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Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Heading Toward the Brink: Why the Government May Shut Down

As the fiscal year deadline approaches, the United States faces the prospect of a federal government shutdown. If Congress fails to pass a continuing resolution (or full appropriations bills) by midnight on September 30 / October 1, many federal agencies will be forced to scale back operations, furlough non-essential staff, or cease certain activities entirely.

At the heart of the standoff is profound disagreement over both the timeline and the content of what should be included in any stopgap funding legislation.

If no deal emerges, we may see large parts of the federal government grind to a halt, and as we’ll see, public land management agencies would be among those most harmed.


Fallout for Public Lands: National Parks, BLM, Forests, and More

A shutdown is not just an abstract political drama; it has real, immediate consequences, especially for our public lands and environmental stewardship. Below are some of the key impacts:

National Park Service (NPS) and Interior Department Lands

Bureau of Land Management (BLM), U.S. Forest Service, and Other Agencies

  • Open land, but degraded services
    BLM lands are more likely to remain physically open during a shutdown, but many visitor facilities (restrooms, visitor centers, staff assistance) will be closed or severely limited. conservationlands.org Trails, roads, maintenance, and resource work may be temporarily suspended. conservationlands.org+1

  • Increased pressure and cumulative damage
    With national parks closed or restricted, public pressure may shift to forests, BLM land, or small state/local natural areas, which themselves are less prepared to absorb surges in visitation. aspenpublicradio.org+1 Understaffed forest and land agencies struggle to control wildfire risk, invasive species, or range management without full capacity.

  • Delay of permits, research, and restoration work
    Projects such as habitat restoration, scientific research, permitting for grazing or infrastructure, and other non-essential agency functions will be slowed or halted.

In short, a shutdown exacerbates the neglect already baked into many environmental and land management systems, and when the shutdown ends, the backlog of damage and deferred care will linger.


Why the Stakes Are High and Why Americans Should Stand Firm

A government shutdown is deeply disruptive. Families lose services, federal workers are furloughed or fired Wikipedia, and agencies falter. But the choice is not simply between “go along to avoid closure” and “stand your ground”: it is about what priorities get protected.

Key arguments for resisting pressure to give away the farm

  1. Protecting vital national priorities
    Americans must stand up for those things that too often get cut: environmental protection, climate mitigation, public health, education, social welfare, veterans’ services, and infrastructure. These can’t be treated as second-class items or expendable bargaining chips.

  2. Avoid conceding on health care and social safety nets
    The GOP proposal excludes renewed ACA tax credits, reversals of Medicaid cuts, and reversions of recent draconian reductions. Those omissions would worsen health care affordability and access at a time when millions of Americans rely on backstop programs. Accepting that exclusion cedes ground for future budgets.

  3. Leverage in negotiations
    The threat of a shutdown is one of the few tools Americans have to prevent a wholly one-sided outcome. If Americans capitulate now, future deadlines will be seen as an opportunity to push for even more extreme cuts. Standing firm sends a message that specific lines can’t be crossed.

  4. Precedent matters
    Allowing concessions under threat sets a dangerous precedent. The next time Republicans want to force through a rollback of climate safeguards or veteran benefits, they’ll invoke the shutdown lever again unless challenged.

A realistic temper: Where compromise may still be needed

To be clear: standing firm does not mean being rigidly ideological. There may be room for short-term bridges (e.g. 7–10 day extension) to avoid irreparable harm, particularly in areas like disaster response, VA services, or critical health functions. However, any extension must preserve priority protections and not serve as a blank check to compromise core values.

However, Americans should refuse the giveaway in which service to people is traded off for narrow fiscal dogma.


Conclusion: A Moment of Truth

We are at a moment when very real public interests are at stake. The Trump administration is attempting to centralize power, shrinking social programs, constraining democracy, and weaponizing shutdown threats to get its way. Meanwhile, environmental collapse, climate destabilization, public health emergencies, and educational inequality demand bold, sustained investment.

If Americans allow a government shutdown threat to dictate policy priorities, they will have lost more than merely a funding impasse: they will have conceded their power.

So yes, Americans must stand firm. We should not yield just to keep the machinery running, especially if it means betraying our people and values. A shutdown should be the last option, and should be used only when the alternative is surrender. But in this moment, the alternative is worse.

Let this crisis be a call: Americans, don’t shrink. Hold strong. Ensure that the next resolution funds not only government institutions, but also people, the planet, and justice.

###



Meet Sean Smith, a master of conservation, adventure, and storytelling! This award-winning
conservationist and former National Park and Forest Ranger has trekked through the wilderness of Yellowstone, Glacier, Mount St. Helens, and the North Cascades, keeping nature safe with his trusty ranger hat and boots. But Sean's talents don't stop there. He's a TEDx speaker and even a private pilot.

But amidst all these adventures, Sean's heart beats for storytelling. He's been spinning tales since childhood, and now he writes thrilling national park novels that'll have you hooked from the first page. Imagine the drama and mystery of the mountains combined with the adrenaline of a rollercoaster ride. That's what you'll find in Sean's books, set against the majestic backdrop of Yellowstone, Gettysburg, and Mount Rainier. His most recent thriller is set in Glacier and will drop later this year.

So, if you're craving an escape into the wild, look no further. Grab a copy of Sean's novels and prepare for an unforgettable adventure. These stories will transport you to the heart of the national parks, where danger lurks and heroes rise. Don't miss out! Find all his captivating novels right here and in the QR code included. 

