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August 23, 2009

Obama, Old Faithful and the Real Animals

Obama Old Faithful.jpg

I have to say it was wonderful to totally unplug and leave civilization. In one troubling respect, though, it felt like I didn’t get away at all.

Like the Obamas two weeks ago, I spent much of the last week in a national park. While the Obamas visited Yellowstone, I was in Yosemite at a campground called White Wolf.

White Wolf is pretty rustic and, for the past few years at least, people in the campsite — about 8,000 feet above the valley floor — have been sharing it with a bear. The situation, however is actually quite routine. The bear is known to amble through the campsite on the occasional afternoon — followed close behind by rangers who run him off — and the animal also prowls the grounds at night. Unless someone leaves food clearly out in the unprotected open, however (instead of locked up in the supplied metal bear boxes), there is little danger. Wary of people and complication, the animal is just looking for easy take out.

So why am I painting this picture?

It’s because of the burly biker types that showed up the day after we did. About six sites away from us, one of them had a big red truck covered in white scrawl broadcasting how “Barrack” Obama was anti-American and anti-Christian and how Obama was going to turn “his Islam” on the country if people didn’t watch out. More chillingly, though, each night these guys formed into a posse (that’s a direct quote from the wackos via the camp “host”) to patrol the perimeter of the campground (superseding the authority of the government forest Rangers) to protect every man, woman and child from the bear.

Needless to say, this taste of the radical fringe — in a setting I’ve experienced several times and with only with the greatest of harmony — has caused me to take the current and rising homegrown terrorist threat a lot more seriously. It also led me to think more deeply about the photo-op of the Obamas in front of Old Faithful. When I saw this image a couple weeks ago — the family on holiday, while likening Obama also to the geyser in his blend of energy and consistency — I mostly took it as nostalgic. Today, however, with the radicals not just appropriating the health care issue but GOP politics, I see something more pressing.

This time, I saw a gesture not just implying but almost having to remind that Obama, in faithfully executing the office of the presidency, is (or, at least fully deserves to be) an intrinsic part of the American landscape.

(image: Larry Downing/Reuters. caption: U.S. President Barack Obama, and his family visit the Old Faithful Geyser in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, August 15, 2009. )

  • jean

    Dang, I was waiting to hear that the bear ate a ‘burley biker type’. THAT would have been a really cool story. However, I fear it would have been bear=1, bikers=1, as they would not let such a challenge to their authority go…unchallenged?
    Disclaimer: I do not REALLY advocate that bears eat bikers. Sigh.

  • margarita

    Again and again, it becomes apparent just how afraid these types are. Afraid and stupid. Afraid and stupid and armed.

  • DanM

    Too many bears in Yosemite are already commemorated with “Drive Slow – a bear died here” signs. They don’t need armed idiots, too. Thanks for that, NRA/Bush.

  • Lee

    Thanks for the story. I think that the image of Obama as “other” was cast during the campaign, especially by Palin. Recall the distain she displayed when talking about Obama “palling around with terrorists.”

  • Tena

    Up until 3 years ago, I spent almost every summer of my life in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado. We had a lot of bears around but in the last 10 years, the number of idiots up there carrying guns all the time – the NRA stickers were everywhere and Colorado is most heavily armed state I’ve been in, and I’m from Texas – increased along with the numbers of bears shot for almost no reason – including one shot in the back while it was trying to get away.
    I’m not in Colorado anymore – I couldn’t take the damn guns, the christians or the people who will not leave wild animals alone.
    I’m in northern New Mexico now – this place has a soul.

  • Mountainviewer

    Sorry to hear the San Juans have gone that way. It used to be a mellow area. But I blame the (neo-)Christians more than the guns. The guns have always been there, I think, but they used to be wielded by people with some self respect (which usually translated into respect for animals). The rise of religious fanaticism in Colorado has brought with it an unbelievable arrogance in people’s relations with one another and their environment, at least in the areas around Denver that I know more recently. And as margarita pointed it, it’s an arrogance driven mostly by fear, and one that fosters willful ignorance. An explosive combination whose wages we’ll only be seeing more of, I think.

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