31 May 2009

Sunday - Chillin'

Sunday May 31, 2009

. . . . .Sunday afternoon, and I hope everyone is enjoying the weather, the sun, gardening, being with family, whatever, but every so often . . .just slow down and enjoy it.

. . . . .Right up top here I'm going to put a disclaimer, I put some reviews up the other day that Cody did of current music and graphic media/comics. He did put a strong recommendation in for the The Boys, but he reminded me today of something he didn't tell me. If The Boys was a television series, it'd be on cable, most likely HBO or Showtime, and definitely have a TV-MA rating for LSV; language, sexuality, and violence. So be forewarned, as opposed to offended.

. . . .There's going to be some changes going on down at Hawkwind and the Blue Star Times in terms of their web addresses, but they'll still be easily accessed to find out about their programs, and the wonderful work they do (being Charla, Tarwater, LuLu and crew). They're e-mailing folks as these changes wrought by AT&T occur, and I'll keep the addresses current here as well. Those links up above in the paragraph are good links, and you can check them out at the jump. These folks are good friends, and have been providing a safe place and not just teaching about, but living, sustainability for a long time down there, over 2 decades, and they do deserve your support and good intent.
- Along with a shout-out to The Red Queen and Lulu and Tarwater in Chattanooga and the killer ink they do there.

. . . .Interesting, but who'd have thought that it would be the nomination of a Supreme Court Justice that would put the true cracks in the armor of the Right Wing?
- Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama had nothing but effusive praise for Sotomayor on this morning's Meet The Press.
- Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina on Fox News Sunday about both Newt Gingrich and Rush Limbaugh:
No, they interject themselves into the debate. They've got an audience to entertain. Newt's a political commentator; I'm a United States senator... I don't think she's a racist.
. . . .Which speaks directly to something I spoke about earlier this week; those who slavishly follow every word put out by Limbaugh, Rove, Gingrich, Hannity, O'Reilly, Malkin, and Coulter on the Right, and Olbermann and Maddow on the Left; those of you who want to put gospel behind everything you see CNN, Fox News, MSNBC or what you hear on the radio. You're sheep, pure and simple. These people are entertainers first, and their job is to insure that their employers, the corporations that own the broadcast networks, make a profit. They do that by getting and keeping an audience, so they can charge more to their advertisers. The larger the audience, the more they can charge.
. . . .Unfortunately, in today's America, where "reading" is a bad word, and with the short attention span of most people, and American's thirst and taste for anything sensational, the further each of these people will go. They are the ones "dumbing us down", and we accept that.
- It's become far easier for people to make judgement on someone's personality, intent or motives despite having never met them, based on an entertainer's words. It's more difficult to actually analyze policy and action. That requires critical thinking.
- Strikes also to something I wrote about earlier this week. Yes, I am hard on the current crop of Republicans, so-called "conservatives", but it's based on their track record of the last 8 years. I figure it this way, when it comes to politics, for most things, it can only be judged in retrospect, with some analysis of the current actions. I've never met Barack Obama, so I can't make judgement on his intent, his personality, or what he "might" do. I can only judge, as a citizen, what affect and effect his policies may have.
- I know this, he is refusing to take part in the "culture wars", much to the dismay of the Left. He has said that same-sex marriage is a state issue. He's openly said that he will not touch gun control issues, or renewing the assault weapon ban. He's not touching abortion.
- What he is working on are the long-term federal issues that will affect us all. The current economic crisis (more on that below); education; health-care; energy [all aspects; upgrading the grid, decreasing our dependence on foreign oil, renewables].

. . . .Do I agree with his handling of the economic crisis? Let me couch it this way. As opposed to those who have said "he's doing it wrong", he walked into a mess created by Bush and Paulson. The true meltdown happened in September when he was on the campaign trail. I've written extensively (check the archives) on the roots of the crisis. I agree on on thing entirely, no matter how distasteful if may be. The banks had to be, and still remain the first priority. The credit system had to be fixed, we were not ready to become a cash-only economy all the way up and down the supply chain as a country overnight, it would have killed too many people. I don't exaggerate with that. Imagine having to have enough case to go buy some milk and eggs that the grocery store had to pay cash for, that the truckdriver had to have enough cash to pay for his diesel fuel for to deliver, that the gas station owner had to have enough cash on hand for to pay for the tank of diesel. The milk and eggs had to come from a wholesaler who had to have enough cash on hand to buy from the producers, and have enough cash on hand to pay for his refrierated storage on a "cool as you go" basis. The farmers had to have enough cash on hand - you get the picture.
-If we don't get the picture that in the long run, that approach failed over the last 4 decades, we're stupid and it's on us. The only, sustainable way to go for long term growth is to actually thik smaller and local. Barter, local banks, local growers and grocers. A case of the neighborhood taking care of it's own.
- That said, I'm still not in agreement entirely with Geithner's, Summer's and Bernanke's approach. Every economist has said the same thing. Nationalize the banks, close the zombie ones, devalue everything to what it's now worth, 35 cents on the dollar, whatever, and take the pain all at once, but that would at least provide a baseline to start over from. Right now, it's a Chinese water torture kind of slow death that will have the same result.

. . . I want to give a plug right her to another columnist that reader Aimee turned me on to, a man who makes good sense in explaining basic finance and has some refreshing viewpoints. Ask Uncle Bill is blog that I enjoy reading. Refreshing viewpoints, and good information.

. . . .The other one that I keep track of is Bailout Sleuth, this man does a good job of staying on point, and right now with keeping track of the banks that are returning TARP funds as they beomce solvent, and those who are being slow to return it.

. . . .CNN reports that Obama is ready to announce on Monday GM's bankruptcy filing. It's gonna be a rugged day in the U.S. economy, and especially in Michigan.

. . . .Something I was remiss in doing. The picture of my Dad's headstone on Memorial Day was taken by Karen, who e-mailed it to me while I was working. Gratitude and thanks for that. On a sadder note, her Dad passed away on Wednesday, the funeral was yesterday. I'm in that club, the burying a parent club, and it sucks, big time. Our prayers go out for this family and this loved one.

. . . Daily Beast provides a review of this week in culture, it's worth a look

. . . .The round-up of the Sunday Morning talking heads can be found here.

. . . .More sage of Caleb and his truck stranded in the U.P.:
Me: "Can I talk to Dave"
Unknown: "Yah, Nope"
Me: "You said that the truck would be fixed 2 weeks ago, then it was last Tuesday, then Friday. So far you haven't touched it, and Caleb has a class that starts down here on Tuesday evening."
Unknown: "Yah, you'll haf to talk to Dave about that, on Monday, or thereabouts"

. . . .Please watch your Northern horizon for a large explosion on Monday.

- It's Sunday, I gotta go enjoy the day. Kiss your kids, and you know the rest.

The Desolation Angel

29 May 2009

Friday

Friday May 29, 2009

. . . .So, the battle over the Supreme Court justice nominee Sonia Sotomayor continues to heat up. Although it appears that some more rational voices are straining to be heard. Senator John Cornyn repudiated both Rush Limbaugh and Newt Gingrich on Thursday. This is meaningful, Conrnyn is Chair of the National Republican Senate Committee. More pointedly, he said "Neither one of these men are elected Republican officials. I just don't think it's appropriate. I certainly don't endorse it. I think it's wrong."

. . .
And by the way, how, in the last 72 hours, did empathy become a bad quality for a judge, at least according the Party of No and the Gang Who Couldn't Shoot Straight? Just wondering.

. . .
And this of course comes on the heels of the absolute maniac appearance today on CNN by former 6th Congressional District Representative Tom Tancredo, who said that Sotomayor belonged to the "Latin KKK". This of course comes from a man who over the years has threatened to bomb Mecca, called Miami a Third-world city and suggested that the fence actually go around Brownsville, Texas to exclude it from the United States. Tancredo is one of the loudest voices behind the movement to throw all immigrants out of the country. Now, rather than debate that, given that simplistic viewpoint, it would mean the Tancredo would have to leave with the rest of us. Only makes sense, we basically rape the continent, leave, and leave the toxic mess for what's left of the original inhabitants here. And we wonder why bloods call us "stupid White people".

. . .There's still reaction coming in from readers about the letter I posted yesterday, and first batch of responses to it. Jeff sends this in:
For over 50 years of my life I considered myself a "physical Republican" and though I did not agree on many planks of the platform, right for women to make a choice about abortion, rights of gay or lesbian couples to enjoy the same rights as you and I have and be legally married if they choose, most enviromental policies, and the what I consider hijacking of the party by the religious/Chistian right. I frankly have done quite a bit of work and fund raising for the GOP over the years, much, much more then your average Republican. However I became so disenchanted over the last 8-10 years that I would say now that I am much more of a Democrat than Republican
. . .In terms of Limbaugh's effect on the public, Arnold "weighed" in on him as well, and his impact on the Right. Arnold says he (Limbaugh) is most definitely not the 800-lb gorilla in the room. . . .he's down to 650 lbs.

. . . . .Arianna Huffington was on "Countdown" with Keith Olbermann on Thursday night and discussed specifically Rush and his continued references to some kind of Obama "master plan".

. . .Got news for Rush. He's the President. He's supposed to have a master plan. It's called charting the course of the country and national policy over the next 4 years, that would be the role of the Chief Executive under the United States Constitution, maybe Rush should read it.

. . . .
Another one of the "must reads" that I came across this week was over in Tina Brown's Daily Beast and was a co-authored piece by Mark McKinnon, a former strategist for both Bush and McCain, and Rob Shepardson, who did the youth marketing for Obama, co-wrote a piece called "A Manifesto for Young Voters". I'm going to run it in whole, because it talks specifically to many of the same points made in this column, and by you all:

Yes, you can change politics. We had a shot and left you a lot of wreckage. But there are a lot of hopeful signs that you, the next generation of voters, are different. You appear to be a generation with a lot fewer selfish chromosomes and a lot more socially responsible DNA.

President Obama wants to change the way Washington works. President Bush came into office intent on doing the same.

Can it happen? We hope so, because the historically complex problems facing our country right now deserve an honest, open debate. Ordinary American voters are not at fault. They want change; they vote for it, repeatedly; they become frustrated when it doesn't happen. Despite our collective will, somehow our discourse winds up back in the gutter.

Our hope is that recent changes in politics, activism and technology might—might—usher in a new era of more enlightened debate.

In 2000 and 2008, calling for a new way of doing politics won votes. Looking ahead, our bet is that those who live by a different standard of political behavior will prevail while those who revert to familiar old-school tactics will find themselves on the losing end.

We've talked to hundreds of younger voters, activists, and students who desperately want to change politics. They are post-judgmental about race and ethnicity, sexual orientation, different upbringings, diseases, or other conditions that once stigmatized people.

What they don’t like, however, is old-fashioned, selfish political gamesmanship. It alienates them. They’ve grown up watching our problems get worse while politicians blame each other through obscure language and nasty behavior that’s offensive. They have a point: Why engage in a system that seems so irrelevant?

And they are brutally frank about whom to blame: their older brothers and sisters, and their moms and dads. "They’ve had their shot," they tell us. “Now they need to get out of the way."

Thankfully, issues motivate young voters. We’ve learned that if they understand the scope of a problem, and they are given a credible way to address it, they act. We’ve seen this in politics and beyond, for organizations such as Bono’s ONE campaign and the Lance Armstrong Foundation.

The good news is that their political alienation hasn’t stifled their better angels—as long as it is not furthering the political charade. During last year's campaign, one young woman put it perfectly: "Enough already. Please, stop the political bullshit. Our country is in serious trouble, so let's get on with it."

To add fuel this fire, social media make mobilizing humans unbelievably easy compared to the dark days before YouTube. Today's tools can overthrow dictators, squelch guerrilla groups, and elect the first African-American president. Younger voters share every moment of their lives with hundreds of friends. Older generations may find it bizarre or alienating and, yes, it can turn ugly, but the result of omni-sharing is a radical reduction in disrespect. Young people today, in short, collaborate.

So digital utopia is just around the corner? Well, not quite. Not until this promising next generation of activists, political organizers, and the citizens they mobilize sign onto a code of conduct for the digital era.

Unless Ashton Kutcher has a better idea, here are a few thoughts to start the bidding:

• Respect those with a different point of view. After all, they might be right, and you might be wrong.

• Question policies and positions, but don't question motives. Assume good intentions on the part of your opponents until proven otherwise.

• Don't personalize your differences. Stick to the substance, which is hard enough. Plus, the personal's none of your business, and only schmucks care.

• Tell the truth. Be honest. Don't distort. It's not right, and it's bad politics.

• Compare views, don't go negative. Arm voters with facts. Don't hide from the scrutiny. And (maybe) if you don't want to, your position might be weak.

• Use social media to engage and activate supporters. Spread the truth, not venom or half-truths about your opponents.

• Don’t let the anonymity of social media induce you to say things you wouldn’t otherwise say with your name attached.

• Keep it organic but keep it organized. Meetups and rallies need to be clear what they are about. The power of the collective can be lost without a common goal uniting them. A mob of people who are just angry cannot accomplish real social change.

• Continue to create, build, and reinvent your own model of political debate. Why follow the cynical politics of the past that led us over the cliff in the first place?

• Demand choices: You are not empowered by "speaking out." A vote is not a choice. If the Internet only gives us more of a "voice," then it has failed democracy. It succeeds if it results in more choices. Don't settle for less.

• Reform starts at home: Republicans cannot improve the Republican Party by fighting Democrats. They have to fix their own house first. And now that Democrats have consolidated power, Republicans have little ability to hold them accountable. Republicans and Democrats need to be responsible for disciplining their own side. Things only got to the poisonous stage they're at because we've all failed in our responsibility to clean up our own messes—or, sometimes, to even see them.

Don't get us wrong: This is not a plea for everyone to lock arms, throw partisan labels out the window, and lay down their weapons.

On the contrary; we hope the next generation of activists bash each other's brains out—through substantive, thorough, serious debate about the issues. Does anyone really believe that one party has all the solutions these days?

There are few things more noble than working in politics and government. That's true now more than ever. So while we hope that idealism motivates the next generation to change politics in our country, we hope they do it for pragmatic and self-interested reasons, too.

After all, engaging in a new way to do politics will win elections. It's also the best way we know how to find the solutions that will secure our country's future, both here and abroad.

The old-line cynics will no doubt skewer our hopeful optimism. That's fine. We're used to the arrows. We bear the scars of all the old battles.

But you've got a chance to change the rules of the road going forward. One thing we know for sure from having practiced this game for a few decades: Winning campaigns and movements never look back. They look ahead and reinvent the rules

. . . .Just a short note, according to the latest figures released, 12% of all mortgages are either in foreclosure or now late.

. . . .On this one, I am in full agreement with the White House, the President, General David Petraeus, and in complete disagreement with the Left and it's thirst for "justice" and a "need to know". There is absolutely no reason to release the photos from Gitmo, and a very compelling reason not to. We have thousands of our young men and women in Iraq right now. Inflaming a populace, giving them further photographic evidence of the abuse suffered, will only put the people we have now in country in further danger. There is no good that can come of it.

. . . .Son Cody weighed in tonight with his judgement on two new albums. Eminem's latest effort "Relapse" gets two thumbs up. He's listened to it extensively, and Cody also has a unique perspective, having grown up with two sober and clean parents and around people who have gone through treatment and are in recovery. His opinion - Eminem's just working out the demons and doing some therapy. The first half of the CD will absolutely offend you and piss you off, guaranteed, as he works out some of his own demons. The second half, actually, and I listened to a few tracks as well, is him starting to work the Steps and get on with himself. Combine that with Dr. Dre's production and the beats he brings to the project and it's a winner.
- The other one he weighed in on is one that he picked up on a whim because he saw it. It's the soundtrack from HBO's True Blood and he says it's excellent and has more better tracks than not, and has possibly only one or two that are throwaways.
- On the graphic novel and comics front, he says that with Todd McFarlane back at the helm of Spawn, the series can right itself and take off in some good directions.
- He also recommends the Ultimate X-Men series from Marvel, now being penned by Mark Millar, who was the scribe behind the Wanted graphic novel.
- He's keeping his eye on and collecting another series right now called The Boys and recommends it.

. . . .I'm going to keep beating this drum. Fixing, upgrading, reinventing the national electrical grid has to be one of our top priorities. Electrical distribution efficiency puts money back in our pockets, puts money back in public coffers and is key towards reducing our dependence on foreign oil sources, which is a right now type of thing. I re-ran the NPR 10-part series on the grid earlier (it can be found below and in the archives section). Wired magazine as well did a great series of pieces on that one, and we'll continue on with that:

Filthy coal-fired power plants spew carbon into the air. A mish-mash of 9,200 generators streams vital electrons along 300,000 miles of aging, inefficient transmission lines and one untrimmed tree in the wrong place could plunge a quarter of the country into darkness. This is our electric grid. A whopping 40 percent of all the energy used in the US—be it oil, gas, wind, or solar—is converted into electrons that travel over these wires. Any attempt at energy reform must begin here.

But this keystone of our 21st-century economy has yet to advance much beyond its 19th-century roots. Considering how wasteful, unresponsive, and just plain dumb the grid is, it isn't surprising that outages—which have been increasing steadily over the past quarter century—cost us $150 billion a year. The real shock is that the damn thing works at all.

Now consider what we will ask the grid to handle in the near future: Demand for electricity is expected to increase by as much as 40 percent in the next two decades—more than twice the population growth rate. To meet that need, we will have to generate an additional 214 gigawatts, a feat that would require the construction of more than 357 large coal plants. We also want to plug in dozens, if not hundreds, of gigawatts of wind and solar power harvested from the most remote corners of the country. And we will want to recharge millions of electric vehicles every night, without fail.

That is why we must fix the grid—reinvent it to be reliable, efficient, responsive, and smart. Washington is already on the case: President Obama has called a new energy agenda "absolutely critical to our economic future," and his stimulus package directs more than $40 billion toward that goal—the largest single infusion of government capital to the energy sector in US history, more than half of which will go to grid-related projects. In the short term, this bonanza aims simply to create jobs. But in the long term, it lays the groundwork for the grid of the future. (About $400 million will go to fund ARPA-E, a sort of Darpa for energy research.) And this is just the beginning: Congress is considering additional legislation in the hope of remaking our energy infrastructure.

Private enterprise is on board as well. Just take a spin through General Electric's Smart Grid Lab in Niskayuna, New York, which will simulate an entire electric system—complete with the kind of state-of-the-art meters, software, and communication tech that will enable a smarter grid. Or check out Google's new PowerMeter, a Web app designed to give consumers instant information about their energy usage.

But technology alone won't solve this mess, because fixing the grid is not a technology problem—it's a system problem on the broadest scale. Political gridlock, broken markets, and shortsighted planning have created a slew of bottlenecks that can't be solved with a bunch of smart meters and fancy routers.

Here, we show how utilities and businesses have begun to tackle those obstacles—from installing new transmission lines to empowering consumers. If we're serious about remaking our energy infrastructure, we'll need to encourage these kinds of fixes and replace our current system of misplaced incentives. Right now, that system encourages everyone involved—customers, utilities, and private industry—to neglect the grid. We have to give those stakeholders new reasons to turn on, engage, and transform.

Go ahead, blame Edison. He's the guy who invented the business model that got us into this mess. Edison Electric Light, founded in 1880, was a vertically integrated monopoly that controlled everything from generation to distribution. (It even owned the bulbs in customers' homes.) As utilities sprouted across the country, they saw no reason to deviate from Edison's successful blueprint.

For its first century, then, the electricity industry was a simple affair. Most states anointed a single utility to provide all the power to its citizens. These utilities owned the plants that generated the electricity, the transmission lines that carried it to substations, and the wires that distributed it to customers. When more power was needed, they simply built another coal-fired plant and spliced it onto the grid. Rates had to be approved by a public-service commission, but otherwise the utilities were autonomous. (They linked their systems to neighboring grids, but mostly for backup.) Electricity was inexpensive and abundant, and the system's reliability was the envy of the world.

What it wasn't? Efficient. Since the utilities had a captive market and seemingly unlimited access to cheap fossil fuels, they had no incentive to upgrade their leaky old plants. No one complained as long as energy was seen as plentiful and harmless. Then came the fuel crisis of the 1970s, along with the rise of environmentalism. In 1978, Congress began chipping away at the utilities' dominance by forcing them to buy electricity from independent generation companies that met efficiency goals. Fourteen years later, the government went much further, ordering the utilities to open their transmission lines to all comers.

The result was utter chaos. Many utilities got out of the generation business and morphed into middlemen, shopping for the cheapest power—often from areas with low labor costs and lax environmental oversight—and transporting it hundreds, even thousands, of miles to their customers. This meant using the links between grids, which hadn't been designed to accommodate such heavy traffic. The grids of distant states thus became closely intertwined, so that an outage in one rural county could affect millions of far-flung customers.

Though power companies were demanding more from the grid, they had no incentive to upgrade it. Every penny a utility spent on grid improvement would potentially benefit plants owned by rivals. And states that exported cheap energy resisted plans for costly new transmission projects, fearing they would lead to higher in-state rates—and angry voters.

As a consequence, the grid has fallen into disrepair, with few major efforts to fix it. Today, utilities allocate just 2 percent of revenue to research. "For God's sake, we contribute less to R&D than the pet food industry does," says Jeffrey Byron of the California Energy Commission. So the grid remains hobbled by unreliable electromechanical switches and analog controllers. During the early minutes of the Northeast blackout of 2003, the Ohio utility whose damaged hardware started the cascade couldn't even monitor its own wires; employees had to phone a regional overseer and beg for updates. By that time, it was too late.

Regulators, meanwhile, have done a terrible job of mandating grid upgrades. Maybe that's because nobody is really in charge. The industry-run North American Electric Reliability Council appoints eight regional agencies to manage grid standards, but they clash with state agencies, which constantly angle for more authority. Adding to the muddle are the quasi-governmental independent system operators and the regional organizations responsible for ensuring open access to transmission lines. Meanwhile, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, created in 1977 to supervise regional and national electricity sales, has proven inept at mediating interstate disputes. This thicket of regulation and competing interests strangles any ambitious initiative. As a result, despite ever-increasing electricity demand, fewer than 700 miles of interstate transmission lines have been built since 2000.

To fix the grid, then, we don't need another layer of oversight. We need to tweak the system so that companies are rewarded—not punished—for investing in the grid. Take the case of Duke Energy. Like most utilities, the North Carolina company is not known for its environmentalism. (It has been accused of flouting the Clean Air Act, for instance.) But in 2006, Duke announced its Utility of the Future initiative. This billion-dollar program is designed to smarten up Duke's portion of the grid by deploying customer meters and network-level gizmos that facilitate speedy, two-way communication. It's exactly the sort of upgrade that will help make the grid stable enough to handle wind turbines and plug-in hybrids.

How did the giant utility come around to embracing the smart grid? Probably not out of the goodness of its corporate heart. The costs of building new generation facilities—and the tumbling prices of plug-and-play gadgets—likely made raising the grid's IQ a more efficient way to improve Duke's long-term prospects. Look at the company's recent push toward IP-based open standards for all its grid hardware. Open standards will help operators communicate with one another regardless of utility—turning the grid into an Internet-like ecosystem rather than a scattered network of proprietary islands. But there may be another reason for Duke to become an evangelist of the approach: Open standards would make it easier for the large utility to gobble up and incorporate smaller rivals, since their systems could be integrated with minimal effort.

Duke isn't the only utility to grasp the financial upside of smart-grid projects. Minneapolis-based Xcel Energy is building SmartGridCity, a $100 million effort in Boulder, Colorado, that will allow customers to monitor their electricity consumption via the Web, as well as pump wind and solar energy into the grid. If SmartGridCity is a success, Xcel hopes to persuade public utilities nationwide to invest in similar systems.

This type of investment benefits the grid tremendously and must be encouraged at every turn. According to Roger Anderson at Columbia University's Center for Computational Learning Systems, tweaking the grid's communications capabilities can increase transmission efficiency by 50 percent—no additional wires necessary.

