OnEarth Magazine: Subscribe | Current Issue
Your OnEarth: Login / Register
Groundbreaking journalism needs your support
DONATE TODAY! Make a gift of $15 or more and receive four issues of our award-winning magazine.

The Last Orca

Scientist Eva Saulitis has dedicated her life to a vanishing group of whales that survived the Exxon Valdez spill but is now nearly extinct. Read>> Table of Contents | Digital Edition
Guardian Environmental Network

Fracking the Amish

Activist Carrie Hahn explains the potential risks of the natural gas drilling technique known as fracking to one of her Amish neighbors. Some 400 Amish families around New Wilmington, Pennsylvania, face the prospect of hundreds of tall drilling rigs near their fields and farmhouses, though they use no electricity from the grid themselves.
In a community that shuns technology and conflict, the intrusion of gas wells shatters tranquility and brings unexpected schisms

A bleak December sky hangs low over rural Lawrence County, Pennsylvania. Here, in areas populated by large Amish families, open fields roll toward the horizon uninterrupted by electrical wires and telephone poles. Stepping from a car that seems grossly out of place in this 19th century landscape, Carrie Hahn, a newcomer to the area, takes a deep breath of mud and cow outside an Amish farmhouse. Suddenly, like an apparition, Andy Miller appears on a flagstone path, his face hidden beneath beard and broad-brimmed hat. He quickly ushers us inside a large, unfurnished mudroom to escape the wind.

Miller, who is in his late 40s and has nine children, is a leading member of the Old Order Amish, who eschew all modern conveniences. (Like all the Amish names in this story, Miller’s has been changed at his request, to respect Amish traditions and preserve his anonymity.) Standing against a western window, a silhouette of felt hat, bushy sideburns, and stiff cotton work clothes, he explains how he came to be in the uncomfortable position in which he finds himself today: dealing with multibillion-dollar energy companies that use high-tech methods to shatter the earth and release mile-deep pockets of natural gas.

Decades ago, Miller says, oil and gas companies began prowling around western Pennsylvania, locking residents into leases for conventional gas wells, which are relatively shallow and unobtrusive. Many landowners, Miller included, had no idea that once they had assigned their mineral rights, often for a thousand times less than the going rate, the leaseholders could return and burrow deeper into the same piece of property.

This time around the gas companies intend to drill into the Marcellus Shale -- a 400-million-year-old, mile-deep formation that sweeps from West Virginia, across Pennsylvania, and into New York -- then turn their bits horizontally and continue boring for another couple thousand feet. Wells are then injected with millions of gallons of highly pressurized water laced with sand and chemicals; the solution fractures the shale and releases pockets of natural gas. This is fracking.

Miller sold his mineral rights to a company called Atlas, which was bought by Chevron in 2011. “The money helped,” he says, “but I wished I knew more of what to expect.” Now, thanks to people like Carrie Hahn, Miller understands that producing gas in this manner is no simple matter. Over a period of months, workers carve a multi-acre drilling platform out of forest or field, then cram it with mixing tanks, storage tanks, compressors, gas pipes, flaring towers, diesel generators, office trailers, and porta-potties. Nearby, they dig plastic-lined ponds of several acres to hold either freshwater or “produced” water that flows up and out of the wells. During development of the site, trucks carrying water, chemicals, sand, and other equipment come and go -- up to 1,000 of them a day.

“We don’t want huge gas companies coming here because of the heavy pollution, the traffic, and so much money,” Miller says. “When money rules, a lot of bad things happen to a community.” But good things have happened, too. With his payout from Atlas, Miller installed new drainage tiles to reduce excess water in his fields (yes, using only horse power). Other Amish families in the area have used gas royalties to build greenhouses or sawmills. “Buildings have to be kept up,” Miller says, shrugging. “But we would have survived without the money, somehow.”

