Wednesday, December 21

Today's Blather

On Today's Going to Hell Watch: Scott McClellan

The first thing of interest I came across is this interview with Chris Mooney. I've not yet read his book, but as I understand it's a welcome entry in the war on science by the religious right You'll find it here

Not too relatedly, yet another story about lawns and bureaucratic power and alternative living here

For those contemplating retirement of any kind

Life really is a fairy tale, wouldn't you agree?!?

And are YOU "chronically happy" yet?

If not, they've got it right in New Zealand, no doubt you've heard.

Tuesday, December 13

Peak 101

Get yer days sunny weather elsewhere

Corporate Shit List

Currently and ongoing

Monday, December 5

Shucks, boys

Mindful of the Susan Faludi book Stiffed of about a decade ago, this article from the Washington Post mulls over recent developments (devolutions) here in our nation. With so many young men and women mulling reductive choices between MBA corporate pillage careers vs. fighting wars in the East, we shouldn't wonder at the somatic attraction of video games, porn or drugs. Do tell a young person today; what is the point?!? Do we know? Can we agree?

Friday, December 2

Hell, at least a time capsule rusts...


Which one is me?!?!
Now that I've got your attention:

Been mulling some of the reasons spoken and unspoken for the draft (shall we say?) in this figurative room I've drawn--Rue, that is. And while ultimately the answer lies with none other than moi, I can't help but be bummed at the quietude in this here blog.
O comments
O comments
O comments
Yes, I can pitch a bitch! I know damn well there are more interesting things in cyberspace, but how hard is it really to chime in here or there?!? Feelin' like radon over here, or Ray Don (his brother); I dunno which.
About as hard as it is to pick up the phone, you say? AHa ha.
Twist firmly.
The blog isn't open to the public, just the riff-raff of YOU, who I chose. Yeah, mebbe you didn't choose me. But I do you, and for my inability to hold your casserole, see your recital, and generally send greeting cards with any precision; perhaps I deserve this. I'd like to think bygones to betsy's NOT.
I've much to learn about being a decent friend, brother etc. I just hope is that somehow these broken unrequited entries count for more than the gathered howl of silence.

Anyway, feel free to play. It might be the most groovey turn yet.

Got gum?

Aspartame
Mine does

Our Flatulant Planet: good news?

Gulf Stream in retirement?

you Are the wind beneath our wings!
sadly,
Iceland will go down first

Wednesday, November 30

By Jehu! 2000 year Oopsie?


















In perhaps an understated historical claim, the chasm between the U.S. administration and the rest of the worlds sentient beings widens.
Unimportant yet ironic facts such as the figurative and literal invasion of Babylon (and its reported sacking and vandalizing by American boys): the seat of the worlds first society in Sumeria; and the moral coup represented by our thundering cavalry-- to Islamic fundementalists worldwide--stagger the thinking mind.

At times like these the truth breaks like a dam...

Even with a stonewall

Tuesday, November 29

Crunching the books, and inevitably the Numbers

http://www.alternet.org/wiretap/28641/
On the brink of FINALLY acquiring that 4-year (snicker) degree, this detailed view rings truer than I wish it did. After taking years to pay off my twenties as a student, here again I'm in debt. Not sure yet what the lesson ought to be...
And more

Tuesday, November 22

Saturday, November 19

I know, I'm a Paine

http://www.alternet.org/story/28346/

Vatican Official Refutes Intelligent Design:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051118/ap_on_re_eu/vatican_evolution;_ylt=AiKv.BbrtxeY.EWZ1FtgEFis0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3ODdxdHBhBHNlYwM5NjQ-

Home and Garden


As a 'health nut' whos family experience has included such nasties as asthma, emphysema, fibromyalgia, cancer and a lotta frickin colds, I think this realm of science and technology deserves heap'more attention. Quality o' life ideally includes the right of young lungs to develop free of secondhand smoke, roach droppings, over-medication (be it Prozac, antibiotics or pain medication), or PCB's, flame retardant, rocket fuel or hormones in our drinking water.
Ideally.
And the fact there is war, political corruption, voting irregularities, and such in the news should not diminish any resolve to fight for a better future. Knowledge is power.
http://www.alternet.org/envirohealth/28115/

http://www.alternet.org/envirohealth/28361/

http://alternet.org/story/28576

Thursday, November 17

Why am I in Libraries?


A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, con a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects. - Robert A. Heinlein

Wednesday, November 16

Junque

http://newdream.org/junkmail/

Monday, November 14

pre ponderance

The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts. - Bertrand Russell

Friday, November 11

Points to Ponder

And by the way happy 8 month birthday to Cormac, who still doesn't mind getting called a girl.

Thursday, November 10

Wednesday, November 9

Heard it All?

From 1776-2000, the first 224 years of U.S. history, 42 U.S. presidents borrowed a combined $1.01 trillion from foreign governments and financial institutions

In the past four years alone, the Bush administration borrowed $1.05 trillion.

http://www.cnsnews.com/ViewNation.asp?Page=%5CNation%5Carchive%5C200511%5CNAT20051104b.html

Drum Beats

Bush and Cheney's church calls for ending Iraq war
http://www.aljazeera.com/cgi-bin/review/article_full_story.asp?service_ID=9998

Churchill-1943:
"The power of the Executive to cast a man into prison without formulating any charge known to the law, and particularly to deny him the judgement of his peers, is in the highest degree odious and is the foundation of all totalitarian government whether Nazi or Communist."

Military used Phosphorus:
http://www.rainews24.rai.it/ran24/inchiesta/slideshow.asp?gallery=1&id=5

Know your addictions? -edit

Product Bias: The End Of The Romance?
Posted by Jonathan Rowe on Sat, 11/05/2005 - 7:41pm
You’ve heard about the new iPod video player and believe me, this is big. Now kids will be able to watch movies behind their textbooks in class. They’ll have another way to sit in the back seat and ignore their parents on family car trips. I mean, we wouldn’t want parents and kids actually to talk with one another.
The first thing they tell you in traffic school is not to take your eyes off the road. Ever. I’m sure I’m not the only one who’s had close calls just taking a quick glance at the heater setting. So now the bozos out there are going to be searching for Coldplay on the screen or getting pumped as the Terminator excises his foes. Makes you feel good that your kids are out on their bikes, no?
It is no secret that new technologies have impacts like this. All it takes to be aware of them is eyes and ears. Yet the media seems oblivious. Most of the early reporting on the iPod video was of the techno-schmoochfest variety summed up in the Business Week column called (I’m not kidding) “Video iPod, I love you.”
It’s not just iPods. Cell phone video, video games, potions and pills get the same fawning treatment. Car reviews still read as though written by people with the psycho-emotional development of 17 year olds. The reporting on HDTV has been almost catatonically unaware of a most basic question: does this country really need something that will make television even more seductive to kids – and to the rest of us too, for that matter.
Far more powerful than the alleged “liberal” bias of the media is the product bias, especially when those products involve technology. This is the master narrative, the assumption that drives much of the reporting about the economy. It also crowds out other narratives, including that of the commons.
The obvious explanation is advertising. Commercial media depends upon it. Most ads are for products; and so publishers are loathe to bite the hands that feed them. The influence of advertisers is undeniable and growing. But it is not the whole story. The issue of Business Week that carried the wet kiss for video iPods didn’t have an Apple ad. (It did have another story touting new devices to plug iPod audio into home stereo systems.)
The assumption is built into the language. Products are goods, and goods cannot be bad.
These assumptions drive the master narrative. They reinforce, and provide august authority for, the cultural romance with technology and the notion that progress comes always on the wings of new things to buy. Providing a soundtrack for all this is the nation’s central measure of progress, the GDP, which embodies these assumptions to an almost comic degree, and which the media follows slavishly.
It’s going to become increasingly hard to maintain the romance of stuff in the face of intruding realities such as this. (A major problem though is the narrow fixation of the American Left on physical impacts such as cancer. Cell phones for example can be questioned only if they pose a cancer risk to users, not if they corrode the interactions in the home.)
Addiction for example has become a trademark affliction of the age. People are becoming addicted not just to tobacco, drink and drugs – the stock vices – but also to video games, cell phones, web surfing, junk food, cosmetic surgery, credit card debt, and shopping period. That’s a pretty broad swath of the economy right there.
Addiction is a phenomenon for which the conventional economic model has no answer. The “rational” consumer is the moral anchor of the narrative, and the claim to “efficiency” of the entire system. So if people increasingly buy things that are bad not just for everyone else, but for themselves as well -- and that they don’t really want to begin with -- then the whole belief system starts to go kerplooey.