Self-interest has a long, noble history of spurring some of America's greatest infrastructure projects. But it must often be nudged along by cleverly crafted government incentives. The transcontinental railroads, for instance, got a crucial boost from a federal land grant program. These grants, often located in barren quarters of the western US, weren't worth much at the time; the railroad companies laid track through the land in hopes of increasing property values. Energy regulators already have some experience creating similarly ingenious carrots. In the early 1980s, states began to realize that utilities wouldn't become more efficient until their revenue was no longer tied directly to the sheer amount of energy produced. So regulators in dozens of states began to implement decoupling, a policy that rewards utilities for coming in below generation targets. Suddenly, companies could profit by promoting efficiency.

With similar policies, we can push energy companies to make the grid better for everyone. For example, utilities have not been eager to incorporate renewable power from customers' rooftop solar panels or backyard wind turbines. They would be more likely to do so if they were allowed to hike rates or were given tax breaks for making the necessary accommodations.

The grid took more than a century to grow into the unwieldy beast it is now. Given the urgency of climate change, energy independence, and economic demands, we have only a fraction of that time to fix it. But the solution won't spring forth fully formed. This, the greatest engineering challenge of our era, must be solved the same way it was created—piece by piece, with utilities and consumers acting in their own interests. For too long, those interests have been misaligned. It's time for a reset.

. . . .Enough for today, outta here. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no gets out alive. We don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances of how our ticket gets punched, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here, right now. This ain't no dress rehearsal and the curtain goes up every day on the real thing. Change yourself, change your world and it will change the world.

. . . Got your back, somewhere out there in the night

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan 48137]

26 May 2009

Wednesday

Wednesday May 27 2009


. . . .Yes!!!!!
That seals the deal! If Rush Limbaugh wants Sonia Sotomayor to "fail" as he "rushed" to do Tuesday, along with calling her a "racist", then I'm in! I will go to war for that woman, I'd take a bullet for her. If she's on Rush's "fail list" then, just as automatically as he and his cronies say "No" then I say "Yes"!

. . . .
And let's add everyone's other favorite Republican intellectual, Newt Gingrich, to the list as he called her a "racist" on Wednesday in his column. No basis, just called her that.

. . . Do those two, along with their buddy from his undisclosed location, Cheney, realize how closely they resemble Moe, Larry and Shemp? Just wondering.

. . . .Karl Rove's reason for opposing her - "We've already had a Hispanic on the Supreme Court". This is great, considering he's supposed to be the brains behind the other three's brawn. The person he's referring to in his column - Benjamin Cardozo . . . .who was a Sephardic Jew.

. . . .
'S a matter of fact, let's do that, you, me, us, all of us. If they want to be the Party of No, and proudly identify themselves that way, then let's be the people of "Yes". I'm quite sincere about that, too. Let's start our own organized movement. The only way we can move forward is we balance out the opposition. For every No, there must be a Yes. For every ending they try to put forward, we need to put a new beginning out. For every ugly, nasty innuendo and piece of slander they put forward, let's put a piece of the truth out there. For every division that they attempt to put in the American people, let's heal the Union and bring the people of this country together.

. . . .Before we even go into "activist judges" and the label that has already, courtesy of Fox News, been thrown on her, let's examine some things. I'm still searching, by the way, for the "activist judges" that are supposedly everywhere rewriting the Constitution. Hmm! Didn't Bush2 appoint a bunch of the Federal Circuit Court judges and Court of Appeals judges we have now. And it's for damn sure that Karl Rove had a big hand in the current crop of Federal prosecutors. So where are these "activist judges"? Would they be the same judges that rewrote a State constitution in California today and wrote policy. Naahh! Couldn't be them! That was the right decision, according to them. Could it be the same judges who rewrote established election law, changed history and put GWB in office two distinct times? Naahh, that's not an "activist judge", that's someone who did their job, again according to them. So. . .who exactly is and where exactly are these "activist judges"? Just wondering.

. . . .Who are these "activist judges" - Well, let's see, can we start with Justice Antonin Scalia, one of the extreme Right's darlings? In Republican Party vs. White in 2002, Scalia wrote:
Even if the policy making capacity of judges were limited to courts of last resort, that would only prove that the announce clause fails strict scrutiny. "[I]f announcing one's views in the context of a campaign for the State Supreme Court might be" protected speech, post, at 3, n. 2, then-even if announcing one's views in the context of a campaign for a lower court were not protected speech, ibid.-the announce clause would not be narrowly tailored, since it applies to high- and low-court candidates alike. In fact, however, the judges of inferior courts often "make law," since the precedent of the highest court does not cover every situation, and not every case is reviewed.
. . . .Oops, there goes the argument about justices "making policy" and being "activists".

. . . .As long as I'm on a roll here, the other argument advanced about her from the Cabal of Stooges is that she will practice "reverse discrimination" because of her gender and ethnicity. Justice Alioto, another good friend of the Gang Who Couldn't Shoot Straight:
When I get a case about discrimination, I have to think about people in my own family who suffered discrimination because of their ethnic background or because of religion or because of gender. And I do take that into account.
. . . .Shit, well I guess they're just going to have to resort to some higher, intellectual form of debate around her qualifications as judge, like, say, calling her names or holding interviews claiming she has "cooties" or something like that.

. . . .Let's see, a woman who was put into her seat by George Herbert Walker Bush, and had the conservative seal of approval, and has more judicial experience that any candidate for the Supreme Court in the last 100 years, she's not what "they" want? I'm still trying to wrap my head around it, you'll have to bear with me on it.

. . .Mark McKinnon turns this one in over on the Daily Beast: Memo to my party: Blasting targets like Sonia Sotomayor and Colin Powell is a surefire strategy to guarantee our extinction:
If the GOP is ever to be resurgent, it has to pick its fights carefully. The tendency is, unfortunately, to shoot at everything that moves. . . . .

. . . Absolutely true story, though you'd have to be from Michigan, and understand the Upper and Lower Peninsula's, and the residents of the Upper Peninsula, called "yoopers" to truly get all of it. Son Caleb goes Michigan Tech up in Houghton/Hancock, in the Upper Peninsula. His truck died sometime during the winter, semester ended 3 weeks ago. After much deliberation, it was decided that the best solution was to leave it up there, have the engine replaced and go back up to get it. First, the station was going to work on it last Tuesday, then last Friday, he goes up on Memorial Day, catches a ride with another guy, to pick the truck up that was supposed to be done by this Tuesday, the latest promise. I get an e-mail today titled "Yoopers":
I talked to Dave at Dave's BP today.
Me: Is there a timetable for my truck?
Dave: I'm hoping to start it friday.
Me: Really?
Dave: Ya, tings got all scruuwed up with the oliday weekend an all, an grad parties and things of that sort, so ima oping ta start it on Friday an ull be the first ta know when its done, eh.


I couldnt even be mad.
. . . .We've been talking all along about sustainability. A broad term, but an important idea; one that involves supporting "local" economies by supporting local businesses, dealing locally, and basically supporting your neighbor by doing good business with them. Striking towards that idea, reader Kay sends this along:
just found this book online (available as e-book) written by an economist giving his thinking about why localization simply IS going to be the way we engage in commerce. According to him, globalization will be pretty much over once oil prices again reach the 3 digit price mark. I'm getting the book - "sounds true"!
Why Your World Is About to Get a Whole Lot Smaller
Jeff Rubin was the Chief Economist at CIBC World Markets for almost twenty years. He was one of the first economists to accurately predict soaring oil prices back in 2000 and is now one of the world’s most sought-after energy experts. He lives in Toronto.
. . .Retired General, James Jones, the National Security Adviser refuted Dick Cheney, and rebutted him in remarks Wednesday at the Atlantic Council:
"I firmly believe that the United States is not only safe, but will be more secure, and the American people are increasingly safer because of the president's leadership that he has displayed consistently over the last four months both at home and abroad."
. . . .Lawrence Eagleburger, the former Secretary of State under George H.W. Bush, mocked Cheney, at a Brookings Institution session as "benighted":
Eagleburger, a GOP elder statesman who was in President George H.W. Bush's inner circle during the war, said Cheney and others who say they were "screaming and yelling" for Hussein's removal only did so when it was obvious Bush had the capacity to do so. When the real decision was being made, Eagleburger implies, Cheney sang a different tune. Eagleburger answered questions at a Brookings Institution forum.
. . . Just a short reminder, that 6 years ago in May, President George W. Bush stood on the deck of an aircraft carrier and declared "Mission Accomplished"
. . . .Another IED (roadside bomb) in Baghdad now makes May the deadliest in 8 months in Iraq, bringing it to at least 20 who have died this month over there.

. . . .Just a short memo to the new U.S. Drug Czar - Since we're still Number 1 in the world in some things, in this case notably, number of people in prison (who are fed and housed courtesy of our tax dollars) and 68% of whom are non-violent drug offenders. The Netherlands is starting a prison closure program for lack of people to put in prison.

. . . .Go Red Wings

. . . . .Fascinating series on right now on the History Channel at night -Life After People - speculation each night about what would happen if there was a massive calamity that wiped all human life off the face of the earth.

.. . . . . .Staying on the subject of upgrading the grid, which is the smartest, cheapest way for us to gain efficiency in our personal and national energy consumption, this one that looks at the challenges of doing so, and draws a very accurate parallel with what Eisenhower faced in putting the national highway system in place:
The parallels are unavoidable: The plan for the national smart grid being proposed today — with all of its obstacles and opportunities — is remarkably similar to the country's push for an interstate highway system 50 years ago.

Like the old road system faced by President Eisenhower, the current electric grid is a cobbled-together network of distinct regional webs. A major overhaul of that system has the potential to do what the interstate highway did so many years ago — modernize the American economy.

It's by no means a perfect comparison. The 21st century electric grid project, unlike the network of sleek interstates, lacks a bold, unifying vision. And it would be developed mostly with private-sector money as opposed to the federal funds used to build the highways.

But a thoughtful look at the history and development of the interstate still provides a useful model for a new electric grid.

A Bold Vision

In 1919, a young Dwight D. Eisenhower set off on a cross-country road trip from Washington, D.C., to San Francisco. It was just months after the end of World War I, and the young lieutenant colonel was part of an 81-vehicle Army convoy that set out to determine how difficult it would be to move the Army across the continent.

As they quickly discovered, it wasn't easy. The roads were narrow and unpredictable, and the trip took more than two months. Along the way, the convoy got into at least 230 accidents. The trucks repeatedly sank in the mud, ran off the road and overturned.

Thirty years later, as supreme Allied commander in Europe during World War II, Gen. Eisenhower witnessed firsthand how important a strong road system could be for commerce and national security. Hitler's autobahn system made the Nazis a formidable enemy, able to move troops and goods quickly throughout Germany.

Eisenhower took those lessons to heart. As president, he made building a dependable interstate system one of the top priorities of his administration.

A Model For The Grid

In 1956, after several appeals from the president, Congress enacted the Federal-Aid Highway Act, creating an interstate system that now consists of nearly 47,000 miles of highway and took 50 years to build.

"The interstate highway system is absolutely part of the country. It seems so natural and logical to us. But in the 1950s, it was a radical thought," says Susan Eisenhower, president of the Eisenhower Group and granddaughter of President Eisenhower.

Susan Eisenhower is part of a growing chorus of voices who see Eisenhower's interstate highway system as the model for building a modern electric grid, a project that seems radical to many Americans today.

Like the early highway system, she explains, the current electric grid is a patchwork of disparate regional webs that are often unreliable and inefficient. And like the road system of Eisenhower's youth, she says, the electric grid requires immediate and dramatic modernization to maintain the nation's economy and security.

Building For The Future

The highway analogy is quickly gaining momentum among advocates of an expanded electric grid. Mike Heyeck, senior vice president of American Electric Power, which has built the majority of the country's new extra high-voltage electric lines, calls the comparison "striking."

Heyeck says President Eisenhower was a "visionary." The president could have advocated for a streamlined two-lane highway system, which likely would have sufficed at the time, but instead he proposed a system of multilane highways based on the country's projected commerce needs 30-40 years in the future.

A modern and interconnected electric grid, Heyeck explains, requires the same kind of bold vision. Rather than building a grid that matches current electrical needs, he says the focus should be on building a system with the transmission capacity the nation will need down the line. For Heyeck, that means building extra high-voltage lines when lower-capacity lines might suffice. In the long run, he says, that option will cost less because it limits the need for expensive expansions and renovations in the future.

Government Vs. Private Funding

But Heyeck is quick to point out a major difference between the two building projects: funding. The interstate highway system cost nearly $130 billion at the time to build and was paid for almost entirely by the federal gasoline tax.

"The difference is that we really don't need federal dollars to build the interstate transmission grid," Heyeck says. "Private investment can be garnered as long as we remove some of the impediments, such as siting and cost allocation."

With a price tag in the hundreds of billions, this is an important distinction. Private companies raise the capital to build new transmission lines, and the cost is eventually passed on to customers. For the most part, the government is left out of the arrangement.

But that doesn't mean the government won't have a role to play in the building process.

Right now, the high-voltage grid is being constructed bit by bit, with little central oversight. But Dan McNichol, author of The Roads That Built America: The Incredible Story of the U.S. Interstate System, says a key to the success of the highway system was that Eisenhower made it a top-down operation.

"Eisenhower was a master of military art," McNichol says. "He understood from his readings and history that the best road systems were built by the central government," including the roads built by Rome, Napoleon and Hitler. Each state transportation department managed its own highway-building program, but the central plan was put forth and managed by the federal government.

Building a modern electric grid is also likely to require central oversight, particularly when it comes to acquiring the land on which to build the towers and lines.

Acquiring Land

In the early years of the interstate highway system, McNichol says, people gave over their land for the project without much argument. "There was an acceptance and even a desire for the interstate system that was almost undisputed," he says.

Acquiring land for the electric grid is another story entirely. Opposition from landholders concerned about the value of their homes has delayed the construction of certain high-voltage lines for more than a decade.

The reasons are complex. Jim Fama, executive director of energy delivery at the Edison Electric Institute, an association of electric companies, says in the 1950s, there was just more available land. It was easier to find space to build that didn't run through private property or houses. Now, the country is more populated and congested. And he says the culture of the 1950s was not as litigious; people were less likely to bring a lawsuit even if the highway interfered with their property.

Fama says people tended to be more accepting of the highway project because they thought it was "an economic benefit to their community. They saw it as progress."

Convincing people that the electric lines are in the public good, McNichol says, is much more difficult. People could imagine themselves traveling along the interstate, visiting a friend or relative across the country. But the journey along the electric grid is a "virtual trip," which makes it a harder sell.

A Project To Modernize America

"When [advocates] start campaigning for the national grid, they're going to have to educate people about what this means for them — that their costs will be lower, the reception for their TV will be better and their supply of electricity will be more consistent," McNichol explains.

McNichol says that will require the kind of bold vision and leadership shown by President Eisenhower. The electric grid, he says, is every bit as important today as the interstate was in the 1950s.

Back then, the U.S. was a manufacturing society that depended on interstate commerce for economic growth. For that industrial country, the interstate was critical. Today, our growth is dependent on an information economy that relies on electricity.

Just the way the interstate modernized the America of the 1950s, McNichol says, the electric grid is needed to modernize the America of today.


. . . .4 earthquakes earlier this week in the Caribbean. All on the same day, all at the same time, and all located within a 300 mile radius from one another.

. . . There's a large group of readers of this particular column that truly understand the interconnectedness of all things. The concept of "Mitauye Oyasin", we are all related, all things. This one from Green Planet supports that so well. When you save electricity, you save water and vice versa; when you save water, you save electricity:

We live in an interconnected world. A butterfly flaps its wings in Mongolia and a philosophy student ponders about that sort of thing in Spokane. See? Interconnected. As our technology and thoughts about butterflies advance, so does our interconnectedness.

One of our aims at the Planet Green website, is to try and provide people with tips and tricks for saving energy and water. Usually, we round up little household hints about how to save electricity or H2O. Most of the time we speak as if these two things were separate beasts. What you may not know is that saving electricity and saving water are actually the same thing.

How Do Shorter Showers Save Electricity?


You might not equate shower-usage with electricity usage. In fact, you’ve been told 1,000 times in your life to keep electrical devices away from the shower. But taking a shower uses electricity. A hot water heater may consume a fifth of your home's electricity and if you pump your own water from a well, that's a double whammy. But the water-related electricity you use around the house pales in comparison to the amount of energy used by the water companies.

In California, water treatment, storage and transportation accounts for 19% of the state's electricity usage. The good news is that saving water is cheaper and easier than saving electricity.

From the Guardian:

"Some of the cheapest greenhouse gas emission reductions available seem to be not energy-efficiency programs, but water-efficiency programs," said Gleick, president of the California-based Pacific Institute, a global water research center.


How Does Turning off the Lights Save Water?


Electricity uses more water than all the showers combined.

From Power Scorecard:

Most electric power plants require water to operate. Nuclear and fossil fuel power plants drink over 185 billion gallons of water per day. Geothermal power plants add another 2 billion or so gallons a day. Hydropower plants use water directly to generate power. These power plants represent the single largest consumer of water among any industrial, governmental or residential activity. Since 98 percent of the water used in power plants is returned to its source, distinctions are made between use and consumption.


These plants also de-water ecosystems and disrupt wildlife. They also pollute the air which is why we are trying to save the energy in the first place. A great way to conserve water is to decrease the need for so much electricity.

What You Can Do


Don't make a distinction between saving water and saving energy. Just because you live in a state with a lot of rainfall doesn’t mean you’re off the hook in terms of water conservation. And if you want to reduce greenhouse emissions, saving water may be the best way to do it. Everything is interconnected.


. . . . .For a long time now, myself, a lot of my friends, a lot of people actually were accused constantly of being "conspiracy theorists", seeing an agenda behind everything. Well, first point, we were right, as the 9 memos released back in February proved, as GWB had suspended 9 of the 10 amendments of the Bill of Rights for the previous 7 years by executive order. More directly, what happened, hunh? Now, every time I turn around, someone on Fox News, someone on the Right, someone from the Republican Party, the Party of "No" is seeing a nefarious, evil Obama plot behind everything. I've heard it all; "organic farming is going to be illegal"; "he's going to take away our guns"; "he's a Muslim"; "he's not even a U.S. citizen". As a writer, I get mail, quite a bit of it. There really is an active underground extreme Right wingnut thing going on here in cyberspace, and a lot of constant monitoring of writers, bloggers, commentators, etc. The majority of that e-mail that this column receives is always from an Anonymous writer, or someone who uses a blind e-mail address, and mostly refer to me as a "N*#@#*-lover", a "queer-lover" who must "suck c*#@" or a "towel-head", and of course, the least original of the schoolyard insults, a "socialist". The letter writers then go on to whip out some columnist, writer or blogger who knows the "truth" and then proceeds to explain to me "the way things are".
- It's cool, I put myself out here, I don't hide who I am, and I'm willing to stand, and stand real strong, for what I believe in, and what I know. So, it's not whining. Every so often, I receive one that is so vile, and so twisted, that I don't do what I normally do, which is hit the "delete" button on that crap. I got one of those recently, one that made stop. Many of my friends refuse to recognize what is happening out there, and how dangerous some of it is, some do. It's not anything that can be ignored, and for anyone who carries that dog soldier blood in their veins, and has one eye and ear cocked towards looking for something dangerous coming, this one was one of the warning signs.
- As I said, I normally hit the "delete" button, but not this one, and not this time. I'm lucky to be surrounded by a lot of people, good people. Among those people are some whose opinion and outlook I respect tremendously, and they serve as a reality check at times and give me some sounding boards to bounce things off of. I did that this time. I copied the body of the e-mail I received and sent it on wholesale to some people, people I respect and asked for their take on it. The responses are starting to come in, and I'm going to print them below, before I ever print the original message that came to me, and that I bounced off of them. I use only first names, it prevents people from getting hit by spambots, and prevents good people from being looked up by the hate-mongers. Go ahead and read the responses and reactions first, then read the original message, personally. If you want to, go ahead and respond as well, I'll print your reaction, either use the comment form below (it's moderated, so I can check for some of the hate and racism that I receive) or e-mail me using the "e-mail me" button on the left. Like I said, go ahead and read the responses, then the original piece that sparked that reaction:

Barbara's response : When I read this, I could not even get mad. I felt extreme pity for this woman who lives in such fear. For many change is terrifying, especially when it requires you to let go of your beliefs and grow to into a more loving space. Obama is asking us to become more than what we have been. He is asking for us to work together listening to everyone's ideas.
I choose not to give this woman power by even acknowledging her.
Lou's response: Hi I am Louis Barbara, my wife asked me to reply.
I have been dealing with the same problem for some time. Usually FACTS don't do any good. Even if they read your reply they have their own version of the "Facts" so no matter what you say they can one up you or just call you some school yard name.
The only way is not to respond to them but to their audience. So if they have an email list use it or post a response on thier Blog.
As usual with stuff, some of it is almost true so it lends a air of truth to the rest of the bile. The part about Hitler is always used because it is historically true. Of course it is used out of context and analogies are used which have no basis in fact.
The first 4 paragraphs are true enough, But whose fault is that, the constrictive have been in charge since Reagan, except for Clinton, and Bush has only accelerated the pattern. They wanted a dumbed down populace because it is easier to control. As for the Media, FOX news is the highest rated cable network and has been for many years. MSNBC is only now coming on as a balance.
There are so many lies and half truths is Paragraph 5 is hard to know were to begin.
The conservatism protested the 2000 election and took it to the supreme court, and the ACTIVIST judges put Bush in as president. Almost 60% now think that gay marriage is a civil rights matter and 5 states including Iowa have approved it. This is a losing cause for conservatism, but they want to impose their religious beliefs on the rest of us just as religion sanctioned segregation a decade ago.
Acorn is a favorite whipping boy of the right. I usually direct them to the Acorn web site and let them judge from that what a communist group it is.
The mandatory civil defense force is an ou right lie. There was nothing in the Bipartisan bill to increase civilian volunteer to support such a claim. I usually just link them to the bill and ask when where it is.
Obama won the election on a promise to bring us together. So far he has been pretty much down the middle. (much to the dismay of the left) Bush was the expert in division but of course they have no memory of that. In his limited time in the Illinois house and the US senate, Obama proved he could work across party lines. Again selective memory.
Any successful popular movement in any country can be compared to the rise of Hitler. It proves nothing. There are potent checks and balances built into our system that will prevent any kind of Power grab. Of course Dick Cheney and his group almost took over all three branches of government. But when they do it, it is OK.
And one more thing, the German People had been humiliated and their country striped of all goods by the treaty of WW1. This provided the motivation for revenge that was the powerful force Hitler used to take over.
Just a few thoughts, I hope it helps.

