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[Marxism] Red River
THOUGHTS AND COMMENTS [HUNTER BEAR] MARCH 27 2009
Amidst the array of profoundly disturbing global news -- including the not
unexpected deepening U.S. involvement in Afghanistan -- is, of course, the
Weather and its ramifications. In the past few days, no one, at least in this
country, can escape the countless reports of catastrophic flooding in the Red
River country of North Dakota and Minnesota.
The prognosis for Fargo and its Minnesota sister city of Moorhead is extremely
grim -- with hopes now that overflow might be at least partially contained
vis-a-vis local neighborhoods. Both cities have begun evacuations which will
undoubtedly increase today and tomorrow -- as the Red begins its ultimate crest
in that setting. This is set in the crisis context of flooding and probable
flooding not only via the Red itself, but in much of North Dakota generally,
and in western Minnesota.
We lived in proximity to the Red River for sixteen years -- at the down river
town of Grand Forks. [One goes "up" the map from Fargo to the Forks, but the
Red flows north and down into Lake Winnipeg.] The entire region is a land of
extreme temperatures -- 90 degrees and higher in the summers; often 30 or 40
below in the winters -- with wind-chills sometimes dropping to 90 below zero.
Snows and ice-storms can be very heavy. And things generally are wildly
unpredictable.
We -- Eldri and I -- have four children: Maria, John, Peter, Josie. And there
are, so far, eight grandchildren [with a ninth on the way via Josie and Cameron
who live near us here in Idaho.] Although only one now, John, lives with his
kids in the Red country [and a good ways from the river, fortunately], you can
bet all of us in our family, wherever we are presently located, are watching
the current situation -- surrounded and invaded by our vivid memories of the
catastrophic flood of 1997.
The Red River Valley is, in a word, an archaic swamp. And it's as flat as the
Mississippi Delta or one's table-top. Historically, until the Europeans came,
there were no known permanent settlements there. [Well to the east in Minnesota
are the timbered forests and lakes; to the west, the land becomes broken,
eventually shifting to the vast North Dakota Badlands.]
But towns like Fargo and Grand Forks should never have been built in that
setting. In the 1840s, fur entrepreneur, Alexander Ross of the Hudson's Bay
Company, noted in his diary that the then flooding Red River had produced a
lake 40 miles wide.
[I cannot resist adding this: Ross, of course, was a sworn antagonist of our
direct ancestor, John Gray [Ignace Hatchiorauquasha] who in 1824, with the
other Iroquois and some Abenaki fur hunters, forced Ross to cut the price of
company trade goods in half and re-do his books to reflect the change. That was
out here in our Columbia and Snake river country. Ross referred to John Gray as
a "turbulent blackguard" and a "damned rascal." The next year, Gray and his
band successfully took on Peter Skene Ogden, another HBC antagonist, on pricing
issues just south of here in the Bear Lake setting.
http://www.hunterbear.org/GRAY%20LANDS%20AND%20GRAY%20GHOSTS.htm ]
We often recall the late summer period in Grand Forks where, in the evenings,
the mosquitoes were so thick on our windows we could scarcely see out.
And we well recall, too, that -- even a few days before the '97 flood hit and
subsequently wrecked the Grand Forks area [there were also, in conjunction,
serious fires], many people remained convinced that it could never happen. For
whatever reason or reasons, I had never trusted the Red River and, a few years
before, relocated our family far to the west of town. We also spent the month
immediately preceding the horrific flood stockpiling food and water. The flood
stopped 300 yards short of us. We shared food and water with others, served as
one of several command posts, helped as best we could.
Following all of that, Grand Forks and neighboring East Grand Forks [across the
river] erected huge dikes -- which are a bit more than sixty feet high.
Essentially, they are modeled after those at Winnipeg [and that's good] but
built by builders and contractors from this country [which makes one
thoughtful.]
They were costly and Fargo now blames Grand Forks for using up all of the
available Federal monies in that genre -- leaving Fargo et al. to their own
devices and luck.
As the Red proceeds toward Grand Forks, other towns, and ultimately the
Winnipeg area, it will swell much, much larger. Expected to crest at Fargo
around 43-44 feet, it will be, at the minimum, about ten feet above that when
it hits the Forks.
But it could be higher. And the dikes, whatever the quality of their
construction, have been subjected to more than a decade of extreme temperatures
and some heavy river pressures.
And the river pressures are now going to be tremendous. I understand that many
people -- maybe most -- in the Grand Forks setting remain pretty sanguine about
"things holding." Rightly or wrongly, they trust the dikes.
Well, we can hope. And hope hard. But if we were still there, we'd have started
stockpiling food and water weeks ago.
When the realization about this crisis struck the people in Fargo something
more than a fortnight ago, people rallied -- people from far and away -- and
they've been working like hell right to this present moment. That tremendous
outpouring of human solidarity has been noted around the world -- and quite
rightly so.
This is not unusual in any rural/small town/ small city setting -- when
Disaster is involved. It occurred very commendably at Grand Forks a few days
before that horrific flood of twelve years ago -- but too late.
And it has to be noted that, in the weeks following these disasters, there is
inevitably some significant social disorganization -- characterized, among
other things, by personal depression, crime, violence, departures, even
suicide. [We ourselves left Grand Forks in July 1997 for a very high hill here
in Eastern Idaho.]
And in all of these situations, then and now, there are many, many indeed who
never take out the relatively inexpensive flood insurance. [Floods, as a rule,
are not covered by conventional homeowners' policies.] Son John reported
earlier this morning that, despite several weeks of a veritable flood of
advertisements, commercial and not-for-profit, pleading for folks to get that
insurance in timely fashion -- it has to be gotten at least 30 days in advance
-- a very, very large number have not.
They're demanding a kind of Federal bailout -- a waiver of the 30 day time
limit. It doesn't look, at least at this point, that they'll get it. [FEMA
could possibly be of some help later on in covering some property damage
losses.]
But when one cuts to the bone, and you and your family and your community face
life and its challenges -- big and small -- you do have to be prepared and
willing to "kill your own snakes."
As I've said, we were there in that country of wild weather, natural disasters,
mostly friendly people, for sixteen years. And then we returned to my native
Mountain West.
Now, when I see on television the unfolding tragedies encompassing our former
region, I occasionally look out our window to the reassuring view of close-by
Idaho mountains. No flood can reach us up where we live; we can handle any
brush or timber fires. Crime is minimal up here [but I have firearms] -- and
the creatures of the wild [even rattlesnakes] are seen by us as friends.
[And that's likely mutual.]
But we do keep our earthquake insurance paid up faithfully. And we always,
always stockpile food and water.
Solidarity,
Hunter [Hunter Bear]
HUNTER GRAY [HUNTER BEAR/JOHN R SALTER JR] Mi'kmaq /St. Francis
Abenaki/St. Regis Mohawk
Protected by NaÂshdoÂiÂbaÂiÂ
and Ohkwari'
I have always lived and worked in the Borderlands.
Check out our Hunterbear website Directory http://hunterbear.org/directory.htm
[The site is dedicated to our one-half Bobcat, Cloudy Gray:
http://hunterbear.org/cloudy_gray.htm
See our extensive course on activist Community Organizing -- often with
new material: http://hunterbear.org/my_combined_community_organizing.htm
And see Hunter Bear's lengthy Movement Life interview:
http://hunterbear.org/HUNTER%20BEAR%20INTERVIEW%20CRMV.htm
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