http://onthecommons.org/node/731?PHPSESSID=dcf079f1833c90d6f9b6d9509502946f

the Lion Roars

Yer move, Georgie. Guess that war is kind of a drag after all.
http://www.terradaily.com/news/energy-tech-05zzzzzzzzc.html

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,6903,1635188,00.html

Tuesday, November 8

Hero

The Road Warrior
HIROSHI OKUDA Hiroshi Okuda, the chairman of Toyota, envisioned the need for a hybrid car long before history demanded it. In the 1990s, at a time when oil prices were hitting rock bottom and America's SUV market was exploding, Okuda greenlighted the engine technology that would usher in an era of fuel-efficient -- and eventually zero-emission -- cars.
Today there are more than 350,000 Priuses on the road worldwide, and other automakers are racing to catch up with the 350 patents Toyota holds on gas-electric hybrids. "When it comes to perfecting the killer app of hybrid technology," says Ashok Gupta, director of the air and energy program at the Natural Resources Defense Council, "Okuda is the Bill Gates of the auto world."
Six feet tall and a black belt in judo, Okuda likes to break the rules. To encourage youthful innovation, he promotes younger employees to managerial roles. He has dismissed American carmakers as "stupid." And in June, to help Japan meet its climate targets under the Kyoto Protocol, he sauntered down a Tokyo catwalk in a lightweight suit, sans tie, his shirt collar unbuttoned down to midchest. It was a fashion statement almost as scandalous as an emperor with no clothes: Formal business attire is to Japanese executives as shitkickers are to Texas oilmen. But Okuda, an outspoken climate crusader at age seventy-two, was promoting Japan's emerging "cool biz" movement, modeling lighter suits that could alleviate the need for air conditioning in office buildings.
For all his showmanship, Okuda is dead serious when it comes to the fight against global warming. "People and countries simply will no longer allow autos to damage their living environments or the Earth's ecosystems," says Okuda, who has worked at Toyota for fifty years. The Prius "embodies this spirit," he adds, contributing to the company's "growth in the moral dimension."
Okuda, a serious reader who ranges from political memoirs to Goethe, selected the name Prius because it means "to go before" in Latin -- signifying "a forerunner to the twenty-first century and to the era when automobile technologies become highly diverse." Hybrid technology is already setting the stage for the future: Building on the system used in the Prius, Toyota has developed a prototype, the FCHV, that runs on hydrogen-fuel cells.

Schitz Mill

"All the happy talk about divorce is designed to reassure parents," "But it's not the truth for children. Even a good divorce restructures children's childhoods and leaves them traveling between two distinct worlds. It becomes their job, not their parents', to make sense of those two worlds."
For example, those who grew up in divorced families were far more likely than those with married parents to say that they felt like a different person with each parent, that they sometimes felt like outsiders in their own home and that they had been alone a lot as a child.
Those with married parents, however, were far more likely to say that children were at the center of their family and that they generally felt emotionally safe.
In the study, all those from divorced families had experienced their parents' divorce before age 14 and had maintained contact with both parents. Most of the time, Ms. Marquardt maintains, children with married parents need not concern themselves with their parents' thoughts and feelings while those with divorced parents must be more vigilant, more attuned to their parents' moods and expectations, more careful to adjust to the habits of the parent they are with - and more concerned about looking or acting like the other parent.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/05/national/05divorce.html?th&emc=th

Saturday, November 5

Prospects

I came across a post-it note today from my reading of Jared Diamond's 'Collapse' a few months back, and rather than share its contents in poetry form, I'll simply regurgitate them in preface to the link below.
"trapped in a competitive spiral
psychological denial
crowd psychology
groupthink"
...and go to commercial!
Personally, the beacon of freedom that was journalism has tanked in the last few years, to my mind. And given the quality of leadership we have in the media and politics, one must dig (or be so fortunate) to find meaningful sources of wisdom. This c.y.a. decade will be savaged if ever it can be looked back upon. At any rate, some of the best springboards for unequivocal self-ed (when properly handled) are 1) the internet, and 2) syllabi
Yep.
http://faculty.whatcom.ctc.edu/jrawlins/phys109/artlist.htm

George Carlin

"This place is eating itself alive," he said in an interview a few days before the Dayton show. "I like applying the entropic principle from science to this country, this civilization. I think it is slowly disintegrating."
"For me, it isn't the fact of the disintegration so much as the act of it, watching it, seeing it," he added. "It is a freak show. And in this country you get a front-row seat. And some of us have notebooks."

All those goodies come from somewhere

http://corpwatch.org/article.php?id=12754

Monday, October 31

Another view from the outside

Is it the air outside our borders? Does freedom ring differently?
Bonus points for particular use of the word "rot"

http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1130622380056&call_pageid=1109682110623&col=Query:1109682108702&DPL=IvsNDS%2f7ChAX&tacodalogin=yes

Give it away now: Corporate Radio

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20051029/music_nm/radio_dc

The graveyard of radio, though littered with the bloated corpses of muzakrock, is speckled with wild daisies of free and independent stations. Be they AM, jazz, classical or Babyl-on, their now THE ONLY alternative we have left. Even NPR is hedged by DOW and ConAgra. Get it while it's live!

More on our Nation's Legacy to its Children

http://www.mcall.com/news/local/all-a1_5dumpoct30,0,5117767,print.story?coll=all-news-hed

The last beach I bodysurfed was Delmarva, in Delaware. Guess the greenwave I rode in on was not so pure a comet as I'd wished. Life is full of sighs.

Despair not, Uncle Sam wants you to drink!

http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/409/toohigh.shtml
-Drug criminals account for 55% of all federal prisoners
-The US accounts for about one-quarter of all prisoners on the planet. In terms of raw numbers, only China, with almost four times the population of the US, comes close
World Prison Population

If you must drink, here's an option: http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.11/absinthe_pr.html

Coast Guard: Still Works

How?
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1122007,00.html

The powers that rule haven't had the time to gut this quietly venerable institution, yet.

Sunday, October 30

Whose beans? Buy in Season

U.S. Organic Companies Are Importing More & More Organic Foods from Overseas--Undercutting U.S. Farmers
<http://desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20051008/BUSINESS01/510080328/1029/BUSINESS
Companies are cutting costs by importing not only bananas and coffee but also all-American commodities like soybeans, fruits and vegetables, and now even beef. The imports also feed U.S. consumers' growing demand for organic products — sales are increasing 20 percent a year nationwide.
Organic Valley, a Wisconsin-based farmer cooperative, imports some of its beef from Australia.
Cascadian Farm, a major name in organic frozen produce that started out buying commodities in the Pacific Northwest, now buys many of its fruits and vegetables from overseas.
According to package labels, the broccoli is from Mexico, the asparagus from China, the green peas from New Zealand, and the cherries and raspberries from Chile. Even the California-style vegetable mix isn't entirely American; some of the veggies originate in China.
Trader Joe's, a fast-growing grocery chain that attracts upscale shoppers with moderately priced natural foods, also is going to China and South America for its produce.
Fresh organic produce, including Chilean apples and Mexican vegetables, also is being widely imported by U.S. stores when domestic product is out of season, according to the Organic Trade Association.
However, a recent USDA study estimated that the United States imported as much as $1.5 billion in organic food in 2002, while exporting as little as $125 million worth of organic products.

Gastroporn

Smartbombs and cellphones and pundits, O my
What a world indeed!
http://www.onthemedia.org/transcripts/transcripts_100705_porn.html

Saturday, October 29

Really Mom, it's for the restless leg syndrome.....

No--really, this deserves our attention......

