Spring was here.

I know it was.

I have the calendar to prove it.

There were half-days and false starts

and light snow into the first week of April,

but it was here all the same.

The birds knew it,

even if the trees did not.

But the birds are, let’s face it, tourists —

half the year here, half the year there —

and they are conversant in the language of change.

They see it coming

and are not surprised to see it go.

They witness the world with very different eyes.

They are creatures of transition.

We who are knee-deep in change do not recognize it as it happens.

If you stand in a river and cannot see the shore,

will you know it is a river,

or only that there is water lapping at your legs?

We have seasons thrust upon us,

and if they only last a week,

we may never know they’ve come and gone.

Spring is such a simple word, so easily lost.

There’s no weight to it like winter,

like heavy blankets wrapped around your bones,

or the cold that creeps like ivy along your skin.

Spring is a farewell to winter’s ghosts, a rebirth,

that moment in between.

Perhaps it isn’t meant to last.

Perhaps it’s just an invocation against all that’s come before it,

and like all magic words, once spoken,

has no power except in memory.

I passed this (found via The Morning News) along to fellow capper Erik Wilson earlier today. Because it’s interesting and I am lazy, I’m copying and pasting it and my comments again here.

In a state that has tried for years to develop a well-rounded economy — tourism has boomed, fishing is suffering but still profitable — it is oil that continues to fuel the state treasury, and oil and gas that remain the cornerstone of Alaskans’ planning for their futures.

“It’s like cocaine,” said Kip Knudson, general manager of Era Aviation, a regional carrier. “Without it, we just don’t have the population base nor the property tax base to support the life to which we have become accustomed. We are about as Third World as you can get. We are completely dependent on resource extraction, and we don’t know what to do without it.”

I do like that the story presents both sides to the argument; there are signs that drilling might not be as bad as some environmentalists fear, and maybe it doesn’t all come down to ignorance and greed. But ultimately, I think the ends don’t justify the means. All evidence seems to indicate that there isn’t enough oil to help the Alaskan or national economy in the long run. Even if the wildlife refuge isn’t destroyed and our oil reserves are increased, it will just stave off disaster for a few years until the next oil shortage.

But I guess that’s at least half of why we’re in Afghanistan and eying Iraq.

Frankly, I could have used an state income tax refund of $1,850.28 myself, thank you very much.

Tom Tomorrow writes:

The Palestinians are a brutally oppressed people–and Israel is a nation under siege. The deaths of 400 Israeli civilians since the start of this latest intifada are senseless and tragic and maddening–as are the deaths of 1500 Palestinians during that same time.

And if you read that last bit and vehemently disagreed with half of it, and are already composing a response in your head to explain why the side with which you are aligned is morally superior to the side with which you disagree–well, that’s kind of the problem at this point, isn’t it?