Since the shallow well went in, Miller has managed to keep energy companies off his property, despite his lease. He gave an earful to a representative who tried to get near his well on a Sunday, and he continues to refuse access to a Texan seeking to seismically map his land (Miller has no obligation to permit this testing). I press Miller, who is now invisible to us in the darkness, to explain how he can legally stop a company from fracking if it owns the mineral rights on his property, but he deflects my inquiries. “It’s time for the community to take a stand,” he mutters enigmatically. When his wife, in a long skirt and a bonnet, lights a kerosene lantern and places dinner on the kitchen table, Hahn and I know it’s time to leave.

* * *

Four hundred Old Order Amish families live in and around Lawrence County’s borough of New Wilmington. Extended families live in plain white houses -- no shrubs, no shutters -- surrounded by gardens, barns, farm fields, and long stringers of ever-flapping laundry. Horses, cows, and sheep graze on rolling pastures; horses and buggies deliver children to one- or two-room schoolhouses served by an outhouse and an outdoor water pump. Old Order Amish don’t use cars or phones, electricity from the grid, indoor toilets, or upholstered furniture. Many live off their land; some run small businesses. Wooden signs at the ends of driveways advertise their wares: rocking chairs, maple syrup, eggs, fudge, donuts, firewood, sawdust, and fresh produce.

Soon, however, customers -- including the thousands of international tourists who visit the Amish countryside each year -- may be chased away from this homegrown bounty as New Wilmington, like other communities before it, is transformed by the industrial frenzy of shale-gas extraction.

NRDC: Defending Communities

Kate Sinding

Kate Sinding

Q&A with the NRDC senior attorney and New York urban program deputy director.

How can people in places like New Wilmington defend themselves if they don’t want oil and gas companies to undertake massive fracking operations in their communities?

If a city or town decides it doesn’t want fracking, that community’s voice should be heard and respected. But it can be very difficult for elected officials and community leaders to challenge large corporations and get up to date quickly about the many legal and environmental issues involved with oil and gas drilling. Plus, the rules and regulations are different in each state where fracking wells are being drilled -- and in a lot of states, communities have little or no power to “just say no” to the industry. That’s why NRDC launched the Community Fracking Defense Project last year. We’re offering our legal and policy assistance to local governments in five states -- New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and North Carolina -- that want added control over the siting of drilling in their communities, or ways to ensure their residents are protected against the harms of fracking.

Read the rest here.

As work crews have moved into the area, gas stations, lunch counters, coffee shops, the local hotel, and a tanning salon (favored by the wives of imported workers) have profited. Large landholders have done well, too, receiving up to $3,500 an acre for their mineral rights. “We’ve got some wealthy people now,” says New Wilmington Mayor Wendell Wagner. “Investment advisers and lawyers are advertising their services.”

But the town is seeing more friction, too, between landowners who trust energy companies to do the right thing and neighbors -- sometimes even family members -- convinced industry will cut corners and ravage the countryside. (Atlas Energy, which has leased mineral rights on several Lawrence County properties, including Miller's farm, would not comment for this story.) “I’ve been to town meetings and seen pictures of what’s going on,” says Ivan Dubransky, 64, who grew up in the area and worked for Pennsylvania Power and Light. “We’re in the same situation now that Washington County was three years ago. Back then, a lawyer told us fracking was the best thing that had ever happened down there, and that we’d better sign up. He came back recently and said it was the worst thing that had ever happened to his county.”

These are familiar concerns and conflicts, even supplying the plot for the new Matt Damon movie Promised Land. But in the small towns of western Pennsylvania, where many landowners have zero control over the fate of hydrocarbons beneath their property, the battle lines can be oddly mutable, and the Amish, many of whom have been rooted to this landscape for more than five generations, now find themselves in deeply unfamiliar territory.