Dear friends,Commercial Alert is launching a nationwide campaign to stop direct-to-consumer prescription drug marketing.Drug ads lead to over-prescription of drugs, which may be dangerous or deadly for patients. Pharmaceutical companies have a massive financial conflict-of-interest which drives them to exaggerate the positive and minimize the negative qualities of their own products. Pharmaceutical companies claim that their ads educate consumers. We know they are just trying to hawk their products, and convince people that all of life’s problems can be solved with more little pills.We have a great opportunity to stop the $4 billion annual marketing onslaught by big drug companies. The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is rethinking its rules on drug marketing. It is collecting public comment through February 28, 2006.Commercial Alert is organizing thousands of citizens to tell the FDA to stop the drug ads.Over two hundred medical school professors have already endorsed Commercial Alert's statement opposing direct-to-consumer prescription drug ads. Now we need your support. Please write to the FDA today, at:
http://www.democracyinaction.org/dia/track.jsp?key=49432014&url_num=4&url=http://hq.democracyinaction.org/dia/organizations/commercialalert/campaign.jsp?campaign_KEY=1415
-- Gary Ruskin, Commercial Alert

a village

http://smart.tin.it/luccacos/miniatureearth/miniature_earth.htm
'Twas the night before Fitzmas, and in the White House
Every one was scared shitless, and Bush was quite soused.
The indictments were hanging like Damocles' sword
As verminous oxen prepared to be gored.
The perps were all sleepless, curled fetal in bed,
While visions of prison cells loomed in each head.
And Dick in his jammies and George in his lap
Were sweating and swearing and looking like crap.
When out on the web there arose such a clatter,
The blogs and the forums were buzzing with chatter.
Away to the PC Rove ran like a flash;
He booted his browser and cleared out his cache.
The rumors that flew through the cold autumn air
Made Dubya shiver with angry despair.
When what to his horror-filled eyes did he spy?
A bespectacled man with a brown suit and tie!
With an impartial manner that gave Bush the shits,
He knew in a moment it must be St. Fitz!
With unwavering voice, his indictments they came.
He cleared out his throat and he called them by name:
Now Scooter, Now Libby,Now Blossoming Turd,
Now Cheney, dear Cheney,Yes, you are the third.
To the bench of the court,Up the steps, down the hall,
Now come along, come along,Come along, all!
He then became silent and went right to work.
He filed the indictments and turned with a jerk
And, pointing his finger at justice's scale,
Said, "The people be served, and let fairness prevail.
"He then left the room, to his team gave a nod,
And the sound could be heard of a crumbling facade.
And we all did exclaim, as he faded from sight
"Merry Fitzmas to all, and to all a good night!"

[SOURCE UNKNOWN}

Loff Now, will you?

http://www.arnoldsneighborhood.com/

Monday, October 24

Sunday, October 23

What are we (not) Talking about here?!?!

By DAN MITCHELL
Published: October 22, 2005
IT'S easy to imagine how busy the comptroller of the United States, David M. Walker, has been since he was appointed in 1998, calling out wayward politicians on fiscal matters.
But lately, Mr. Walker has been on a tear. He is making appearances nationwide to warn of what he says is a looming federal fiscal crisis, likening it to horrific weather events.
"We have not yet begun to face the demographic tidal wave - the demographic tsunami, if you will - associated with the retirement of my generation, the baby boom generation," Mr. Walker said during a recent panel discussion in Minneapolis, which can be heard on Minnesota Public Radio's Web site, mpr.org.
Also this week, National Review Online (nationalreview.com) quoted Mr. Walker as saying during an appearance in Richmond, Va., that "a Category 6 hurricane is threatening our shores - it's the federal budget deficit."
For the panel discussions, representatives from two research groups, one from the liberal Brookings Institution and one from the conservative Heritage Foundation, usually tag along with Mr. Walker.
This is to make it clear that the effort is not a partisan attack on the Republican-controlled government. It is also to emphasize that while the problem has worsened under the Bush administration (even the Heritage Foundation says so), the government's fiscal condition is not tied to any president's policies. As comptroller, Mr. Walker is in charge of the Government Accountability Office. Its Web site, www.gao.gov/special.pubs/longterm, offers easily digestible material in support of his arguments.
But however loud, logical or well presented the arguments may be, the lack of government action seems to some to come from a systemic fault in modern American politics.
"There is not much courage out there," said Brian M. Riedl of the Heritage Foundation, speaking at the Minneapolis event. "Like an alcoholic, the first thing you have to do is admit you have a problem. The flip side of it is, Americans are vehemently opposed to every possible solution."

Saturday, October 22

Eat this

I think everyone who knows me is aware of my displeasure for lawns, so I'll spare you. What then is to be done about them. Well, the same thing as gargantuan problems such as sprawl, political correctness, nuclear proliferation, or Starbucks. Start small if you have to, but jump in!
Tiny acts of discordance drive powers that be crazy!
http://www.fritzhaeg.com/garden/initiatives/edibleestates/main.html

Friday, October 21

what's a 'Cabal'?


http://news.ft.com/cms/s/afdb7b0c-40f3-11da-b3f9-00000e2511c8.html

Hint: Dick Chain-ey, Army Graib, Regime Change

His Call to Arms


http://www.yeeguy.com/freefall/

I could watch this for....nearly five years and two elections

a FOX poll

finds that 48% support doctor assisted euthanasia as opposed to 39% who opposed.

Where do you stand? One foot in, one out?
I guess I'm developing strong opinions regarding death, even. (Wha?)
In a world with so many billions unable to right themselves, in a country with a 'healthcare' system stacked for profit and prolongation of life(!) at nearly any cost, where we are propelled into financial debt and usury throughout life....Why make it any harder? Why does the gracious hand of God have the only say in my/your time here?
Bullshit!

Close the door behind you

Illegal aliens have always been a problem in the United States. Ask any Indian. - Robert Orben

Friday, October 14

Say you, say me....

War is.?.?.

Quotes from Republicans when Clinton committed troops to Bosnia:
“You can support the troops but not the president.”–Rep Tom Delay (R-TX)
“Well, I just think it’s a bad idea. What’s going to happen is they’re going to be over there for 10, 15, maybe 20 years.”–Joe Scarborough (R-FL)
“Explain to the mothers and fathers of American servicemen that may come home in body bags why their son or daughter have to give up their life?”–Sean Hannity, Fox News, 4/6/99
“[The] President . . . is once again releasing American military might on a foreign country with an ill-defined objective and no exit strategy. He has yet to tell the Congress how much this operation will cost. And he has not informed our nation’s armed forces about how long they will be away from home. These strikes do not make for a sound foreign policy.”–Sen. Rick Santorum (R-PA)
“American foreign policy is now one huge big mystery. Simply put, the administration is trying to lead the world with a feel-good foreign policy.”–Rep Tom Delay (R-TX)
“If we are going to commit American troops, we must be certain they have a clear mission, an achievable goal and an exit strategy.”–Karen Hughes, speaking on behalf of George W Bush
“I had doubts about the bombing campaign from the beginning . . I didn’t think we had done enough in the diplomatic area.”–Senator Trent Lott (R-MS)
“I cannot support a failed foreign policy. History teaches us that itis often easier to make war than peace. This administration is just learning that lesson right now. The President began this mission withvery vague objectives and lots of unanswered questions. A month later, these questions are still unanswered. There are no clarified rules of engagement. There is no timetable. There is no legitimate definition of victory. There is no contingency plan for mission creep. There isno clear funding program. There is no agenda to bolster our over-extended military. There is no explanation defining what vital national interests are at stake. There was no strategic plan for warwhen the President started this thing, and there still is no plan today”–Rep Tom Delay (R-TX)
“Victory means exit strategy, and it’s important for the President to explain to us what the exit strategy is.”–Governor George W. Bush (R-TX)

Funny thing is, we ended that war without a single American killed in action.