Actually, I agree with everything she says - EXCEPT her POV about who is responsible for this mess. She blames Obama as an ARAB anti-semitist. I blame the neo-cons purchased by the extremely wealthy. Looks like we both blame the group we feel is the most powerfully 'hate-mongering'. I really don't know what else to say about this. She has her perception and opinion, I have mine.
We can frame her response as "anti-arabic" fear-mongering because she is a conservative Jew (though I found no reference to her being Hassidic) and politically active within her movement. She cites no facts in her references to what Obama stands for or is doing, and focuses on facts about Hitler instead, thus planting in the unobservant mind an incredibly biased, hateful picture of Obama while indirectly calling him an anti-semitic nazi (Hitler would roll in his grave - a mixed-blood black nazi!).
She speaks in the same voice as the conservative, right-wing Christian, adding some (unearned?) support from them. The right to protest about an illegal or 'rigged' election is constitutional; unelected judges in the current administration should now be elected, where there was no problem accepting the appointment of conservative right-wing judges; I don't even know what a "Banana Republic" is (is she referring to a retail clothing store?), but I have never seen any evidence that Acorn is a 'marxist' group. If anything, they are intensly involved in making sure all Americans are represented in the polls.
I agree that we are at the verge of the largest collapse in our history, and that we live in fear of exposing those responsible. I just don't believe those responsible are brown or black skinned. Obama IS in favor of/discussing bringing back the draft, and IS adding a huge number of people to patrol our borders. Maintaining and managing our population so as not to become as overrun as India or China is, apparently, a 'civilian defense force stronger than our army'. That is true.
I agree that change is coming, the US will never look the same again, and "I have never been so afraid for my country and for my children as I am
now." (when I choose to entertain fear instead of hope & love). The difference is that I felt this fear with Bushie in office, and am beginning to feel it again now. Politicians are basically the same when they achieve Presidency and power - they make decisions based on fear of losing their power. Sometimes I think Obama is beginning to do that by compromizing much of what we put him into office for in order to placate the right, who will never be placated and will always hate anyone who does not think exactly as they do. He is responsible to represent us all, but we need him less spread out across all issues so that he can use that fabulour, analytical mind to stop those attempting to collapse and overtake the economy.
Anyway, I am another herself (Hunab Ku), only on the other side of the street. As I recall, Obama has not introduced an indoctrination of the people (unlike Bush when he introduced Ready Kids as part of Homeland Security).
In closing I would say, have some mercy and compassion for this woman. Being Jewish, she comes from a history of extremist politics and extreme political results, and chooses to be part of a group that keeps themselves constantly vigilant against it happening again. She's a little nuts, but aren't we all? Having allied herself with right-wing, conservative Chrisitians, I would ask her to watch the documentary "Jesus Camp" except that she might then decide to fund it! It's a REALLY scarey look at the current creation of Christian jihadists & suicide bombers (children, mind you).
Kay

Well, I've read it a couple of times and it saddens me. It reminds me too much of the idiots that were politicians in the state that I grew up in and otherwise decent people bought into it hook, line and sinker. Larry Craig and Steve Symms come immediately to mind. This person is twisting history and logical thought in ways worse than those she accuses of aiding and abetting. I'll have more tomorrow or Monday. No real student of history would ever try to bait this (or any) country into another civil war and I see the wing nuts on the right working awfully hard to take us down that nasty road of hateful intolerance.
Kip--
Geez, where to start... In my view, Ms. Geller is taking the plays straight from the book as written in the early 1930's in central Europe. Rationally, one needs to consider the political landscape that she comes from -- the Likud party and most likely the right edge of it. Israel's last best chance for a lasting peace was frittered away by both Begen and Arafat -- they could have made it right and they could have made it last. Israel has been on the downside of public opinion for more than 20 years by virtue of the fact of their abismal treatment of the Palestinians. It won't be too much longer when the Arab Israelis will outnubmer the Jewish Israelis and the Jewish right will try to dissolve democracy to hold onto power - my opinion. And yet another reason to maintain a secular state at all costs.

Ms. Geller presents herself to the world with the credentials of an academic historian, decries the general malaise of public education (as I do) and then proceeds to shamelessly pander to the uneducated by exploiting the current urban myths of pseudo-history that are held by so many folks that no longer bother to read. She demonizes her philosophical and/or political opponents and accuses them of fascist behavior when it is her behavior that fits the classic definition of fascism -- a political philosophy that almost no one in the general public actually understands anymore. She is employing the tactics of Joseph Goebbels pretty much step by step from a speach that he made in the mid-thirties when he explained in very straightforward terms that his propaganda wahs not designed to make an intellectual argument, but to incite the masses. (I'll see if I can add an actual reference to the exact speach tonight -- I don't think that I'll Google Goebbels from work 1 :) )
In my opinion the right no longer has an intellectual argument and they are just stirring the pot. I find them to be the main reason that I don't bother with the news much anymore. Geller is correct when she says that, generally speaking, people aren't capable of critical thought anymore. She and Rush and a host of others are taking advantage of this and is trying to make hay while the sun doesn't shine.
I've tried to live my life expressing tolerance for political opinion from all quarters, but at this point in my life as I approach my geezerhood I truly do have a craw full
of it from these folks.
--Jim

What the Fuck? Why doesn't she just get the rope out, put the hood on, get on her high fucking horse, round up her cohorts, and string him up on the nearest tree on the hill.

"Change is indeed

coming. And when it comes, you will never see the same nation again."
thank the great mystery for that! Because what has been created, has been created by people like her. We now are in the process of dismantling the whole fucking mess.
She needs to pay attention.
Lost soul.
maybe she is the one that needs to be strung up.
that is my reaction.
V

Sore loser.......when the whole wide world collectivly let out that long held breath in relief the momemt Mr Obama was nominated I could also feel a lot of fear generated. The fear was coming out of the control machine. From the ones that can not or will not choose to look at the bigger picture. At the fact that what big government has been doing for the past years has torn us apart. Not only us in the US but us as the whole world. We are living on a planet in chrisis. We have sold our future grandchildren short. We have been living under a selfish leadership that forgot that their own blood line would be facing the mess we created too. How close minded and offensive to compare our new leader to Mr Hitler. Fear is a powerful thing. Trust is more powerful. We must withstand this kind of fear generating crap. That is what it is. Sore, very sore and afraid losers.....I send out the rescue remedy world wide that we may soothe the fear and help those that
are afraid realize that for a very long time many of us had stood in that place of fear too. The difference that I see here is that the many who voted for Mr Obama did it for love of the earth, love for our grandchildren and hope for the future.
L.

Caleb (my youngest son, who is intelligent, and politicially informed) - I would love to print your response, but your Grandmother reads this column too.

Having read this prologue again I must admit I do not see what the fuss
is about. While I am not looking back over my shoulder at a vanity wall
of such fine credentials my sense of smell is very keen. I have little
dispute with the assertion of our educational, economic and political
maladies. However short the political career Mr. Obama has had inside
and out of Washington, it certainly exceeds the experience of being
mayor of Wasilla Alaska, a town I have lived near and a large community
it is not, with no Dairy Queen in site.
The news media has all of it's own sacred cows wholly laden with common
content. If we are lacking in discernment after decades of biased fear
and hate mongering then perhaps our author can reassure us of which
malodorous mass to gobble up next. There is no sound reasoning that
would suppose the historic events of the thirties, replete with mass
murders, genocide if you will, and our current President have any
similarities other than he would have been on the short list of most
reviled.
I am confident that our President is making mistakes, has made mistakes,
some of which he will eventually repent. One of them is not a desire to
create a master race of Americans, slaughter the unholy in the name of
God or some other oracle of divination. The debt being created or
rather being transfered onto the books of the government was not a
conspiracy of anything other than stupidity and greed. The government
was complicit in the former and we took over from there.
The demise of our industrial base may have been pushed onto the thin ice
through poorly thought out regulation, ridiculous negotiation, and
investing in the non-sustainable as the prudent course. The difference
today is that the government is working on repeating these mistakes in
reverse, using invented money which is truly non-sustainable,
negotiating in businesses that are for profit with a non profit, spend
it like it was real experience base, and then making regulations to
insure failure.
Our President is facing the difficulties, perhaps with a bit more zeal
than we can afford, but he is following up on the legacy of some of the
worst decisions in modern history. He needs to realize growth in the
private sector will not happen if money is devalued through homeopathic
economics. Character assault through comparison to famous villains or
assumptions of race or class divisiveness is of little value. Elitist
fear mongering is the weapon of the group not in power, the power can be
regained through being forward reach rather than back biting. If we are
going to have meaningful dialog, it is best to start at common ground,
if the object is to smirk and snicker at how cleverly we can accuse of
grand conspiracy, and treason to the nation, your job is done.
I suspect soliciting response is not the intention, because the thinly
veiled prejudice smells of sacred cow rendering in both premise and content.
Tom

. . .And the original missive that started this set of reactions? It's captured below, but bear in mind a couple of facts. The author's name is Pamela Geller, not Pamela "Atlas" Geller, who has a website of her own. Her credentialing is not from Google, but she is self-identified on her website as holding those creds.

by Pam Geller
I am a student of history. Professionally, I have written 15 books in
six languages, and have studied history all my life. I think there is
something monumentally large afoot, and I do not believe it is just a
banking crisis, or a mortgage crisis, or a credit crisis. Yes, these exist
but they are merely single facets on a very large gemstone that is only now
coming into a sharper focus.
Something of historic proportions is happening. I can sense it
because I know how it feels, smells, what it looks like, and how people
react to it. Yes, a perfect storm may be brewing, but there is something
happening within our country that has been evolving for about 10 - 15 years.
The pace has dramatically quickened in the past two.
We have spent two or more decades intentionally de-industrializing
our economy. Why?
We have intentionally dumbed down our schools, ignored our history,
and no longer teach our founding documents, why we are exceptional, and why
we are worth preserving. Students by and large cannot write, think
critically, read, or articulate. Parents are not revolting, teachers are
not picketing, school boards continue to back mediocrity. Why?
We have now established the precedent of protesting every close
election (now violently in California over a proposition that is so
controversial that it wants marriage to remain between one man and one
woman. Did you ever think such a thing possible just a decade ago?). We
have corrupted our sacred political process by allowing unelected judges to
write laws that radically change our way of life, and then mainstream
Marxist groups like ACORN and others to turn our voting system into a banana
republic. To what purpose?
Now our mortgage industry is collapsing, housing prices are in free
fall, major industries are failing, our banking system is on the verge of
collapse, Social Security is nearly bankrupt, as is Medicare and our entire
government. Our education system is worse than a joke (I teach college and
know precisely what I am talking about.) The list is staggering in its
length, breadth, and depth. It is potentially 1929 x 10. And we are at war
with an enemy we cannot name for fear of offending people of the same
religion who cannot wait to slit the throats of your children if they have
the opportunity to do so.
And now we have elected a man no one knows anything about, who has
never run so much as a Dairy Queen, let alone a town as big as Wasilla ,
Alaska . All of his associations and alliances are with real radicals in
their chosen fields of employment, and everything we learn about him, drip
by drip, is unsettling if not downright scary (Surely you have heard him
speak about his idea to create and fund a mandatory civilian defense force
stronger than our military for use inside our borders? No? Oh, of course.
The media would never play that for you over and over and then demand he
answer it. Sarah Palin's pregnant daughter and $150,000 wardrobe is more
important.)
I have never been so afraid for my country and for my children as I am
now. This man campaigned on bringing people together, something he has
never, ever done in his professional life. In my assessment, Obama will
divide us along philosophical lines, push us apart, and then try to realign
the pieces into a new and different power structure. Change is indeed
coming. And when it comes, you will never see the same nation again.
I thought I would never be able to experience what the ordinary, moral
German felt in the mid-1930s. In those times, the savior was a former
smooth-talking rabble-rouser from the streets, about whom the average German
knew next to nothing.. What they did know was that he was associated with
groups that shouted, shoved, and pushed around people with whom they
disagreed; he edged his way onto the political stage through great oratory
and promises.. Economic times were tough, people were losing jobs, and he
was a great speaker. And he smiled and waved a lot. And people, even
newspapers, were afraid to speak out for fear that his "brown shirts" would
bully them into submission.
And then he was duly elected to office, with a full-throttled economic
crisis at hand [the Great Depression]. Slowly but surely he seized the
controls of government power, department by department, person by person,
bureaucracy by bureaucracy. The kids joined a Youth Movement in his name,
where they were taught what to think. How did he get the people on his
side? He did it promising jobs to the jobless, money to the moneyless, and
goodies for the military-industrial complex. He did it by indoctrinating
the children, advocating gun control, health care for all, better wages,
better jobs, and promising to re-instill pride once again in the country,
across Europe , and across the world.
He did it with a compliant media - Did you know that? And he did this
all in the name of justice and .. . .. change. And the people surely got
what they voted for. (Look it up if you think I am exaggerating.) Read
your history books. Many people objected in 1933 and were shouted down,
called names, laughed at, and made fun of. When Winston Churchill pointed
out the obvious in the late 1930s while seated in the House of Lords in
England (he was not yet Prime Minister), he was booed into his seat and
called a crazy troublemaker. He was right, though .
Don't forget that Germany was the most educated, cultured country in
Europe . It was full of music, art, museums, hospitals, laboratories, and
universities. And in less than six years - a shorter time span than just
two terms of the U. S. presidency - it was rounding up its own citizens,
killing others, abrogating its laws, turning children against parents, and
neighbors against neighbors. All with the best of intentions, of course.
The road to Hell is paved with them.


. . . .And that, folks, is what those of us who are out here on the edges, watching and keeping guard, have to deal with on a daily basis. As a patriot, as an American citizen, what scares me is that this group of people, who so artfully live in a George Orwell-like 1984 world, I believe are truly willing to foster and foment another Civil War in this country, not to achieve anything other than trying to their point, that if they can't be in power, no one else should, and certainly not the citizens of the United States trying to build a representative democracy and operate in a forward-looking fashion.

. . . . Outta here, kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets out alive. We don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances on how the ticket gets punched folks, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here, right now. This ain't a dress rehearsal, the curtain goes up every morning on the real thing. Change yourself, change your world and in so doing, change the larger world.

. . .Got your back, somewhere out there in the night

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

25 May 2009

Tuesday morn

Tuesday May 25, 2009

. . .
I sincerely hope that you had a good long, holiday weekend and were able to enjoy some relaxation time, some time with family and friends, and I mostly hope that you took a few moments to remember and think about the veterans in your family, in your life, and those you never met.

. . . .I've got a feeling that this is a guy thing, but have you ever noticed that a lot of the great stories that you hear at work, the ones that have you laughing so hard you can't stand it, normally begin with the person telling the story starting off with a sentence that goes something like "So I told him 'Here, hold this for me so I don't spill it, and watch, this is gonna be so cool' . . ."

. . . .At 10 AM, or thereabouts today, President Obama will announce his pick for the Supreme Court to replace Justice Souter. It's Judge Sonia Sotomayor from the Circuit Court of Appeals, which should be an enormously popular pick. Judge Sotomayor is from the Bronx. She was born in the projects, when her father died when she was 8, her mother, a nurse raised both of them. She wound up at Princeton and Yale on scholarship, and has had an exemplary career since. Her confirmation process should go smoothly, and this should be an enormously popular pick. She of course, will have to face the Republican and Right wing opposition that will be thrown up as she will be branded and labeled, don't listen to any of that crap. She is someone who has worked in this lifetime for the people.

. . . . I'm working on a piece for later this week that several of you are contributing to, thanks for what you've sent so far, as they all come in, I'll put them all together and do that as a compiled piece.

. . . .Regular reader, contributor and wise woman Barbara V. sends this one along:
Received on email: I WAS BUYING FOOD THE OTHER DAY AT THE COUNTRY MARKET. ON THE LABEL OF SOME PRODUCTS IT SAID 'FROM CHINA'.
FOR EXAMPLE THE "OUR FAMILY" BRAND OF THE MANDARIN ORANGES SAYS RIGHT ON THE CAN 'FROM CHINA'.
SO FOR A FEW MORE CENTS I BOUGHT THE LIBERTY GOLD BRAND OR THE DOLE SINCE IT'S FROM CALIF.
TAKES FOREVER JUST TO BUY FOOD AND DO LABEL READING ! !
Are we Americans as dumb as we appear or is it that we just do not think? While the Chinese, knowingly and intentionally, export inferior and even toxic products and dangerous toys and goods to be sold in American markets, the media wrings its hands and criticizes the Bush Administration for perceived errors.
Yet 70% of Americans believe that the trading privileges afforded to the Chinese should be suspended..
Well duh, why do you need the government to suspend trading privileges?
SIMPLY DO IT YOURSELF, AMERICA!!
Simply look on the bottom of every product you buy, and if it says 'Made in China' or 'PRC' (and that now includes Hong Kong), simply choose another product, or none at all. You will be amazed at how dependent you are on Chinese products, and you will be equally amazed at what you can do without.
Who needs plastic eggs to celebrate Easter? If you must have eggs, use real ones and benefit some American farmer. Easter is just an example, the point is do not wait for the government to act. Just go ahead and assume control on your own.
THINK ABOUT THIS: If 200 million Americans refuse to buy just $20 each of Chinese goods, that's a billion dollar trade imbalance resolved in our favor fast!
The downside? Some American businesses will feel a temporary pinch from having foreign stockpiles of inventory. Wahhhhhhhhhhhh!!!
The solution? Let's give them fair warning and send our own message. Most of the people who have been reading about this matter are planning on implementing this on June 4, and continue it until July 4. That is only one month of trading losses, but it will hit the Chinese for 1/12th of the total, or 8%, of their American exports. Then they will at least have to ask themselves if the benefits of their arrogance and lawlessness were worth it.
Remember, June 4 to July 4.
EVEN BETTER, START NOW.
Send this to everybody you know. Let's show them that we are Americans and NOBODY can take us for granted.
If we can't live without cheap Chinese goods for one month out of our lives, WE DESERVE WHAT WE GET!
. . . .It does make good sense, going beyond the some of the more inflammatory sentences in the e-mail she received, it speaks to two things; sustainability and local economy, two tremendously important concepts that we have to get down pat before we can move ahead.

. . . .Local economies are simple; shop local, buy local, support local and it affects on a national scale and globally. Think not? Yes, it does. The viewpoint that's hard to get to is understanding that each of our actions are important, that we are important and that we all can make a difference. Yes, if only one person does it, it still makes a difference. It's about economies of scale (don't you hate it? I keep making you remember those college classes). The difference is in the scale of things. If just you or I do it, then it still makes a difference, only the percentage change that it makes is small. If we all do it, then the impact is much, much larger; as actions by large groups of people tend to have impact that is "greater than the sum of it's whole", generally on a logarithmic scale.

. . . .We're at the height of growing season here in the United States. It would be easily possible to buy not just American grown fruits and vegetables, but fruits and vegetables grown locally, near you, and keep the money, (which desperately needs to flow right now), flowing in your local community. This as well, in a general sense, supports your local organic farmer (who is not going to some outlaw if H.R. 875 passes. What? Like Michelle Obama is going to made the First Felon as well as the First Lady for planting an organic garden? C'mon!). Support your local fresh vegetable/fruit stand.

. . . .The other point it speaks to is sustainability, which regular reader Kay M. spoke to last week (post down below) in a letter that she submitted her Congressional representatives and posted here. I'll quote it, in part, again:
Another fundamental difference is that I support economic localization.
"Economic localization occurs when a region, county, city-even a
neighborhood-frees itself from overdependence on the global economy and
invests in local resources to produce a significant portion of the goods,
services, food, and energy it consumes.

We believe a strategy that brings production of vital goods and services
close to home is more environmentally, economically, and socially
sustainable than a strategy based on economic globalization." (text in
quotes copied from
http://www.rprogress.org/sustainable_economics/economic_localization.htm)

This statement completely sums up the process by which we can structure our
economy to be invulnerable to security threats resulting from the
destruction of centralized power facilities (localization will do away with
most centralization of power sources), as well as those threats created by
global shortages of fossil or bio fuels.

Sustainable, localized power, food and water (where the potential for such
resource growth exists) will provide local funding for local, small
business; savings and jobs for the local community; local investment
vehicles as opposed to "Wall Street" and the big banks that got us into this
mess; and an inexpensive, inexhaustable energy for each community, which
will in turn spur consumer spending.


. . . .The link that Kay provides is to a public policy think tank called Redefining Progress, whose mission statement reads "Shifting public policy to achieve a sustainable economy, a healthy environment and a just society". Their mission statement also goes on to read:

Redefining Progress is the nation’s leading public policy think tank dedicated to smart economics. We find solutions that ensure a sustainable and equitable world for future generations.

While conventional models for economic growth discount such assets as clean air, safe streets, and cohesive communities, Redefining Progress integrates these assets into a more sustainable economic model. Working with government and advocacy groups, Redefining Progress develops innovative policies that balance economic well-being, environmental preservation, and social justice.

Our policy initiatives address pressing environmental issues such as global climate change and natural resource depletion, while ensuring that both the burdens and the benefits of these policies are shared equally among affected communities. We inject ground-breaking ideas into public dialogue, policy discourse, and decision-making in compelling and nonpartisan ways.

. . . Touching on global climate change, Muir Grey, a guest columnist in the London Times Online puts this piece in, speaking to the medical community of not just Great Britain, but worldwide - "Climate Change is the Cholera of Our Time".

Climate change will hit the poorest nations hardest, but it will affect us too. In the summer of 2003, la canicule, an unexpected heatwave, killed 14,000 elderly people in France. Rising temperatures will bring that type of problem to our shores. Our health services will be put under pressure by severe weather and floods. But it is the global effects that will hit us, and especially our children and grandchildren, because of the effect that climate change will have on world food and water supplies; millions of climate refugees will disrupt the borders of even an island nation.

Smoking, Aids, swine flu? They all pale into insignificance compared to climate change’s threat to health. That proposition will instantly provoke a hostile reaction from the diminishing band of climate-change sceptics. But as a doctor of 40 years’ standing who has been involved in running public health services for 30 years, I know that the evidence is good enough to make action, not inaction, the sensible choice. An empirical view of the data shows that delay will not just increase the amount of preventable harm, it may take us past a point of no return.

So the medical profession must accept responsibility in the campaign for change. However, with a few notable exceptions, doctors are effectively silent on the health threat that will come to define our age. My fellow doctors cannot just leave this issue to their leaders, to the presidents of the Royal Colleges and to the members of the Climate and Health Council. They should be active in their local communities, where they are known and respected, using their influence to press for national and international action.

. . . .And from the British Daily Mail Online, David Derbyshire on why global warming is the biggest health threat of the 21st Century:

Climate change is the biggest health threat of the 21st century, leading academics claimed last night.

Those who fail to take the issue seriously are as morally reprehensible as 18th-century slave traders, they said.

A British report said rising global temperatures will trigger food shortages, droughts, wars and floods over the next 100 years, pushing billions into ill-health, disease and poverty.


. . . .Continuing on with sustainability, we finished with the series from NPR on the upgrading, improving, renovating the nation's electrical transmission grid last week (see below), but there's plenty more to read and think about. Again, it's not high-tech, it's not sexy, it's not sleek, but it's the biggest bang for the buck we can get. Over 50% of the power used to power a light bulb in your house, an electrical appliance, a fan is lost in the grid just plainly due to inefficiencies; in some regions of the country as much as 96% is lost. Improving energy efficiency again is about sustainability, and about acting locally. Call your local electrician (me, preferably!) and have him come to your house, inspect and tighten every wire and connection. Have him look at whether or not your house has the proper size wiring and circuits for appliances. Have him look at your load balance. Let him talk to you about the age of your appliances. The money you'd spend on a new refrigerator if yours is ten years old will be more than made back in the first year of electrical bills, and will be money savings to you, and energy efficiency savings in the future. The couple of hundred dollars you'd spend on a qualified electrician you'd make back in the first 6 months of bills.

. . . From the folks over at Renewable Energy:

The "business case" for energy efficiency is fairly straightforward: using less energy means paying less for energy. But a simple cost-benefit analysis might overlook some very important benefits that efficiency brings.

At this point, there is little doubt that regulation of carbon dioxide is coming, with the power sector as a primary target. While there are technologies both available and in development to mitigate CO2 emissions from power plants, the fact remains that the easiest ton of CO2 to remove from the atmosphere is the one that is not emitted in the first place. Greater energy efficiency in the T&D system means lower emissions in generation to deliver the same amount of consumed energy.

Greater efficiency also has a direct impact on the role of renewables, specifically in terms of the percentage of the total fuel mix they account for. Lowering the amount of energy consumed (or lost) effectively increases the share of renewables in the total, assuming the gains are offset by reducing the amount of energy produced from traditional generation sources.

Fuel conservation and diversity is another strong selling point for efficiency, and here the benefits extend well beyond economic and even environmental considerations. Reducing US dependence on foreign fuel supplies—be they oil, natural gas or even coal—pays obvious dividends from a security standpoint, and the less we use, the less we have to buy.

