“Earth and the American Dream:

Name:
Period:
“Earth and the American Dream:
This is a story of the dream, the dream of land, the dream of riches, the
American Dream. This is a story of the price; the price the Earth has
paid to make the dream come true.”
Warning: As you watch this documentary, you will see disturbing scenes of what
Americans have done to Native Americans and to the natural environment of the United
States. Voices you hear are actors reading actual quotes from historical figures; they are
sometimes racist and offensive.
Directions: For each time period, use annotation techniques and write down your thoughts,
questions, and observations about each person’s historical perspective of the American Dream.
“There is little in common between us. You wander far from the
graves of your ancestors, and seemingly without regret. Every part
of this soil is sacred in the estimation of my people. Every hillside,
every valley, every plain and grove has been hallowed by some sad
or happy event in days long vanished. When the memory of my
tribe shall have become a myth, these shores will swarm with the
invisible dead that once filled them, and still love this beautiful
land. The white man will never be alone; there is no death, only a
change of worlds.” ~ Chief Seattle
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
1492-1776 “When we began to clear the land...” – (3:57)
“Ah Majesty, rivers Majesty filled with gold…a miracle. Mountain
and hills, plains and pastures are fertile and beautiful. The harbors
are unbelievably good, and there are many wide rivers, of which the
majority contain gold…rivers, Majesty, filled with gold. Your
servant, Christopher Columbus.”
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“My God, a hideous and desolate wilderness full of wild beasts and
wild men, and what multitudes there might be of them? We know
not.” ~ Gov. William Bradford, Plymouth Colony
“Genesis, the first part, the twenty-eighth verse, the Lord’s words,
‘You shall have dominion over the fish of the sea, dominion over
the birds of the heavens, over all the Earth, over every creeping
thing that creepeth upon the Earth. Go forth children, multiply, fill
the Earth, and subdue it.’” ~ Bible, King James Version
“In such a wilderness, when we began to clear the land with fire,
with might and strength, trees so thick and strong, we laid them all
along, most furiously to ashes did confound. As for the natives,
they’re near all dead of the smallpox. So the Lord has cleared our
title to what we possess, and we shall be the place where the Lord
will create a new heaven and a new Earth.” ~ Gov. John
Winthrop, Massachusetts Bay Colony
1
1776-1850 “What good man would prefer a country covered with forests?” – (8:27)
“Sir, our lands were originally very good, but use and abuse have
made them quite otherwise. We ruined the lands that are already
cleared and either cut down more wood, or just emigrate; emigrate
to the western country.” ~George Washington, President
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“The American, he fells the forests and drains the marshes. The
wilds become villages, and the villages…towns. The American,
the daily witness of such wonders, does not see anything
astonishing in all this destruction.” ~ Alexis De Tocqueville
“What good man would prefer a country covered with forests, and
ranged by a few thousand savages, to our extensive republic
studded with cities and towns, and prosperous farms, occupied by
more than 12 million happy people?” ~ Andrew Jackson,
President
“Most men, it would seem to me, do not care for nature and would
sell their share. Nowadays, almost all men’s so called
improvements, as the building of houses and the cutting down of
forests, simply deform the landscape. What is the use of a house, I
ask, if you haven’t a tolerable planet to put it on?” ~ Henry David
Thoreau, Naturalist
“When I think of these times and call back to my mind the grandeur
and beauty of those almost uninhabited shores, when I picture to
myself the dense and lofty summits of the forest, unmolested by the
acts of the settler, when I see that the vast herds of elk, deer, and
buffalo which once pastured on these hills and in these valleys have
ceased to exist, when I remember that these extraordinary changes
have all taken place in the short period of twenty years, I pause,
wonder, and although I know all to be fact, can scarcely believe it’s
reality.” ~ John James Audubon, Artist
1850-1900 “The prairies will be covered with your speckled cattle and festive cowboys.” – (11:56)
“The entranced act of destiny of the American people is to subdue
the continent, to rush over this vast field to the Pacific Ocean, to
confirm the destiny of the human race.” ~ William Gilpin,
Territorial Governor
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“There is nothing on the American continent equal to it, folks,
timber, soil, fish, climate, no end to the possibilities of wealth here,
an inexhaustible goldmine. Take a train, take a wagon, by golly
walk if you have to.” ~ Samuel Wilkerson, Railroad Booster
“How beautiful would this natural Eden look if parted off with
fences into farms, dotted with cities, villages, and farm houses?