Sentimental? Yeah, right

http://overheardinnewyork.com/

Funnier if it were true?!?

http://www.thefrown.com/frowners/becomerepublican.swf

This explains it all so well...I'd love to see one for the Dems as well

Building Blocks

http://www.alternet.org/story/26703/

Sunday, October 9

Drink and Drive

Brazil fights oil prices with alcohol
By Andrew Downie, Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor Fri Oct 7, 4:00 AM ET
Brazilians aren't waiting for high-priced hybrid cars.
Drivers are fighting rising gasoline prices by buying "flex" or "flexible fuel" cars that slurp more alcohol.
Alcohol made from sugar cane is becoming the fuel of choice in Brazil, and other countries - so much so that global sugar prices hit a seven-year high this week.
Regular car engines will run fine on a 10 percent blend of alcohol and gasoline. But by using computer sensors that adjust to whatever mix is in the tank, flex car engines run on either ethanol, gasoline, or any combination of the two. And they have been roaring out of dealerships here since Volkswagen sold the first TotalFlex Golf in March 2003.
Today, flex cars are outselling traditional gasoline models. In August, 62 percent of new cars sold were flex, according to industry numbers. "Demand has been unbelievable," says Barry Engle, the new president of Ford Brasil. "I am hard-pressed to think of any other technology that has been such a success so quickly."
As many countries reexamine their dependence on petroleum fields for fuel, Brazil offers a model for how to make the switch to cane, beet, wheat, or corn fields. The successful transition here comes down to many factors, but price is the primary one, experts say.
Unlike hybrids sold in the US, for example, flex cars sold in Brazil don't cost any more than traditional models. In fact, some models are only available with flex engines now. Ethanol engines use 25 percent more ethanol per mile than gasoline. But ethanol (the alcohol produced by fermenting sugar) usually sells at somewhere between a third to half of the price of gas. Even people who were reluctant to take the plunge and buy a flex say they have been won over by the savings.
"It's been a revelation because of the economy," says Madalena Lira, a university lecturer who says that she and her husband had reluctantly purchased a flex car because it was the only available version of the Fiat Palio Weekend they wanted. "I love this car in spite of it being a flex, not because it is a flex. The savings have been great. I'd certainly buy another one."
In addition to the savings, environmentally conscious drivers appreciate having a car that runs on a cleaner fuel, and some might even buy a flex car because they know it is good for the country's auto and sugar manufacturers. But today, two-and-a-half years into the flex experiment, another unforeseen advantage is emerging.
"There is something curious that we are just starting to see," says Alfred Szwarc, an ethanol consultant with Sao Paulo's sugar cane association. "Gasoline powered cars lose more of their [resale] value than flex cars. People know that oil is finite and that it is going to get more and more expensive. They think that a gasoline-powered car is going to be more difficult to sell. They see flex cars as the car of the future."
Ethanol-powered cars are not new in Brazil. In a bid to cut the country's reliance on foreign oil imports and help their own sugar producers, Brazil's military government pushed alcohol-powered cars in the early 1980s. Gas stations across the country added ethanol pumps to the existing gasoline and diesel ones. Between 1983 and 1988 more than 88 percent of cars sold annually were running on a blend of ethanol and gasoline.
This didn't last for long, though. The subsidies were withdrawn at the end of the decade, and cane farmers quickly realized they could get more from selling sugar than turning it into ethanol. When alcohol fuel shortages ensued it looked like the end of the road for ethanol engines as sales of the experimental cars plummeted.
That experience may have been a bitter one but it gave Brazilians a taste for alternative fuels that lingered. Although most people abandoned ethanol cars, many taxi drivers kept them because it was so much cheaper than a gas-only car. Then the country's Congress passed a law forcing oil companies to add small quantities of ethanol to their gasoline. That prompted car companies to experiment with an engine that would run on both fuels, and when they did, the flex car sales took off.
"Why did this take off here?" asks Mr. Engle. "Because this isn't brand-new. Car buyers concerned about high gas prices or potential ethanol shortages no longer have to make a choice between the two. It used to be an either-or but now there's both and that gives consumers peace of mind and explains why Brazilians have embraced it."
The next task is convincing other nations to adopt the technology, industry experts said. With oil prices at a record high, there is a clear advantage to diluting gasoline or even substituting it, with sugar-based ethanol or one of the biofuel alternatives such as beets or corn.
For most countries, the problem is the lack of ethanol production and a distribution system. Although many countries require oil companies to dilute their gasoline with ethanol (in Brazil, gas sold at the pumps is 25 percent ethanol; and some of the gas sold in the US, China, Australia and Canada is 10-15 percent ethanol), few actually make ethanol or manufacture flex vehicles, and even fewer have a network of gas stations with ethanol pumps.
In the US - with about 4 million flex cars - there are 14 states without even one ethanol pump, says Robert White, project director for the National Ethanol Vehicle Coalition.
With years of experience at every stage of the process, Brazil is in the pole position to help other nations' farmers grow crops, scientists refine it into fuel, or engineers produce the technology to make flex cars, says Rogelio Golfarb, president of Brazil's car makers association. "There is an enormous demand from abroad to know more," Mr. Golfarb says "This is an advantage and an opportunity for Brazil."

Friday, October 7

welearnthoughrepetition

http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?emx=x&pid=27240

U.S. ignores energy reality, analyst says
BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPOKANE -- It might already be too late for the United States to avoid a major economic disruption because of a decline in worldwide oil production, an industry expert said Wednesday.

Roger Bezdek, a consultant for the U.S. Department of Energy, told the Global Oil Depletion conference that it will take more than a decade to find alternative sources of energy if oil production reaches a peak, which could be imminent.
The conference was presented by the Thomas S. Foley Institute at Washington State University, and painted a gloomy picture of a future in which there is increased competition for diminishing resources.
Bezdek said it will take the nation 10 to 15 years to deal with a decline in oil supply by finding alternative means to move people and goods. That time is needed to find substitute fuels and get higher fuel efficiency.
"It may be too late to avoid economic dislocations," he said.
Matthew Simmons, an investment banker who recently wrote "Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy," said the United States has been in denial about energy issues for decades. The nation has built its economy and lifestyle around an endless supply of cheap oil, and now finds itself with stiff competition for oil from India and China, he said.
The recent hurricanes on the Gulf Coast have knocked a big hole in oil and natural gas supplies, and it is unclear when those refineries will be back in production, Simmons said.
Herman Franssen, president of International Energy Associates Inc. of Chevy Chase, Md., said that two-thirds of the world's oil comes from the Middle East, which probably cannot increase its production much.
He predicted that Iraq will remain unstable for years, and that oil production will not rebound to the levels of the Saddam Hussein-era for years.
To cut oil consumption, Simmons said the United States should switch to moving more goods by railroad and ship, rather than trucks. More workers should work from home to cut down on commuting, he said. The nation also should grow more of its own food to cut down on imports, he said.
Simmons predicted there will be natural gas shortages this winter because of the damage from hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Bezdek suggested people adopt a faith-based energy policy: "Pray for a mild winter