Finally, within the context of the power system itself, it's important to recognize how interrelated energy efficiency is with grid reliability. In many areas of the US, transmission constraints have reached the point where they not only cost consumers billions of dollars in congestion charges, they threaten the integrity of the power system itself. Over the past twenty years, the situation has continued to deteriorate to the point where now the question of installing a new line is nearly moot in some locations. By the time it was completed, demand would long since have outstripped the ability of the local grid to meet it, so a short-term solution must be implemented in the interim.

Improving transmission capacity is also vital to the integration of renewables like wind and solar which are often located far from the loads they must serve. For that reason, the cause of efficiency in the T&D system is in perfect alignment with that of expanding renewable generation. As renewable energy technologies continue to grow in importance, the potential impact of energy efficiency cannot be overstated. With the array of technologies and methodologies now available, efficiency stands ready to play a much larger role in the energy equation.


. . . . .A Sherpa from Nepal who holds the world's record for climbing Mount Everest warned on Monday that the mountain's glaciers are shrinking, noticeably.

. . . .Paul Krugman, whom regular readers of this column will know that I admire, as one of the world's leading economists, speaking on Monday said the the world economy had avoided "utter catastophe":
The world economy has avoided "utter catastrophe" and industrialized countries could register growth this year, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman said on Monday.

"I will not be surprised to see world trade stabilize, world industrial production stabilize and start to grow two months from now," Krugman told a seminar.

"I would not be surprised to see flat to positive GDP growth in the United States, and maybe even in Europe, in the second half of the year."

. . . .Krugman, Noriel Roubini, George Soros and others took part in a symposium on the economic crisis sponsored by the economic crisis back on April 30th. You can read excerpts from the transcript here.

. . . .And while you missed it over the weekend; the extreme Right wingnuts had at it again (after all, why waste a good holiday weekend doing something constructive like being with your family) - Conservative radio host "Mancow" Muller voluntarily had himself waterboarded on Friday, he lasted 6 seconds, and came up saying 'This is torture' - Colin Powell fired right back at Rush Limbaugh and Dick Cheney, and you know what, I'll take a decorated combat soldier and former National Security Advisor to Bush 1 and Secretary of State to Bush 2 over a drug-addled sweating windbag and an angry, demented, bitter loser anyday - Former Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, who was also the governor of Pennsylvania said that Limbaugh was "shrill" and more hindrance than help and disputed and disagreed with Dick Cheney's assertions that the country was less safe under Obama - Bill Maher dismissed Sean Hannity's criticism of him as "terrible sexual repression" - the former senior interrogator in Iraq completely dissected and shredded Dick Cheney's speech from last week as full of lies and inaccuracies.

. . . .Outta here for today.

. . . .Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments, before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, we don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances of how the ticket gets punched. So, it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here, right now. This ain't no dress rehearsal. Change yourself, change your world, and in so doing, change the world around you.

. . . Got your back, out there in the night

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

24 May 2009

Sunday Night (Memorial Day weekend)

Memorial Day Weekend


. . . . .My father, Norm Williams, my son's, Cody and Caleb, grandfather, a veteran, rests in peace at Augusta National Cemetery in Augusta, Michigan alongside many other veterans.

. . . .Who is a veteran? A veteran is a member of your family; your Dad, your Mom, your Grandfather, Grandmother, Uncle, Aunt, Brother, Sister, Son, Daughter, Nephew, Niece. Your neighbor, the man or woman down the street. The kid you coached in T-ball or watched play football.
. . . .I mean it, I don't care what your political, philosophical or ideological stance on war is; the person, man or woman, who puts on the uniform and serves, who takes those orders and puts themselves in harm's way, they need to be honored and thanked. The warrior, the person who serves in the United States Armed Forces, the veteran needs to have a special place. Not just Memorial Day, but everyday. They volunteer to put that uniform on and go. They choose that, in order to serve their country. The concept of country can get abstract at times, they serve and sacrifice for us.

. . . .Bob Woodruff, the reporter for ABC who sustained life-threatening combat injuries of his own while covering the war in Iraq, on honoring our warriors:

As we honor the brave men and women who defended our country throughout history, our thoughts will also be with our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the 35,000 here at home who have been physically injured since those conflicts began.

This Memorial Day, we should extend that honor to those who have sustained the hidden injuries of war.

Today, the wounds we see are often coupled with the ones we cannot. According to a RAND report, some 300,000 U.S. troops are suffering from major depression or post-traumatic stress; 320,000 have sustained traumatic brain injuries.

Most troops wounded in combat are surviving their injuries. They fought our country's battles. Now they fight their own.

Returning from combat to civilian life, many face intense cognitive and psychological issues, fall into substance abuse, experience depression and anxiety. A growing number are severely rent burdened, 500,000 paying more than 50% of their income on rent. Their own personal struggles reveal the larger social issues like suicide and homelessness our nation will be required to address.

We must redouble our efforts to return our heroes home to the assistance they need to reintegrate into society.
As our troops come home, we will need fresh ideas, and the broadest level of collaboration, to solve the complex issues related to the return of service members from combat to civilian life.

As we consider those who risked their lives to protect the freedoms we enjoy, we should consider this: Memorial Day shouldn't end when the last picnic is over. More than a holiday, it's an enduring symbol of the responsibility we share to ensure that "support our troops" -- including those with hidden injuries -- isn't just a slogan.

When the general orders for Memorial Day were drawn up, it was written that the people should in their own way arrange such fitting services and testimonials of respect as circumstances may permit.

The best memorial we could build to America's veterans is a homefront ready to support them.


. . . .A man named Sean, a programmer who work with the Google Earth Outreach team, whose goal it is to help non-profits and public benefit groups to further their cause, has deployed a personal project of his own that is awesome, respectful and worthy of a click. He has developed and deployed a project called Map the Fallen, which uses Google Earth to map the hometown and story of each and every United States Armed Forces member who has fallen in Iraq and Afghanistan. This was a labor of love and respect for him, and deserves your attention. Click the link here.

. . . . .One of the finest pieces I've read today is from Rick Atkinson over at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 10 Things About WWII You Should Know, excerpted, in part, below:
The first thing to know about World War II is that it was a big war, a war that lasted 2,174 days and claimed an average of 27,600 lives every day, or 1,150 an hour, or 19 a minute, or one death every three seconds. One, two, three, snap. One, two, three, snap.
. . . . . .From Michael R. Auslin in the Washington Post today:

From the 1940s through the early 1970s, a generation of Americans accepted compulsory military service as a responsibility of citizenship. In war and in peace, Americans of different economic classes and ethnicities served together, forming relationships that lasted a lifetime, even when the vets had little else in common. With today's all-volunteer force, our military is more professional, but the mixing of different groups has diminished, and American society has lost the sense of the virtue of national service.

My father's older brothers and brothers-in-law all served in World War II, and the terrors they and their comrades shared bound them together for the rest of their lives. With the wars won but the peace still to be fought, their younger brothers and nephews were conscripted to serve around the globe. Nearly 1.5 million men were drafted during the Eisenhower and Kennedy years, and they were the last to soldier in a time when the idea of national service was universally accepted. And "universal" was no exaggeration: The most famous draftee of the time was Elvis Presley, who mustered in at the height of his fame in 1958 and came out a tamed 25-year-old veteran two years later.

It will be hard to describe to my now 9-year-old son what it was like to grow up in America in the 1970s. That was a time not only when World War II veterans were in their prime, but also when almost everyone's father had served in peacetime, and when the older boys in the neighborhood were just returning from Vietnam. Retired military presence was everywhere. Our grade school principal, our rabbi and our local shopkeeper had all worn the uniform, which could often be found, like my father's, stuffed into a footlocker in a basement workshop. My friends and I knew that these were men far more experienced than we, and we all instinctively gave them our respect, if not always our obedience.

Back then, every family included at least one war veteran whose dark refusal to talk about combat only emboldened our young imaginations. Balancing him, however, was the Old Army Buddy (I'm sure there were Old Navy Buddies and Old Air Force Buddies, but no one ever referred to them). The Army buddy was a person of mystery, a rarely sighted being. No "real" such person lived in our neighborhood -- they came from places my brother and I had only read about, like San Diego or Phoenix or Miami. But Old Army Buddies were famous for simply showing up, sometimes unannounced, and suddenly changing everything in the house.

I can still remember when any of my father's old buddies came to visit our suburban Chicago household. My mother would bring down the dusty bottle of Japanese sake kept in the back closet, while my father set up the slide machine and unearthed the knickknacks he had brought home two decades earlier. We'd have a special dinner and stay up late listening to old tales. Once, my father and his buddy spent the entire evening recalling the dire effects of eating local vegetables that had been grown in untreated animal manure; my brother and I swore off carrots for weeks afterward. Sadly, we'd be ushered out of the room for the best stories.

Those visits were magical, because his buddies revealed another side of my father to me -- not merely his youthful experiences, but also his vitality, his hopes. My father became happily human, reliving the good old days and maybe being reminded of just how well things had turned out. This was a scene repeated in homes around the country during my childhood.

Not all the men who visited were happy. Some would show up just after divorces, others after losing jobs. One of my father's closest buddies had not only gone through a nasty separation, but one of his sons had also tragically died early in an accident. That, too, was a lesson, a way of learning that things don't always turn out right.

Their professional status undoubtedly gives our current armed forces a greater cohesion than anything the old draft could have accomplished. And yet the self-selecting nature of today's warriors is a constant reminder that most of us owe our freedoms to a select few who are willing to protect them. Unlike our fathers, we are not called to give even a small portion of our lives to the defense of our country, and I, like most of my generation, chose not to do so. It is unclear whether a large, diverse society can survive indefinitely without that sense of service to the nation and that experience in social bonding; this experiment is only a few decades old, and the results are not yet in.

Yet as much as the change to an all-volunteer Army may have deep social portents, it also means, on a more personal note, that most American children will probably never run out of their rooms with surprise and pleasure because "Uncle" Jim from Tucson has just dropped his suitcase in the front hall and tonight, no homework will get done.



. . . .Rolling Thunder this weekend in Washington D.C., close to half a million bikes are in the Capital this weekend at a rally whose purpose is to call for the government's recognition of, and protection of POW's and MIA's. They met with the President yesterday.

. . . . The Patriot Guard Riders need some recognition here too. This nationwide group of veterans rides to the funerals of soldiers, any soldier to make sure that are honored and carried out in a good way.

. . . .The Wounded Warrior Project deserves your respect and attention. This all volunteer organization and foundation works to help severely wounded veterans in their transition back to civilian life.

. . . .The Healing Waters project is another volunteer organization that works with wounded vets to help them and aid them, but taking them on fishing trips and reintroducing them to the simple, peaceful, healing process of fishing.

. . . .Outta here for now. Kiss the veteran in your life, tell the ones who've laid their earthly burden down how much you thank them, and how much you love them.
. . . .They've got your back now, and still have it somewhere out there.

Norm's son

23 May 2009

Memorial Day weekend (Saturday)

Saturday May 23, 2009


. . . .
Doesn't it seem that Memorial Day weekend is about a week early this year?

. . . .I've turned the playlist back on. If you want to watch the videos below, you've got a couple of choices. (1) Hang around, read the last 10 posts and let it play through, it's great music, and it will give you about a half-hour to kill. (2) If you want to pause it, go up to the upper left hand corner and look for the narrow bar in the player labeled "Podbean". Look to the extreme left hand side, and there are three buttons. The middle button is the play/pause button. Just push it, and you can halt the music and go ahead and watch the two videos embedded in yesterday's post, both of which are really good. Now, if you want my recommendation, catch up on your reading, let the playlist play out, then watch the videos. Best of both worlds!!

. . . . .OK, so it's the weekend, and even I get cheesy. This week's Time has an good feature called "In Case You Missed It", a quick overview by Paul Slansky of just about everything that has happened this preposterous week. You really should check it out at the jump here.

. . . .
And over at Tina Brown's Daily Beast, they serve up this little piece that covers this week in culture: music, books, movies, the arts. Another good quick overview. You can catch it at the jump here.

. . . .And over at Politico, you can catch up on the week in video, or you can just catch up on this week in Politi-quotes; the week in one-liners.

. . . . .Over at Wired, they're reporting in the Threat Level blog on an intriguing one that ties into the piece below. Last year, the Fermi National Accelerator Lab received a 2 sentence coded message sent anonymously in a hand-addressed envelope through regular mail that now has the scientists at the Lab and even outside crypto-coders that have had a look at it stumped. They're asking for public help on it.. . . .Which ties in perfectly with yet another "unsolved mystery". You do realize that the Kryptos sculpture commissioned several years ago and placed outside CIA headquarters in Langley, VA has not been cracked yet, don't you? And that includes the Agency's top crypto guys and the NSA guys.

. . . . Well, the folks at Morgan Stanley figured out a way around the bonuses restrictions on TARP money, they're just doubling their salaries next year. Along with Bank of America and UBS.

. . . . I am going to give Colin Powell more props and recognition. He's taking to the airwaves to answer his critics within the Republican Party, (read Dick Cheney & Rush Limbaugh). Colin is not one to back down from a fight, and those two windbags should have known better than to try and knock him publicly and not be willing to say it to his face.

. . . .And speaking of Cheney, who is at best an annoyance, irrelevant to today's world and political scene and someone who is definitely pursuing his own agenda. Mr. Cheney isn't making the noise he's making for the singular purpose of his own paranoid delusions and bitterness at losing power, no, this whole thing has been a shill for his "book". But he wants a hefty advance up front to "write" it. (read that dictate to a ghostwriter).

. . . .It's Memorial Day weekend, go thank the veterans in your life for their sacrifice, kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments, before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets out alive. We don't get to negotiate the terms and circumstances of how the ticket gets punched. It's not about yesterday, or tomorrow. It's about right here, right now, this ain't no dress rehearsal. Change your world, and in so doing, change the world around you.
. . . .Got your back, out there in the night.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

22 May 2009

Friday (Eve of your long weekend)

Friday May 23, 2009

. . . .
So then. I'm going to ask you to scroll on down and take a gander at yesterday's post, and thank the veterans in your life, and the ones you never met. It's cool to take a long holiday weekend and go play, but try not to forget what this holiday is about.

. . . .The playlist in the podcast isn't turned off, it's paused. There's two videos embedded just below, both of which are truly cool. If you want to hear the playlist after the videos, just go over to the left hand side here, go up and find the "Podbean". Look for the narrow horizontal bar that says Podbean, look at it's left hand end. You'll see three green symbols. The one in the middle is the pause/play button. Click it one time, after viewing the videos and turn it back on and catch some cool tunage.

. . . Lulu, inker and cool person down at the Red Queen in Chattanooga sent along this video today courtesy of her Facebook links. It's actually fascinating, and does a quick history of the development of information technology and where it's headed, check it out, it's worth it and quite mind-blowing if you think about some of the things they have to say and facts they present.



. . . .Reader Dave P. sent along this video. Folks, I love all types of music, and what I appreciate and love are artists dedicated to their craft. This is trumpeter Chris Botti and violinist Lucia Micarelli doing a performance of "Emmanuel". It's out-of-this world good.



. . .H.R. 2454, the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, the Waxman-Markley comprehensive energy bill, known as the "climate change" bill made it out of committee today and is headed to the House floor for a vote, not scheduled right now. You can read it about and track on Open Congress right here.

. . . .President Obama signed the credit card reform bill into law this afternoon.

. . . .I saw something absolutely, jaw-droppingly amazing this afternoon. Glen Beck, whom I normally deride as a fear-mongering extreme Right lapdog, actually had something accurate to say. One of the senior research fellows at the Manhattan Institute was on and they were discussing American's political leanings. Both Beck and the research fellow freely discussed and admitted that both parties are rapidly losing not just registered voters, but people who previous to now had identified themselves as either Republican or Democrat. A good 70% of voters right now identify themselves as Independent, and vehemently so. It's not just an equivocation in order to not identify their party leanings.
. . . .They call themselves many things; independent, populist, progressive, grass-roots, libertarian but they (us, we) share many common traits.
. . . .On social issues, issues of personal choice, freedom, so-called "values" issues they all identify themselves as liberal. In other words, government, Federal or State, has absolutely no business or say in what goes on in someone's bedroom, on what their choice is of a place to worship or how they worship, has no business censoring media of any kind and want nothing to do with the Right wing or the traditional Republican party or platform.
. . . .On issues of fisal policy, they identify themselves as conservative, the true definition of it, long before Bush and Cheney decided to expand the Federal government to it's largest size in history, long before those two ran up a record-breaking deficit. Long before Geithner, Summers and Obama decided to start waffling on fiscal policy. You can't give banks a huge sum of money and then turn a blind eye to what they do with it. On this issue, again, this huge block of voters has had it with both Republicans and Democrats. I still believe that the President has the right idea, but I'm watching Congress, the House and Geithner/Summers blow this one completely all the way around.
. . . .On issues of national security and foreign policy, again this huge bloc of voters identify themselves with neither parties policies, but instead express unhappiness with Bush's handling of Iraq, and are still hitting the sidelines to see how Obama handles his foreign policy challenges.

. . . Back to the point I made, this split also appears to be generational. The point, it's OK to think and be independent, to not swallow a party line in whole. It's OK to be an independent, and I think it's an exciting time. I don't believe that "change" is over. I believe that an entire bunch of independents will come to the surface, and finally, finally, people will start talking about, asking questions about and paying attention to policy again, and not this "values" crap that has been force fed to us. It made me sick, the American people are smarter than that, especially this generation of voters that just came of age and are getting active now. They have brains, and opinions and they count. Far more than fossils and dinosaurs like me the ones of my generation, and I for one am happy to see them starting to express opinions about how their future is going to be laying out.

. . . Outta here, kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here and now, this ain't no dress rehearsal. Change your world, and it changes the world.
. . .Got your back, out there in the night somewhere.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan 48137]

21 May 2009

Thursday/Friday before the long weekend

Thursday May 21, 2009

. . . .This is a picture that the Rev. Charla, down at Hawkwind took and put up on her websites, Blue Star Times and Hawkwind. The man holding the drum in this picture is one of my best friends, one of the guys I can count on, Tarwater. He's been there for me through thick and thin, has always had my 6 and is the guy who is the kind of person that you can call at 2 in the morning, say "I need you" and there'll never be a question.
. . .He's also a veteran.
. . .I know that this weekend, he's either taking his bike on the Trail of Tears run, or he's doing something that he's done a couple of other times, taking a run up to Washington D.C. to the Wall.
. . .Who's a veteran? He's a veteran. My other best bud Tom is a veteran, as is his wife Zetta. My dad, God rest him, is a veteran.
. . .Who's a veteran? A member of your family, your neighbor, the man or woman down the street. Your uncle, your grandfather, your mom, your dad, your brother, your sister. The kid you coached in Little League or Pop Warner football that is now wearing a uniform half a world away. Your nephew, your neice, your son, your daughter. These are veterans.
. . . .I don't care what your political stance or your idealogical stance on any war is; you, me, all of us must always, always, always honor the warrior. The person, who without question, puts on that uniform and puts themselves in harms way. Our veterans, both standing and fallen need to be honored every day, not just one day.
. . . Honor them, and their sacrifice.
. . . I travel for a living. Try this one, next time you're in an airport and see a young man or woman in uniform, traveling, walk up to them, shake their hand, say "Thank you" and buy them a cup of coffee. Do it anonymously, don't tell anyone. See how you feel after you look them in the eyes and thank them and see the look they give you back. There's nothing like it.

. . . .While I'm at it, please, the next time you want some ink (or need some) take a ride down to Chattanooga, TN and see Tarwater at the Red Queen for some of the best tattooing you could find anywhere. Say hi to LuLu, who absolutely rocks.
. . .If you get the chance, take a look at the website for the Blue Star Times and Hawkwind. Tarwater, his wife Charla and Lulu and the whole gang down there; Libby, Krista, Doug, Lee, Alisha all provide a peaceful, restful place in the world and work hard every day to bring about positive transformation in the world. That's what they do, and have been doing for a very long time. It's a great place.

. . . . Reader Kay M. sends along this one:
I wrote the following to Congressman Mark Schauer, who is my District's
House Representative, and I would appreciate your doing the same if it
sounds valid/like something you can 'get behind'. To find out who represents
you & write him, go to: https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml.
To find your senator,
http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm?State=MI
.
"

I am writing regarding the amendment passed today by the Committee on Energy
and Commerce - the "Nuclear and Advanced Technology Amendment" in H.R. 2454,
"The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009"(ACES).

I, for one, do not like the idea of paying taxes in order to give them to
large corporations who will turn right around and charge us taxpayers for
the use of the technology & facilities built with my tax money (we are being
'double billed', which is what State Sen. Thomas P. Gaffey is currently
being fined & sanctioned for). This seems, at best, unethical.

I have a difference of opinion at a really basic level with our government's
definition of "clean" energy. My definition does NOT include power obtained
from nuclear reactors or fossil fuels for the following reasons:

1.. The very process of mining uranium and coal releases fatal toxins into
water and earth both.

2.. There is no safe way to dispose of nuclear waste, and no way to assure
that these plants will not be successfully targeted by terrorists. We have
not opened any new nuclear plants since 1996 for the very good reason that
we lack proper disposal methods. coal power actually results in more
radioactive waste being released into the environment than nuclear power.

3.. The population effective dose equivalent of radiation from coal plants
is 100 times as much as nuclear plants.

4.. And the prospect of opening up new oil rigs anywhere near water is
short-sighted at best given our recent storm activity and the pace at which
our weather is increasing in violence.

More fundamental than this, however, is my belief that the only people who
are going to see a profit from this bill are the big energy corporations
that got us into this mess in the first place. These are the same
corporations that created the United States Climate Action Partnership
(USCAP), who repeatedly provided recommendations to the House Committee on
E&C during it's drafting of ACES. You can read their "Blueprint for
Legislative Action" at http://www.pewclimate.org/uscap.cfm . This document
appears to be on the side of green until you examine it's goals closely.
Naming this group "...Climate Action" is more than a little Orwellian. The
following founding corporations read like a whos-who of environmental
destroyers:

Alcoa; Boston Scientific Corporation; BP America Inc.; Caterpillar Inc.;
Chrysler LLC; ConocoPhillips; Deere & Company; The Dow Chemical Company;
Duke Energy; DuPont; Exelon Corporation; Ford Motor Company; FPL Group,
Inc.; General Electric; General Motors Corp.; Johnson & Johnson; Marsh,
Inc.; NRG Energy, Inc.; PepsiCo; PG&E Corporation; PNM Resources; Rio Tinto;
Shell; Siemens Corporation; Xerox Corporation.

Another fundamental difference is that I support economic localization.
"Economic localization occurs when a region, county, city-even a
neighborhood-frees itself from overdependence on the global economy and
invests in local resources to produce a significant portion of the goods,
services, food, and energy it consumes.

We believe a strategy that brings production of vital goods and services
close to home is more environmentally, economically, and socially
sustainable than a strategy based on economic globalization." (text in
quotes copied from
http://www.rprogress.org/sustainable_economics/economic_localization.htm)

This statement completely sums up the process by which we can structure our
economy to be invulnerable to security threats resulting from the
destruction of centralized power facilities (localization will do away with
most centralization of power sources), as well as those threats created by
global shortages of fossil or bio fuels.

Sustainable, localized power, food and water (where the potential for such
resource growth exists) will provide local funding for local, small
business; savings and jobs for the local community; local investment
vehicles as opposed to "Wall Street" and the big banks that got us into this
mess; and an inexpensive, inexhaustable energy for each community, which
will in turn spur consumer spending.

"

Be sure to include your full name, address (including 4 digit extension on
zip code), & phone number to be considered "real" voters/people. Good Luck!
. . . Thank you Kay. That's activism and populism folks. Kay is someone who writes her Senators and Congressional representatives, and who takes a stance. That's exactly what I was talking about in yesterday's column. That's how deliberative, representative democracy is practiced.

. . . As opposed to the inanity of standing in separate corners and calling one another names and attempting to spend your entire work day proving the other person is "wrong" or that the President is "wrong" or that the Republican party is "wrong". Tell me, just what damn good does that do? What is constructive and working towards solutions for the common good about any of that? Nothing, that's what.

