In this issue, we travel to Arizona, where the West’s “wild” horse problem is as enigmatic as ever. We also delve into the bankruptcy of California energy company PG&E following catastrophic wildfires, and we examine questions of intellectual property questions around Indigenous recordings, which were often made and sold without permission. We check in on Utah bees and dive into a complicated conservation arrangement on undeveloped California land. In our essays and reviews, we look back at historic public lands policies; showcase photography from the gay rodeo circuit; and examine racism in language in California’s Dixie School District.

Wild horses on the lower Salt River below Saguaro Lake in Arizona’s Tonto National Forest. Credit: Jill Richards Photography

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Roadkill beats factory-farmed

If one wishes to eat animal flesh, then Ella Jacobson is correct that it’s far more ethical to eat animals that were accidentally killed on highways than ones cruelly killed in slaughterhouses (“Road-killed cuisine for the Anthropocene,” HCN, 2/4/19). Unlike cows, chickens and pigs, most animals killed on roads have lived a free life and died…

Free beer vs. carbon tax

One of the insights offered by recent Nobel economics laureate William Nordhaus was that the framing used to advance carbon fees/taxes is really the whole story (“What Killed Washington’s Carbon Tax?” HCN, 1/21/19). Instead of putting a carbon tax on the ballot, we might have better luck with “free beer,” “health care for all,” or perhaps…

Navajo generating station

You are missing one of the pieces to solve the puzzle (“Healing wounds from the war on coal,” HCN, 3/4/19). I have always admired the Navajo Coal Plant as a great opportunity to generate electricity and provide jobs on tribal land. Currently, I am working with another of the tribes to develop a wind-generating facility that…

Resisting what?

The essay by Raksha Vasudevan (“Mountain biking is my act of resistance,” HCN, 3/4/19) has disquieted me. This may be the intent of HCN’s editors, but I wonder what the takeaway is for most readers. For me, it is frustration with a mindset that claims victim status just for being different, and with a publication…