Monday, October 3

the view in Here

October 2, 2005
Rocky Mountain Dry
By PAM HOUSTON
Creede, Colo.
HEW HALLOCK, the editor of The Valley Courier in Alamosa, Colo., comes from a long line of cattlemen who have grazed their stock near Springfield, out on the state's eastern plains. After two years of drought that forced some ranchers to send their cattle to Oklahoma and others to simply sell out, 2005 has been a good year: plenty of rain and high beef prices have allowed for at least temporary sighs of relief.
But increased gas prices are already affecting where Hew's family can afford to run their cattle and how they market them. "We can't sustain the current rate of growth in the San Luis Valley and still provide the water people need, and it is agriculture that will pay the price for overuse," he told me. "A hundred and fifty years ago our ancestors came out to Colorado and found a new way to live, and I suppose that is what we'll have to do."
Seven thousand feet above sea level, Colorado's San Luis Valley is one of the largest high-desert valleys in the world. Enclosed by the Sangre de Cristo mountains to the east and the San Juans to the west, the valley is home to a community of ranchers and farmers working to preserve a lifestyle threatened by diminishing water tables and rising land and fuel costs.
A little farther down valley, Colin and Karen Henderson own and operate El Sagrado Farm outside La Jara. On their 300 acres they grow grains, oats, barley, wheat, alfalfa and 20 kinds of certified organic vegetables. "We are an old-fashioned diversified farm," Colin said. "We are focused on sustainability, on taking care of the land." El Sagrado is off the grid, relying on solar, wind, bio-diesel (made from used cooking oil) and horsepower (in the form of two giant Belgians). For 17 weeks each summer the Hendersons feed 43 families as part of a community-supported agriculture farm-share program.
"Farmers have always had to use their ingenuity to survive, maybe now it is just a little bit worse," he told me. "We don't want to be separate in our self-sufficiency, we want to be integral; that is the true definition of community."
About 200 miles northwest of La Jara, near Montrose, Bob Hasse is raising yaks. "It is impossible for a ranching family to survive without debt from generation to generation in commodity farming, without borrowing from the future on their land," Bob told me. He believes that if ranching is to survive in Colorado it will be with high-end exotics: elk, bison, American Kobe beef and (in his opinion) the far superior yak. He sells yak hides for clothing and furniture, yak skulls to local artists, and yak meat (as low in fat as elk and bison, but higher in omega-3's) to the health-conscious crowd.
Bob secured his own financial future by working for years in the business world, but he is concerned for his children and grandchildren: "To get started in life without help is harder and harder. Even though we are making some money now, I can't afford to hire my kids at a rate of pay they would be interested in; hopefully in the next few years that will be possible."
I met Banjo Joe at a fruit stand on the side of the road in Palisade. He said it was a beautiful year for peaches; mostly, he thought, because of prayer. Joe's boss, Peter Forte of Forte Farms, had a dream that there were bees crawling all over him, and after that, Joe said, they knew it would be a bumper crop.
Banjo Joe, whose real name is Dan, has been picking peaches in the Grand Valley (nestled between the Book Cliffs and the Grand Mesa, the largest flat-top mountain in the world) since 1972. He identifies himself as the if-it's-broke-then-fix-it guy. Joe doesn't spend too much time thinking about his future or financial security.
"Customers are blessings," he said, "and I try not to let finances blind my eyes. I love peaches. I even wrote a song about them. If we freeze out early in the year I have to prune people's yards all winter just to live. Being a farmer is like going to Vegas. You either win or you have a lot of time to play the banjo."
Pam Houston is the author, most recently, of "Sight Hound."

Protest. will Ya?!

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2
Just three days before the long-planned protests, "above top secret" military exercises began on the streets of Washington, D.C. The top secret exercises involving the nation's intelligence agencies, national laboratories and U.S. military troops on the ground in America's capital were coordinated and controlled by Northcom in Colorado.The Washington Post reported on Sept. 21:[] Granite Shadow is yet another new Top Secret and compartmented operation related to the military's extra-legal powers regarding weapons of mass destruction. It allows for emergency military operations in the United States without civilian supervision or control . . .That's where Granite Shadow comes in. U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM), the military's new homeland security command, is preparing its draft version of CONPLAN 0400 for military operations in the United States, and the resulting Granite Shadow plan has been classified above Top Secret by adding a Special Category (SPECAT) compartment restricting access. Further, Granite Shadow posits domestic military operations, including intelligence collection and surveillance, unique rules of engagement regarding the use of lethal force, the use of experimental non-lethal weapons, and federal and military control of incident locations that are highly controversial and might border on the illegal. The sensitivities, according to military sources, include deployment of "special mission units" (the so-called Delta Force, SEAL teams, Rangers, and other special units of Joint Special Operations Command) in Washington, DC and other domestic hot spots. NORTHCOM has worked closely with U.S. Special Operations Command (SOCOM), as well as the secret branches of non-military agencies and departments to enforce "unity of command" over any post 9/11 efforts Both plans seem to live behind a veil of extraordinary secrecy because military forces operating under them have already been given a series of "special authorities" by the President and the secretary of defense. These special authorities include, presumably, military roles in civilian law enforcement and abrogation of State's powers in a declared or perceived emergency. []005/09/30/AR2005093001775_pf.html

Friday, September 30

To those who won't row; sink or swim

http://news.yahoo.com/s/oneworld/20050928/wl_oneworld/45361195801127935317

On Big Easy:http://pesn.com/2005/09/23/9600175_Rebuild_Energy_Systems_Not_NewOrleans/

Etan Thomas, dribbles O my

“Giving all honor, thanks and praises to God for courage and wisdom, this is a very important rally. I'd like to thank you for allowing me to share my thoughts, feelings and concerns regarding a tremendous problem that we are currently facing. This problem is universal, transcending race, economic background, religion, and culture, and this problem is none other than the current administration which has set up shop in the White House.
In fact, I'd like to take some of these cats on a field trip. I want to get big yellow buses with no air conditioner and no seatbelts and round up Bill O'Reilly, Pat Buchanan, Trent Lott, Sean Hannity, Dick Cheney, Jeb Bush, Bush Jr. and Bush Sr., John Ashcroft, Giuliani, Ed Gillespie, Katherine Harris, that little bow-tied Tucker Carlson and any other right-wing conservative Republicans I can think of, and take them all on a trip to the ‘hood. Not to do no 30-minute documentary. I mean, I want to drop them off and leave them there, let them become one with the other side of the tracks, get them four mouths to feed and no welfare, have scare tactics run through them like a laxative, criticizing them for needing assistance.
I’d show them working families that make too much to receive welfare but not enough to make ends meet. I’d employ them with jobs with little security, let them know how it feels to be an employee at will, able to be fired at the drop of a hat. I’d take away their opportunities, then try their children as adults, sending their 13-year-old babies to life in prison. I’d sell them dreams of hopelessness while spoon-feeding their young with a daily dose of inferior education. I’d tell them no child shall be left behind, then take more money out of their schools, tell them to show and prove themselves on standardized exams testing their knowledge on things that they haven’t been taught, and then I’d call them inferior.
I’d soak into their interior notions of endless possibilities. I’d paint pictures of assisted productivity if they only agreed to be all they can be, dress them up with fatigues and boots with promises of pots of gold at the end of rainbows, free education to waste terrain on those who finish their bid. Then I’d close the lid on that barrel of fool’s gold by starting a war, sending their children into the midst of a hostile situation, and while they're worried about their babies being murdered and slain in foreign lands, I’d grace them with the pain of being sick and unable to get medicine.
Give them health benefits that barely cover the common cold. John Q. would become their reality as HMOs introduce them to the world of inferior care, filling their lungs with inadequate air, penny pinching at the expense of patients, doctors practicing medicine in an intricate web of rationing and regulations. Patients wander the maze of managed bureaucracy, costs rise and quality quickly deteriorates, but they say that managed care is cheaper. They’ll say that free choice in medicine will defeat the overall productivity, and as co-payments are steadily rising, I'll make their grandparents have to choose between buying their medicine and paying their rent.
Then I'd feed them hypocritical lines of being pro-life as the only Christian way to be. Then very contradictingly, I’d fight for the spread of the death penalty, as if thou shall not kill applies to babies but not to criminals.
Then I’d introduce them to those sworn to protect and serve, creating a curb in their trust in the law. I’d show them the nightsticks and plungers, the pepper spray and stun guns, the mace and magnums that they’d soon become acquainted with, the shakedowns and illegal search and seizures, the planted evidence, being stopped for no reason. Harassment ain’t even the half of it. Forty-one shots to two raised hands, cell phones and wallets that are confused with illegal contrabands. I’d introduce them to pigs who love making their guns click like wine glasses. Everlasting targets surrounded by bullets, making them a walking bull's eye, a living piñata, held at the mercy of police brutality, and then we’ll see if they finally weren’t aware of the truth, if their eyes weren’t finally open like a box of Pandora.
I’d show them how the other side of the tracks carries the weight of the world on our shoulders and how society seems to be holding us down with the force of a boulder. The bird of democracy flew the coop back in Florida. See, for some, and justice comes in packs like wolves in sheep's clothing. T.K.O.'d by the right hooks of life, many are left staggering under the weight of the day, leaning against the ropes of hope. When your dreams have fallen on barren ground, it becomes difficult to keep pushing yourself forward like a train, administering pain like a doctor with a needle, their sequels continue more lethal than injections.
They keep telling us all is equal. I’d tell them that instead of giving tax breaks to the rich, financing corporate mergers and leading us into unnecessary wars and under-table dealings with Enron and Halliburton, maybe they can work on making society more peaceful. Instead, they take more and more money out of inner city schools, give up on the idea of rehabilitation and build more prisons for poor people. With unemployment continuing to rise like a deficit, it's no wonder why so many think that crime pays.
Maybe this trip will make them see the error of their ways. Or maybe next time, we'll just all get out and vote. And as far as their stay in the White House, tell them that numbered are their days.”