. . . .The real laugh riot to me is the number of people who watch television and believe that somehow what they are watching is the unvarnished truth. Doesn't matter whether or not I'm talking about a Fox News viewer, an MSNBC viewer, a CNN viewer, CNBC, Bloomberg, Fox business, any of it. Granted there are no other sources (other than C-SPAN, which actually, without commentators is the only real unvarnished one), but please, please bear something in mind while watching your favorites. They're entertainers, paid by a media congolomerate to pull in viewers, the numbers of whom pull in paid sponsors and advertisers.
. . . .Let me let you in on a little secret. They don't care about you, they don't really give a damn about your opinion, and they're all richer than you, and despite their claims to the contrary, they are the Mainstream Media.
. . . .They are paid to make a profit, not tell you the "truth". You're best advised to watch a little of all of them, and then turn to some other news sources, like the AP, Reutuers, and most especially, make sure to get some foreign news to start getting some real perspective.

. . . I've swapped the playlist and the podcast around a little bit, but I keep trying to come up with music that you'll enjoy, and probably haven't heard, or at least thought of in a while.

. . . .And my little diatribe above leads directly to today's main event: the steel cage death match between "The Rock" Obama and "Darth" Cheney. Much will be made of it in the media, it will be analyzed and parsed by the pundits and beaten fully until all the commentators are standing around the carcass of the debate, it's bones sticking out and flies buzzing around, holding their sticks and asking "Is it dead yet?". This much is clear, both men have very divergent views of the world. Apparently, they live in two different countries on two different planets. Neither men played it safe, not did either pull any punches. The judge's scoring isn't in completely yet, but one of the clearest analyses I've read yet tonight breaks it down very well. From Josh Gerstein at Politico check it at the jump here.

. . . .Geithner's been testifying in front of the Congress for the last two days testifying in front of the House and Senate Appropriations committees.

. . . . The full text and video of Obama's speech can be found here.

. . . .The full text and video of Cheney's can be found here.

. . . . Outta here for tonight. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets out alive. We don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances of the way the ticket gets punched, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right here and now. This ain't no dress rehearsal. Change your world, and in so doing, change the world around you.
. . .Got your back, somewhere out in the night.

The Desolation Angel
[where: 27.52N 91.59N]

20 May 2009

Wednesday



Wednesday May 20, 2009

. . . .H.R. 627 the Credit Cardholder Bill of Rights Act of 2009 was voted in by the House today as amended by the Senate yesterday. This is good for you, and good for credit cardholders everywhere as I detailed in yesterday's post (read below). You can check the entire bill and the vote on it here at Open Congress.

. . . . . The other one to watch right now is another House bill, introduced on May 14th. H.R. 2454 the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 introduced by Waxman, the Chair of the House Commerce Committee. To quote Open Congress:
This is the Waxman-Markley comprehensive energy bill, known for short as "ACES," that includes a cap-and-trade global warming reduction plan designed to reduce economy-wide greenhouse gas emissions 17 percent by 2020. Other provisions include new renewable requirements for utilities, studies and incentives regarding new carbon capture and sequestration technologies, energy efficiency incentives for homes and buildings, and grants for green jobs, among other things.
. . . .Steve Earle's new album, Townes, debuted at #19 on the charts today. Buy it, Steve is a gifted songwriter and singer.

. . . .It's Wednesday, I miss Lost already, and yes, they did a great job this season. They answered as many questions as they opened up, and I'm still in jaw-dropping wonder at the season finale, it was excellent. And I was so damn happy to see Vincent, Bernard and Rose. I love Rose, just thought I'd say that.

. . . .I want to make something really, really clear. I am not a Republican, that's obvious from my merciless pummeling of them in their current incarnation (read this as since Rove and Bush Sr.), nor am I a Democrat, that party had all the hope in the world during the 60's and turned into a bunch of sniveling party hacks who shot themselves in the foot every time they turned around during the 80's and 90's. That said, I know I'm not unique. I am someone who is classified as an independent; definitely very, very liberal on social issues and issues of personal choice and privacy, and very conservative (re - the real Webster's dictionary definition of it, not the Bush/Rove/Cheney/Limbaugh/Hannity Orwellian 1984-speak definition that they twisted it into) on issues of fiscal policy (that would mean that the complete deregulation of the financial markets led by Bush, Paulson, and Sen. Phil Gramm in order to line their own pockets and the pockets of their largest campaign contributors and friends is definitely not conservative, nor did it follow the economic policies of John Maynard Keynes or Kenneth Galbraith, both of whom established regulatory policies in the 50's and 60's that lead to the sustainable growth of the entire country, nor was the largest expansion of Federal power and government under Bush conservative) and on issues of National Defense (that would mean that the criminal actions of Bush and Cheney in prosecuting a war in Iraq in a twisted, drunken desire to settle some "daddy" issues for Bush, Jr. while allowing the true perpetrators of 9/11, Al-Queada to grow stronger and more bold, till now they are 60 miles from Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, and fully nuclear armed country, and the most unstable government in the region was not in America's long-term best interests. The very thought of the Taliban, and shariyah law having it's hands on a fully functional nuclear arsenal is frightening).
. . . .What I am is someone who has always believed in the American experiment, that being democracy. Democracy is not the two-party system we have. A democratic republic, by definition, is a representative democracy, not a direct democracy, and not a democratic two-party system. It ain't fucking semantics! It's important, as American citizens regain their political sense of self to understand these points.
. . . .The Republican party is the younger sibling. It was born in Jackson, Michigan in 1854. Jefferson and Madison organized the Democratic Party in 1800.
. . . .I was given a Libertarian education at a Libertarian university. In it's ideal, it's a perfect political philosophy, however the country is way too full of stupid people, greedy people and those who would willingly take advantage of someone who is in a weaker position for it to be a viable long-term solution.
. . . .The whole rant here leads to this. I have the utmost respect for Colin Powell, a man, a soldier who wore the uniform, was under fire in battle, led men in battle and lost men in battle. An elder statesman who served his country as a soldier and as Secretary of State, and a man with enough honor to walk out on his boss, the President of the United States, when he discovered that the man sitting in that chair had no honor.
. . . .I am behind Colin Powell fully in his getting right back in Dick Cheney and Rush Limbaugh's face and letting them know that he is a Republican, that is his party and his conviction, and he ain't about to leave because they decided to kick him out! From the Boston Globe:

Colin Powell issued a sharp rebuke Tuesday night to Rush Limbaugh and Dick Cheney for trying to exclude him from the backbiting Republican Party.

Before some 1,500 business leaders in Boston, as well as Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and wife Gisele Bundchen, the retired general and former secretary of state spoke openly of the dispute roiling the Grand Old Party after election setbacks and polls putting its popularity at roughly one of five Americans.

"Rush Limbaugh says, 'Get out of the Republican Party.' Dick Cheney says, 'He's already out.' I may be out of their version of the Republican Party, but there's another version of the Republican Party waiting to emerge once again," Powell told the crowd.

. . . .Powell's voice, along with those of Christopher Buckley, Peggy Noonan and George Will are what is needed right now for the Republican Party to be the "loyal opposition" and work with the President and Congress to do what's right for the country. Not the voices of idiocy echoing hollowly out of the mouths of Cheney, Limbaugh, Malkin, Coulter, Hannity, Palin and Gingrich. You will notice, pointedly, that Bush Jr. has said nothing, and in fact, is now doing speaking tours with Bill Clinton, not attempting to destroy the country by splitting it. Whatever kind of bad President he may have been, GWB was an American and was one of only 44 men to have even sat in that seat, and he does understand that.

. . . . .I've read all of Jefferson's writings, all of John Adam's writings, all of Franklin's, Paine's & Madison's. What made this country unique and great was that this group understood that for this country to be great, what made it great was a group of people who had differing opinions respecting one another, respecting one another's dedication to the country and the American ideal, agreeing to disagree and then sitting down together and hashing out a common solution that served the greater good and a higher purpose. That's what makes us America, and I'm sick to death of the politicians of this country, the leaders of the two current parties and the media trying to turn this all into a cartoon. In real life, there's a lot of shades of gray, with a huge sliding scale in the spectrum in between both ends, and there is not now, nor has there ever been any good purpose served by slavishly following one or the other extreme end of the idealogical bandwidth.
. . . .We are so far past idealogical arguments. We need practicality and purpose, we need that common solution that serves the greater good and the higher purpose, and I'm just a little bit scared that those we've put into power, even the President who is so popular aren't up to the task.
. . . .Yes, I support this President. I'm an American, if he fails, we all fail. We are truly in crisis, and he was elected as our leader. This country needed that change. Look at the legacy that Bush 2 left. Remember, it's only been a little over 100 days since he left office after 8 long years, and look at the legacy he left. How can you miss it. Dick Cheney, since emerging from his undisclosed location has become a true media whore.

. . . . .In Part 10 of the continuing series from NPR on upgrading the National Electrical Grid (it ain't high-tech, it ain't cool, it ain't sexy, but it's the cheapest thing we can do that will have the largest impact on high energy consumption and cost) A New Grid and Also New Habits Are Needed:
Power companies are planning to beef up the nation's electricity transmission grid. At the same time, conservationists are trying to reduce the vast amount of power wasted in Americans' homes and offices. That raises a question: If we simply used energy more efficiently, would we need to spend billions of dollars on a new grid?

To answer this question, we first need to know how much electricity buildings of the future could save. A good place to start is an office in downtown Washington, D.C. — the new home of the U.S. Green Building Council, which pushes for and certifies hyper-efficient construction.

Project architect Ken Wilson says the idea is to make the office a model of efficiency. It's a glimpse of the future.

'The Mother Of All Green Projects'

"What we're doing in this project is dramatic," he says. "The energy load for our lighting is being reduced in half. And we've loaded it up full of all kinds of energy-saving devices that are in some ways a paradigm shift."

For example, there are no desktop computers in this office — only energy-efficient laptops. And even those won't be humming away all the time. The new paradigm is that energy is only consumed when it's actually needed.

A set of cubicles has something that looks like a smoke detector overhead. The gizmo actually senses human bodies and is wired into the work pod's electrical outlets.

"The idea is that when someone leaves the pod, and the occupancy sensors will sense that they're not there, then that outlet shuts off. And so if they've got a task light plugged into that or a laptop computer into that, it goes off," Wilson explains.

The laptops revert to battery mode or save active work and shut down, saving energy that would otherwise be wasted. Air conditioners are also set up so that they don't cool empty offices. Brendan Owens of the Green Building Council points out that instead of desks, there is a broad corridor of white carpet near the windows that reflects natural light deep into the work space.

"At the peak of the day, when we're getting most of our light outside the space, we can turn off all our interior lights, and that shuts our demand way down," Owens says.

The office kitchen is outfitted with two giant, hyper-efficient refrigerators — to serve the needs of a young and hip work force that saves energy by riding bikes or transit to work and likes to brown-bag for lunch.

Wilson, the architect, says when this "mother of all green projects" is done, it should use about half the electricity of a conventional office. In fact, the job should end up earning the highest possible rating — platinum — from the U.S. Green Building Council, the very folks who will populate the work pods and offices.

Planning For Future Demand

Because this office is a showcase, Wilson could make many expensive choices and not worry so much about whether they'd ever save enough in energy bills to justify the cost. That said, Wilson imagines the energy savings if every office in downtown Washington were able to accomplish what this one is doing.

"Certainly if you were to take every building and cut the energy use by 50 percent, that would go a long way toward solving the need for more power plants," he says.

And if you don't need more power plants, you don't need more transmission wires. Right? Well, not so fast.

Revis James, who works for the industry-funded Electric Power Research Institute, says his organization spends a lot of time looking down the road 20 or 30 years to see what our future electricity needs will be.

James says demand has been growing thanks to a proliferation of energy-hungry microwaves, computers, giant TVs and other plug-in devices. That wave of invention may be cresting.

"Over the time frame of the next 20 or 30 years, I don't think we're going to see a tremendous change in the fundamental nature of the devices and the types of things that create a demand for electricity," James says.

What will really drive new demand is the steady trickle of a growing economy — and constant population growth.

"When you take a very moderate growth rating assumption, and you extend that out into time — not just a couple of years, not just five years not just 10 years; you extend that out for 50 years — even modest growth rates translate to significant amounts of energy," James says.

For example, the Census Bureau projects that in 30 years, the United States will have 100 million more people, in addition to the 300 million residents today. And James figures that population growth will more than wipe out the gains from efficiency programs.

What's more, some of the things that are now powered by fossil fuels, like cars and even furnaces, may eventually be phased out as climate change is addressed.

"A time will come when the emissions we get from natural gas will become too much, and we'll have to eliminate that, too," James says.

What energy source is left? Electricity, presuming it's from a carbon-free source.

So even the optimists acknowledge that new transmission lines must be built, and the existing electric grid must be made smarter.

That brings us back to Owens, at the Green Building Council's flashy new digs in Washington.

"We need to have the smart grid work with smarter buildings to really make sure the potential of both is optimized," he says.

Both approaches are tools for getting the job done, but they're not solutions in themselves.

. . . .Terminator:Salvation will come out while I'm out of pocket and won't be able to see it until the early part of June. I really hope that Christian Bale can bring his intensity and focus to the part of John Connor and breathe new life into this franchise. After all, we've only got 9 years until it's 2018!

. . . .Much will be made in the next few days of Iran's testing of a missle with the capabilities of reaching Europe and Israel. It's a tempest in a teapot. At the end of the day, Ahmadinejad is a Hugo Chavez. He is one of the three largest suppliers (Venezuela and Saudi Arabia being the others) of the world's heroin, oil. He is also Western educated, has more power than the Ayahtollah, and realizes that at the end of the day on a geo-political scale, it's all about money and power. What he wants is recognition and a seat at the table, and he realizes that he's going to have to shake some people up to get it. He also knows that turning his own country into a war zone again, after the millions of Iranians lost in the Iran-Iraq war of the 80's, is a complete mistake. I'm, again, much more scared of the Taliban and shariyah law being in control of a nuclear arsenal in Islamabad, Pakistan than I am of Iran. Iran wants recognition; the Taliban want to reshape the world into an earthly vision of a holy war that they believe is being carried out even now in the heavens, and they aren't afraid to burn themselves down to attain that vision.

. . . . Outta here for today. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, no one gets out alive, and we don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances of how our ticket gets punched. It's not about tomorrow or yesterday, it's about right fucking here and now. This ain't no dress rehearsal. Change your life, and in doing that, change the world around you.
. . .Got your back, out there in the night.

The Desolation Angel
[where: 27.52N, 91.59W]

19 May 2009

Tuesday (deep into it now)

Tuesday May 19, 2009
 
. . . . So, 2/3 of the way through May, and the United States is colder than all billy hell. What global climate changes?
. . . .We're 3 weeks away from hurricane season down here where I work. We're in the middle of one of the worst tornado seasons that Texas/Oklahoma and the Southeast have seen, there's floods from Kansas to West Virginia, wildfires running out of control all through the Pacific Coast and Northwest, and we went through 9 straight days of rain up in the Midwest/Great Lakes and are getting ready to enter our own tornado season.
. . . .In terms of personal and family safety, with all those weather events, there's a couple of things I'd like to point out. I said this a couple of weeks ago, learn to text. If you don't know how, ask your teenager. When voice won't go through on cell phones because of a compromised or overloaded system, data like text will. It would be a good thing to be able to stay in touch with your loved ones. We all now live in extended families across the United States, and the options to be able stay in touch and let someone know you're OK, or find out if someone needs help are all available, vast and easy to use.
 - Even if you have an e-mail account with your local service like Comcast, Charter or Cox, even if you have an e-mail account with AOL or Earthlink, get yourself at least 1, if not 3 more accounts. Get an e-mail account with Gmail, Yahoo or Hotmail and let your family and loved ones know your address. All 3 services are server based and not resident on your computer or resident on a local server that may be affected by outages or storms, and they make a good option to stay in touch and find out if everyone is OK or in need of something.
- Learn how to SMS text from those accounts to your loved ones phones. It's easy. An SMS text is a service offered by all 3, and accepted by your cell phone service. Normally the "To" address is 123-555-xxxx, the phone number of who you're trying to contact followed by an @ symbol and then either vtext.com, cingularme.com, or sprint.com. All together it would look like 123-555-xxxx@vtext.com, or something like that. 
- Skype is a VOIP (Voice Over Internet Protocol) service that will utilize internet service for voice communication even when hard land line phones are down.
- Join a social networking community like Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn or Twitter. Again, with access to a computer at an internet cafe, a Starbucks, the public library you can use these services to let everyone know you're OK and check on those you want to check on. 
- If you're an independent contractor, or an at home worker that uses your computer, utilize a free service skydrive, like Google Docs, or Windows Live Workspace to back-up all your important documents and files on a remote server. Save your work! Often, it will save grief later. 
- If you have precious photographs that you want to save, use a service like Flickr or Picasa and upload them.
. . . .The Senate today passed sweeping credit card reforms, all of which are good for you, and good for credit card users. So just what do the new credit card rules entail, from the New York Times today, this:
At first glance, the sweeping credit card legislation that passed the Senate on Tuesday looks like a huge victory for consumers. The bill (and similar legislation that has already passed the House) contains relief from penalty fees and instant interest rate spikes. It even limits expiration dates on gift cards.
And certain cardholders who carry a balance may ultimately pay less under the new rules. But for people who pay their bills off each month, and milk the card rewards programs for everything they are worth, there is some cause for concern.
For months now, the card companies have been threatening to cut rewards programs sharply, even for people who never get into trouble with debt and late payments, to make up for revenue lost to the new restrictions.
My guess, however, is that this talk is just so much saber-rattling. Card companies want to make money, and big-spending customers help them do it, even if they do not go into debt.
First, let’s lay out the things we know will change because of the new legislation (you can skip to the end, if you’d like, to read more about what might happen with rewards). The bills are filled with new rules, which will take effect at various points in the year after President Obama signs the final bill.
¶First, and perhaps most important, there are new restrictions on when credit card companies can increase the interest rate on balances that you’ve already run up. The Senate bill says that banks must wait until you’re 60 days late in making the minimum payment before they can apply a penalty interest rate to your existing debt; the House bill mandates a 30-day wait.
It’s not yet clear how legislators will reconcile the variations. The House may end up voting on whether to simply accept the Senate’s stricter bill, or there may be a horse-trading conference of sorts to work out compromises.
¶The Senate bill requires card companies to, in effect, lower interest rates for cardholders who have exhibited good behavior and paid on time for six consecutive months. Some cards, like Citi’s new Forward card, already offer a similar feature. The House bill has no such provision.
¶Both bills require card companies to give 45 days’ notice before raising the interest rate. The Senate bill, for good measure, requires such notice for any significant change to the card. That may mean that card companies can no longer spring huge alterations in reward programs, effective immediately, on customers who are just short of a reward that they’ve saved for for years.
¶Banks must send your bill out no later than 21 days before the due date. They cannot send it with, say, 14 days to go, hoping that you won’t get a check back in time to avoid a late fee.
¶If the card company gets your payment by 5 p.m. on the due date, it’s on time, according to the new rules. No more of this early-morning deadline nonsense that some card companies were engaged in, aimed at hitting you with a late fee if your payment arrived with the afternoon mail. Also, no more late fees if the due date is a Sunday or holiday and your payment doesn’t arrive until a day later.
¶Let’s say you’re paying many different interest rates on the debt on a single card, one for a cash advance, another for a balance transfer and a third for a new purchase. Now, when you make a payment over the minimum balance, banks will have to apply it to the highest-interest debt first. I bet you can guess how many banks used to handle this sort of situation.
¶At long last, banks must now ask you to opt in before granting you the “privilege” of spending more than your credit limit and paying a fat $39 fee for the privilege. If you want to pay that fee, you’ll have to ask them first.
¶If you’re a student, it will get harder to get a credit card. In the House version of the bill, no one under 18 can apply for a card unless a parent or legal guardian is along for the ride as a primary cardholder.
The Senate, hopping onto the helicopter parenting movement, wants the minimum age to be 21. The senators note that a spouse can co-sign as well, and students with independent income sources can submit proof and ask for an exception. It is not clear how this will work. Will students working as summer camp counselors need to send in a credit card permission slip from their camp director?
And both houses require written permission from a parent, guardian or spousal co-signer for any increase in a card’s credit line.
¶The House throws in what ought to be called “The Fine Print Rule.” Card companies must print their account applications and disclosures in 12-point type or greater. A supervisory board will also probably declare certain hard-on-the-eyes fonts off limits. The Senate is silent on typeface but imposes many other communication requirements. Read all about it through links to the House bill, the Senate bill (and government summaries of the House and Senate bills from the version of this story at nytimes.com/yourmoney.
¶Hate gift cards? Me, too. There will be some helpful new rules regarding those absurd dormancy fees, which punish people who let the cards sit around before using them.
Under the Senate’s rule, retailers and others that issue Visa, MasterCard, American Express or Discover gift cards or certificates will have to print explicit dormancy fee information on the card. Sellers of the cards will also have to inform the buyer of the fee. That’s a smart twist, since the gift giver can then become aware of the noxious nature of the fee — and elect to give cash or some other gift.
The bill also bans expiration dates on gift cards and certificates any sooner than five years after the card’s original issue date. And the retailer or card issuer will have to print the terms of any expiration date in capital letters in at least 10-point type. Call it the fine print rule.
It will be fascinating to see which retailer or card issuer has the nerve, after having free use of your money for five years, to tell you it will lose the money altogether if you don’t use up their gift card. I dare them to try.
So will credit card companies kill reward programs or drastically scale most of them back? Of course not.
“If you strip away the reward component of a credit card, it’s essentially a commodity,” said Rick Ferguson, editorial director at the loyalty marketing company LoyaltyOne. “The reward is what gives it its personality. It works from a branding perspective as well as a mechanism to influence customer behavior and consolidate spending on a particular card.”
That last part is crucial. People who spend a ton generate fees galore from merchants, and that money helps the card company stay in business. So you may soon see card companies giving away more goodies or lowering annual fees for people who hit certain spending thresholds each year. American Express already does this on a number of cards.
Also, keep in mind that you may have more control over what the card companies do to you than you may think.
If you don’t like the new fees and other things that banks will soon be testing as they grapple with their new economic reality, then make some noise. Send a note to me at rlieber@nytimes.com, so I can write about the latest foolishness — or consumer-friendly twist. At the very least, all of our complaints to the higher-ups at the banks may help persuade the companies to head in another direction.
“Work your way up the chain,” said Dennis C. Moroney, research director for bank cards at TowerGroup, a MasterCard-owned financial services consultant. After all, it may cost less to appease you than it would to replace you.
. . . .You can read the full bill here at Open Congress on S.414

. . . .Continuing the series on upgrading the national electrical grid, here's Part 9, Could Energy Innovation Create A 'Green Bubble' from the NPR series:
One argument for a major overhaul of the U.S. electricity grid is to encourage the development of more renewable sources of energy, such as wind and solar. President Obama certainly has gotten behind green energy, and his administration is part of a concerted effort to help the industry grow.
In the wake of the housing bubble, that has some asking whether the country is headed for a renewable energy bubble.
Eric Janszen founded the financial advisory company iTulip in the midst of the Internet stock bubble. Janszen, whose company was named for the Dutch tulip bulb bubble in the 1630s, has made a career out of studying financial bubbles.
He says bubbles start with a kernel of something good — say, homeownership or the development of the Internet or, in this case, energy that causes less pollution. But then, he says, outside forces come in and create a sort of mania.
"You'll know that we're at some stage of an energy bubble when you start to hear about how you can get rich quick in the energy market," Janszen says. But first, he says, a few things have to happen. There must be significant government involvement designed to focus energy and capital on the specific industry — and clearly that's already happening.
"To really make these things go, you need a new source of credit," he says. In the housing bubble, it was mortgage-backed securities. Janszen says this element is important because you need a lot of capital gushing in to inflate stock and other asset prices.
Developing Plans, Finding Funding
But credit is a problem right now for renewable energy developers. Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens was forced to delay construction of a 1,000-megawatt wind project in Texas, and worries about an impending renewable energy bubble aren't keeping him up at night.
"I wake up in the night wondering 'Where am I going to get the money to build this project, because I've already got $150 million in it'," Pickens says. He says part of the problem is that natural gas prices have dropped by more than half since last summer, and it's difficult to justify using wind to generate electricity when gas is so much cheaper. Add to that one of the other challenges of wind: It's going to rely heavily on an upgraded electricity grid that isn't built yet to get power from wind corridors to population centers.
Pickens says another issue may stand in the way of a renewable energy bubble: While the Obama administration is promoting the industry, the specifics of the government's plans aren't completely clear.
"But I think once you get through this year, it's going to be pretty clear how they expect [to] cause the industry to kick off and go," Pickens says.
Congress is working on legislation that would limit greenhouse gas emissions and then turn them into a commodity that can be traded. Such a cap-and-trade system might be the seed for creating the credit necessary to get a renewable energy bubble going, Janszen says.
"Some think the investment banks will get into the cap-and-trade business and figure out a way to use that market to create securities that can then be the foundation for an asset price inflation," Janszen says.
So, while a few people out there still see the potential for a renewable energy bubble, more pieces have to fall in place first, not the least of which is major upgrades to the country's electricity grid.
Planning for that is under way. The Electric Power Research Institute was given $1.3 million in federal stimulus money recently to develop a framework for grid developers to follow. The group expects to complete that work by early summer.
. . . . Let's see, other news of the day - President Obama announces new mileage and CAFE standards - Michael Steele reinvented the Republican Party & the Republican Party found a unique way to support climate change legislation; tee off on big business, light the sack of crap on the doorstep and blame the Democrats.