Each claimant can claim and hold 240 acres of land. My husband,
his father and sister are claimants, making 720 acres of land
belonging to our family.” ~ Miriam Colt, Homesteader
“Yes, the Indians are in evidence everywhere. I am told they are
harmless, but I do not like the way they have of stalking into the
house unbidden, or looking in at the windows. I do not like it.”
~ Gertrude Burlingame, Homesteader
2
“They will not dig the gold or let others do it. They are too lazy
and too much like mere animals to cultivate the fertile soil, mine
the coal, develop the salt mines, or wash the gold. What shall be
done with these Indian dogs in our manger?” ~ Editor, The
Yankton Press & Dakotan
“The buffalo hunters have done more to settle the vexed Indian
question than the entire regular army has done, because they are
destroying the Indians commissary. Indeed for the sake of lasting
peace, let them kill, skin, and sell until the buffalos are
exterminated. Yes, then your prairies will be covered with your
speckled cattle and the festive cowboy.” ~ General Philip
Sheridan, Commander of the Western Army
“I rush my horse into ‘em, pick out the fattest cows, shoot them
down. I killed for the railroad company for seventeen months.
During that time, the number I brought into camp was kept account
of…4,280 buffalo…4,280.” ~ Buffalo Bill Cody, Showman
“While the slaughter of the buffalo has been in places needless and
brutal, and while from a purely selfish stand point, many, including
myself, would rather see it continue to exist. Yet, its destruction
was a condition precedent on the advance of white civilization in
the west. From the stand point of humanity at large, the
extermination of the buffalo has been a blessing.” ~ Theodore
Roosevelt, President
“Nature has nowhere presented more beautiful and lovely scenes
than those of the vast prairies of the west, and of man and beast, no
nobler specimens than those who inhabit them, the Indian and the
buffalo, joint and original tenants of the soil, and fugitives together
from the approach of civilized man. They fled to the Great Plains
of the west, and there, under an equal doom, they’ve taken up their
last abode, where their race will expire, and their bones will bleach
together.” ~ George Catlin, Artist
“I love the land and the buffalo and will not part with it. I don’t
want to settle. I love to roam the prairies. I want the children
raised as I was. A long time ago, this land belonged to our fathers,
but when I go to the river, I see soldiers in its banks. They cut
down our timber. They kill my buffalo. When I see that, it feels as
if my heart would bust with sorrow.” ~ Satanta, Chief of the
Kiowa
Of 60 million buffalo in the American West less than 500 live to
see the 20th century.
Of 2 million Native Americans when Columbus arrived less than
390,000 live to see the 20th century.
1900-1920 “Man’s forces will be used to hasten his dominion over nature.” – (21:37)
“It is a glorious history our God has bestowed upon his chosen
people, a history of statesmen, who flung the boundaries of the
republic out into unexplored lands and savage wildernesses, a
history of a multiplying people, who overran a continent in half a
century. Steam joins us. Electricity joins us. The very elements
are in league with our destiny.” ~ Albert Beveridge, U.S. Senator
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
3
“The final victory of man’s machinery over nature’s materials is the
next logical process in evolution. Machinery, science, and
intelligence moving on the face of the Earth may well affect it as
the elements do, up building, obliterating, and creating, and they are
man’s forces, and will be used to hasten his dominion over nature,
and each gain upon nature adds to the quantity of goods to be
consumed by society.” ~ Simon Patten, Political Economist
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
Bigger and better than ever, oh what a feeling, you’ve got me
feeling, bigger and better than ever…
My heart is bumping, you’ve got it bumping, bigger and better than
ever…bigger and better than ever. ~ Song
“To make one ton of steel, one and a half tons of iron has to be
mined, then transported a hundred miles from the mine to the lakes,
then carried by boat hundreds of miles, and then transported by rail
a hundred and fifty mile into Pittsburgh. One and a half tons of
coal must be mined, manufactured into coke, and carried fifty miles
by rail, and one ton of limestone, mined, and carried to Pittsburgh.
