In this issue, our feature story dives into a border community’s resistance to arriving militia members. We travel to California, where: immigrants and refugees are modeling small, abundant agriculture; a radio station provides needed outreach to this community; and farmers make the case for capturing greenhouse gases. Other stories look at courts slowing the Trump administration’s “energy dominance” agenda, the energy industry lobbying to boost uranium, and the BLM offering the fire-starting Hammonds new permits to, yes, reduce fire risk. We review a new book that contemplates nature in isolation. And a writer questions the Mormon church’s recent reversal of an anti-queer policy, saying it’s not nearly enough.

“No Militia” signs stand outside the humanitarian aid office in the middle of the one-block downtown of Arivaca, Arizona. Credit: Andrew Cullen for High Country News

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America’s nuclear past

This is a beautifully written story that notes the whitewashing of our nation’s nuclear past (and present). It’s tempting to think of it as a “New Mexican” story, but it’s actually an American story that took place here because of New Mexico’s relative remoteness in the 1940s.  Ray Gulick Bernalillo, New Mexico This article appeared…

Fish rights

We don’t have any pupfish here, but we have an assortment of hoodlums who practice their gun shooting while both drunk and sober, on every road sign they find (“Scene of the Crime,” HCN, 4/15/19). They also shoot every living thing in sight, including bald eagles and deer out of season. They can’t read “no…

Fly elsewhere, Growlers

The Navy plans to expand its electronic warfare training for EA-18G “Growler” jets, some of the loudest aircraft in the world, over Olympic National Park (“A crusade for quiet” HCN, 5/13/19). Plans are already in the works to add another 36 jets to its existing fleet of 82 on Whidbey Island, a 44% increase. More…

Meandering road trip

I’m not quite sure of the purpose of “The Atomic Road Trip” (HCN, 5/13/19), which was not quite a travelogue, nor a thoughtful examination of New Mexico or its people and nuclear past. The story meanders and never comes to a point, which is ironic because that’s something you can do in New Mexico —…

Sanctuary plans

I was pleased to see Gustavo Arellano’s article about the plans of the Catholic Church to build a “multimillion-dollar retreat center” next to the Santuario de Chimayó in the community of El Potrero (“Whose Santuario?” HCN, 5/13/19). However, the article fails to mention the process that led to the church putting its plans on hold. From…