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Dear  <<First Name>>,


What a week! Let us hold each other close, and in the Light, as we, this country and beyond, do the hard and necessary work of facing our long dark shadows, that can be no longer denied. When we boldly face the systemic disease of power and greed in our own lives and communities, we take back the power to serve the greater good, and each other. We Shall Overcome Today...

Of immediate concern in Virginia is protecting ourselves from the blind gluttony for gold. Please act on options in the next article. 

Thanks to ARTivism for serenading us to bold and glorious Actions for the #GreenNewDeal

And thanks to Senator Kaine and Appalachian Voices for speaking out against the violence we have painfully witnessed this week.

Take the leap into ACTION - Many hands make light the Work! Thank you!

Heidi Dhivya Berthoud
Secretary Friends of Buckingham

Gold Mining in Buckingham 
We are all Buckingham
 
Learn about the threat of gold mining in Virginia. You can help stop this year’s assault on rural Buckingham, Commonwealth residents along the Virginia Gold-Pyrite Belt, and beyond.
  • Follow developments at FoB website and Face Book.
  • Comment at the Public Hearing on zoning changes of commercial prospecting, Monday, January 11, 6 pm. For how to make comments, and find information on the issues, see this post.
  • Register for this WebinarTuesday, January 12, 6 – 7 pm. Learn more about what you can do to take action and help stop the threat of gold mining in Virginia. 
  • Interactive map of gold drilling areas and communities impacted. Thanks to Ben Cunningham of Allegheny Blue Ridge Alliance (ABRA).
  • Watch a longer video from Earthworks, "The Dirty Truth about Modern Cyanide Gold Mining".

Thoughts on January 6th, 2021
Email from Senator Tim Kaine
 

So many of you have reached out — while the Capitol attack was going on and in the days since — to ask how I am and express your deep concern over what you saw happening. Rather than respond briefly to each, I thought I would write up my thoughts to share with you all.

January 6th re-proved a very old lesson about human nature: character is destiny. America trusted its most important post to a moral defective. Some thought he would grow into the job, or moderate his behavior under the weight of responsibility. That is just not how life works. In all but a very few cases, an adult will behave as she or he has behaved throughout life. In this sense, the set of outrages of the last few years — culminating in a 2020 marked by mismanaging a pandemic thus occasioning unnecessary death and then the violence and racism at the Capitol — is a completely logical ending to a very sad chapter in American life.

A second human nature lesson is this — the presence of evil is constant, but the success of evil depends upon a key variable: the degree to which people choose to be bystanders. We over-analyze why the President has such a devoted base of supporters. I am more focused on this fact: An awful lot of smart, educated people chose to be bystanders in the last years and that allowed a pathetic and insecure leader to do things that most of us thought unimaginable in this great nation.

The bystanderism started with the tens of millions of Americans who just sat things out in 2016, not able to see the danger that was so clearly before us. And it has sadly continued everywhere, most visibly in Congress. I have lost count of the number of my Senate colleagues who, though privately worried, went along with the unacceptable because they wanted a tax cut, or a judge they liked, an invitation to golf or to avoid a primary challenge. And now some finally awake to the wisdom of the Gospel lesson: "what doth it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?"

And then there are lessons about our nation, humbling lessons. We like to pat ourselves on the back and embrace the notions of "American exceptionalism" or America as "the indispensable nation." Any truth to these notions resides in what we do rather than who we are. We cannot just claim honors for ourselves without doing the work to justify them. When we are true to our values, we approach becoming exceptional and indispensable. But when we are not, self-congratulation is unjustified and hollow, even ridiculous.

I remember saying, in the weeks after the November 2016 election, that the next years would be a stress-test of American democracy. And that has been the case every day. Virtually all basic values and our institutions have come under attack from within. Have we passed the test? It might be too early to say for sure. But our democracy has survived the test.

My overwhelming emotion on January 6 was anger — that our Capitol was attacked and people died needlessly. But as I walked to work the next morning, there was a beautiful sunrise. I thought about the massive engagement of everyday citizens after 2016 in elections and activism. I thought about the historic turnout in the November 2020 election and then again earlier this week in Georgia. And I grew hopeful that we are rejecting the disease of bystanderism to begin a new chapter on January 20th.

That chapter is not written and its outcome is not a function of words or institutions. It is dependent on us. But the sweep of our history shows that painful periods are often followed by times of great progress. I am an optimist about our next chapter.
-Tim 

Senator Kaine, we salute your integrity, your long time public service, and wish you fortitude in standing strong to root out and face the systemic corruption of our world with truth and reconciliation. 

Which Side Are You On? Thank you!!
ARTivism YouTube

Protecting our democracy in the face of violence means holding elected officials accountable
 
Every American and believer in democracy should be repulsed by the violent and seditious acts that occurred in the nation’s capital this week as the people’s elected representatives worked to finalize the lawful outcome of the presidential election.

President Trump’s inciting rhetoric and the inexcusable actions of those who stormed the Capitol failed to derail the certification of the election. But violence was committed against our democracy due to lies and misinformation sowed for years by the president and his enablers in Congress, many of whom continue to refuse to accept the will of the majority of Americans. And the incident resulted in the loss of five lives.

The people who perpetrated and cheered on this riot, including many who openly displayed racist symbols, were not just fringe actors; they included current and former state representatives. Elected officials, including several members of Congress who represent our region, fueled or tacitly supported the mob by repeatedly undermining the legitimacy of the election.

Read more at the Front Porch Blog. We thank Appalachian Voices for their enduring, courageous and righteous work. It is thanks to our broad coalition that we are all able to muster the strength to stand up to what's wrong and reclaim the world we want. Our strength lies in recognizing and embracing the Planetary Village that we are. 
 
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