Miraculous.” ~ Andrew Carnegie, Industrialist
“If the business man’s refinery taints the air, if his chimneys smug
the sky, if his waste poisons our streams, we tolerate it. Tell him of
the forest, blighted by the arsenic fumes from giant smelters, and he
replies, ‘It would cut dividends to get rid of the fumes. The smoke
laden air of every city,’ he says, ‘is but a testimonial of the general
prosperity of the county.’” ~ Edward A. Ross, Sociologist
“Wheat will win the war. Plant wheat. Plant the cattle ranges.
Plant your vacant lots. Plant wheat, wheat for the boys over there,
wheat for the allies, wheat at any price. Wheat will win the war.
Fetch me timber my son, wherewith to build a thousand ships.
Without ships, the war cannot be won. Without timber, ships
cannot be built. Every swing of an axe, every cut of a saw, may
score as heavily as a shot, fired from the trenches. Help our boys
win the war. Make our world safe for democracy.” ~ Uncle Sam,
Government Pamphlet
1920-1930 “Hadn’t we figured out mass production?” – (30:20)
“There has always been at each decisive period in this world’s
history, uh…some voice, some note that represented for the time
being the prevailing power. First, there was the lions roar. Then
came the voice of man. Now, in the streets of Detroit, the murmur
of this newest and most perfect of forces, the automobile.” ~ The
Detroit News Tribune, Editorial
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“The way to make an automobile for the great multitudes is to make
one just like another, to make them all alike, to make them come
through the factory all alike. Just like one pin is just like another.
A car so low in price that no man making a good salary will be
unable to own one. And when I’m through, about everybody will
have one. The horse will disappear from our highways. The
automobile will be taken for granted, and there won’t be any
problem.” ~ Henry Ford, Automaker
Henry Ford, Henry Ford, what have you done? You’ve got the
whole nation talking. Henry Ford, Henry Ford, you sure make them
run. Soon there’ll be nobody walking. ~ Song
4
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“Of course our agents say we overload them with cars and bully-rag
them until they have to pull in customers by the ears. But what of
it? The average American family is happier and healthier for
having a good little car, even if the old man was bluffed into buying
it.” ~ Anonymous, Ford Executive
“I won’t give up that car. I’d go without clothes and food before I
gave up that car. Why I’d rather starve!” ~ Anonymous Woman
“The story of the development of life and industry in America is the
most amazing tale of the waste of wealth by a careless improvident
people the world has ever known. For every barrel of oil which
reaches the pipeline, three barrels have been wasted. It may be
cheaper today to skim the cream from oil gushers, but our children
and our children’s children may pay a bitter price.” ~ Stuart
Chase, Political Scientist
We’re running wild, we’ve lost control, we’re running wild, mighty
bold…
“America has been altered astonishingly, and the changes which
have come over us were more swiftly achieved than at any time in
our history. We sold more goods to the world in this decade than
the entire 19th century, and we mined a billion tons more coal,
smelted twice as much copper, made three and one half times as
much steel. We match a decade against a century and the decade
wins.” ~ Christine Frederick, Home Economist
“Industry as a whole can plan and execute for its advancement,
secure in the belief that there are no limits to the total productive
capacity of the country and the resulting purchasing power, because
there are no limits to the needs and desires of American consumers.
Of course, there exists theoretically that danger point when
consumption has reached its limit. However, such a breaking point
is probably nonexistent. Human desires seem to have no limits.” ~
Paul Mazur, Banker
“If a man saves $15 dollars a week and invests in good common
stocks, and allows the dividends to accumulate, at the end of twenty
years, he’ll be rich. And, I am firm in my belief, that man not only
can be rich, but ought to be rich! ~ John J. Raskob, Chairman of
General Motors
“Gosh, wasn’t we crazy? Why the thought never entered our head
that we wasn’t the brightest, wisest, and most accomplished people
that was ever on this Earth. Hadn’t we figured out mass
production? Couldn’t we make more things than anybody? Did the
thought ever enter our bone head that the time might come when
nobody would want all these things we were making? No, we had
it all figured out that the more we made, the more they would
want.” ~ Will Rogers, Humorist
1930 – 1940 begins on next page…
5
1930-1940 “Whether we like it or not, we are on our way.” – (38:27)
“Great areas lie devastated beneath the merciless cloud of
pulverized soil. It looms like dim, grimy doom and settles in arid
layers in desiccated dregs. This was the western prairie grassland.
The cowboys grazed their cattle here. Then cultivators came,
plowed up the buffalo grass, and laid the soil bared to the winds.
