Lucky Me, Unlucky Oceans


Two lucky things happened yesterday at Koohan Paik-Mander’s talk in Brunswick: she presented me with a copy of Pentagon, Climate Change, and War by Neta Crawford, inscribed by the author who she had just been on retreat with and 2) a seaweed harvester I’ve corresponded with, Larch Hanson, showed up. His timing was impeccable as I’m just preparing for a talk next month against a proposed rocket launch site on the Maine coast adjacent to Acadia National Park. 


Larch and his partner Nina Crocker had come quite a ways to hear Koohan and they were not disappointed.


I suppose it was three lucky things, actually, because Koohan’s talk was so good. I’d heard a version of it before when we worked together on a COP26 People’s Forum webinar about climate and militarism, but the in-person wisdom and additional information were  tremendously though- provoking.

Militarization of the oceans is no joke, is well underway, and creates wholesale slaughter of life forms — like the ocean mammals who seem in many ways wiser than humans. By killing off whales or coral reefs, the war machine may actually kill off life on the planet by interfering with the ocean’s basic functions e.g. its ability to sequester large amounts of carbon dioxide. 


And as we know, the heavens are now full of the satellites that are integral to modern weapons systems. Koohan described how every archipelago in the Pacific is infested with U.S. military installations, many brand new, and how the Pentagon is rapidly filling the oceans with sonar devices that will link up to satellites in order to threaten nuclear war on China. (Check out this radio interview  Koohan did with anti-nuclear activist Bob Anderson in New Mexico recently.)


A slide she shared mapped corporate entities’ plans to put satellites overhead for the next five years:


What could go wrong?


As to why meeting Larch was so lucky, he’s someone I’ve been needing and wanting to work with because he’s from the town being targeted for a rocket launch site. As was discussed in the Q&A at Koohan’s talk, launch sites all over the planet are part of the Pentagon’s plan for full spectrum dominance. From New Zealand to Kodiak, Alaska residents experience the noise, pollution, and habitat destruction of rocket launches that were never going to be for military purposes but then somehow always are used for military purposes.


Here’s an excerpt from the handout Larch shared with us about Steuben, Maine:

I look forward to generating more resistance to using the Maine coast for rocket launches. Bruce Gagnon and I will be speaking at the Common Ground Fair on Sunday September 24 at 9am and we’ve invited Larch to consider joining us as a co-presenter.


With islands around the northern hemisphere burning in the hottest summer yet, rocket launches from the rapidly warming waters off Maine are the next-to-last thing we need. 


WW3 with a nuclear-armed nation is the literal last thing we need and the furthest thing from lucky that I can imagine.


Koohan left us with some relevant lines from Alan Ginsburg’s epic poem “Howl“:

Moloch the vast stone of war! Moloch the stunned governments! 

Moloch whose mind is pure machinery! Moloch whose blood is running money! Moloch whose fingers are ten armies! Moloch whose breast is a cannibal dynamo! Moloch whose ear is a smoking tomb!

2 thoughts on “Lucky Me, Unlucky Oceans

  1. Perchlorate is a forever chemical that is a product of the manufacture and use of munitions, rocket fuel, air bag inflators, and fireworks. Perchlorate blocks transport of iodine to the thyroid, thus dashing all hope of establishing a self-regulated metabolism,
    a healthy immune system, and normal neural development in children and the unborn.
    In Maine, the limit for perchlorate in drinking water is 0.8 parts per Billion! The feds refuse to regulate it. They are the biggest polluters. The Colorado River system that irrigates the southwest is polluted with perchlorate from munitions manufacturing sites in Nevada and also from lagoons of spent rocket fuel that have leached into the river. This river irrigates the Imperial Valley where lettuce is grown, and since broad leaf vegetables take up perchlorate, the entire country is exposed to this forever chemical. My doctor tells me that 75% of the patients she sees have a thyroid imbalance. Iodine is also displaced from the body by chlorine, bromine, and fluorine…..in other words bleach, swimming pools, hot tub disinfectants, bromated dough conditioners in cheap factory bread, dental products containing fluorides, and also fluoridated municipal water systems.

    • Larch, thanks for elaborating on your comments about the proposed rocket launch site in Maine. Can you share what you know about the type of allegedly non-toxic rocket fuel that blueShift Aerospace claims it will use to launch its 80 foot rockets i.e. does it produce perchlorates?

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