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Craig is a guy from Tibet, Tennessee, USA

recluse; born NYC, ex-international development (NGO) worker, vegan, musician, father of six, lover of wilderness and high places.

I keep an irregular blog, a Buddhist website, Twitter a Yahoo group called PADMA and am married to Tonyadechen. You can hear some of our buddhist rock&roll right here.

  • Joe Bageant: Welcome to Middle-Class Lockdown

    Rated 06:07pm 10 reviews politics, american history, society joebageant.com

    "With so little money available in those days in rural America, there was no way to get by without neighbors. And besides, all the money in the world would not get the lard cooked down and the peaches put up for the winter. You needed neighbors and they needed you."
    Joe Bageant: Welcome to Middle-Class Lockdown
  • PBS - THE WEST - Black Kettle

    Rated 12:21pm 1 review native americans pbs.org

    BLACK KETTLE (d. 1868) "... his repeated efforts to secure a peace with honor for his people, despite broken promises and attacks on his own life, speak of him as a great leader with an almost unique vision of the possibility for coexistence between white society and the culture of the plains."

    If you live in America, you should know and respect this man's name.
    PBS - THE WEST - Black Kettle
  • the electric lotus journal

    Rated 10:00am 1 review buddhism, religion orderofcompassion.com

    "Our greatest goal is to support the objectives of the Charter for Compassion, by developing a grassroots community of individuals dedicated to alleviating suffering. In a city such as ours, that will present limitless possibilities for service to the poor, the sick and dying, the marginalised and the hungry.

    Additionally we hope to provide the region with a fresh, reinvigorated and inviting look at the Dharma of the Buddha and the Compassionate Way of the Christ, interpreted through a non-sectarian, non-theistic and postmodern lens… to offer a diversity in forms of meditation, liturgy and study, so that the Dharma of Compassion is accessible to all who are interested. "
    the electric lotus journal
  • Cooking the History Books: The Thanksgiving Massacre :...

    Rated 07:50am 1 review history, native americans russellmeansfreedom.com

    William Newell, a Penobscot Indian and former chair of the anthropology department of the University of Connecticut, claims that the first Thanksgiving was not "a festive gathering of Indians and Pilgrims, but rather a celebration of the massacre of 700 Pequot men, women and children."
      Cooking the History Books: The Thanksgiving Massacre : Russell Means Freedom
  • Silas Soule - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Rated 07:20am 1 review american history wikipedia.org

    SILAS SOULE
    (July 26, 1838 - April 23, 1865)

    If anyone is looking for good historical subjects to represent in film, here is a colorful and meaningful life of high adventure and moral principle. Born in Maine, at 16 his family moved near Lawrence Kansas to help settle the Territory and bring it into the Union as a free state. Father established the house as a stop on the Underground Railroad and son became an expert in the hit and run tactics of the border wars known as Bleeding Kansas. Silas helped execute jail breaks for those convicted of assisting runaway slaves. He gained access to John Brown in prison although the old man insisted on being martyred and refused to be rescued. Soule fought the Confederates at Glorieta Pass, southeast of Santa Fe where Union troops used ropes and tackle to scale cliffs and flank the rebs. The climax approaches as Soule rides with Col. Chivington and his volunteers to Sand Creek where our hero refuses to attack the Indians camped there. His subsequent testimony against Chivington led to his murder in cold blood on the streets of Denver. National outrage at the massacre influenced the US Congress to refuse the Army's request for thousands of more troops for a general war against the Native Americans of the Plains.
    Silas Soule - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Sand Creek massacre - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Rated 06:23am 1 review native americans wikipedia.org

    NOV 29 1864 Col. Chivington and his volunteer militia descend on the indians camped at Sand Creek on the plains east of Denver, killing 133 Cheyenne and Arapahoe, 105 of them women and children. Chief Black Kettle and his wife manage to escape but both will be killed by Custer's troops on the Washita in Oklahoma under very similar circumstances four years hence.
    Sand Creek massacre - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  • Great Madhyamaka: Great Madhyamaka by Taranatha

    Rated Nov 28 2 reviews buddhism blogspot.com

    Teachings on the subtle, inner Great Madhyamaka of definitive meaning.
    Great Madhyamaka: Great Madhyamaka by Taranatha
  • Phurba Totally Explained

    Rated Nov 28 1 review buddhism totallyexplained.com

    "The phurba affixes the Elemental Process of Space to the Earth, thereby establishing an energetic continuum."

    A good background on the phurba or kila, the ritualistic dagger used in Vajrayana rituals.
    Phurba Totally Explained
  • Earliest evidence of peanut, cotton, squash farming

    Rated Nov 28 1 review archaeology, native american physorg.com

    "...wild-type peanuts, squash and cotton as well as a quinoa-like grain, manioc and other tubers and fruits in the floors and hearths of buried preceramic sites, garden plots, irrigation canals, storage structures and on hoes. The researchers used a technique called accelerator mass spectrometry to determine the radiocarbon dates of the materials. Data gleaned from botanists, other archaeological findings and a review of the current plant community in the area suggest the specific strains of the discovered plant remains did not naturally grow in the immediate area.

    "The plants we found in northern Peru did not typically grow in the wild in that area," Dillehay says. "We believe they must have therefore been domesticated elsewhere first and then brought to this valley by traders or mobile horticulturists.

    "The use of these domesticated plants goes along with broader cultural changes we believe existed at that time in this area, such as people staying in one place, developing irrigation and other water management techniques, creating public ceremonials, building mounds and obtaining and saving exotic artifacts."

    The researchers dated the squash from approximately 9,200 years ago, the peanuts from 7,600 years ago and the cotton from 5,500 years ago.
    Earliest evidence of peanut, cotton, squash farming
  • Ababinili - VisWiki

    Rated Nov 28 1 review native americans, religion viswiki.com

    A Chickasaw Legend: "Ababinili is the spirit of fire and manifest in fire and the sun."
    Ababinili - VisWiki