Paranoia by Karie Luidens

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Halloween is normally a day for scary fun... but lately we've had far too much fear-mongering in our national discourse, and actual terrorism taking lives. This Halloween let's take a deep breath and try to keep it real. I’ll let Adam Serwer at The Atlantic take it from here.

In reality, the caravan was thousands of miles and weeks away from the U.S. border, shrinking in size, and unlikely to reach the U.S. before the election. If the migrants reach the U.S., they have the right under U.S. law to apply for asylum at a port of entry. If their claims are not accepted, they will be turned away. There is no national emergency; there is no ominous threat. There is only a group of desperate people looking for a better life, who have a right to request asylum in the United States and have no right to stay if their claims are rejected. Trump is reportedly aware that his statements about the caravan are not true. An administration official told The Daily Beast simply, “It doesn’t matter if it’s 100 percent accurate … This is the play.” The “play” was to demonize vulnerable people with falsehoods in order to frighten Trump’s base to the polls.

Nevertheless, some took the claims of the president and his allies seriously. On Saturday morning, Shabbat, a gunman walked into the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh and killed 11 people. The massacre capped off a week of terrorism, in which one man mailed bombs to nearly a dozen Trump critics and another killed two black people in a grocery store after failing to force his way into a black church. [...]

Ordinarily, a politician cannot be held responsible for the actions of a deranged follower. But ordinarily, politicians don’t praise supporters who have mercilessly beaten a Latino man as “very passionate.” Ordinarily, they don’t offer to pay supporters’ legal bills if they assault protesters on the other side. They don’t praise acts of violence against the media. They don’t defend neo-Nazi rioters as “fine people.” They don’t justify sending bombs to their critics by blaming the media for airing criticism. Ordinarily, there is no historic surge in anti-Semitism, much of it targeted at Jewish critics, coinciding with a politician’s rise. And ordinarily, presidents do not blatantly exploit their authority in an effort to terrify white Americans into voting for their party. For the past few decades, most American politicians, Republican and Democrat alike, have been careful not to urge their supporters to take matters into their own hands. Trump did everything he could to fan the flames, and nothing to restrain those who might take him at his word.

Many of Trump’s defenders argue that his rhetoric is mere shtick—that his attacks, however cruel, aren’t taken 100 percent seriously by his supporters. But to make this argument is to concede that following Trump’s statements to their logical conclusion could lead to violence against his targets, and it is only because most do not take it that way that the political violence committed on Trump’s behalf is as limited as it currently is.

Promises by Karie Luidens

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The most important fall harvest that must be preserved until spring: the seeds taken from this year’s fruits. Those are what will allow the whole cycle of self-sustenance to begin again the garden; they hold all the promise of life continuing.

Preserves by Karie Luidens

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This is the time of year when humans must preserve enough fresh-grown food to last through the cold season ahead. Of course, our household will subsist mostly on what others have stocked for us at the local grocery store: food baked or boxed with chemical preservatives. The original preserves, though, are those that have been dried or smoked, pickled or sugared, boiled and sealed. We’ve got some of that on hand—pickled cucumbers, jammed fruits, shelf-stable cans of soup and sauce. We’re also lucky enough to have a freezer where we can keep roasted chile peppers and shredded zucchini for months to come.

Parties by Karie Luidens

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There’s a reason autumn is the season of celebration, from Halloween parties like the one where I danced the night away last night, to Día de los Muertos next weekend, to Thanksgiving just around the corner. All through the spring and summer, we’ve done the hard work of tilling, planting, weeding, and watering—or at least our ancestors did when society was still predominantly agricultural. Now the harvest is in. It’s time for one last hurrah of abundance before we start rationing what we’ve saved through the barren winter months.

Seasons by Karie Luidens

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I think it’s safe to say, between these gusts and frosts and mists, our growing season is now drawing to a close. My tangled vines of squash and pumpkin are no longer putting out fresh yellow blossoms each morning. Tomatoes still hang from their stems, but only here and there do they turn red; the rest may need to be harvested green before they freeze, in which case I’ll happily fry them up to eat hot. The only crop that continues to mature is the corn, whose fuchsia tassels have drooped over ears grown long, firm, and strong. Soon the whole garden will have slowed itself into hibernation and I’ll help put it to bed for the winter.

Cottonwoods by Karie Luidens

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It happened all at once: the cottonwoods that line the Rio Grande, forming a trail of bright green through the city all summer, turned gold this week.

Bittersweet by Karie Luidens

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This Tuesday marks the twenty-first and final week to pick up a share of vegetables from our CSA. Chispas Farm has fed us all season long with fruits and vegetables grown organically in the soil of Albuquerque’s South Valley: lettuce and cucumbers, tomatoes and eggplants, onions and peppers, basil and cilantro, zucchini and spaghetti squash, chard and kale, sweet potatoes and their greens, even my first taste of jujubes. All summer and fall we’ve been nourished by the local land and the sense of community that formed around those who work it. Thanks for all the substance and sweetness, Chispas! Parting for the winter is such sweet sorrow!

Democratic by Karie Luidens

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Two weeks out from the midterm elections, early voting is now open for the people of New Mexico! There’s nothing more fundamental to the democratic process than the basic participation of its citizens in the voting process. Show up, people! Get yourself down to the polling station that’s most convenient for you—if you’re in Bernalillo County, it may even be the brand-new Mobile Voting Unit that’s parking at different spots each day around town for the next two weeks.