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Low Colorado River flows create ripple effects on Utah’s recreation industry

The Colorado River once only powered farms and industry. Today, it powers communities whose economies depend on recreational activities such as rafting, tubing and fishing. In Southern Utah, businesses along the Colorado River and the Virgin River say low flows are reshaping seasons, straining logistics and forcing a reevaluation of century-old water policies.

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Phishing Season

Every so often, my phone buzzes—and it’s not a pal, not a loved one, not Ted from accountingasking if he can expense a banana. It’s a stranger. A phisherman, casting a line. It’s not myneighbor Phil who fishes for fish with esoteric lures, bless him.As most know, Phishing is a scam where someone pretends to be someone else and fishes foryour money. It’s spelled with a “ph” because back in the 1970s, a group of telephone hackerscalled phone phreaks wanted their name to be phonetically and visually alliterative. You know,because they’re cool like that. It was so cool it stuck and to this day, when someone goes fishingfor your credentials, it’s called phishing.Let the phishermen phish, I say. I just want them to be better at the craft. Right now, it’s just ageneric, slipshod, poorly punctuated, English-as-a-second-language effort. I get texts like: Areyou free for diner(sic)? Do you like my new number? We’ve seen each other at least once, right?I would never ever, under any circumstances respond to anything so, well, dumb.But what if, instead of phoning it in with: Do you remember me? They brought a little pizazz tothe party. What if I got a text that said: Are you there God, it’s me? When I respond to that, I’mnow the voice of God. I know He is very good at punctuation but does He use all caps? Italics?Emojis? If someone has their phone silenced, does He notify anyway?What if, instead of: Are you busy? They brought a little savoir faire to the thing and asked:Would you rate your intelligence as world class, superhuman, otherworldly, or other? You see,some questions practically demand an answer. (A: World class, obviously)What if, instead of: Want to meet up? They asked something truly important like: Is Egyptianblue really just cobalt? Because that’s a question I’ve been thinking about a lot anyway andthere’s a chance the right answer might win me a Nobel Prize.Instead of a dumb question like: Are you there? (Of course, I’m here!) they asked a smart onelike: Do you buy Heidegger’s reading that Aristotle’s good life isn’t about happiness, but aboutbeing? The thing I love about this question is that my answer has a fifty-fifty chance of soundingdeep.In lieu of: Can I send w/rk info? (Why abbreviate a letter with a symbol?) They asked: Did youever figure out that whole one hand clapping sound? I think whoever asked that question woulddefinitely want to know that I’m still working on it.Instead of I’m Violet here to check in on a possible role (bad grammar, weird premise), theyasked: “They say the British band Wet Leg is indie rock but don’t you think it has a lot of punkinfluences, too?” I’d text back immediately: I’ve been saying exactly that since their first album!

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