed out stability. Politics does not look into the eyes of a teacher who says, “Almost every home is broken.” 

That teacher was not asking to protect a governance model. She was asking for flexibility to save kids. 

Since SB 218 failed, I have not been able to shake it. We are a legislative body of 105 elected representatives and senators — one hundred and five adults entrusted with shaping the future of this state. And yet, year after year, we struggle to find either the courage or the consensus to create meaningful change for the children who need it most. 

Last night I went to bed thinking about our failure. I woke up this morning thinking about how much time we spend debating bills that will barely move the needle — while the hard conversations about structural change are delayed, diluted, or dismissed. We argue over technicalities. We protect turf. We preserve comfort. And in doing so, we avoid the deeper question: why can’t we figure out how to help the underserved children we all acknowledge are struggling? 

I do not feel better today about the state of education than I did before this vote. If anything, I feel a heavier responsibility. Because if we — as 105 elected officials — cannot summon the will to address structural limitations in a system we openly admit is not reaching every child, then what message are we sending to the families who are waiting for something different? Institutions naturally defend themselves. That is human nature. But legislatures are not elected to protect institutions — they are elected to protect children. Especially the ones with the least voice. Especially the ones who cannot move districts or write tuition checks. 

We just set aside hundreds of millions of dollars for a new prison. We call it planning for the future. But if we continue protecting a system that we admit — year after year — requires carve-outs to compensate for its limitations, then we are planning for failure long before we are planning for safety. 

SB 218 did not threaten children. It threatened control. 

When forced to choose between preserving a governance model and opening doors for underserved communities, we chose preservation. 

The system survived. 

But somewhere tonight, a child who needed a different door to open is still walking into the same one — carrying the same weight— because we chose to protect structure over courage. 

We protected the system. 

The children are still waiting.

2/21/26

Pollution center stage at Smithfield site

In South Dakota the Big Sioux River is a toxic shit hole and is considered one of the most polluted waterways in the US frequently ranked in the top 10 to 15 for toxic releases. Roughly 75-80% of the river is classified as impaired, with excessive E. coli bacteria and sediment from agricultural runoff, along with urban waste and worse. 

Smithfield Foods has historically been the leading industrial polluter of the Big Sioux River though it was recently overtaken as the state's top toxic releaser by Wharf Resources' strip mine in the Black Hills. Smithfield gets a wrist-slap from South Dakota's Republican-owned Department of Aggravation and Natural Ruination nearly every year for discharging toxic pollution into the Big Sioux River but it is usually a measly sum.

Pollutants include but are not limited to: 1. Refrigeration Chemicals (Very Common, High Risk) 2. Cleaning & Sanitation Chemicals (Long-Term Soil Impact) 3. Fuel Storage & Petroleum Products (Very Common Superfund Trigger) 4. Rendering & Waste Disposal Residues 5. Heavy Metals (Building & Equipment Related) 6. Asbestos (Extremely Likely in 100-Year-Old Facility) 7. PCBs (Mid-Century Electrical Equipment) 8. Nitrites & Nitrates (From Curing Operations) 9. Smokehouses & Combustion Residues 10. Pesticides & Rodenticides 

A site becomes a Superfund site when: contamination is significant, there is groundwater impact, there is off-site migration and responsible parties cannot fund cleanup. A slaughterhouse alone doesn’t automatically equal Superfund, but: the biggest Superfund triggers in this type of facility would be leaking underground fuel tanks, PCB contamination, large-scale petroleum contamination, significant groundwater nitrate pollution, industrial ammonia system leaks and buried waste lagoons.

Current Environmental Status & Remediation Plans
  • Nitrate & Ammonia Legacy: Historically, the plant was the state’s largest toxic chemical emitter, primarily due to nitrates released into the Big Sioux River. While a $45 million wastewater upgrade in 2023 reduced these emissions by 77%, the legacy of over 5 million pounds of waste annually (recorded as recently as 2021) suggests significant soil and riverbed impact to be addressed.
  • The "Sanford District" Transformation: City officials plan to turn the remediated site into a "whole other downtown" extension called the Sanford District.
  • Timeline: Redevelopment is not expected to begin in earnest until at least 2030, after the new plant is operational and the old one is demolished.  
    While not currently a Superfund site, its 100+ year history aligns with the triggers you noted:
    • Structural Hazards: Given its 1909 origin, asbestos and lead-based paint are highly probable in the demolition phase.
    • Chemical Spikes: The facility has faced past fines for massive ammonia violations (over 20 times the daily limit), indicating the high risk of the refrigeration systems you mentioned.
    • Groundwater & Soil: The sheer volume of wastewater (3 million gallons per day) and the concentration of nitrate compounds pose a risk of long-term soil contamination that the $50 million cleanup fund is intended to resolve.