* * *

Luckily for her Amish neighbors, Carrie Hahn, 47, is adept with a smartphone. She knows her way around county records and has no problem challenging corporate or local authority. With her husband, Bill, and their two horseback-riding, soccer-playing teenage daughters, she moved here from Pittsburgh nearly two years ago, seeking a healthier lifestyle and room to start a market garden. (A registered Republican, Hahn also works as a nutrition advocate for the Weston A. Price Foundation, which promotes a diet centered on fresh produce and animal products.)

The Hahns spent considerable time searching for property in the area, but an uptick in oil-and-gas drilling had tripled the price of land that included subsurface mineral rights. The Hahns could see that drilling would soon be a part of their daily life, so they started digging into what that might mean.

“I spent hours every day, researching, and reading anything and everything I could find on the environmental, financial, and social impacts of fracking,” Carrie Hahn says. “Soon, we were looking for land anywhere the shale was not.”

This was physically impossible if the family wanted to stay in western Pennsylvania, but the Hahns decided that controlling the rights to minerals beneath their home would be the key to minimizing their exposure. Thousands of leases have already been signed in Lawrence County, although only 26 wells destined for hydrofracking had been drilled as of June 2012. Residents are looking warily toward Washington County, to the south, which has 896 deep wells, and Bradford County, to the east, which has 1,795. According to estimates by Terry Engelder, a Penn State geoscientist, the Marcellus shale formation might contain enough technically recoverable natural gas to supply the entire United States, at the current rate of use, for up to 20 years.

The Hahns eventually purchased a modest house on 14 acres, and they continue to turn down offers from landmen seeking to purchase their mineral rights. But the couple knows that holding out will do little good if a deep well is drilled on the 100-acre property across the street, where rights have already been leased to Atlas Energy. “That would be the end of my organic farm,” Hahn says.

But she hasn’t given up hope. Before Atlas can sink a well on that property, it needs to piece together rights to hundreds more acres to make its investment worthwhile, which means the company is pursuing mineral rights from some of the Hahns’ Amish neighbors.* And that’s why Carrie now spends her days going door to door with rolled-up property maps, standing on wind-whipped porches and in dimly lit vestibules, respectfully explaining the risks of hydraulic fracturing to a community that, because of its religious convictions, is largely immune to both the cries of energy independence that rally fracking supporters and to the consumer opportunities that fracking windfalls might put within their reach.

* * *

The next morning, Hahn introduces me to Seth Bender, a sprightly farrier, 35 years old and the father of six. “I’m against the drilling because I live here,” he says as he bangs a horseshoe against an anvil in a drafty barn. “I’ve heard about the sinkholes and the earthquakes. I’m too much of a land lover to favor drilling. I want to keep the land the way God made it.” Bender’s Amish neighbors leased their land, “but I don’t think they’d have signed if they had it to do over again,” he says. “People here think, ‘If everyone’s done it, then so will I.’” He rasps the hoof of a bay mare, muddy in her harness. “Lots of people said they wouldn’t drill, because it’s against the elders, the rules. But they signed anyway and don’t talk about it. That two-sided thing used to be against our teaching.”

He drops the hoof. “This friction is caused by greed. Scripture says that at the end of times, it will take over. I could have been engulfed in it, too: we all like to make money. But I was taught at home that money not worked for” -- money from leasing, that is -- “is no good.”

The prospect of deep drilling has strained relationships not just among the Amish. “My cousin wanted no part of this, but his wife and kids did,” Ivan Dubransky, the former power company worker, tells me. “He ended up signing, but now he won’t even talk to me about it.”

“I went on the township’s Facebook page to ask questions about the seismic testing near me, and someone told me to go chain myself to a tractor,” says Suzanne Matteo, a local resident who now travels to distant post offices to avoid her pro-fracking local postmistress.

* * *

It’s tempting to think of the Amish as low-carbon innocents, the last people on earth who would knowingly invite oil and gas companies to intrude upon the land that sustains them. And the sight of wooden buggies parked near chemical tankers does spark some cognitive dissonance (as does learning that some Amish feel animosity toward energy companies only because they settled for $3 an acre, instead of $3,000).