And now, the winds have blown off the top soil in clouds, in
drifts!” ~ Fox Movietone News
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“We started out in ’14 on a rampage such as was never known in
the history of agriculture. We went into this thing on the thought of
furnishing food and winning the war. It was partly patriotic and
partly with the thought of making money. We plowed up 60
million acres of the best land in this country.” ~ William Sitterly,
Farmer
“Well, we plowed. We plowed because war time wheat prices said
plow. The government said plow. Wives said plow. So we
plowed everything. Tore up so easy we plowed it all.” ~ Farmer
“Years ago, you plow out in the prairie with a woman, kids, and a
couple of ponies. You get up a section of land. Yeah, they thought
there was no end to that.” ~ Farmer
“America’s two million miles of rural road, three quarters of a
million miles of surfaced highway, 127 million big machines,
motor cars, locomotives, turbines, tractors, trucks, lathes, 700
million installed horsepower. America’s a million miles of
pipeline, electric line, telephone line, a billion acres of farm land,
six and a half million farms, a 100 million head of stock, half a
billion acres of forest. It is incredible anyone should be in want.”
~ Robert R. Doane, Economist
“The mighty task of diverting the Colorado river through a mile of
mountain is almost an accomplished fact. That’s dynamite. Hey,
look out! The holes are loaded with 3,000 charges before the final
pull on the lever, and here she goes!” ~ Fox Movietone News
“Technicians today span rivers, plug up canyons, go through
mountains, but our future physical progress is going to put the
present into the tiniest pygmy class. The public’s been told this so
many times during the past few years that it does not believe it
anymore. They look at our 10 million unemployed and say,
‘There’s your progress.’ We’re in the midst of this thing now, and
it does not always look like happy landings ahead, but to stop is
fatal. To stop our forward progress, even if we could, would hardly
lead elsewhere than to a complete wreck. Whether we like it or not,
we are on our way.” ~ Clifford Furnas, Chemical Engineer
1940-1950 “If only we could have created all this energy for something good.” – (44:45)
“A fighting machine in action is a thrilling and inspiring sight.
Here’s another fighting machine in action, producing, not
destroying. Producing for the 11 million fighting men of America
and their allies. Steel jacketed messengers of death. Ammunition
factory, one of hundreds engaged in turning out the millions…”
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
Continued on next page…
6
Here is steel, giant builder of the signals of defense, symbol of
democracy’s strength, for guns, tanks, ships, planes, trucks… Long
lines of new heavy tanks bear witness to the need for steel and more
steel. Where we used to make hubcaps, now we're making helmets.
Mass production, same as before, of the things that count today.
Push buttons, switch gears, motors, transformers, turbines
accelerating the defense effort across the continent. Mine coal in
West Virginia. Has left the drafting boards and is now in mass
production. …production line is democracy’s front line. …master
productions. Mass production of the tools of battle. That’s just
three days work standing there.” ~ Government Documentaries
“We won because we were audacious. We have won this war
because our men are brave and because of the gift of nature’s
materials. In the emergency of war, our nation’s powers are
unbelievable. The strength we have spread around the world is
appalling, even to those who make up that strength. I’m sure that in
the past two years, I’ve heard soldiers say a thousand times, ‘If only
we could have created all this energy for something good.’ But, we
rise above our normal powers only in times of destruction.”
~ Ernie Pyle, War Correspondent
In the first half of the 20th century America’s population grew 100%
…mineral production grew 500%
…oil consumption grew 5,600%
… electrical consumption grew 6,000%
…motor vehicles grew 600,000%
…people consumed more non-renewable resources than in all of
mankind’s previous time on earth.
“We have made the Atomic Bomb. We have become the richest
people on the globe. We have achieved the highest standard of
living known to history. But, how will we live? The whole world
has an interest in the answers, which history will make of these
questions.” ~ Henry Steele Commager, Historian
1950-1960 “We make consumption our way of life…” – (49:15)
When I was just a little girl I asked my mother what will I be.
Will I be pretty? Will I be rich? Here’s what she said to me,
Que sera sera, whatever will be will be. The future’s not ours to see.
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
Now I have children of my own. They ask me mother what will I be?
“Every seven and a half seconds, a new baby is born somewhere in
the United States. That means every 7 seconds, marketers have
gained one new prospect, who will need food, clothing, shelter, and
later on, motor cars, HI FI sets, power boats, and a casket. More
people mean more markets.” ~ Vance Packard, Social Critic
I want a corvette. I thought you would. Oh! I want a Pontiac, too.
