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Blog Break
Many of you have noticed that I have not been blogging with my usual intensity and enthusiasm for the last couple of months. It has been because my beloved husband, Paul Imse, had been diagnosed with late stage cancer and so I have been focused on his struggle. Yesterday he passed on to a new and better life, according to our beliefs.
Paul was always a great supporter of my blogging, even though it seems silly and a waste of time to so many other people. I couldn’t have asked for a better or more supportive husband.
So I will be taking a blog bereavement break from now until May 27th. I will continue to post other’s posts and approve comments. If you have ever wanted to start a topic on this blog, or have something you’ve always wanted to say, this might be a good opportunity.
Just sent it to me at terraveritas@gmail.com.
See you in a few!
Sharon
Benedict’s Corner
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Recent Posts
- 2014 USFS Budget: A Decrease of $116 Million for Hazardous Fuels?
- Tongass Futures Roundtable Collaborative Group Shutting Down
- Judge: USFS Must Consult with US FWS to Protect 10 Million Acres of Lynx Critical Habitat
- True Nature: Revising Ideas On What is Pristine and Wild
- Dialogue in an Era of Divisiveness: ACR 2013 Conference
- Wisconsin wildfire started by logging operations destroys 17 homes
- Kissing the Past Gently Good-bye
- Buffalo Nightmare: 3 Days of Taxpayer-Funded Yellowstone Helicopter Hazing
- How Feminism Wrecked the US Forest Service
- US boom transforming global oil trade
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- Judge: USFS Must Consult with US FWS to Protect 10 Million Acres of Lynx Critical Habitat
- True Nature: Revising Ideas On What is Pristine and Wild
- Kissing the Past Gently Good-bye
- Rethinking the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum in Forest Service Plans
- Buffalo Nightmare: 3 Days of Taxpayer-Funded Yellowstone Helicopter Hazing
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Science Policy Quote of the Month
"In the real world, many risks we face present neither the great certainties we would need to use cost-benefit analysis effectively nor the almost complete uncertainties that would justify radical precautionary approaches. Moreover, neither the precautionary principle nor cost-benefit analysis tell us anything about the role of democracy in making policy decisions.
I am currently working to develop new approaches rooted in deliberative democracy which might move beyond both strict cost-benefit and knee-jerk precaution toward processes that could achieve better public participation and greater political legitimacy on the major environmental threats to our future."
Jonathan Gilligan, Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences on his website here.
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