2/20/26

The Black Hills National Forest is broken

Dave Mertz is a retired natural resource officer for the Black Hills National Forest who attended a 2024 roundtable discussion in Spearditch hosted by South Dakota's Earth hating US Representative Dusty Johnson when Johnson sicced two fellow Republican congress members on Regional Forester Frank Beum and BHNF Supervisor Shawn Cochran. Mertz' comment below appears at a Colorado Springs forest policy blog.

Regarding [mountain pine beetle] treatments, if you get ahead of the beetles and thin to 40 BA (basal area), I believe it was affective here in the Black Hills. In some areas, very effective. Once the beetles are already in an area, it is a lot tougher to deal with them. It doesn’t work to go chasing after beetles. We also did a lot of “cut and chunk” where infested trees are cut into 2-foot lengths soon after infestation and left to dry. This is obviously very labor intensive and costly. There was some minor success with this, but I don’t think it was worth the effort or money. 

Regarding the benefits of thinning, there are pluses and minuses, but I think the pluses win the day. It is true that thinning, particularly heavy thinning, can increase the 20-foot windspeeds (this is why it works on MPB and disrupts their pheromones) and the reduction of shade increases the ground level temperatures. Trees also suck up a lot of water so if there are fewer of them, soil moistures should be higher. Regarding thinning and wildfires, it should reduce the likelihood of crown fire, but a big factor is what is left on the forest floor? Is it covered with activity fuels? Did the opening of the canopy facilitate a flush of growth (seedlings/saplings, grass, shrubs)? Was the stand rx burned after thinning? So, in my opinion, the answer is complex. Generally, I believe that thinning down to 60 BA or so, combined with rx burning is a good thing.

I agree that with high winds, low RH, high temps, and low fuel moistures, no fuel treatments will be effective. 

I did want to respond to your post on “Different Forests”. I agree that the Black Hills NF is probably different from a lot of the other Forests, but the truth is, I don’t really know if there are other Forests in the situation of having to cut more than what their best available science tells them is sustainable. The Chief and others have said that many (if not most) Forests are not cutting to their [allowable sale quantity], in some cases nowhere near their ASQ level. I don’t really know if that is a good metric to use. For instance, here on the Black Hills, our ASQ was developed in 1997 and the Forest was overstocked at that point. The Forest that exists today is not even remotely similar to the Forest that existed back then. I am going to guess that there are a lot of Forests out there with ASQ’s that are not viable with the conditions today. If your Forest has had large fires and/or bug kill, was the ASQ ever updated?

I can look up what Forests are selling in the cut and sold report and see who the big producers are, but how do I know if the levels they are selling are sustainable? ASQ is not always a good metric. The Chief wants an increase of 25% to the volume sold by FY 28. How did they come up with that number? Was there any analysis or was it as we used to say, a rectal extraction? [Dave Mertz]

2/19/26

Nothing is impossible

New Hampshire - Democratic Presidential Polling Among 18-34 Year Olds: AOC: 42% Buttigieg: 24% Harris: 9% Newsom: 6% Kelly: 5% Sanders: 5% Pritzker: 3% Beshear: 2% UNH / Feb 16, 2026

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— Polling USA (@usapolling.bsky.social) February 19, 2026 at 6:24 PM

2/15/26

Trump Organization ending environment protection because eugenics

In a new @newsweek.com, leaders from the @sierraclub.org, @nrdc.org, Environmental Defense Fund, and @earthjustice.org warn that the Trump administration’s latest Environmental Protection Agency pollution policy puts corporate profits ahead of public health.

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— Sierra Club (@sierraclub.org) February 15, 2026 at 8:30 AM

In past years the Trump Organization used the federal courts to punish tribal nations who built casinos Trump said were competition but in 2020 the White House deployed COVID-19 as a biological weapon in Indian Country. 

Star Trek canon describes how the Eugenics Wars cause WW3 so an episode of ST: Deep Space 9 written in 1994 and broadcast in 1995 but set in 2024 is unfolding today in Minneapolis, Chicago and in other blue cities. That war against people of color was resurrected in ST: Picard. 

Michigan ophthalmologist, John Tanton held white nationalist beliefs and wrote that to maintain American culture, “a European-American majority” is required. Today the extreme white wing of the Republican Party is driving the abolition of women’s rights because they’re wedded to the Great Replacement hypothesis.