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

Preserve our History, Environment and Culture, One Sign at a Time

History lives where we least expect it, on the weathered panels that stand guard beside trails,
perched atop scenic overlooks, and nestled near historic structures in our national parks. But today, these unassuming signboards face a serious threat: the Trump administration’s campaign to reshape and sanitize America’s story.

This isn’t just bureaucratic tinkering. The administration has pressured the National Park Service to review and rewrite interpretive text on exhibits and signage that it deems “anti-American.” In some cases, officials have gone further, asking park visitors to report signs and displays they believe cast the United States in an unfavorable light. Think about that, our national parks, places meant to educate and inspire, are being turned into battlegrounds for ideological purity tests.

What does this mean in practice? It means signs that tell the truth about some of the hardest chapters in our history are at risk:

  • Civil War battlefields where signs honestly describe slavery as the central cause of the conflict.

  • Native American sites that acknowledge forced removals, massacres, and broken treaties.

  • World War II locations like Manzanar, Minidoka, and Tule Lake that tell the painful story of Japanese American incarceration.

  • Civil Rights landmarks that document the violence and resistance faced by those who fought for equality.

  • Environmental sites such as Glacier or Everglades, where interpretive text describes how climate change is reshaping ecosystems.

  • Industrial and mining landscapes where signs explain the damage caused by pollution, clear-cutting, or overuse of natural resources.

Under this campaign, visitors could soon encounter only a whitewashed version of history, one stripped of struggle, diversity, and hard truths. If allowed to stand, this approach reduces our parks to propaganda rather than places of education and reflection. Trump has ordered information deemed inappropriate to be removed by September 17, 2025.

Now more than ever, we must safeguard these echoes of the past before they disappear.

Why It’s Important to Tell the Entire Story

Our national parks are more than scenic backdrops; they are living classrooms that reveal the full scope of America’s natural, cultural, and historic legacy. From the towering sequoias of California to the battlefields of the Civil War, these places tell stories that are both inspiring and difficult. Some celebrate achievement, resilience, and discovery; others confront us with injustice, exploitation, and loss.

If we allow only the comfortable or convenient stories to be told, we lose the richness of our collective past. Interpreting the whole spectrum, beauty and struggle, triumph and tragedy, helps us understand who we are as a nation. It reminds us of what we’ve overcome, and it equips us to confront challenges still before us.

Interpretive signs are one of the most direct ways visitors encounter these lessons. They provide context, amplify diverse voices, and ensure that future generations inherit a history that is truthful, not selective. Preserving these signs is about more than words on a panel, it’s about protecting the integrity of America’s story in all its complexity.

Introducing: The “Save Our Signs” Project

The Save Our Signs initiative is a grassroots effort dedicated to documenting and archiving all history-related interpretive signs across our national parks. Its vision is simple yet powerful: ensure future generations can read, learn from, and reflect on the truths these signs convey, regardless of shifting political winds.

What You Can Do — Today

  1. Visit a national park: Any one will do. From Yosemite to Acadia, every sign tells a story.

  2. Snap a photo: Aim for clarity, capture the entire sign, including any contextual elements like nearby artifacts, structures, or landscapes.

  3. Submit it online: Upload the image (and any notes—location, date, sign text) via the project’s submission portal: Save Our Signs photo submission.

Why this matters:

  • Public record: Even if signage is altered or removed, your contribution ensures the original remains accessible.

  • Crowdsourced clarity: A database built by volunteers across the country captures diverse signs from major parks to small sites.

  • Collective resistance: Taking this small step is a statement. Together, we show that history can’t be erased.

A Call to Action

Calling all history-lovers, hikers, families, park fans, and American patriots, your next trip to a national park can do more than renew your spirit; it can preserve the truth. When you’re there, pause. Look. Photograph.

Tag your photos with something like "SaveOurSigns" if you're sharing on social media, and don’t forget to submit through the project portal so your documentation becomes part of something lasting and impactful.

Here’s how to help move this forward:

  • Share this post with your friends, local groups, and on social media. Encourage them to visit their local parks ASAP. Encourage folks to capture every sign imaginable, especially those sharing complex or underrepresented histories.

  • Forward this post to friends, family, and colleagues who work for the National Park Service and other federal land management agencies. They come in contact with our parks' interpretive displays daily. They are in the best position to capture the vast majority of signs. Encourage these park employees to photograph their park's signs before September 17, 2025.

Together, we can build a lasting archive that resists erasure and honors every story that belongs to our national narrative. Visit a park. Take a photo. Save our signs and the history they tell.

###



Meet Sean Smith, a master of conservation, adventure, and storytelling! This award-winning
conservationist and former National Park and Forest Ranger has trekked through the wilderness of Yellowstone, Glacier, Mount St. Helens, and the North Cascades, keeping nature safe with his trusty ranger hat and boots. But Sean's talents don't stop there. He's a TEDx speaker and even a private pilot.

But amidst all these adventures, Sean's heart beats for storytelling. He's been spinning tales since childhood, and now he writes thrilling national park novels that'll have you hooked from the first page. Imagine the drama and mystery of the mountains combined with the adrenaline of a rollercoaster ride. That's what you'll find in Sean's books, set against the majestic backdrop of Yellowstone, Gettysburg, and Mount Rainier. His most recent thriller is set in Glacier and will drop later this year.

So, if you're craving an escape into the wild, look no further. Grab a copy of Sean's novels and prepare for an unforgettable adventure. These stories will transport you to the heart of the national parks, where danger lurks and heroes rise. Don't miss out! Find all his captivating novels right here and in the QR code included.