. . . .Jesse Ventura, who is a true Libertarian, and by the way, a veteran of the U.S. Armed Forces went one-on-one with Sean Hannity. Guess who won?

. . . .My two favorite political nutjobs, Michelle Bachmann and Barney Frank went toe-to-toe over funding. Enlightening and intelligent? No. But worth watching for the entertainment value.

.  . . .The extreme Right wing media is beginning to eat itself. Michael Savage tore Rush Limbaugh apart as a phony.

. . . .Paul Krugman, one of the 3 economists that we need to be listening to, along with Noriel Roubinni and Mark Zandi, spoke at conference in Seoul, South Korea yesterday:
The United States may emerge from recession as early as this summer, though further job losses mean a "depressed economy" could last as long as five years, Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman said Tuesday.
"I think it's quite possible that industrial production in the United States and perhaps in the world as a whole will bottom out sometime in the next few months, that GDP growth in the United States will be positive in the second half of the year and maybe a little bit later than that in Europe," Krugman told a global financial conference in Seoul.
Krugman said that he would not be surprised if the U.S. recession, which began in December 2007, ended in August or September this year. But job losses were likely to continue into 2011, meaning "the period of a depressed economy" could last until 2013 or 2014, he said.

. . . .Outta here. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, and we don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances on how the ticket gets punched. It's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right fuckin' here and now, this ain't no dress rehearsal. Take a stand for something, change your own life, and in so doing change the world around you.
Love y'all, got your back out there in the night.
Remember that this weekend is Memorial Day, but our men and women in uniform who have sacrificed for us need to be remembered and thanked every day, not just that one.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan 48137]




 

Monday night (headed back out to sea)

Monday May 18, 2009
. . . .Today's playlist? Eclectic to say the least, but it is thematic. I invite you to just go ahead sometime and fire up the website, let it run and just give it a listen all the way through. There's a definite theme that runs throughout it, and you'll figure it out. You're hearing Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Kings of Leon, U2, Ben Harper and Buddy Miller all mixed in there together. I'll give you a clue. One of my favorite songs of all time is In the Garden by Van Morrison for the line "No Guru, No Method, No Teacher ". Yup, it's a typical cryptic Van the man koan, but listen to it done live, with the joy he can put into it and go back to another one of his best songs "Did Ya Get Healed". You're all smart people, you'll get it.

. . . .My particular love for music is well-known. It goes a lot beyond "I like the beat". I like all types and styles of music, as long as the artist is putting their heart and soul into it. One of the most important events in music occurred here recently. Pete Seeger's 90th birthday party was held in New York at Madison Square Garden as an All-Star Jam. The list of artists who gathered to honor Pete and his contributions to American music is breathtaking; Bruce Springsteen, John Mellencamp, Joan Baez, Richie Havens, Tom Morello, Roger McGuinn, Warren Haynes, Dave Matthews, Kris Kristofferson, Taj Mahal, Steve Earle, Ben Harper, Emmylou Harris and Arlo Guthrie only start the list. It was impressive, but what was more impressive, according to those who were there, was the sheer admiration each of these people had for Pete, who is still incredibly humble, despite his career and contributions.

. . . .We're fortunate here in America with the vast array of artists and musicians that we have, and the ability they have to reflect our social fabric and mirror back to us that things we have going on around us every day. Harkening back to Pete Seeger, who along with Woody Guthrie gave such a rich catalog of Dust Bowl and Depression era music and who stood steadfast and strong against the Red Scare of the 50's and House Anti-American Activities Committee and it's fascist actions, a host of current artists have given us a new catalog of songs to chronicle and document the current hard times that so many people are experiencing. I'll link out to each one, go ahead and download and build a decent playlist for yourself:
- The best of the current crop of songs has to be John Rich's Shuttin' Detroit Down, a quiet, very moving tune with a great video starring Kris Kristofferson and Mickey Rourke
- Neil Young's Cough Up The Bucks from his latest album is a rocker, and a good one.
- The Flatlanders Homeland Refugee is the bleakest of the bunch, and a damn good song.
- Cam'ron doing I Hate My Job is a good reflection of what it feels like to be underemployed, disrespected and kicked in the teeth everyday just to get a paycheck.
- Wilco has been covering The Jolly Banker every night at their shows.
- While Lucinda Williams has been covering Hard Time Killing Floor Blues
- Even Jimmy Buffet, whose music I normally hate, has chimed in, penning A Lot To Drink About, (like a song about drinking is a surprise from Jimmy)
- Prince has one too, Ol' Skool Company, but I dont' which of the three new albums it's on.
- Jadakiss' Hard Times has relevance.
- Bruce Springsteen, who was so full of optimism at the start of the year, has changed his set lists to include Johnny 99, Seeds, This Hard Land and The Ghost of Tom Joad. As well, he's picked up a turn of the century tune, Hard Times Come Again No More, and been covering it each night, preceding it's playing with a pitch for the local food banks.

. . . .Reminiscient of 40 years ago, when Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young did 4 Dead In Ohio in 24 hours in response to the Kent State Shootings, and the 45 was on the street 10 days later.

. . . .We're coming up on another 40 year anniversary this summer, Woodstock. There's going to be a reissue of the movie as a DVD and more importantly, at least to me, a reissue of the album, only this one has every song from every artist over those 4 days.

. . . .As long as I'm doing an wide scope on music today, Tom Morello, one of my favorite young artists, one of the founders of the Axis of Justice, and former guitarist for Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, who has most recently been acoustic as The Nightwatchman, has picked the electric guitar up again and has formed a new band with politically charged rapper Boots Riley. The band's name is Street Sweeper Social Club and their new album is due out June 16th.

. . . .And just to put two other notes in here, Steve Earle's album Townes, a tribute to his late friend Townes VanZandt, (which is a much deeper and somewhat twisted relationship than a simple friendship) is out, and Eminem's new one is out as well. For those of us who have struggled with our own addiction problems and gotten cleaned up, Mr. Mather's new album has some great tracks, he's at his best when he's doing what he does best, tearing himself down.

. . . .In Part 8 of NPR's series on upgrading the grid, which is one of the most important, and simplest things we can do to improve energy efficiency in this country and become less dependent on foreign oil, we take a look at the workforce that's going to be required to maintain it, which in these perilous economic times, is good news really, as a new workforce will have to hired and trained:
Many in the utility industry worry that the most vulnerable part of the power system is its work force, as a wave of retirements is depleting the supply of linemen and other craftsmen who keep the lights on.

A historic jump in the number of power-related jobs is boosting demand for classes such as one called Power Production and Operation at Centralia College in Centralia, Wash.

"Many people who went to work in the electric power industry were there for 25, 30, 40 years," instructor Rulon Crawford says. "Now that they are leaving the industry, there's a ton of opportunity for this generation that's coming along."

The International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers says nearly half its members nationwide are up for retirement in the next few years, and in response, Centralia College has formed the Center of Excellence for Energy Technology to train young workers like 19-year-old Haley Keithan — one of a handful of women in this class.

She comes from an energy family — her dad worked for the local coal-fired plant. But, she says, "I want to go into more renewable resources, more so than coal or oil or anything like that."

That's a common theme in the Pacific Northwest. Like many states, Oregon and Washington require local utilities to boost the portion of the power they produce from renewables. Travel up the Columbia River, which has long supplied this area with cheap electrical power, and you can see and hear what's luring students into the energy field.

Wind turbines seem to be sprouting from every hilltop, and if you get close, you can hear them spinning lazily in a light wind. This is what's drawing students like A.J. Quackenbush to Columbia Gorge Community College, on the Oregon side of the river.

Quackenbush is a muscular, curly-haired student in the renewable energy technology program. Students like him may be keen on renewables, but this program is meant to prepare them to work on the aging transmission grid as well. Quackenbush says he might end up expanding the system that connects those hilltop turbines to power-hungry cities: "I know there's been a lot of talking about installing a transmission superhighway, and I think having the chance to work on something like that would be pretty fulfilling as well."

Local utilities here say that, at times, they are already producing more wind power than the electrical grid can handle. That means the viability of those wind turbines may depend on the eagerness of these students to help upgrade the electrical grid.

Training Young Workers On Antiquated Equipment

But at a training facility in Vancouver, Wash., you can see just how resistant the old electrical grid is to change, and why it's so difficult to train new workers in this field.

Two apprentice linemen have just made their first mistake as they try to replace a huge glass insulator 30 feet up on a telephone pole at the Bonneville Power Administration's Technical Training Center. On the ground, instructor Craig Froh razzes them, as he sees they have lost their focus and let the wire slip from their grasp. Froh is a burly utility guy, right down to the sticker on his hard hat that reads, "Drink til she's cute."

"Now we're going to have fun," he shouts up to the apprentices, as they struggle to correct their mistake.

In real life, the wires these guys are working on would be live with 115,000 volts. Workers spend three to four years working as paid apprentices before they become journeymen, going through a ritual that dates back many decades. This is why people here refer to this business as a "craft" — while it doesn't require a college degree, it is both dangerous and arcane.

In another part of the facility, 31-year-old apprentice Zack Banks is deciphering a roomful of dials and getting the juice flowing again during an imaginary blackout. Bells ding and meters flash in a central control room that's meant to replicate a real, working substation. With its old-style dials and clicking alarms, this place looks a lot more like a World War II-era submarine than a key node on the power system. Banks dials up the trainer in the exercise — using a rotary telephone.

Bonneville hopes to get federal funding to help build a smart grid for the region. If that happens, workers here could someday be staring at computer screens and digital interfaces. But for now, the next generation of electrical workers will have to get started on some very 20th century gear.

. . . .The absolute idiocy of the last 7 years is coming to light, and in a very scary way. While we invaded Iraq and got 4,000 good young soldiers killed based on Bush/Rumsfeld/Cheney, the true perpetators of 9/11, Al-Quaeda, were allowed to roam free and run rampant in Afghanistan and build a power base, and expand further into Pakistan. Now, in the most unstable region of the world, in it's most unstable country, Al-Queada and the Taliban are 60 miles away from Islamabad, the capital and control of a nuclear missle force. As Pakistan falls into absolute chaos, the extremists will win, and will be in control of nuclear weapons, not what we need or want.

. . . Now here's a stunning revelation from the Reuters newswire; "Blue collar males lose ground".

. . . It's about time. The two women who tried to warn about the impending economic implosion and meltdown were given the JFK Profiles in Courage medal today.

. . . And we rank as the least green consumers in the world, again.

. . . Why should we repair and maintain the Hubble Space Telescope, take a look at the images at this link here, and you tell me.

. . . And on the subject of the political firestorm of the moment emanating from the Beltway, Matthew Yglesias from The Daily Beast on how the Right is misfiring again:

Just when it seemed to many that the right had lost its mojo, give conservatives credit: They're still enormously good at ginning up controversies and controlling the news cycle. Thus a story that was once about the Bush administration's decision to authorize barbaric and illegal acts of torture has successfully been morphed into a to-do about Nancy Pelosi's account of CIA briefings.

As political gamesmanship, it's been masterful. I particularly like the way the right has managed to trot out an endless procession of figures willing to express outrage that anyone would ever hint that the CIA might mislead a member of Congress. From conservatives' incredulous responses, you'd think Pelosi had suggested that little green Martians stole her briefing memos. Obviously, I wasn't in the room with Pelosi and whoever briefed her, but anyone with any recollection of history should be aware that it would hardly be unusual for the country's marquee intelligence agency to do something like that. Indeed, deception of Congress has been a common occurrence in the agency's history, and one former director, Richard Helms, was even convicted of lying to Congress.

None of which has anything in particular to do with a unique CIA penchant for dishonesty. Rather, the crux of the matter is that the CIA is typically a president's tool of choice when he wants to get someone to do something illegal. When you do something illegal, there's typically a need for a coverup, and with the coverup comes the deception.

And here's where the right's tactical acumen comes up short. Various conservative commentators have expressed their hope that gunning for Pelosi will blunt progressive calls for a "truth commission" to thoroughly investigate what really happened on Bush's trip to the "dark side". Fox's Neil Cavuto said we might be in a "Mexican standoff" wherein Pelosi would agree to drop the idea of investigations to prevent herself from attracting scrutiny. Steven Hayes, Dick Cheney's official biographer, said, "Democrats who have been so enthusiastic about truth commissions have to be stopping and saying, OK, wait a second." What conservatives are missing here is that this is a fight they were winning before they started gunning for Pelosi. Their best ally in this fight was Barack Obama, whose desire to "move forward" rather than focusing on the past had been the subject of much consternation. Had conservatives simply reached out to grab the hand that was being extended to them, they could have gotten what they wanted.

But in their zeal to score a tactical win, the right has made a truth commission more likely not less likely. Obama wanted to avoid a backward-looking focus on torture in part because it distracted from his legislative agenda. But if we're going to be looking backward anyway, thanks to conservatives' insistence on complaining about Pelosi, then the move forward strategy lacks a rationale. And far from forcing a standoff in which Pelosi will abandon her support for an investigation, the right has forced her into a corner from which she can't give in to moderate Democrats' opposition to such a move without looking like she's cravenly attempting to save her own skin.

There's no sign that Pelosi or anyone else is backing off the truth-commission idea. And, indeed, by suggesting that Pelosi could be a target of an investigation, conservatives have helped cleanse the idea of the odor of victor's justice. The question of CIA briefings of congressional leaders would, after all, be a legitimate subject of inquiry. And it's very possible that, done rigorously, Pelosi and other Democrats, such as Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Rep. Jane Harman (D-CA), could wind up getting a black eye or two. But however bad an investigation might make the members of Congress who were supposed to be preventing illegal conduct look, the people actually doing the misdeeds are going to look even worse. Today, the congressional Republicans look extremely clever. But in a few months' time, we'll look back on this as yet another example of a conservative tactical victory that winds up backfiring. After all, selecting Sarah Palin looked brilliant for a week or two. And the anathematization of Obama's stimulus proposal seemed like an unexpected coup until it wound up pushing Arlen Specter into the arms of the Democrats. Gamesmanship, in short, can only get you so far. But conservatives sure are good at it.


. . . .What I get sick of in this country, since I have absolutely no use for either the Extreme Right Conservative movement or the Extreme Left, is the need we all somehow feel to reduce everything to a cartoonish caricature, with black hat wearing bad guys, and good guys. Nothing, especially in the governance of a country as large and complex as ours is black or white. There are a tremendous number of shades of gray, that's reality.

. . . .Krugman (who along with Roubinni are the only two economists left that I respect, since they are both loyal oppositionists and realists with the new Adminstration) in yesterdays' New York Times:
In a way, it was easy to take stands during the Bush years: the Bushies and their allies in Congress were so determined to move the nation in the wrong direction that one could, with a clear conscience, oppose all the administration’s initiatives.

Now, however, a somewhat uneasy coalition of progressives and centrists rules Washington, and staking out a position has become much trickier. Policy tends to move things in a desirable direction, yet to fall short of what you’d hoped to see. And the question becomes how many compromises, how much watering down, one is willing to accept.

There will be a lot of soul-searching later this year for advocates of health care reform. (For me the make-or-break issue is whether the legislation includes a public plan.) But right now it’s the environmental community that has to decide how much it’s willing to bend.

If we’re going to get real action on climate change any time soon, it will be via some version of legislation proposed by Representatives Henry Waxman and Edward Markey. Their bill would limit greenhouse gases by requiring polluters to receive or buy emission permits, with the number of available permits — the “cap” in “cap and trade” — gradually falling over time.

It goes without saying that the usual suspects on the right have denounced Waxman-Markey: global warming isn’t real, emission limits will destroy the economy, yada yada. But the bill also faces opposition from some environmentalists, who are balking at the compromises the sponsors made to gain political support.
. . . .Outta here for now, kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands, this rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, and we don't get to dictate terms and circumstances on how the ticket gets punched. It's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right fucking here and now, this ain't no dress rehearsal.
Got your back out there in the night.

The Desolation Angel
[where: New Orleans, Louisiana]

17 May 2009

Sunday

Sunday May 16, 2009


. . . .Like Van "The Man" Morrison said; No Guru, No Method, No Teacher

. . .Just live ladies and gentlemen, just live and breathe, it's all good.

. . . Today's playlist, a heartrending selection of love songs filled with sweetness and devotion, (he snickered)

. . . .
So Dear Readers, I'm sitting here tonight, actually doing some research to help one of my old employers, Ford Motor Company, out and I receive the following epistle from one of the "enlightened masses":
First off they did everything you say and its about time we stop throwing bad money after bad. So far we've printed money we don't have to solve problems that can't be solved as quickly as some people would like. I'm sorry about the workers but they were hosed by the same people who claim to want to help them (UAW, American Government, corporate executives).
Personally the idea of one man having a golden parachute in case the corporate jet goes down is beyond greedy.
Or anyone involved in government accepting money from someone so they can get their way is beyond unethical. I wonder how many of the government officials have flown on a corporate jet?
As far as the UAW i've never met anyone so i can only associate them with other Unions in which i find a disproportionate amount of dumb asses earning obscene amounts of money for relatively simple tasks.
Optimism is great but there are still a lot of indicators that we have not hit bottom yet this being a great big one.
We all knew even with the bailouts the auto industry was going to die because no one has the money to buy a car and the banks aren't lending didn't have to be a rocket scientist to see that one coming. Maybe throwing bad money after bad money (we keep printing it at this rate it will be worthless and China and the Middle East aren't gonna be too happy either).
I just read an article about Tesla Motors the new and hopefully up and coming carmaker in the us. Damned if the owner didn't throw about a hundred million of his own money into it, I respect that. Thats the small businessman getting it done. Somewhere he was also talking about getting help from the government. How smart would it have been for our government to have invested in Tesla. We might have a new car maker that could already be hiring laid off auto workers and maybe retooling a plant or two and be farther ahead instead. We also wouldn't have wasted all our tax dollars either.

Man it would be nice if i could just close my eyes and ignore everything. But no I've got to work any fucking job at any fucking wage to keep my house.

Still respect ya Angel but that I hope your happy now comment pissed me off but your right it did make me happy in the fact the we can now get on with the job of "repairing her faults. Sometimes you have to wipe the slate clean and start over which is what a lot of us are having to do.

Suddenly Stoopid

. . . .
That's the nice part of this gig. It's my column, I don't get paid, and I don't have to be objective or fair. I'm glad that you still respect me Stoopid, but I sure as hell don't respect your uninformed ignorant opinions. Here's the facts, those 5 to 7 million people who are getting laid off don't have jobs to go in this economy, so they'll be trying to get by on unemployment, Medicaid and Medicare paid for by you, me & everyone else that happens to be working right now. The "Government" pays for nothing, it's not a profit-making entity and it doesn't have a product to sell, only money to collect from we the people. Do they want that? HELL NO, YOU MORON! They're people, men and women, just like you who wanted nothing more than to support their families, raise their kids, build a home, see those kids through college, and just be folks, people who got through life making their own way.
You know nothing about them, yet you rain down some "terrible judgement" just because you have bills to pay too. Well, welcome to adulthood. I worked in those plants for 25 years, beside good people, people who had skills and talents. Anytime you want to walk in off the street and start running a 2,000 ton stamping press or a 32 station transfer line with no training and no skills, making a product to tolerances of 50 microns or better, a couple of thousand components a day that go into a 5,000 lb. piece of metal that anyone with two weeks of training is given a license to hurtle down the road at 70 MPH, you're welcome to it. Everyone I worked with was well aware of the implications of what they did, and well aware that most people are too damn ignorant to realize what it takes to put together an engine and transmission so they operate safely, despite the stupidity of the person behind the wheel.
No, the UAW and corporate executives did not kill the automotive industry, it was the incredible number of blind people in this country who just threw all the money they had at companies that were funded by two governments, Japan and Germany, who vowed to destroy us back in 1945. Well, they won, thanks to the traitors in this country who every day get behind the wheel of their axismobile, and curse the guy who worked in an automotive plant.
Got news, if it wasn't for Henry Ford, there wouldn't be a middle class in this country, he didn't invent the automobile, he invented the middle class, do a little economic and social research. If it wasn't for the automotive workforce, the wage level in this country wouldn't have been where it was at from 1950 onwards.
Glad they're gone? Try telling that to a family of kids who will now lose their home. Glad they're gone? Try looking any good honest man or woman who went to work everyday to make a living and did the best they could in the eye and saying that Ace.
In all the years that I worked in those plants, all the thousands of people I worked with (yes, thousands) I can honestly say that I never met anyone who got up in the morning, looked at his wife and kids and said "Hey, I'm just gonna put it to them today". I did work with a lot of people who did the absolute best they could everyday.
Tesla motors? Give me a break. The automotive companies are a profit making business, corporations, which by a 1963 Supreme Court ruling, are legally bound, as a legal entitity, to make a profit for their shareholders. As such, they gave the public what they wanted, which due to cheap gas up until 2 years ago, was SUV's and trucks! That's what the public wanted and would buy. Back in the 70's, it was muscle cars.
I'm gonna go back to what I said about Germany and Japan. There are millions of good men laying in National Cemeteries all over this country, men and women who wore the uniform of this country, it's flag, and fought and died in WWII and Korea. My own father wore that uniform and lays in a grave in Augusta National Cemetery, so this one's personal. You just pissed all over his grave, and countless others like him, who believed that an American citizen should support American companies. So, bub, I'd be the one in the middle of the picture up on the left. The two on either side of me would be my sons, you just pissed all over their Grandfather's grave. I'd recommend walking to the other side of the street if you happen to spot us anywhere. You want to wipe the slate clean? Start by getting every damn car that was built that the profits flow back overseas to two countries that were enemies off the street.

. . . .
And to make a point, this link here takes you to an interactive map that details, by county and state, the economic distress level here in the U.S.

. . . I wrote last week about my personal opinion around the legalization of marijuana, though I stopped smoking it myself over 28 years ago. You can cruise the archives to get to it. Reader Dave P. sends this one along, from the New York Times Op-Ed page, by Nick Gillespie. It seems that I'm not alone in my opinion.