Saturday, September 24

Friday, September 16

SUV Exodus

Poll: 8 in 10 Want Drivers to Drop SUVs
By WILL LESTER Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Eight in 10 people say it's important for Americans now driving sport utility vehicles to switch to more fuel-efficient vehicles to reduce the nation's dependence on oil, a poll found.
With gas prices hovering around $3 a gallon nationally and the price of natural gas rising sharply, six in 10 said they are not confident President Bush is taking the right approach to solving the nation's energy problems, according to the survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.
Given several choices for dealing with energy problems, the public has some clear preferences:
-Almost seven in 10 want the government to establish price controls on gasoline and want more spending on subway, rail and bus systems.
-Just over seven in 10 want to give tax cuts to companies to develop wind, solar and hydrogen energy.
-Just over eight in 10 want higher fuel efficiency required for cars, trucks and SUVs.
-Slightly more than half, 52 percent, favor giving tax cuts to energy companies to explore for more oil.
The rising anxiety over high gas prices has caused a shift in public priorities about the importance of exploring for new energy.
Latest News
Poll: 8 in 10 Want Drivers to Drop SUVs
Almost six in 10 now say exploring for new sources of energy is more important than protecting the environment. People were evenly split on that question in 2002. Half now support drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska - up from 42 percent who felt that way in March.
Only four in 10 wanted to promote the increased use of nuclear power, while slightly more than half opposed that step.
The Pew poll of 1,523 adults was taken Sept. 8-11 and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
---
On the Net:
Pew Research Center - http://www.people-press.org

Bootstrap Time


http://www.bushgreenwatch.org/mt_archives/000293.php


Does this look like the coast of Louisiana to you?
That's because an area the size of Delaware has sunk to the bottom the Gulf in the last 75 years.



Gotsa get it together
http://www.ren21.net/

Monday, September 12

More of what you forgot you already know--)

Got Health?
The article:
http://www.organicconsumers.org/school/organicstudy090405.cfm
The Study:
http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/members/2005/8418/8418.pdf

Playing God?! No Shit?!

http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050906/65371.html?.v=1
Government Intervention in Stock Market.
The new report ("Move Over, Adam Smith: The Visible Hand of Uncle Sam") concludes that the U.S. government has intervened to support the stock market so many times that "what apparently started as a stopgap measure may have morphed into a serious moral hazard situation, with market manipulation an endemic feature of the U.S. stock market."
The Sprott report does not maintain that the government should never intervene in the stock market; it recognizes that certain emergencies may argue strongly for temporary intervention, such as the 1987 stock market crash and the terrorist attacks of September 2001. But, the Sprott report notes, frequent surreptitious intervention, conducted through intermediaries, the government's favored financial houses in New York, gives those intermediaries enormous advantages over ordinary investors. Frequent intervention, the Sprott report adds also makes it impossible to distinguish between national emergencies and political expediency.
"But a policy enacted in secret and knowingly withheld from the body politic has created a huge disconnect between those knowledgeable about such activities and the majority of the public, who have no clue whatsoever.
"In addition to creating a privileged class, the manipulation also has little democratic legitimacy in the sense that the citizenry has not given its consent. This has tangible ramifications. By not informing the public, successive U.S. administrations have employed a dangerous policy response that is subject to the worst possible abuse. In this regard, the line between national necessity and political expediency has no doubt been perilously blurred.
"We can only urge people to see what the evidence indicates and debate what is and ought to be a very contentious matter. The time for such a public discussion is long overdue."
The Sprott report can be found in Adobe Acrobat format at the Sprott Internet site here: http://www.sprott.com/pdf/pressrelease/TheVisibleHand.pdf
It also can be found at the GATA Internet site here: http://www.gata.org/SprottReportTheVisibleHand.pdf
Contact: Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee
Chris Powell, 860-646-0500

"How Bush Blew It"

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9287434/site/newsweek

"The radio was reporting water nine feet deep at the corner of Napoleon and St. Charles streets."
That used to be home for J 'n B, 2 cats and a dog...

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article311818.ece


Chimpy:38% and falling

Sunday, September 11

From the great prophet Bill

When my son asks me who the great prophets of my time were, this man will be a leader among them.

http://alternet.org/story/25274/

What's that Peak?

Lieberman's law: Everybody lies, but it doesn't matter since nobody listens.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/10/business/10nocera.html?th&emc=th

http://www.calcars.org/globalwarming.html

http://www.alternet.org/story/25175/

Saturday, September 3

Oops, I said it!

Years of stonewalling, bribes, 'early retirements', taxpayer dollars, and thousands of lives later; http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2005/08/31/bush_gives_new_reason_for_iraq_war/

the answer...















http://www.shropshirestar.com/show_article.php?aID=36765

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050831/ap_on_fe_st/creepy_centipede

the reality trump

(A Reprieve for Reality in New Crop of Films By STEPHEN HOLDEN)
Whether taken with milk and cookies or swallowed as a gulp of bitter medicine, reality is something many would like a lot more of than the infotainment juggernaut is willing to supply. These movies challenge audiences to examine reality at a moment when the very term has been warped beyond recognition by reality television. This has been the summer in which mass culture, in its search for new commercial distractions, reached a dangerous tipping point. There is a sense of exhaustion in the air, as though the accumulation of cultural debris, celebrity worship and meaningless competitions had reached a critical mass.
How much longer can we continue to live inside a bubble where Jennifer Aniston's broken heart and Tom Cruise's public meltdown compete with the war in Iraq, famine in Sudan and the catastrophe in New Orleans as headline news stories?
Are the fame-seeking narcissists who swarm through reality television shows an accurate mirror of who we have become as a people? Or are they an illusion marketed by hucksters who cleverly play on a creeping self-disgust, then devise fresh new camouflage to mask that deepening sense of revulsion?
The relationship of reality television to the rise of the documentary is another question to ponder. Did reality television prepare the way for the new popularity of the documentary? Or is the increasing popularity of documentaries a response to the Orwellian political climate.
Seventy years ago T. S. Eliot observed in his poem "Burnt Norton," "Humankind cannot bear very much reality." "March of the Penguins," "Grizzly Man" and the 16 other summer movies discussed below (and listed alphabetically) may not solve the riddles of existence, but they offer glimpses into the real world beyond the matrix.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/movies/02note.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print

Can't Miss Blog:
http://www.alternet.org/story/24936/ "Hell no, I'm not glad to see them. They should have been here days ago. I ain't glad to see 'em, I'll be glad when 100 buses show up," said 46-year-old Michael Levy, whose words were echoed by those around him yelling, "Hell, yeah! Hell yeah!"
"We've been sleeping on the ... ground like rats," Levy said. "I say burn this whole ... city down."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/business/02norris.html?th&emc=th

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/02/opinion/02fischetti.html?th&emc=th

Couldwoulda:http://smh.com.au/news/world/china-evacuates-790000-as-typhoon-slams-into-coast/2005/09/01/1125302689224.html

China evacuates 790,000 as typhoon slams into coast. 3 Dead
http://smh.com.au/news/world/china-evacuates-790000-as-typhoon-slams-into-coast/2005/09/01/1125302689224.html

Wednesday, August 31

whywearethewayweare, part XXVII

August 30, 2005
Scientific Savvy? In U.S., Not Much
CHICAGO - When Jon D. Miller looks out across America, which he can almost do from his 18th-floor office at Northwestern University Medical School in Chicago, he sees a landscape of haves and have-nots - in terms not of money, but of knowledge.
While scientific literacy has doubled over the past two decades, only 20 to 25 percent of Americans are "scientifically savvy and alert," he said in an interview. Most of the rest "don't have a clue." At a time when science permeates debates on everything from global warming to stem cell research, he said, people's inability to understand basic scientific concepts undermines their ability to take part in the democratic process.
Dr. Miller's data reveal some yawning gaps in basic knowledge. One adult American in five thinks the Sun revolves around the Earth, an idea science had abandoned by the 17th century.
At one time, this kind of ignorance may not have meant much for the nation's public life. "Even if you could not read and write, and most New England residents could not read or write," he went on, "you could still be a pretty effective citizen."
No more. "Acid rain, nuclear power, infectious diseases - the world is a little different," he said.
Dr. Miller, who was raised in Portsmouth, Ohio, when it was a dying steel town, attributes much of the nation's collective scientific ignorance to poor education, particularly in high schools. Many colleges require every student to take some science, but most Americans do not graduate from college. And science education in high school can be spotty, he said.
Lately, people who advocate the teaching of evolution have been citing Dr. Miller's ideas on what factors are correlated with adherence to creationism and rejection of Darwinian theories. In general, he says, these fundamentalist views are most common among people who are not well educated and who "work in jobs that are evaporating fast with competition around the world."
But not everyone is happy when he says things like that. Every time he goes on the radio to talk about his findings, he said, "I get people sending me cards saying they will pray for me a lot."