But “the Amish are capitalists,” says Erik Wesner, a former scholar of Anabaptism who founded the website Amish America, which examines Amish culture and communities across North America. They’re astute businesspeople, Wesner continues, and “they make individual decisions, so long as they don’t go against their Ordnung,” or rules and standards.

Besides, the Amish have to pay taxes like anyone else, and farming has never been lucrative. They say the wells, as presented by the gas companies, seemed innocuous. According to Hahn, the technological isolation of the Amish can make them easy marks: “They don’t have televisions or the Internet, so they can’t learn about fracking or even see if the landmen are lying when they say their neighbors have leased and that they could make a lot of money.”

Landmen even brandish maps, Hahn adds, with plots falsely marked as leased. Dubransky says that landmen tried fooling him, as well. “I had a kid tell me I’d have more protection [against other drillers] if I signed a lease than if I didn’t,” he says, incredulous. (Pennsylvania law doesn’t allow energy companies to drill under non-leased property, so by not signing a lease, Dubransky kept his land protected.)

With other concerned community members, Hahn last year formed the Fracking Truth Alliance of Lawrence and Mercer Counties, which hosts forums to raise awareness about oil and gas development. Amish men have come to several of these, Hahn says. The group fought, unsuccessfully, to prevent the Wilmington Area School Board from leasing district-owned land to an energy company. And it’s currently trying to raise money to help Amish families test their water before deeper drilling and fracking begin. Without such baseline data on pre-drilling conditions, it’s impossible to win a lawsuit should water later become polluted.

“It costs $1,200 for a Tier 3 test, which is the broadest spectrum,” Hahn says. “But many of these families live below the poverty level.” (The Penn State Cooperative Extension Service recommends twice-a-year testing for the next 30 years if there is drilling and fracking activity near your house to monitor any potential pollution. Pricing may vary.)

The Amish worry about water quality for themselves, for their livestock and their gardens; they also worry about heavy traffic, which could shatter the carefully cultivated tranquility of their daily rhythms. There are reports, in other fracked counties, of well-servicing trucks running horses and buggies off the road. In Minnesota, an Amish family is fighting a rail yard that will wash and load fracking sand, on the grounds that the noise and traffic may prevent them from practicing their religion. Constitutional issues aside, their legal action is noteworthy because the Amish way is to resist quietly, if at all.

* * *

One afternoon, I accompany Hahn as she makes a cold call on Fred Kingery, the financier who owns the vacant 100 acres across from her house. In the double-height living room of his large stone house, a gas fire glows in the grate and nautical paintings decorate the walls. Kingery explains his pro-drilling position, which is based on a belief that the burning of hydrocarbons isn’t warming the planet, and that Marcellus gas will free the nation from dealing with its political enemies.

Hahn interrupts. “I’m screwed if you do a platform across from my house.”

“I wouldn’t want one across from my house either,” Kingery concedes. “But that’s just how it is.”

Hahn frowns, and Kingery adds, “It’s not about the money. It’s all about energy independence.”

“It’s constant noise and high-voltage lights.”

“It’s not forever,” Kingery sighs. “These issues come with progress. It’s part of the process, whether it’s the railroads or building skyscrapers.” Hahn realizes she’s getting nowhere. She asks Kingery if he tried to persuade her neighbors to allow seismic testing on their property.

“No,” he says. “I wasn't trying to talk them into it. But I spoke to them about it because I thought it would be in their best interest.”