OK, we’ll have the usual two car garage. Let’s go all out and buy a
Cadillac, too.
7
“The population explosion is a grand thing for business. Think of all
the machines we can sell to more people. The consumer is a great
big gaping jaw we’re all trying to fill up with whatever we can cram
down there, and the great hope is that the jaw will keep getting wider
and wider. We can make it an American middle class universe.
And, we can make a lot of money on it.” ~ Charlie Landesfahr,
Advertising Executive
“All you have to know is what switch to turn, what buttons to push,
and what cans to buy. Our canned foods are the best in the world,
and look at the variety! Packaged cereals, prepared mixes, frozen
foods… These peas may have been picked last June, when they
were just perfect. Grandmother would call this a miracle. Ladies
and Gentlemen, here they are…” ~ Advertisement
“Our enormously productive economy demands that we make
consumption our way of life. That we convert the buying and use of
goods into rituals. That we seek our spiritual satisfaction, our ego
satisfaction, in consumption.” ~ Victor Lebow, Marketing
Consultant
“Mother, wouldn’t it be slick if we had an electric ironer, like Sally’s
mother has? Yes, of course it would, and I’m looking forward to
having an electric dryer too. Whee! No matter what the job is, there
are machines to take the hard work out of it. It’s no trick to do the
wash with this baby, and we can go right on playing Cribbage.
Automatic, huh? Awe, you betcha! ~ Advertisement
“At Shipping Court, Pennsylvania, America’s first full-scale atomic
power plant, devoted exclusively to civilian use, goes into operation.
In the Whitehouse, President Eisenhower waves a radioactive wand
to send the plant into full scale operation, and nearly a quarter of a
million kilowatts of power feed into the lines. Hundreds of
thousands of homes, businesses, and factories are supplied from the
pioneering installation. Peace time atomic energy truly comes of
age.” ~ Advertisement
“The atom will give us all the power we need and more. Power
seemingly without end, power to do everything man is destined to
do. We have found what might be called perpetual youth, the hope
and exuberance of boundless energy.
~ Westinghouse Electric Corp., Educational Pamphlet
“We have heard so much about the success of the epic effort to
harness the atom, but we often delude ourselves into thinking that we
have altogether conquered it. But, perhaps we’ve adjusted to the fact
of atomic energy too fast for our own good. I am not sure that we
fully realize what kind of power we’re holding in our hands.”
~ Thomas E. Murray, Atomic Energy Commissioner
“With every explosion of a super bomb, huge quantities of
radioactive material are pumped into the air. This radioactive fallout
carries something called Strontium 90, which is the most dreadful
poison in the world. In sufficient concentration, it can cause cancer.
Prior to the Atomic Age, radioactive Strontium was practically
nonexistent in the world. Today, all of us, all over the world, have
some of it in our bones.” ~ Adlai Stevenson, Presidential
Candidate
Star Spangled Banner (National Anthem) by Jimi Hendrix
8
1960-1970 “A fateful power to alter and destroy nature…” – (57:40)
“We still talk in terms of conquest. We still haven’t become mature Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
enough to think of ourselves as only a tiny part of a vast and
incredible universe. Man’s attitude toward nature is today critically
important, simply because we have now acquired a fateful power to
alter and destroy nature. But, man is a part of nature, and his war
against nature is inevitably a war against himself. Now, I truly
believe that we in this generation must come to terms with nature.
And, I think we’re challenged as mankind has never been challenged
before to prove our maturity and our mastery, not of nature, but of
ourselves.” ~ Rachel Carson, Marine Biologist
“We have reached the moon, but we have not yet reached each other.
I do not wish to seem overdramatic, but the members of the United
Nations have perhaps 10 years left to subordinate their ancient
quarrels and launch a global partnership to improve the human
environment, to diffuse the population explosion. If such a global
partnership is not forced within the next decade, then I very much
fear that the problems I have mentioned will be beyond our capacity
to control.” ~ U Thant, Secretary General, U.N.