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/30/science/30profile.html?ei=5070&en=631977063d726261&ex=1125547200&pagewanted=print

Ecopsychology: The force of nature

Science has long recognised this instinctive attraction to nature. Now, an emerging branch of psychology suggests it may be fundamental to our health and wellbeing - and to the future of the planet.
Ecopsychology is grounded in the idea that our innate craving for contact with nature is the result of millions of years of evolution in a natural environment. The problem, ecopsychologists argue, is that industrialisation and urbanisation have tossed those instincts aside. Our detachment from nature lies behind a host of modern psychological, emotional and physical problems, as well as our blasé attitude towards environmental change. Personal and planetary wellbeing, they say, feed into one another.
It may sound romantic and New Age, but the theory is gaining scientific credibility. In evolutionary terms, we are stalled in prehistory. And just as our bodies are unable to adapt to a permanent surplus of calories and the invention of the automobile, so our minds are unable to acclimatise to the peculiar stresses of high-density urban living. We are, deep down, creatures of the countryside, even if most of us see less of it than ever before.
As our environment deteriorates, so does our psychological, social and emotional wellbeing. Escaping the suburban sprawl - either outright, through a weekend's camping, or more locally, through a well-planted window box - could soon be as basic a piece of preventative medical advice as eating fruit and vegetables.
Proponents of "green exercise", for example, believe that the healing power of nature can be harnessed by simply getting out in it and doing something.
For details of ecotherapy courses see http://www.grahamgame.com/. For details of green gyms see www.btcv.org/greengym/

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article308758.ece

Friday, August 26

White House denies Vacation

The White House seems to be a little defensive about President Bush's summer vacation. According to the San Bernardino Sun, a spokesman insisted "the reason that Bush is in Crawford, Texas, is due to the renovation of the West Wing of the White House."Said the spokesman: "He's operating on a full schedule; he's just doing it from the ranch instead of from the White House. The only week he had officially off was this last week."Whether he's on vacation or just away, USA Today notes he's been "shadowed by anti-war demonstrators" the entire time.

Who shall we kill next?! http://www.guardian.co.uk/venezuela/story/0,12716,1555809,00.html

Hybrid Bandwagon

http://www.alternet.org/story/24542/

Thursday, August 25

Get on Up

http://www.grist.org/advice/ask/2005/08/22/umbra-eitheror/index.html?source=weekly

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0816/p01s01-ussc.html

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050824/ap_on_sc/scientist_global_warming;_ylt=AuY.lIMxIrjdbj11xtKAzogPLBIF;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/25/opinion/25thu1.html?th&emc=th

Why Hollywood STILL SUCKS

Do these guys sound like alcoholics or what ????

Summer Fading, Hollywood Sees Fizzle
By SHARON WAXMAN
Published: August 24, 2005
setting the movie industry on edge. But many movie executives and industry experts are beginning to conclude that something more fundamental is at work: Too many Hollywood movies these days, they say, just are not good enough.
"Part of this is the fact that the movies may not have lived up to the expectations of the audience, not just in this year, but in years prior," said Michael Lynton, chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment. "Audiences have gotten smart to the marketing, and they can smell the good ones from the bad ones at a distance."
Even Robert Shaye:"I believe it's a cumulative thing, a seismic evolution of people's habits," said Mr. Shaye, chairman of New Line Cinema.
In previous years, he said, "you could still count on enough people to come whether you failed at entertaining them or not, out of habit, or boredom, or a desire to get out of the house.
"It wasn't like the last crop of summer movies were that much better than this summer," said Mr. Shmuger. "This summer has been as deadening as it has been exciting, and there's a cumulative wearing down effect. We're beginning to witness the results of that. People are just beginning to wake up that what used to pass as summer excitement isn't that exciting, or that entertaining. At New Line, executives have been talking about the "sameness of everything" on movie schedules, one executive said.
With the task so large, and so very complex, Hollywood is still grappling with how to broach solutions.
At Universal, Mr. Shmuger said he intends to reassert "time and care and passion" in movie production. Some of his own summer movies, he conceded, should never have been made.
He declined to name them.
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/24/movies/24slum.html?th&emc=th

Sunday, August 21

Pastafari


Glimpses of the elusive and powerful 'noodly master', mon.


I'm hooked, let's get it on the ballot...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Monster

excerpts from 'Globalisation is an anomaly and its time is running out'

Cheap energy and relative peace helped create a false doctrine James Howard Kunstler
Guardian
The big yammer these days in the United States is to the effect that globalisation is here to stay: it's wonderful, get used to it. The chief cheerleader for this point of view is Thomas Friedman, columnist for the New York Times and author of The World Is Flat. The seemingly unanimous embrace of this idea in the power circles of America is a marvellous illustration of the madness of crowds, for nothing could be further from the truth than the idea that globalisation is now a permanent fixture of the human condition.
Today's global economic relations are a product of very special transient circumstances, namely relative world peace and absolutely reliable supplies of cheap energy. Subtract either of these elements from the equation and you will see globalisation evaporate so quickly it will suck the air out of your lungs. It is significant that none of the cheerleaders for globalisation takes this equation into account. In fact, the American power elite is sleepwalking into a crisis so severe that the blowback may put both major political parties out of business.
We are now due for another folding up of the periodic global trade fair as the industrial nations enter the tumultuous era beyond the global oil production peak, which I have named the long emergency. The economic distortions and perversities that have built up in the current era are not hard to see, though our leaders dread to acknowledge them. The dirty secret of the US economy for at least a decade now is that it has come to be based on the ceaseless elaboration of a car-dependent suburban infrastructure - McHousing estates, eight-lane highways, big-box chain stores, hamburger stands - that has no future as a living arrangement in an oil-short future.
The American suburban juggernaut can be described succinctly as the greatest misallocation of resources in the history of the world. The mortgages, bonds, real estate investment trusts and derivative financial instruments associated with this tragic enterprise must make the judicious goggle with wonder and nausea.
Add to this grim economic picture a far-flung military contest, already under way, really, for control of the world's remaining oil, and the scene grows darker. Two-thirds of that oil is in the possession of people who resent the west (America in particular), many of whom have vowed to destroy it. Both America and Britain have felt the sting of freelance asymmetrical war-makers not associated with a particular state but with a transnational religious cause that uses potent small arms and explosives to unravel western societies and confound their defences.
China, a supposed beneficiary of globalisation, will be as desperate for oil as all the other players, and perhaps more ruthless in seeking control of the supplies. Of course, it is hard to imagine the continuation of American chain stores' manufacturing supply lines with China, given the potential for friction. Even on its own terms, China faces issues of environmental havoc, population overshoot, and political turmoil - orders of magnitude greater than anything known in Europe or America.
Viewed through this lens, the sunset of the current phase of globalisation seems dreadfully close to the horizon. The American public has enjoyed the fiesta, but the blue-light special orgy of easy motoring, limitless air-conditioning, and super-cheap products made by factory slaves far far away is about to close down. Globalisation is finished. The world is about to become a larger place again.
· James Howard Kunstler is the author of The Long Emergency: Surviving the Converging Catastrophes of the Twenty-First Century
http://us.f408.mail.yahoo.com/ym/Compose?To=kunstler@aol.com

Big, Fat and Worthy Issue

Can't hear your soul through all the white noise? Communicatin' with your family got you down? Do something about it!
click
http://www.commercialalert.org/

BoysToys

http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/printer_7145.shtml

Rooster's Crow

the new Williams Chariot waits to build upon its 14 young miles...