* * *

A few sheep-dappled miles away, a drilling rig towers 150 feet above a soybean field behind Sam and Lydia Mullet’s farmhouse. The drill pad sits on land owned by Dorothy Hurtt, an elderly “English” woman -- as the non-Amish are known -- from whom the Mullets bought their property 18 years ago. The steady thud of drilling, which has gone on round the clock for several weeks, makes normal outdoor conversation impossible. The Mullets have nine children; the family subsists off its extensive garden (a strawberry patch produces 200 quarts a day at its peak), fees from training carthorses for others, and sales of the bentwood rockers that Sam Mullet crafts in a workshop behind the house. Asked how the drilling has affected her, Lydia answers in a tremulous voice. “I’m depressed about it, but we feel helpless because it’s not on our land. And the lights shine through our windows at night. It’s not relaxing.” Since the work began, Lydia has been waking at 3 a.m., unable to go back to sleep.

“I just hope it turns out good in the end,” Sam says.  “My attitude is live and let live, as long as it’s not hurting the earth. We try to avoid conflict.”

The Mullets’ 3-year-old son, bright-eyed under his broad-brimmed hat, skips about his father’s workshop with a length of strapping and motions for his visitors to peep inside a cardboard box, where five yam-sized puppies squirm. “I don’t want your kids outside breathing that silica dust once they start fracking,” Hahn says to Lydia.

“Okay,” Lydia answers, diffidently. “I think they’re going to be done here in another week or so.”

“They’re just doing the first well now,” Hahn tells her. “You know they could put 12 wells on that platform?” Lydia’s face goes ashen. She looks shocked. She had no idea that the pounding could continue for several more months.

If the drilling and fracking weren’t temporary, Sam tells Hahn, he’d likely move away. Perhaps this is possible: the Amish own thousands of acres throughout Lawrence and Mercer Counties. But a new address is no guarantee that drilling won’t intrude -- the Marcellus underlies a vast area, and neither water nor air pollution stick to property lines.

I ask Mullet if his community would ever take a unified stand against this sort of activity, as Andy Miller had hinted they might. He shakes his head and answers slowly. “We don’t want to go to court, to testify about water problems. But we’re glad for people like Carrie to do this.” Mullet’s voice trails off. Then he repeats, in a tone halfway between resolved and resigned, “We try to avoid conflict.”

Hahn smiles weakly. She feels deep empathy for families like the Mullets, who are stressed and sickened by the drilling activity nearby and are living, she says, in constant fear and worry. “If something goes wrong here,” she asks, “who’s going to help you? The government? I don’t think so.”

After her confrontation with Kingery, Hahn is hopeful that he won’t allow Atlas to put a drilling platform near her house, should the company eventually piece together the acreage it needs. But she still worries that a well within a few miles of her property could affect the food she plans to grow. And so for her own family’s sake, as well as the sake of her Amish neighbors, she continues to pull together community forums, to take water samples around the county, to talk to her new neighbors and prepare them for what’s coming -- and what’s at stake.

“We want the industry to know that we are out there,” she says. “We want them to know that we’re watching what they’re doing, and that they can’t just come in here and sandbag us.”

Correction January 14, 2013: This story originally misstated the conditions necessary for Atlas to drill a well near Carrie Hahn's property. Return to the corrected sentence.