Here’s a better idea — and one that will help the federal and state governments fill their coffers: Legalize drugs and then tax sales of them. And while we’re at it, welcome all forms of gambling (rather than just the few currently and arbitrarily allowed) and let prostitution go legit too. All of these vices, involving billions of dollars and consenting adults, already take place. They just take place beyond the taxman’s reach.

Legalizing the world’s oldest profession probably wasn’t what Rahm Emanuel, the White House chief of staff, meant when he said that we should never allow a crisis to go to waste. But turning America into a Sin City on a Hill could help President Obama pay for his ambitious plans to overhaul health care and invest in green energy. More taxed vices would certainly lead to significant new revenue streams at every level. That’s one of the reasons 52 percent of voters in a recent Zogby poll said they support legalizing, taxing and regulating the growth and sale of marijuana. Similar cases could be made for prostitution and all forms of gambling.

In terms of economic stimulation and growth, legalization would end black markets that generate huge amounts of what economists call “deadweight losses,” or activity that doesn’t contribute to increased productivity. Rather than spending precious time and resources avoiding the law (or, same thing, paying the law off), producers and consumers could more easily get on with business and the huge benefits of working and playing in plain sight.
. . . .And while we're on a discussion of practical realities, reader Jim H. sends this one along from CNN's commentary page, by David MacKay:
We need to introduce simple arithmetic into our discussions of energy.

We need to understand how much energy our chosen lifestyles consume, we need to decide where we want that energy to come from, and we need to get on with building energy systems of sufficient size to match our desired consumption.

Our failure to talk straight about the numbers is allowing people to persist in wishful thinking, inspired by inane sayings such as "every little bit helps."

Assuming we are serious about getting off fossil fuels, the scale of building required should not be underestimated. Small actions alone will not deliver a solution.

Let's express energy consumption and energy production using simple personal units, namely kilowatt-hours. One kilowatt-hour (kWh) is the energy used by leaving a 40-watt bulb on for 24 hours. The chemical energy in the food we eat to stay alive amounts to about 3 kWh per day. Taking one hot bath uses about 5 kWh of heat. Driving an average European car 100 kilometers (roughly 62 miles) uses 80 kWh of fuel. With a few of these numbers in mind, we can start to evaluate some of the recommendations that people make about energy.

Take, for example, the idea that one of the top 10 things you should do to make a difference to your energy consumption is to unplug your cell-phone charger when you are not using it. The truth is that leaving a phone charger plugged in uses about 0.01 kWh per day, 1/100th of the power consumed by a lightbulb.

This means that switching the phone charger off for a whole day saves the same energy as is used in driving an average car for one second. Switching off phone chargers is like bailing the Titanic with a teaspoon. I'm not saying you shouldn't unplug it, but please realize, when you do so, what a tiny fraction it is of your total energy footprint.

In total, the European lifestyle uses 125 kWh per day per person for transport, heating, manufacturing, and electricity. That's equivalent to every person having 125 light bulbs switched on all the time. The average American uses 250 kWh per day: 250 light bulbs.

And most of this energy today comes from fossil fuels. What are our post-fossil-fuel options?

. . . .And continuing in that practical application of alternative energy, Part 7 of the NPR series that we started last week on upgrading and improving the efficiency of the national electrical grid:
The U.S. electricity grid is in the midst of a revolution. It has a track record of 99.97 percent reliability, but there are plans for a massive overhaul of the grid to accommodate increasing demand and more renewable forms of energy, like wind and solar.

While some proponents of changing the grid can be almost breathless in their enthusiasm, the utilities that will end up performing a lot of the work are a more conservative lot.

"The traditional regulated utility has one job, and that's to keep the lights on," says Martha Duggan, vice president for government affairs at solar energy company SunEdison.

Duggan, who began her career in the regulated utility world, likes to tell a story about a utility engineer who said the nature of his job was either to be ignored when the electricity was on, or criticized when it was off.

"And so his goal, really, was to be ignored," Duggan says. "When you apply that kind of thinking across an organization — as you might imagine — the opportunity for creativity or new ideas is not necessarily in top of mind for folks who work in that environment."

Room For Innovation

Duggan says there are a few exceptions around the country. She points to Xcel Energy, which is in the process of creating the first smart grid for an entire city in Boulder, Colo. Just recently, Florida Power and Light launched a $200 million upgrade to the electricity grid in Miami-Dade County. But for most of the other utilities, there is an impression of big stodgy companies that are resistant to change

"I think that's a total misperception," says David Ratcliffe, CEO of the Southern Company in Atlanta. "We've deployed a million new automated meters and will move to 4.5 million. We've deployed automated switching on our transmission and distribution networks."

But take those automated — or smart — meters. It's not as simple as just ripping out the old ones and installing new ones, then charging the customer a little extra to cover the cost. Utilities, by and large, are still regulated monopolies, and big changes require approval.

"There are all kinds of regulatory/financing issues here that the utilities are concerned they will not be able to collect all the money," says Ahmad Faruqui, an economist with the utility consulting firm The Brattle Group.

Keeping The Lights On

Such mundane issues might seem boring when placed next to all the exciting talk about a revamped electricity grid in the U.S. But even now, a utility CEO still sees his primary job as keeping the lights on.

"It doesn't have the same kind of sex appeal as new technologies and new 'golly-gee-whiz' — whether it's a new computer software program or a new computer itself," Ratcliffe says.

So don't expect the smart grid to be unveiled like the latest iPod — utilities will build out this updated grid methodically, as befits their conservative nature. Ratcliffe says change is under way. And there's a new generation of utility executives coming up through the ranks who tend to be more comfortable with change — and with the new technologies that will remake the country's electricity grid.

. . . .One of the scariest things I've seen yet came to light today in GQ online. Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, during his tenure and during the Iraq war had his daily briefings for himself, his staff and the President (GWB) formatted to have a quote from Scripture at the top with the pictures:

on the morning of Thursday, April 10, 2003, Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon prepared a top-secret briefing for George W. Bush. This document, known as the Worldwide Intelligence Update, was a daily digest of critical military intelligence so classified that it circulated among only a handful of Pentagon leaders and the president; Rumsfeld himself often delivered it, by hand, to the White House. The briefing’s cover sheet generally featured triumphant, color images from the previous days’ war efforts: On this particular morning, it showed the statue of Saddam Hussein being pulled down in Firdos Square, a grateful Iraqi child kissing an American soldier, and jubilant crowds thronging the streets of newly liberated Baghdad. And above these images, and just below the headline secretary of defense, was a quote that may have raised some eyebrows. It came from the Bible, from the book of Psalms: “Behold, the eye of the Lord is on those who fear Him…To deliver their soul from death.”

This mixing of Crusades-like messaging with war imagery, which until now has not been revealed, had become routine. On March 31, a U.S. tank roared through the desert beneath a quote from Ephesians: “Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand.” On April 7, Saddam Hussein struck a dictatorial pose, under this passage from the First Epistle of Peter: “It is God’s will that by doing good you should silence the ignorant talk of foolish men.”
. . . .The Daily Beast covers this further, and in a staff written article, examines it a little further, and explores how Bush's handlers are releasing all this, and surprisingly enough, Rumsfeld gets the blame for Katrina too, and somehow is accountable for Ted Kennedy not getting a medal?!?!?

. . . .In case you missed last night's season finale of Saturday Night Live, Will Ferrell returned, and of course brought his GWB with him. Click here for the video link to one of the best sketches, Bush dropping in on Cheney in the make-up room before Dick's appearance on Meet The Press. "I used to be scared of you Dick, but I'm better now, I've watched a lot of Dr. Phil."

. . . .And as a service to you all, here's the round-up of the Sunday talk-shows (think of it as Talk Soup for smart people) first from the Daily Beast, and then from The Huffington Post.

. . . .I was listening to Shooter Jennings last night on his regular Saturday Night Electric Rodeo show on Sirius radio, he was talking about his new album, which he and The .357's are working on now in the studio and the number of rumors flying around that "Shooter is going rock". Hell, Shooter plays what he wants and has always done that, and refused to be categorized. That is one boy that is a dead ringer for his daddy, Waylon, in every way shape and form. Go Shooter, keep doing it your way, your Father was one of the original outlaws and I'm glad you're keeping it up, it honors his memory.

. . . .Outta here for now, kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, and we don't get to dictate the terms and conditions of how the ticket gets punched. It's not about yesterday or tomorrow, and this ain't no dress rehearsal. It's about right fucking here and now. Go change your life, and that changes the world.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan 48137]

14 May 2009

Friday

Friday May 15, 2009

. . . . .
I believe it's well known that I worked in the automotive industry for 25 years all told, and as I've traveled around the country both in my personal life, and in my job, over and over I've heard from people comments such as "The auto companies killed themselves", "The UAW killed the car companies" "Let them go bankrupt, they deserve it" "They're paid too much, let them get another job".
. . . .Well, it's about to happen, and I truly hope that people are satisfied now. Chrysler announced today that it would close over 700 dealerships across the nation tomorrow. GM will announce tomorrow that it will close anywhere between 1,000 and 2,600 dealerships tomorrow. This will add to the already 5.1 million jobs lost since the recession started. In this case, it's more than just a local business closing, it's the loss of a dealership and a service department. Those people who own Chrysler and GM cars will now find themselves without a service department, those people in a smaller town will find now that whatever dealerships are left will not be forced to compete, and therefore, there will be a price rise in imported vehicles. There are not jobs available now for the employees of those dealerships, which puts the smaller businesses around them in danger.
. . . .And all this is only a precursor to what will happen when Chrysler and GM go under. The total job loss, permanent numbers, in the U.S. will be around 5 to 7 million jobs total lost permanently from the American economy.


. . . . .The stench from the Washington beltway is increasingly growing stronger. The hypocrisy emanating from the Senate and House is incredible, the best part being that somehow they, (being Senators and House members) believe that somehow, we are gullible enough to believe anything. From Politico, this report on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's verbal contortions and attempted obfuscation of the very apparent, and very real fact that she knew back in 2002 about "enhanced interrogation techniques" aka waterboarding aka torture. Now, she attempts to twist the facts and deny knowledge. It won't fly, she knew, and for her to stand with the White House and decry these techniques is abhorrent, even in best light.
. . . It's simple, she knew and it's time for her to cop to it, and step down from the Speakership.

. . . . . From Tim Dickinson, in Rolling Stone, this one titled "The GOP Jihad";

As Specter's forced march down the gangplank makes clear, the GOP is in the midst of a reactionary spasm — one that threatens to marginalize the party for a generation to come. Rather than acknowledging the party's failed policies and reaching out to new constituencies, the GOP's dominant faction is retrenching around the anti-government, free-market, fundamentalist strain of Republicanism last championed by Barry Goldwater — who steered the party to one of its most crushing defeats in 1964. The purists are led by a group of GOP veterans who tried to bring down Bill Clinton in 1994 — including Contract With America architect Newt Gingrich, former House majority leader Dick Armey and anti-tax crusader Grover Norquist. The veterans are allied with House Minority Whip Eric Cantor, a Gingrich protégé who has emerged as the youthful face of the Party of No, as well as with stimulus-rejecting Gov. Mark Sanford of South Carolina and right-wing radio heavy Rush Limbaugh, who enforces the new GOP orthodoxy from the most feared bully pulpit in America. Together, they seek not to expand the party but to purge it.

Indeed, the Republican jihad has reached such a fever pitch that, to these ideologues, excommunicating one of the party's most powerful senators and handing the president a potentially unstoppable majority actually marks a positive development for the GOP. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Sanford cheered Specter's departure, calling him "deadly for the Republican brand." Firing up his listeners, Limbaugh hailed the defection for "weeding out people who aren't really Republicans," adding that he only regretted Specter didn't take John McCain with him.

. . . .Speaking of infotainer Rush Limbaugh and John McCain, this from Roberta McCain, John's mother on the subject of Rush - "I don't know what he's talking about, he doesn't represent the Republican Party."

. . . .Cognitive dissonance, that is, speaking of extreme right-wing infotainment talking heads, there's tape from back in 2002 that proves Bill O'Reilly didn't care about gay marriage back then, so why is such a vital issue to him now? Thanks to Media Matters on that one.

. . . .This one from Wired and the Danger Room blog; DARPA is now going back to the future and is now working on telepathy for battle field soldiers.

. . . . . And from Wired's Threat Level blog, this one on the FBI's new electronic surveillance program:

The proposed 2010 Justice Department budget published last week reveals the development of a new FBI advanced electronic surveillance program dubbed “Going Dark.” The program is being budgeted $233.9 million next year.

According to the published budget summary (.pdf), the program “supports the FBI’s electronic surveillance (ELSUR), intelligence collection and evidence gathering capabilities, as well as those of the greater Intelligence Community.”

An FBI spokesman told ABC News, which first reported the information, that the program’s name, Going Dark, “does not refer to a specific capability, but is a program name for the part of the FBI, Operational Technology Division’s (OTD) lawful interception program which is shared with other law enforcement agencies.” He added that “The term applies to the research and development of new tools, technical support and training initiatives.”

The program is designed to help the agency address challenges with conducting surveillance over newish technologies, such as VoIP. The program is also doing research on automated link analysis to find connections between subjects of surveillance “and other investigative suspects.”

The budget report also discusses a Biometric Technology Center that is being developed jointly by the FBI, Defense Department and Justice Department in conjunction with the University of West Virginia for research and development of biometric technologies. The center is located at the Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division complex in Clarksburg, West Virginia.

The biometric project will also encompass “a vast database of personal data including fingerprints, iris scans and DNA which the FBI calls the Next Generation Identification (NGI),” according to ABC, which could be online next year. Lockheed Martin has been awarded the contract to update and maintain the database at an estimated cost of up to $1 billion a year.

. . . .Tonight, Part 6 of the continuing series from NPR on upgrading the national power grid. tonight's installment The Grid May Be Smart, But Will It Also Be Green?
The push is on to make the nation's aging electricity grid smarter, so it can handle growing demand for electricity. Many assume that a smart grid will also be a green grid — delivering clean electricity and helping to address climate change. But that's not necessarily so.

Giving the grid a brain doesn't necessarily mean it will make green decisions. Likewise, the big push to expand the electric grid into areas rich in renewable energy doesn't guarantee that the new, improved grid will be more climate-friendly.

Smart grid technology means several kinds of innovations. One is that both customers and utilities will be able to monitor electric use, minute by minute. Steve Nadel, who runs a nonprofit called the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, says information alone doesn't make the smart grid green.

"As a friend of mine says, a smart grid needs smart programs needs smart rates," Nadel says.

Smart programs could, for example, help people see how they're using electricity so they can find painless ways to conserve. And smart rates could create incentives for people to save electricity, by charging more at some times and less at others. In principle, cheaper energy should encourage environmentally friendly objectives. But Nadel says not all smart grid experiments make green sense.

"Some utilities have programs to encourage nighttime lighting," Nadel says. "Gee, make your house look beautiful. Make it more secure. Light up like Times Square or something. That's an example. And don't worry, it's only 2 cents a kilowatt-hour. We'll give you a special nighttime discount."

In some cases, people use not only more energy, but dirtier energy, too. That's because in some parts of the country, nighttime electricity often comes from coal-fired power plants. They're usually the cheapest source, so they are used first. When demand is higher during the day, the additional electricity is more likely to come from cleaner natural gas. So in parts of the country that rely heavily on coal power, nighttime energy means dirtier energy.

Nadel says the good news is that smart grid pilot programs so far have largely encouraged conservation.

"Some of them have saved quite a bit of energy," he says. "Some have built some load. The devil is always in the details."

Clean Energy Transmission Lines?

Details also bedevil another feature of the expanded, smarter grid — new transmission lines. In California, San Diego Gas and Electric has been pushing to build a major new power line into the neighboring Imperial Valley. The utility has been selling the idea in part on its environmental benefits.

But California Public Utilities Commissioner Dian Grueneich is skeptical.

"Anybody who's proposing a transmission line in the United States these days is going to claim it's going to be used for renewable — it's going to be a 'green' line because that's mom and apple pie," Grueneich says.

During the public utilities commission's hearings about whether to approve the Sunrise power line, San Diego Gas and Electric said the project would bring huge amounts of clean solar and geothermal energy into San Diego.

The utility was basing its arguments on clean energy sources it hopes will be developed in the Imperial Valley in the coming years. But Grueneich says hopes and aspirations are a lot different from legally binding commitments.

"Existing contracts that SDG&E had signed from this area, the Imperial Valley, would only fill up 20 percent of the line," she says. "And that means the other 80 percent of the power that flows over this line could easily — would likely — flow from coal-fired power plants elsewhere in the Western United States."

The commission voted to approve the line, anyway. Grueneich cast the only "no" vote.

She says this sort of debate is likely to play out nationwide as power companies bid to string new lines while expanding and strengthening the electric grid. Power company investors will make a profit no matter what kind of electricity the lines carry. So Grueneich favors new laws requiring power companies to buy a lot of green electricity.

"This isn't rocket science. We don't need to develop whole new technologies," she says. "We aren't making bets on will we be able to develop a whole new way of doing things. It's just really being serious. If we're going to spend this money and call something green, let's make sure it happens."

And that comes down to politics. Indeed, bills are winding their way through Congress that would help ensure that the smart grid is also green.

. . . .Outta here for now, will continue to update throughout the day.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

13 May 2009

Wednesday

Wednesday May 13, 2009

. . . .Wherever you live in the country you were outright screwed on Wednesday. The Senate rejected a limit on credit-card interest rates. The corruption in Washington is nothing short of disgusting, and while most of the focus is on the White House, the "business" of running the country is handled in the Senate and the House, and they outright screwed us on Wednesday, with the lobbyists and representatives of the credit card companies and banks watching the vote closely. Courtesy of the U.S. Government's website, here is the vote breakdown, with a "yea" vote indicating that your Senator was one of the 30 who voted for it, with the "nay" votes being those Senators who voted to strike down any limit on credit card interest rates:
U.S. Senate Roll Call Votes 111th Congress - 1st Session

as compiled through Senate LIS by the Senate Bill Clerk under the direction of the Secretary of the Senate

Vote Summary
Question: On the Motion (Motion to Waive CBA Sanders Amdt. No. 1062 )
Vote Number: 191 Vote Date: May 13, 2009, 04:24 PM
Required For Majority: 3/5 Vote Result: Motion Rejected
Amendment Number: S.Amdt. 1062 to S.Amdt. 1058 to H.R. 627 (Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights Act of 2009)
Statement of Purpose: To establish a national consumer credit usury rate.
Vote Counts:YEAs33

NAYs60

Not Voting6
Grouped By Vote Position
YEAs ---33
Begich (D-AK)
Bennet (D-CO)
Boxer (D-CA)
Brown (D-OH)
Burris (D-IL)
Cardin (D-MD)
Casey (D-PA)
Conrad (D-ND)
Dodd (D-CT)
Dorgan (D-ND)
Durbin (D-IL)
Feingold (D-WI)
Feinstein (D-CA)
Gillibrand (D-NY)
Grassley (R-IA)
Harkin (D-IA)
Inouye (D-HI)
Kerry (D-MA)
Klobuchar (D-MN)
Kohl (D-WI)
Lautenberg (D-NJ)
Levin (D-MI)
McCaskill (D-MO)
Menendez (D-NJ)
Merkley (D-OR)
Reed (D-RI)
Reid (D-NV)
Sanders (I-VT)
Schumer (D-NY)
Udall (D-CO)
Udall (D-NM)
Webb (D-VA)
Wyden (D-OR)
NAYs ---60
Akaka (D-HI)
Alexander (R-TN)
Barrasso (R-WY)
Baucus (D-MT)
Bayh (D-IN)
Bennett (R-UT)
Bingaman (D-NM)
Bond (R-MO)
Brownback (R-KS)
Bunning (R-KY)
Burr (R-NC)
Byrd (D-WV)
Cantwell (D-WA)
Carper (D-DE)
Chambliss (R-GA)
Coburn (R-OK)
Cochran (R-MS)
Collins (R-ME)
Corker (R-TN)
Cornyn (R-TX)
Crapo (R-ID)
DeMint (R-SC)
Ensign (R-NV)
Enzi (R-WY)
Graham (R-SC)
Gregg (R-NH)
Hagan (D-NC)
Hatch (R-UT)
Hutchison (R-TX)
Inhofe (R-OK)
Isakson (R-GA)
Johanns (R-NE)
Johnson (D-SD)
Kaufman (D-DE)
Kyl (R-AZ)
Landrieu (D-LA)
Lieberman (ID-CT)
Lincoln (D-AR)
Lugar (R-IN)
Martinez (R-FL)
McCain (R-AZ)
McConnell (R-KY)
Murkowski (R-AK)
Murray (D-WA)
Nelson (D-FL)
Nelson (D-NE)
Pryor (D-AR)
Risch (R-ID)
Roberts (R-KS)
Sessions (R-AL)
Shaheen (D-NH)
Shelby (R-AL)
Snowe (R-ME)
Specter (D-PA)
Stabenow (D-MI)
Tester (D-MT)
Thune (R-SD)
Vitter (R-LA)
Warner (D-VA)
Wicker (R-MS)
Not Voting - 6
Kennedy (D-MA)
Leahy (D-VT)
Mikulski (D-MD)
Rockefeller (D-WV)
Voinovich (R-OH)
Whitehouse (D-RI)
. . . .Contact your Senator using Congress.org, and let them know, by e-mail or calling their office how you feel about them jobbing you this badly.

. . . .On the subject of the Senate and House being completely corrupted by lobbying, fundraising and special interests, Robert Borosage, of Our Future:

"And the banks -- hard to believe in a time when we're facing a banking crisis that many of the banks created—are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place"

That was Sen Richard Durbin, the powerful Senate Democratic whip, irate as the banking lobby, with foreclosures soaring across the nation, blocked a core reform for beleaguered homeowners that would give judges the right to modify mortgages in bankruptcy court.

But it isn't just the banks. Agribusiness is protecting its obscene subsidies. The insurance companies are deploying legions of lobbyists to gut the public plan in health care reform, the heart of President Obama's plan. The utilities are carving out exceptions for coal plants. Multinationals are clearly on the way to disemboweling Obama tax proposals. The military industrial lobby is a good bet to frustrate Defense Secretary Bill Gates' modest procurement reforms.

This isn't about America being a "center-right country," the myth that pundits still peddle about the American people. This is about Congress being bought and sold, pure and simple. Each night, Washington slurps on political fund-raisers. Each day, the deals get cut; the favors get done. Now with Republicans lining up lemming-like to obstruct anything Obama, Congress can be bought on the cheap. The lobbies have only to enlist (suborn, bribe, seduce, finance) a few of what the press insists on describing as "moderate Democrats" in the Senate to stop any reform they don't like.

What's often forgotten in this squalid exchange is that the very Americans the legislators preen to represent are the victims of their various corruptions.

In area after area, Americans are suffering from the accumulated corruptions of our moneyed politics. In the fifth labor of Hercules, an arrogant king tries to demean the hero by hiring him to clean out the Augean stables in a day. The stables, containing the largest herd of cattle in civilization, had never been cleaned. Hercules, with a little help from Athena, changes the path of two rivers and quickly washes out the accumulated filth. But no one is about to change the course of the Potomac to cleanse the backrooms and lobbies of Capitol Hill. The only current strong enough to do that is an aroused public angry enough to sweep away those who stand in the way. Despite rumblings, despite growing awareness of the damage wrought by a sordid and selfish era, we aren't there yet.



. . . . .Total television heaven. Lost finished it's 5th (and next to last) season tonight. Finally, after all this time, some viewer's patience is beginning to be rewarded. The first 3 minutes gave a clue that fans of the show have been waiting for now for a very long time, since the beginning, and it looks like it's shaping up to be what those of the philosophical bent thought a long time ago, that the island is a battleground for the eternal battle between choice, free will vs. rigidly imposed order; the balance between light and dark and ultimately, what human free will and choice have to do with that. Why is it that my favorite two shows of all time, Lost and Battlestar Galactica both in the end, dealt with those themes.

. . . .Tomorrow and through the weekend, we'll look at cognitive dissonance, synchronicity, chaos theory and just what the hell rock and roll has to do with it all.