Following the seismic ponderments of the last few months, my clan(Beth, Sugi, and I) have voted to delay an expedition to another hemisphere in order to pursue goals here and now. Following promotions and a brief consideration of homebuying, we've elected to invest in a new Toyota Prius, which we picked out this week. Lifeways, Beth has burgeoning projects in dance etc., and Jesse is focusing on graduation. These babies require concentration and a great deal of effort that has been siphoned recently by planning and consideration on the there. So, we now've elected to dig a little deeper and pollute a lot less...

Our Suburu workhorse got about 22mpg, overcame rutted Colorado 4wd roads and put up with many adventures, but the benefits of trading her for this lovely(above) were overwhelming(below). Getting two to three times the mileage, we envision a reinvestment of sorts in the next coupla years here in Lala-land.

Excellent source of info:http://www.hybridcars.com/index.html

From Autoblog 2004:
USA: Hybrid gets top crash test rating
The first hybrid car to be crash-tested by Euro NCAP, the Toyota Prius, was one of eight cars to achieve the top five star occupant rating and also received the highest rating for child protection.
From Consumer Reports:
Highs:
Fuel economy, low emissions, transmission, ride, hatchback versatility, reliability.
Lows:
Steering feel, multifunction display.
Toyota's second-generation Prius is unbeatable for its combination of economy, acceleration, and interior room. It couples a 1.5-liter gasoline engine with an electric motor, and it automatically switches between them or runs on both as needed. The car shuts the engine off at idle. We got an excellent 44 mpg overall in our tests. Shifts are automatic via a responsive continuously variable transmission (CVT). Regenerative braking recharges the battery while coasting or braking. Ride and handing are competent, though the steering feels vague. Access is easy. Reliability has been outstanding.

From Internet Auto Guide:
2005 Toyota Prius
This is now a midsize car. It's roomy, with adult-size back seats and lots of cargo space. And it's also more pleasant to look at, with sleek, futuristic styling. It's easy to spot in a crowded grocery store parking lot.
The real justification to buy a Prius is its extremely low emissions. It produces almost no pollution and is one of the most environmentally friendly vehicles you can drive. The Prius is an excellent choice for buyers who want to reduce air pollution and America's dependence on oil. The Prius isn't cheap, but it's an amazing piece of engineering that achieves those goals.
Check the list of standard equipment, and you'll see that the word "economy" applies only to
Safety is enhanced with antilock brakes (ABS), Electronic Brake-force Distribution (EBD), Brake Assist, and traction control. Standard passive safety features include multi-stage, dual front airbags; three-point seatbelts and head restraints at all five seating positions; and rear seat head restraints that are adjustable. Curtain airbags designed to offer head protection for front and rear passengers and seat-mounted side-impact airbags for torso protection for driver and front-seat passenger.
The side view makes clear the stylists' devotion to aerodynamics. A steeply raked windshield carries the hood's acute angle rearward. An even more steeply raked backlight (rear windscreen) ends in a high spoiler that trips the air stream as it leaves the car, maximizing the aero advantage of the car's almost-vertical back end. Sleek rear quarter windows do more to visually enhance the aerodynamic look than they do for outward visibility.
A tall glasshouse yields exemplary outward visibility. As is the case with many of the latest aerodynamic designs, the driver can't see the front of the car or the hood without leaning forward.
Driving Impressions
By complementing the gasoline engine's horsepower with the electric motor's torque, the Prius makes better use of the energy stored in each gallon of gasoline, while leaving fewer nasty chemical compounds in its wake. The electric motor, which begins cranking out its maximum torque virtually the moment it starts spinning, gets the car moving and helps it accelerate while it's underway. The gasoline engine steps to the fore at more constant speeds, especially during highway driving, where horsepower is more critical for maintaining a car's momentum.
The hybrid system improves fuel economy further by turning off the gasoline engine when it's not needed, like when you are waiting at a stop light or even when puttering around town at low speeds. Any time the driver's right foot requests more motivation than the electric motor alone can provide, the gasoline engine fires up and joins in.
The transmission is non-traditional, too, though not unique in today's market. Prius uses a continuously variable transmission, which shuns gears for a steel-segmented belt riding on variable-diameter pulleys. This system constantly and automatically selects the most efficient drive ratio to get the car moving and to keep it moving.
Emissions are the lowest of any real car available to U.S. buyers. On the surface, it is bettered by electric cars, but electric cars are impractical and must be recharged using another energy source that, in turn, requires fuel. So in the big picture, the Prius is easier on the environment than electric cars are.
The Prius saves fuel and reduces emisions by scavenging energy that most cars waste. Regenerative braking links the brakes to a generator, helping use the car's kinetic energy to recharge the battery whenever the brakes are applied. Along the same lines, the transmission offers a setting that helps recharge the battery when the driver merely lifts off the accelerator and lets the car coast, most beneficially downhill. In sum, with all these regenerative methodologies, there's no need (and no way, for that matter) to plug the car into an electrical outlet to charge the battery.
Final Word
The Toyota Prius sets the standard for environmentally friendly transportation. It also delivers extremely good fuel efficiency for a four-seat car with an automatic transmission. Just ignore those EPA numbers. Buyers can expect to average something north of 45 mpg.

Saturday, August 20

Rate Your State!

http://www.surveyusa.com/50StatePOTUS0805.htm

Eight cities in Texas are competing with each other to be the location for the George Bush Library. It's BYOB -- bring you own books. ... The George Bush Presidential Library -- that shouldn't take up too much space: a box of cliff notes and pop-up books. . . The only thing Bush ever checked out of a library was Laura. -- Jay Leno

Friday, August 19

$5 a gallon

U.S. author forecasts $5 gas by next year
CHICAGO, Aug. 17 (UPI) -- An oil expert and author who correctly forecast $3 per gallon gasoline in the United States this year says the price will reach $5 next year.
Craig Smith, author of "Black Gold Stranglehold," told the Chicago Sun-Times there's also a possibility the price could hit $10 per gallon if terrorists strike a major Middle East oil field.
Last year, Smith predicted $3-a-gallon gas and $65-a-barrel crude oil prices this year, and now says oil prices will jump to $80 a gallon by the end of 2006.
Meanwhile, he said complaining about the current spike makes no sense.
"Why are they charging higher prices for gas? Because people will pay it," he told the Sun-Times.

NYT editorial: The Oil Effect
(G)as is now averaging $2.60 a gallon nationwide, nearly a 39 percent increase from last year. At the same time, natural gas prices are up 60 percent to 90 percent around the country, presaging steep home-heating bills in the months ahead on top of high prices at the pump.
With most other prices relatively tame, consumers could weather the energy squeeze if they had a cushion. They don't.
Wage gains for most Americans are barely keeping up with inflation. And according to a recent Commerce Department report, Americans, on average, are now saving nothing each month, so they obviously cannot pay higher energy bills by reducing the amount they save.
That leaves rising home values to cover growing energy costs. According to a recent report by John Makin, a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, the housing boom has offset the economic drag of higher oil prices by enabling homeowners to get cash through refinancing or selling at a profit, and by creating a "wealth effect": as their houses appreciate, homeowners feel rich and thus spend freely, even as they neglect to save.
Mr. Makin estimates that a mere leveling off of housing prices would be sufficient to remove the economic boost from real estate. That would slow consumer spending and, with it, the economy.
No one knows when that leveling off will occur. But homes are already becoming increasingly unaffordable, and refinancings are slowing down. There are early signs that banks are beginning to tighten their lending standards. And the Federal Reserve, which has been trying for more than a year to push up mortgage rates, will probably succeed in that endeavor at some point.
The pain that now seems imminent might have been avoided. Conservation could have reduced energy demand and prices, while properly targeted job growth and savings incentives - not tax cuts for the rich - could have built a stronger job recovery, helping to foster higher wages and new savings. Maybe next time around.

And: World running out of time for oil alternatives
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/08/18/MTFH69017_2005-08-18_13-53-52_SCH850008.html
Time to go look at a hybrid.....