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'The Death Trap' Dangerous Jet Dramatically Increases Over Nation

By , , Oct. 17, 2024

SELLS, Arizona -- "The has dramatically increased its dangerous jet combat fighting over the heart of the Tohono O'odham Nation, with combat jets, a private and a plane labeled as "the death trap," due to safety violations.

"Tohono O'odham who live below say the are breaking the plaster in their traditional homes. Dangerous flares endanger all life below, including the of and more. With the risk of deadly crashes, Tohono O'odham are at risk below, including those in the community of this week.

"The U.S. Air Force now plans to expand its dangerous use of the over Tohono O'odham, and communities in . including on the Tohono O'odham Nation are among those at risk.

"The enormous #ange -- 1.9 million acres in the west of the Tohono O'odham Nation -- was set aside for U.S. military training, yet the military is consistently using Tohono O'odham Nation airspace.
The wants to authorize more blasts training at lower altitudes. The dangerous expansion includes airspace over , and scenic regions of Arizona and western ."

Read more:
bsnorrell.blogspot.com/2024/10

bsnorrell.blogspot.com'The Death Trap' Dangerous Jet Combat Training Dramatically Increases Over Tohono O'odham NationCensored News is a service to grassroots Indigenous Peoples engaged in resistance and upholding human rights.

Nature interrupted: Impact of the on

Scientists on both sides of the border are working to understand how the barrier is affecting the area’s . Meanwhile, communities try to save animals left without access to .

By Iván Carrillo 06.27.2024

"In a vast stretch of the , between the towns of and in northern sits a modest building of cement, galvanized sheet metal and wood — the only stop along 125 miles of inhospitable landscape dominated by thorny ocotillo shrubs and towering saguaro cactuses up to 50 feet high. It’s a fonda — a small restaurant — called La Liebre del Desierto (The Desert Hare), and for more than 20 years, owner Elsa Ortiz Ramos has welcomed and nourished weary travelers taking a break from the adjacent highway that runs through the arid Pinacate and Grand Desierto de Altar Biosphere Reserve.
Landscape showing an arid land with bushes and a mountain in the background. The land is divided by a brown wall. In the foreground is a huge cactus.

"But the dedication and care of this petite woman go beyond her simple menu. Every two weeks, she pays out of pocket for a 5,000-gallon tank of water to distribute to a network of water troughs strategically placed in the area. By doing so, she relieves the thirst of , , , , and even that have been deprived of access to their natural .

"'The come to the house and scream to warn us that there is no more water ... it’s our alarm,' says Ortiz Ramos in her distinct northern Mexico accent. Her words sound straight from an Aesop’s fable, but they take on stark realism in this spot. Covering large parts of , and the Mexican states of and , the — along with the in Iran — was catalogued in 2023 as having the surface temperature on the planet, at 80.8 degrees Celsius (177 degrees Fahrenheit).

"Through narrow steel bollards 3.5 inches apart, I observe lush vegetation surrounding the Quitobaquito spring on the other side of the border. 'This vital source supplies both humans and animals over an area of more than 1 million hectares,' Federico Godínez Leal, an agronomist from the University of Guadalajara, explains to me. But now this crucial water source is restricted to the US side due to the construction of the border wall, and I have come with him here to understand the consequences. Godínez Leal and his team have been documenting the stark difference between each side: Their poignant photographs show skeletons of wild boar, deer and bighorn sheep lying on Mexican soil."

Read more:
knowablemagazine.org/content/a

Knowable Magazine | Annual ReviewsNature interrupted: Impact of the US-Mexico border wall on wildlifeScientists on both sides of the border are working to understand how the barrier is affecting the area’s biodiversity. Meanwhile, communities try to save animals left without access to water.