image of Elizabeth Royte
OnEarth contributing editor Elizabeth Royte also writes for the New York Times Book Review, which called her "no stranger to the pleasures and perils of chasing errant pieces of plastic and other castoffs to surprising (and often disgusting) places."... READ MORE >
This is tragic. And science studies are showing it to also be a wasted effort. The methane that is being burned off at the well makes fracked gas as bad for climate change as burning coal. And they weren't even measuring the methane that was leaking. Nature just published this update http://www.nature.com/news/methane-leaks-erode-green-credentials-of-natural-gas-1.12123
How dare the Gas Companies frack the Amish? Have they no restraint or compassion ? They need to be stopped and quickly before the Earth is a Superfund site...
I enjoyed "Promised Land", and I saw it twice on back-to-back days after it opened. The only part of the movie that, to me, was fictitious was the ending where Matt Damon's landman character actually got a heart and soul, and then told the truth. In the real world that NEVER happens. Landmen give snake oil and used car salesmen a good name! Like the conmen they are, they look for easy marks - the poor, the disenfranchised, the stubbornly religious with rigid rules about "avoiding conflict" regardless of how much doing so harms them and their families, and others who are easy prey. They usually lie, deceive, cajole and otherwise act unethically in order to get you to sign on the bottom line. I wonder how much a landman made for getting the Amish to lease land for $3 per acre rather than the $3,000 per acre they were giving to others in that same area. My guess would be at least half of what he saved the company!
Thank goodness for people like Carrie who are trying to educate people about the truth of this toxic industry.
This story is so typical of what happens when people allow religion to get in the way of common sense and self-determination. The way democracy works is that government usually does NOT intervene on your behalf unless you initiate the action. Letting somebody else who is not a member of your religious order carry your water for you seems to me to violate their own tenets of earning what you have. And, refusing to get involved because you like to “avoid conflict” is not going to wash when one’s family is sickened or dies from exposure to the pollution in the water, air and soil. And, it is hardly just the Amish! Everywhere, a relatively small group of people fight this insidious industry for the benefit of their neighbors who, for whatever reason, don’t seem to be willing to get involved and make any contribution of any kind to protection of their own health and safety, property values or the environment in which they live and upon which they depend for their survival. For a fact, we CAN live without oil and gas – mankind did it for 200-400,000 years – but nobody and nothing animate or inanimate can survive without fresh, clean water and air. It really is just that simple.
I stumbled across ‘Fracking the Amish’ and have to admit to being more than a little confused. The title, for starters, is a mystery. Surely the writer (unless she’s a teenager) would not insult her readers and belittle herself by trying to make some clumsy crude play on the word ‘fracking’ and the ubiquitous ‘f*&king.’ She didn’t actually intend the reader to read the title as F*&king the Amish, surely? Then we move on to the body of the article, or is it a story? Quite frankly I was so mired down in hyperbole, ‘rocking chairs and maple syrup, prowling oil companies, bleak December days et-boringly- cetera, I began to wonder whether I was reading a trashy romance rather than an allegedly serious treatise on an issue which has the potential to affect the future of civilization as we know it. I read with interest the quotes from residents who feel hard done by, trampled on by the ‘frenzy’ of industry and ‘prowling oil companies,’ although I see they did have time to grab the money, before the stampede. “But we would have survived without the money.” Mr Miller says, shrugging. Hindsight is a wonderful thing Andy, isn’t it? And then there are the Amish and the traffic which could ‘shatter the carefully cultivated tranquillity of their daily rhythms.’ Wow. In my neck of the woods I just wish I could have some CCT DR’s (carefully cultivated tranquillity ...daily rhythms) to be shattered. Then we come to the really scary bit: the cold call on Mr Kingery. THE FINANCIER! (Loud Boo from the audience, as the kids yell ‘he’s behind you! He’s behind you!) Personally, I can understand Mr Kingery sighing. There seems to be no debating you Elizabeth. You actually only want to hear from people who agree with everything you say, and to whom you can flower-up their quotes like Beatrix Potter on a good day. Sigh. And maybe Ms Hahn wouldn’t feel so helpless if she had a modicum of rational thought with which to debate the issue. At one point, I forget where (I think I was battling with ‘tremulous voices’ and ‘cognitive dissonance’ at the time) one of Elizabeth’s interviewee’s comments: “When money rules a lot of bad things happen to a community.” Take money out of a community and trust me Honey a lot worse will happen. It’ll be bleaker than a Lawrence County December day. Seth Bender says he wants “to keep the land the way God made it.” Good for you Seth! If you’re happy for your six kids to sleep in a cave, good on you. I’m not. OK? And I think you’ll agree, I have as much of a say on God’s earth, as you do. Someone else in this Dr Zeus talks of the earth being ‘hurt.’ Oh God, save us. In conclusion Elizabeth, I don’t want to appear too tough on you. Your heart might be in the right place but your pen isn’t. Maybe you need an actual sword to fight this battle. You do your cause a great disservice. If you are in fact fifteen years old and I was writing your report card, I would say you do have a writing talent but not in this genre. You speak for yourself. I speak for the millions who live daily the grind of starvation, freezing cold and searing heat. Not a life-style choice; all free-range eggs and strawberry patches, but rather a life sentence: deprivation and despair. Leave the serious reporting to the grown-ups. You seem to have a penchant for food. Have you thought about a cook book? Colleen-Shana Nolan.
Wow, Colleen, you really don't know what you're talking about, do you? Elizabeth Royte is one of the best environmental journalists in the country. Ever hear of the books Garbage Land or Bottlemania? Or Best American Science Writing, for that matter? You might want to check her out here before making a fool of yourself again: http://byliner.com/elizabeth-royte
Thou really doth protest too much. Is it upsetting that the author's story is real, not pulp fiction? Or that the story's subjects display a depth of character beyond what you've considered? It's likely there are unspan-able differences between a person who views the earth as her playground and one who says: "we all like to make money. But I was taught at home that money not worked for…is no good.” So you think you "have as much of a say on God's earth" as Seth Bender does. Does that give you, or a global corporation, the right to swindle him out of the safe use of his land and his property and then criticize him for being a trusting enough soul to allow it to happen? Tell me: how is ruining the lives of American citizens who do not wish to participate in the gas industry's fracking (every possible meaning implied here: noun, verb or adverb) experiment in anyone's interest who values living in a democracy or respects the rights of others? It's hard for a thinking person to believe that you "speak for the millions who live daily the grind of starvation, freezing cold and searing heat" if you are a person who is traveling through life "on the expensive." How exactly will fracking (verb) for shale gas help those for whom you purportedly speak, anyway?
oh man' you are tough' hu. are you for the environment' or not' forgive me if im mistaken' but you are making a life style choice of tough living. money over Honey''hunny' i think you are looking through the glass from a fractured point of view in my opinion. i live very simple. very'' organic, farm raised isn't just for those with money or a conscience., it should be for everyone' by quality of life ' you and your children like living below the poverty line/ no>> well when you come to terms with Honey' above money' you will see the light' sister.
Such vitriol! I'm sorry you don't understand wanting to live in peace and quiet. And, I'm sorry you have to live in a "daily grind of starvation, freezing cold and searing heat", but we all make our choices and we chose to live here in New Wilmington where it is quiet and peaceful. As far as I know, know one here lives in caves. Your remarks about the Amish show much ignorance. How you can be so judgmental about a people and a way of life you don't even believe exist? Well, madam, they do and,believe me when I tell you, they would never speak badly about you. I discovered this piece while investigating the 'net looking for how I should handle the request we've received to seismically survey our property. You see, I don't want my peace and quiet destroyed here in New Wilmington, either.
"And maybe Ms Hahn wouldn’t feel so helpless if she had a modicum of rational thought with which to debate the issue." You make this comment but give no references from the article as to my lack of rational thought. You want a debate on this topic? Bring it.
" In my defense I became self-righteous." Tainted virtue, questionable temperance, brotherly kindness in doubt. 400 yrs ya say ? Money, Oh the temptation. Soon all the little perky goodies will all be gone, lives and community soured. People are learning, " Who is it knocks so loud ? a lonely little sin... slip through I answered.....Soon all Hell was in !" Thank You Lady Royte for all your hard work, not just here but everywhere your mind and heart go.
Disgusting ... horrifying ... alarming ... saddening. While I am in favour of energy independence, I do NOT think that it ought to be had at the expense of our earth, the beauty of which is seldom fully reparable~restorable. Nor is it right or just for the companies to lie to simple(r) folk like the Amish in order to save a buck in the process of mineral-rights acquisition. Being different is NO cause to demean or degrade their dignity as people or as American citizens. For certain, the Amish set a fine example for the rest of us in their use of the earth AND caring for it, NOT exploiting it !!!