1970-Now “We have forgotten that we have only one planet.” – (1:01:25)
“Hundreds of birds, mostly ducks, are being washed ashore on the
island of Martha’s Vineyard off the coast of Massachusetts. Their
feathers are covered with heavy crude oil, picked up in a seven-mile
long oil slick just off shore. The water fowl by the hundreds are
dying.” ~ News Report
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“The National Lead Company’s titanium oxide plant in St. Louis
covers 40 acres and has 140 smoke stacks. Some of this pollution
does consist of acid mist. I have seen our secretary come in with her
nylon stockings in shreds from the acid mist…” ~ National Lead
Company Employee
“Yesterday was one of the smoggiest days on record in the Los
Angeles area. People hear didn’t need statistics to tell them the air
quality was wretched. The city suffocated under the hot brown
blanket.” ~ Los Angeles News
“Devices attached to the inside of smoke stacks, and what results is a
huge quantity of sludge that no one has figured out what to do with.”
“Powerful logging companies that have been clearcutting rain forests
at the rate of three square miles a day.” “PCPs are valuable to
industry, but they’re also poisonous…” “The fluorocarbons floating
into the atmosphere deplete the ozone layer…” “Plutonium buried
just seven years ago leaked out of its containers and seeped into…”
“Chemical wastes are this ship’s wake. This ship is just dumping
them as it goes along.” “…miles of beach are fouled with oily glop
that’s two inches thick…” “…contaminated with high amounts of
DDT. Now there are no fish…” “…and kept on rolling barrels of
radioactive waste into the sea.” “It’s called acid rain.” “Chemical
seepage…” “Radioactive waste.” “Illegal dumping of toxic waste.”
“…treated for chemical inhalation.” “Dangerous for thousands of
years…” “The Green House Affect.” “Skin cancer.” “…cloud of
black smoke carrying toxic fumes.” ~ Various News Accounts
9
“There are no boundaries on planet Earth. Not only have we failed
to realize we are one people, we have forgotten that we have only
one planet. The slow dismemberment of the Earth is not a recent
development. Our early forbears began the process thousands of
years ago. The difference is simple. Today, we have nowhere else
to go.” ~ Jacques Cousteau, Oceanographer
Thoughts, Questions, Observations:
“Compare the six days of the book of Genesis to the four billion
years of geologic time. On this scale, one day equals about 766
million years. All day Monday until Tuesday noon, creation was
busy getting the Earth going. Life began on Tuesday noon, and the
beautiful organic wholeness of it developed over the next four days.
At 4:00 pm Saturday, the big reptiles came. Five hours later, when
the redwoods appeared, there were no more big reptiles. At three
minutes before midnight, man appeared. One-fourth of a second
before midnight, Christ arrived. At one-fortieth of a second before
midnight, the industrial revolution began. We are surrounded by
people who think that what we have been doing for one-fortieth of a
second can go on indefinitely. They are considered normal, but they
are stark-raving mad.” ~ David Brower, Conservationist
“Ah Majesty, rivers, Majesty, filled with gold.” “Go Forth, children!
Multiply! Fill the Earth…and subdue it.” “And we shall be the
place where the Lord will create a new heaven and a new Earth.”
“The final victory of man’s machinery over nature’s materials is the
next logical process in evolution.” “But man is a part of nature, and
his war against nature is inevitably a war against himself.” “I pause,
wonder, and although I know all to be fact…can scarcely believe it’s
reality.”
Union Carbide plant explosion, Bhopal India
Oil spill, Prince William Sound, Alaska
Deforestation, Amazon Rain Forest, Brazil
Nuclear power plant explosion, Chernobyl, USSR (Russia)
Famine, Korem, Ethiopia
“Not only have we failed to realize we are one people, we have
forgotten that we have only one planet.”
“I looked below me where the Earth was silent as sick green light
and saw the hills look up, afraid. And all the animals… and
everywhere about me were the cries of frightened birds and the
sounds of fleeing wings. Then, I was standing on the highest
mountain of them all, and round about beneath me was the whole
hoop of the world. And, while I stood there, I saw more than I can
tell, and I understood more than I saw. For I was seeing in a sacred
manner the shapes of all things in the spirit. And, the shape of all
shapes, as they must live together like one being. And, I saw that it
was holy.” ~ Black Elk, Vision of a Lakota Holy Man
“For centuries, we’ve lived as if our fate were separate from the fate
of the Earth. But, no people, no country, can separate their own fate
from the fate of the Earth.” ~ Bill Couturie, Producer E & the A D
But I still haven’t found what I’m looking for…” U2
10