Emails recently unearthed from the 
Jeffrey Epstein files have sparked intense controversy by linking his views on climate change to a radical solution for overpopulation.
Epstein’s Views: Climate Change as "Culling"
New documents reveal that Epstein viewed environmental destruction as a potential remedy for a growing global population.
  • "Earth's Forest Fire": In a 2016 email exchange with AI researcher Joscha Bach, Epstein referred to climate change as the "earth's forest fire" and suggested it could be a "good thing for the species" by eliminating the "elderly and infirm".
  • Eugenics Connections: These emails have been characterized by critics and scientists, such as climatologist Michael Mann, as part of a disturbing "eugenicist" ideology where mass death under climate stress is seen as "existential optimization".
Trump Administration Actions (Feb 2026)
Simultaneously, President Donald Trump has significantly shifted U.S. climate policy, which critics connect to the broader "Epstein class" of indifferent elites.
  • Revoking the Endangerment Finding: In February 2026, the Trump administration and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin revoked the 2009 "endangerment finding," which legally established greenhouse gases as a threat to public health.
  • "Scam" Rhetoric: Trump has labeled climate change a "giant scam" and a "con job," arguing that federal regulations based on it were "overreach" without a basis in fact.
  • Focus on Fossil Fuels: The administration maintains that fossil fuels have lifted billions out of poverty and that environmental regulations are "hidden taxes" on American families.
The Intersection of Overpopulation and Climate
The debate over overpopulation is increasingly viewed as a "third rail" issue:
  • Wealth as an Insulator: Critics argue that ultra-wealthy individuals may welcome climate impacts because their wealth insulates them from the consequences while the poor suffer most.
  • Shifting Blame: Some experts suggest that blaming "overpopulation" for climate change is a tactic to shift responsibility away from high-consumption nations and fossil fuel companies toward the global poor.

2/14/26

Gaia continues her rage against Republican counties

This isn't national forest being blocked from fuel treatments by radical environmentalists; it's Republican ranch land decimated by a century of poor management practices and if livestock grazing is the key to preventing wildfires why is ranch country still suffering from near daily high even extreme grassland fire danger indices? Because Republicans are evil. Just a hundred and fifty years ago bison, wapiti, bighorn sheep, pronghorns and deer cleared the grasses driving western South Dakota's fire years. If grasses remained in the fall tribes burned the rest.

Unseasonably warm weather will combine with very dry air (RH as low as 15 percent) and gusty westerly winds (gusts 25 to 35 mph) to create critial fire weather conditions for Sunday afternoon for portions of northeastern Wyoming through south-central South Dakota.

2/13/26

NM Earth haters fail to field a US Senate candidate

My home state of South Dakota will suffer brain drain for years to come and New Mexico has its own set of challenges but living where the Republican Party is virtually meaningless and Democrats rule is well worth it.

2/12/26

'When Power Silences Truth:' Jancita Eagle Deer's voice still matters

Editor's note: confusion still exists whether it's spelled "Jancita" or "Jacinta."

When Power Silences Truth
Jacinta Eagle Deer’s story is often misunderstood. It is not simply about personal harm it is about how authority, systems, and silence can outweigh truth.
In the late 1960s, Jacinta was only fifteen years old when she reported being assaulted by Bill Janklow, a lawyer working on the Rosebud Indian Reservation. She spoke to adults she trusted. Medical staff documented her condition. Her account was recorded. Yet no charges were filed.
What failed her was not a lack of evidence but a maze of jurisdictional rules that left Native women without protection, especially when the accused was a non-Native official. Her voice was caught between federal authority and tribal limitations, where responsibility was passed and accountability disappeared.
Years later, Jacinta chose to act where the courts had not.
With the support of the American Indian Movement and tribal legal advocates, she brought her case before the Rosebud Sioux Tribal Court. In 1974, the court took a rare and powerful step, removing Janklow’s right to practice law on the reservation. It was a defining moment an assertion of tribal authority in defense of a Native woman.
That victory was brief.
In April of 1975, Jacinta was found dead along a rural Nebraska road under circumstances that raised unanswered questions. Her death was never resolved.
Her stepmother, Delphine Eagle Deer, refused to be silent. She spoke openly, demanded accountability, and continued to press for recognition of what had happened. One year later, Delphine was also found dead, her case likewise left without answers.
While two Lakota women were lost, the man Jacinta accused continued his rise eventually becoming Attorney General, Governor of South Dakota, and a member of Congress.
Today, his legacy is marked in public memorials. Jacinta and Delphine’s names are not.
Yet their story endures not through statues, but through memory, advocacy, and the refusal to forget. Their lives expose a system where credibility often follows power, and where Native women have too often been denied justice.
Jacinta Eagle Deer and Delphine Eagle Deer are remembered not only for what happened to them but for the courage it took to speak when silence was safer.
Their voices remain part of a larger call: to listen, to protect, and to believe Native women.