Posted inDecember 1, 2021: Visions of Wildness

The Public Health Officer Emergency

As a nursing home administrator in Washington state, licensed since 1979 and concerned about the condition of and the political fronts that public health has weathered and is now facing, I read Jane C. Hu’s article with interest (“The Public Health Officer Emergency,” October 2021). The political infusion of right-wing folks who are abandoning science […]

Posted inDecember 1, 2021: Visions of Wildness

Totally off base

I understand and applaud HCN’s effort to give Indigenous peoples a strong platform to express their views. You have had many fantastic interviews with Indigenous scientists that I have thoroughly enjoyed reading. However, the rant by Nick Martin regarding the White Sands footprint discovery was totally off-base. Oral history, while possibly suggestive of actual past […]

Posted inDecember 1, 2021: Visions of Wildness

White Sands discovery

This is an eye-opening article (“The White Sands discovery only confirms what Indigenous people have said all along,” November 2021). Our country’s original founders are in much need of recognition, support and help in any way possible. Wayne BlumbergFort Collins, Colorado This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline White Sands discovery.

Posted inNovember 1, 2021: The Radioactive Waste Next Door

The Public Health Officer Emergency

Your impressively thorough article, “The Public Health Officer Emergency” (October 2021), was distressing. The defiant attitudes and mean-spirited tactics of the vociferous opponents of professional medical guidance concerning the COVID-19 epidemic are chilling. They apparently do not care about protection of their fellow citizens, their own personal vulnerability or the tragic impacts on overwhelmed medical […]

Posted inNovember 1, 2021: The Radioactive Waste Next Door

The time of the Indigenous critic has arrived

I enjoyed reading Jason Asenap’s essay regarding the present state of Native filmmaking and production (“The time of the Indigenous critic has arrived,” October 2021). He landed on some critical points, especially concerning the Indigenous filmmakers and artists working in a predominantly and historically white-run business. Those lines are now being blurred. Just as Asenap has written, learning to live […]

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