. . . Today's playlist/podcast, more fun stuff. If there's something you want to hear, or just one song that you'd like me to build a themed playlist around, just let me know at any of the many available e-mail addresses or in a comment and I'll do it.

. . . . .
Let me say right off the bat that I am someone who loves my country, and my flag very, very much. I am a patriot. That said, I've put up here repeatedly what the extreme Right wing (and they are not conservative, not Republican, and not pro-America) has continually tried to do, undermine this Administration, undermine and sabotage the President, and in so doing, in this hour of crisis that this country faces, undermine America, undermine us, and watch us fail. Those actions are traitorous, there is not other word for it. Let me be deliberately clear, I use language very, very specifically. I am not calling these people traitors, I am calling their actions traitorous, and they need to rethink their public words and deeds very, very quickly lest it undermine the country that they live in as well.

. . . . . From Jacob Heilbrun, the author of They Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons:

The Cheneys were at it again yesterday. On Tuesday, daughter Liz, who served in the Bush State Department, undiplomatically denounced President Obama on Fox News for agreeing to release photographs of Americans abusing prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq. It's become "fashionable,' she said, "to side, really, with the terrorists."

Right.

For good measure, Pops jumped into denounce Obama's plan for helping the ailing auto companies. And according to the Washington Post, he's going to address the American Enterprise Institute, his stomping grounds before he became George W. Bush's vice-president, on May 21 on how to keep America safe. Presumably, he won't be praising Obama's efforts in Afghanistan, as Max Boot, a genuinely insightful neocon, does today in a superb column in the Los Angeles Times. According to Boot, "If anyone is up to these difficult tasks, it is the A-team that the Obama administration has assembled."

Both Cheneys aren't simply trying to defend the Bush administration's record from being besmirched by lily-livered liberals. One theory is that Papa Cheney has simply lost it, that, as the Washington Post's Eugene Robinson put it, he's a crazy old coot who needs to be shipped out to Wyoming, where he can go fishing with his corporate buddies and leave everyone else alone. But there may be more to it than sheer craziness.

Both Cheneys are also seeking to lay the groundwork for a "Who Lost America?" debate should there be another terrorist attack during the Obama presidency. Just as the right fulminated about liberals "losing" China in the early 1950s, so the Cheneys are ginning up the hard Right to denounce Obama and his advisers as traitors.

Ultimately, though, their snarling has less to do with the Democratic party than the GOP, which is at war with itself. On the one side are the movement conservatives such as the Cheneys. On the other side are cooler heads on the right such as David Frum and David Brooks who recognize that Obama may leave the GOP stranded in the wilderness for decades. For now, the former holds the upper hand as the GOP wallows in its self-righteous indignation about being toppled from power.

But it's already clear that the Cheneys will be active for years, even decades, to come, as Liz profiles herself as the rising star of the party. She's the anti-Meghan McCain -- truculent, strident, abrasive, a zealot. The acorn has not fallen far from the tree. So, friends, whom do you despise more, Dick or Liz?

. . . .
From Paul Begala, prominent Democratic strategist:

If 3,000 Americans had been killed on your watch, in an attack that could have been prevented, perhaps you'd be a little hesitant to accuse anyone else of endangering America. And if you had advocated torture, and the torture produced false information that you used to mislead America into an unwise, unjust and unwarranted war, you might be a tad sheepish about defending the use of torture.

Not Dick Cheney. Mr. Cheney has stepped up his attack on Pres. Obama's security strategy, telling CBS's Bob Schieffer that Obama's refusal to use waterboarding and other "enhanced interrogation techniques" (i.e., torture) endangers American lives.

The truth is the Bush-Cheney policies did not keep us safe, and Mr. Cheney is not a credible spokesman on issues of national security.

First, this awkward fact. When it came time to risk his hide to serve our country during the Vietnam War, Cheney got five draft deferments. He later told the Senate, "I had other priorities in the sixties than military service." John Kerry did not. Nor did John McCain. Nor Gen. Colin Powell, nor Gen. Jim Jones, nor Gen. Wes Clark, nor Jim Webb. These warriors - and so many others - strongly oppose the use of torture. They were willing to die to protect America. It is insulting for a doughy draft dodger like Mr. Cheney to suggest they would endanger us today.

Indeed, the public record offers evidence that torture has endangered American security. Not only by breeding more terrorists, but by producing false intelligence - which Mr. Cheney and President Bush used to mislead America into invading Iraq.

The case of Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi is instructive. Al-Libi was a senior al Qaeda operative captured trying to make his way out of Afghanistan into Pakistan. In US custody, he initially said he knew of no connection between Saddam and al Qaeda, and, according to Newsweek, "he had difficulty even coming up with a story about the relationship between the two." An FBI agent urged that al-Libi be read his rights and be treated with respect, "as a shining example of what we feel is right." There was a practical, as well as moral, reason not to torture al-Libi: veteran interrogators believe establishing a rapport with a prisoner is the key to obtaining actionable intelligence. There are reports that, after hours of bonding with his FBI interrogator through discussions of religion, al-Libi provided useful information about alleged shoe-bomber Richard Reid and Zacarias Moussaoui, the so-called "20th hijacker" who was arrested just before 9-11.

But even after the bonding experience, al-Libi continued to deny a link between Iraq and al Qaeda. He was rendered to Egypt, where he faced certain torture. "You're going to Cairo, you know," a CIA agent reportedly told al-Libi at the airport. "Before you get there I'm going to find your mother and I'm going to f*** her."

So much for building rapport.

In Egypt, al-Libi was placed in a coffin-sized box for 17 hours, then beaten. Al-Libi cracked. He gave the information Cheney and his crowd most wanted: a direct link between Saddam Hussein and al Qaeda. Al-Libi, (who reportedly died this week in Libya), said Iraq had provided al Qaeda with training in the use of chemical and biological weapons.

Bingo! Vice President Cheney and others cited the information to justify the war in Iraq. Trouble is, it turned out to be false. As early as February, 2002 - just two months after al-Libi's "confession" -- the Defense Intelligence Agency reported to the White House and the National Security Council that it had doubts about al-Libi's charge. The DIA's Defense Intelligence Terrorism Summary (DITSUM) all but destroyed al-Libi's credibility. The report said, in part:

"However, he (al-Libi) lacks specific details on the Iraqis involved, the CBRN (chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear) materials associated with the assistance, and the location where training occurred. It is possible he does not know any further details; it is more likely this individual is intentionally misleading the debriefers. Ibn al-Shaykh has been undergoing debriefs for several weeks and may be describing scenarios to the debriefers that he knows will retain their interest.


"Saddam's regime is intensely secular and is wary of Islamic revolutionary movements. Moreover, Baghdad is unlikely to provide assistance to a group it cannot control." (Emphasis added.)

The timing here matters. In December, 2001 al-Libi, under torture, claims Iraq trained al Qaeda in chemical and biological weapons. Two months later, the Pentagon's intelligence agency says he was probably lying. And yet on September 25, 2002, Condoleezza Rice continued to spread the myth, telling PBS's The News Hour, "We know too that several of the (al Qaeda) detainees, in particular, some high-ranking detainees, have said that Iraq provided some training to al Qaeda in chemical weapons development." Defense Secretary Rumsfeld, President Bush and several other leading Administration officials kept banging the al-Libi drum.

In January 2003, the CIA joined the chorus of skepticism about al-Libi's claim that Iraq trained al Qaeda in chemical and biological weapons, noting al-Libi "was not in a position to know if any training had taken place."

More than a year and a half after al-Libi's claim was discredited by the DIA, and nine months after it was poo-pooed by the CIA, Dick Cheney was still sighting it as Gospel, appearing on Meet the Press on the week of September 11, 2003 and telling Tim Russert, "We learned more and more that there was a relationship between Iraq and al-Qaeda that stretched back through most of the decade of the '90s, that it involved training, for example, on BW [biological weapons] and CW [chemical weapons], that al-Qaeda sent personnel to Baghdad to get trained on the systems that are involved."

It may well be that torture was used to advance the Bush-Cheney march to war in Iraq rather than to obtain intelligence about al Qaeda plots against the American homeland. A former senior U.S. intelligence official familiar with the interrogation issue told McClatchy Newspapers, "Cheney's and Rumsfeld's people were told repeatedly, by CIA . . . and by others, that there wasn't any reliable intelligence that pointed to operational ties between bin Laden and Saddam, and that no such ties were likely because the two were fundamentally enemies, not allies." Senior administration officials, however, "blew that off and kept insisting that we'd overlooked something, that the interrogators weren't pushing hard enough, that there had to be something more we could do to get that information," he said.

Next, consider this inconvenient truth: 9-11 happened on Mr. Cheney's watch. Tom Kean, the Republican co-chair of the 9-11 Commission, has said the attacks could have been prevented. He's right. That fact ought to weigh heavy on Mr. Cheney's conscience. As should these:

  • Before they took office, senior Bush administration officials were briefed repeatedly about the al Qaeda threat. Clinton National Security Adviser Sandy Berger told incoming National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, "I believe that the Bush administration will spend more time on terrorism in general, and on al Qaeda specifically, than any other subject.''

  • Richard Clarke, the counterterrorism chief under both Clinton and Bush, presented the new Bush-Cheney administration with a plan to roll back al Qaeda. He briefed Dr. Rice on the plan. Nothing. In February, 2001, he briefed Vice President Cheney on the plan. Nothing. Time magazine has reported, "Some counterterrorism officials think there is another reason for the Bush administration's dilatory response. Clarke's paper, says an official, "'was a Clinton proposal.'" If true, Bush and Cheney were allowing partisan politics to endanger America.

  • On May 8, 2001 - three months after being briefed by Clarke - Cheney was instructed to chair a task force on terrorism. It did not meet before the 9-11 attacks.

  • The FBI asked the Bush-Cheney Justice Department for58 million to beef up its domestic counterrorism capacity by hiring more translators, more field agents and more analysts. The Bush-Cheney Administration told the FBI no.

  • Congressional Democrats sought to shift 800 million in the Pentagon budget from Star Wars (the Bush-Cheney faith-based missile defense system) into counterterrorism. The Bush-Cheney administration threatened to veto the entire defense budget. Congressional Republicans sided with Bush and Cheney, and blocked the Democrats from transferring the funds.

  • In July, 2001, an FBI agent in Phoenix reported that Middle Eastern men - possibly al Qaeda - were taking flying lessons. He suggested that al Qaeda operatives might be trying to infiltrate the US civil aviation system. His warning was not acted on.

  • On August 6, 2001 Pres. Bush received a classified briefing, the President's Daily Brief. On that day, the headline blared: "Bin Laden Determined to Strike in U.S." According to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ron Suskind, Bush told the briefer, "All right. You've covered your ass, now." Dick Cheney, who has called the President's Daily Brief "the family jewels," presumably received the same briefing. Neither Bush nor Cheney acted on it. The "family jewels" were pearls before swine.


And the attack came. Over three thousand Americans were killed. In the heartache and rage that followed, Bush and Cheney instituted their "enhanced interrogation techniques." Uncovering a pending plot against the homeland was, doubtless, an important motivator. But the al-Libi case is a cautionary one. Rather than finding a ticking time bomb, the al-Libi torture may have been used to build a spurious case for war - a war that has weakened America.

Perhaps what's most galling about Mr. Cheney is how, without irony, humility or apology, he holds himself out as someone who has protected America when in fact he shirked his responsibility before 9-11 and misled us into war after. The closest Dick Cheney has ever come to fighting for America is when he shot his lawyer in the face.

. . . . .From Politico, Roger Simon, their chief political reporter, reports on the most startling development yet in this dramedy, the Republican party, as far as I can tell from this one, is officially getting ready to jump off a cliff and commit suicide (cue Jim Morrison singing "The End"):
A member of the Republican National Committee told me Tuesday that when the RNC meets in an extraordinary special session next week, it will approve a resolution rebranding Democrats as the “Democrat Socialist Party.”

When I asked if such a resolution would force RNC Chairman Michael Steele to use that label when talking about Democrats in all his speeches and press releases, the RNC member replied: “Who cares?”

Which pretty much sums up the attitude some members of the RNC have toward their chairman these days.

Steele wrote a memo last month opposing the resolution. Steele said that while he believes Democrats “are indeed marching America toward European-style socialism,” he also said in a (rare) flash of insight that officially referring to them as the Democrat Socialist Party “will accomplish little than to give the media and our opponents the opportunity to mischaracterize Republicans.”
Two other resolutions — to urge Republican lawmakers to reject earmarks and to commend them for opposing “bailouts and reckless spending bills” — are also on the agenda, but language that would have denounced Sen. Arlen Specter, a Republican turned Democrat, and Republican Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins for voting for President Obama’s stimulus package has been dropped.

Steele didn’t want the special session to be held at all. The RNC will hold its regular summer meeting in July, and all matters could have waited until then. But the special session is being viewed by some in the party as a “comeuppance” for Steele and an implied criticism of his performance and behavior in his first 100 days in office.

Exercising a rarely used party rule that allows any 16 RNC members from 16 different states to demand a special meeting, conservatives in the party forced Steele’s hand, and now the special meeting will be tacked onto the end of a previously scheduled meeting of state party chairmen that will convene next week at National Harbor outside Washington.

A further comeuppance — a vote of “no confidence” in Steele — is not being contemplated, I am informed, because Steele’s opponents in the RNC have already won a major victory by forcing him to accept greater controls on how he spends party funds.

Also, while there has been some talk about replacing Steele, few consider that likely, at least in the near future. “Without a Republican

president to decide on that change, that won’t happen,” the RNC member said.

But Steele is not a popular chairman within the RNC, and his recent statements that appeared to attack Mitt Romney and the Republican base have undermined his popularity even further.

Steele was elected to a two-year term as party chairman on Jan. 30 on the sixth ballot, but instead of quietly trying to consolidate power within the party and build up his image, he embarked on a publicity tour that included statements that some in the party considered baffling at best and incendiary at worst.

“He has a tin ear,” the RNC member told me when I asked him to name Steele’s worst problem. “He has a tin ear when it comes to the building (i.e., the RNC staff), the RNC and the party.”

Last Friday, when Steele was guest-hosting conservative pundit Bill Bennett’s radio show, a caller suggested that Romney would have been a stronger candidate against Barack Obama than John McCain but that liberals and the media had pushed for McCain to win the Republican nomination.

The caller was, perhaps, not making the most intellectually rigorous of arguments, but in his answer Steele seemed to outdo the caller.

“Remember, it was the base that rejected Mitt because of his switch on pro-life, from pro-choice to pro-life,” Steele replied. “It was the base that rejected Mitt because it had issues with Mormonism. It was the base that rejected Mitt because they thought he was back and forth and waffling on those very economic issues you’re talking about.”

Steele, who himself has said that abortion is a matter of “individual choice,” was opening old wounds not only by attacking Romney but also by suggesting the Republican base is bigoted when it comes to Mormons.

“His job should be to get everybody to sit down and focus on a message for the party and then get them to be the messengers,” the RNC member told me. “Steele wants to do the right thing, but he is clueless as to how the RNC really runs.”

. . . .I linked and copied all 3 of these in whole mainly so that I cannot be accused of parsing, nor of lifting what I want from them. What they mean to me is simple, there is an all out assault on our government happening, and we cannot stay silent, we cannot afford that at all. This goes beyond praying for them or sending good intentions their way, it is important, now more than ever, to stand our ground, to speak the truth and to defend our country, our flag and our President, there are dark, evil forces at work that would see him fail, and in so doing, see us fail. There are different ways to voice dissent, and the extreme Right seems to choose not to follow those ways, and when someone you know sends you an e-mail, or speaks out with some garbage, stop them, and point out the facts.

. . . . . . .Bill Clinton basically laughed Dick Cheney off on Wednesday saying "it's over" and "wishing him well" and that he "hopes he gets more target practice before he goes out again"

. . . .I support President Obama's decision to block the release of photos showing the abuse of detainees. It happened, of that there is no doubt. It does no good to satisfy this country's voyueristic need to see something sensationalistic and privately get some sort of ghoulish enjoyment from it. Revisiting that past, and that abuse will do no good and will not serve to move us forward. I also support his stated decision to not pursue legal prosecution of members of the former administration, this would set a dangerous precedent for any other future administrations, don't like what the guy before you did? Prosecute him. Unh-unh, this is not the way to go and will not help, again, further us towards a progressive, populist society and representative government.

. . . .From reader Kay M. she sends this one in, a letter that she sent today to the Senators of the State of Michigan:
My Senators and Representatives,
In great pain, I wrote my President today about the plan to shut down auto dealerships here in the States while allowing GM to sell autos made in China as their own, and his statement that the "few individuals" that have been identified as involved in publicly disclosed torture have "been dealt with" and there is no need for further investigation or public disclosure about America's use of torture. I have blind copied everyone in my address book on this email - even my business sources - because I am strongly inviting them to demand some accountability from Washington DC and the President.
First let me say that I am a registered Democrat. I voted for the Obama/Biden ticket, I contributed financially to this campaign and to the Democratic party at both the State and Federal levels, and I made phone call and knocked on doors for Obama. So it pains me greatly to say that I have lost faith in him. He is not keeping his campaign promises - nor his word during prior press releases - about the auto industry, federal transparency, and the issue of America using torture.
1) GM plans to import >17,000 cars to sell in the US from China by 2011, and >51,000 by 2014. In a press release on March 30th 2009 the President is quoted as saying "If you buy a car from Chrysler or General Motors, you will be able to get your car serviced and repaired, just like always." I don't know how he can make this statement while allowing (requiring?) small &/or franchise GM & Chrysler dealers to be closed. Many dealers fitting Chrysler's criteria for closing are rural, located far from urban colleagues to which their local populations would have access. With the high cost of everything, lower wages and high unemployment, I'm not sure the President and his Auto Industry Task Force have considered that a significant portion of the rural population will not be in a position to take advantage of his quoted guarantee of service and repair for Chrysler & GM vehicles when there is no dealership in their area.
The closing of 1000-1200 GM franchise dealers and 800 or more Chrysler dealers will leave a minimum of 28,000 out of work. If GM closes the dealerships quoted previously, these numbers will be even higher - up to 42%, or 2,940 dealerships (based on 7,000 total current dealer estimate in http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122688631448632421.html?mod=article-outset-box). Because they are no longer protected by their state's laws, closed dealerships will not be able to pay debts already on the books, which means their suppliers will not be paid either. As the suppliers go out of business, the costs associated with their unemployed will add to the financial burden, as will the costs incurred as the former employees are no longer able to pay bills or make house payments. In addition, almost 20% of a state's sales taxes typically come from auto dealerships.
Franchise dealerships do not directly cost auto companies anything. The cost of having more dealerships than a particular area needs is indirect. The cost of closing dealerships is direct. The market takes care of closing dealerships that do not offer reasonable prices or good service. We do not need a mandate for this - we need to allow the market to correct itself. All closing dealerships is going to do is reduce competition among dealers, leading to higher costs and lower repair standards due to the lack of competition.
2) My second rant has to do with this whole business of not publicly and transparently reporting on those who have committed torture. The world (and the US) needs to know that we are accountable as a nation and, therefore, trustworthy. This means public committees exploring the issue, and public trials of those found suspicious of committing the crime. If anyone was given an order to do so, their superior should be placed on trial - NOT them. Soldiers follow orders or they get court martialed. Their commanding officer is the one who should be charged for any criminal conduct sanctioned or ordered by them. If any of these behaviors were legal at the time, nobody involved in these should be questioned at all, though I do hope we become more transparent and accountable about the current rules of engagement.
"The publication of these photos would not add any additional benefit to our understanding of what was carried out in the past by a small number of individuals," Obama said. http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/05/12/prisoner.photos/#cnnSTCVideo
I think we all know that individuals were NOT responsible for torture policies. His stance and statement smells like obsfucation to me.
Write everyone you know. Blog about this. The current White House is beginning to look no less fascist to me than the prior one right now. They are just better at selling it. Tell Obama's administration that we expect them to hold up their end of the deal - Change toward a more accountable and transparent government FOR the people.

. . . .And in the continuing series from NPR on upgrading the national electrical grid, Part 5 - Getting Constant Current From Fickle Winds:
Like lots of other farmers and ranchers in the northern Plains, Joel Keierleber has been flirting with wind power developers for years.

He knows his grassy slopes near Winner, S.D., have world-class wind, but there's always the same hitch: There aren't enough transmission lines to carry the electricity from rural areas like his to the big cities where the electricity is needed.

If the country is going to meet President Obama's ambitious green energy goals, the transmission system has to link up the places that offer the best chance of producing lots of clean energy, such as the sunny Southwest and the windy Plains.

Keierleber's property is considered Class 6, or "outstanding," for a wind farm, but it's bone-chilling for people. Even on an early spring day, it feels like it's in the low teens. In the winter, with the wind chill, it can be 80 degrees below zero.

"Your face will be numb before you get 10 steps," Keierleber says. "And if it hits you just right, you won't be able to breathe for a little bit. It will take your breath away."

Because of all the wind, Keierleber has to feed his cattle more, and his neighbor can't keep siding on his house.

"That's why you want to see wind towers. Then you'll at least see some good out of it," he adds.

In Keierleber's large kitchen, he unfolds a map that shows lots of properties near Winner that have been optioned by one wind developer or another. He says one reason ranchers here are so eager is that this place has never been good for farming. He only makes a profit three years out of five.

The latest wind developer to come courting is Scott Conant, from a small Wisconsin company called Prelude Wind Farms.

As recently as last fall, Conant had never heard of Winner, but after about 18 trips, he's learned the contour of the land, the speed and consistency of the wind, and the desire of local residents to host wind farms.

"I think that there's no doubt this area could be a 1,000-tower project, and maybe more. The whole package is right here," Conant says.

The Wind's There, But The Power Lines Aren't

Well almost. The only thing it lacks, Conant adds, is transmission lines.

One evening last month, Conant and another wind developer joined a couple hundred farmers and ranchers at Winner Middle School to hear a pitch from a transmission company called ITC Holdings Corp.

For more than a decade, wind developers have been salivating over windy places like this, but balked at building turbines without transmission lines. And utilities wouldn't string the lines without the wind farms. ITC wants to break that impasse, with a $12 billion transmission project.

"Who comes first, the generation or the line? That's been the problem that's probably plagued the transmission industry for the last 30 years. And that's why no transmission has been built," says Joe Dudak, a vice president of ITC, which is based in Novi, Mich. "We think you build it first, and you're there the same time the wind energy is there."

ITC's project would carry 12,000 megawatts of electricity from the northern Plains to Chicago and points east. That's enough electricity to power about 4.5 million homes. Dudak says the current grid is not up to the job of bringing green power to millions of homes and businesses — it's a patchwork of transmission lines strung decades ago by utilities — mostly connecting big polluting power plants to local customers.

"There is no superhighway system, and there's not enough room right now. The system is terribly constrained right now," he says.

Dudak hopes that concerns about climate change and new laws that mandate clean power will translate into a green light. "It's possible we can be breaking ground in two years," he says.

Jumping Hurdles To Wind Development

ITC already passed its first hurdle with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, but it still needs lots of money and federal and state approvals to build its piece of a transmission superhighway, which it calls the green power express.

ITC is also awaiting an analysis from the Midwestern Independent Transmission System Operator, which is like an air traffic control tower for the electric grid in 13 states.

At the Midwest ISO's control room in Carmel, Ind., talk of a major increase in wind power sends chills down the spine of Rob Benbow, a grid manager. Before dawn on a spring morning, Benbow and a few dozen grid operators are shouting electricity jargon at each other in front of a massive curved screen that's 20 feet high and 150 feet long.

As people in the Midwest wake up and turn on coffee makers and hair dryers, the operators make sure enough power is being generated to match the surge in demand. A warning signal alerts them that a power plant has unexpectedly turned off. This time, it is someone else's problem. But Benbow worries that when wind power makes up a significant portion of his grid's electricity, managing it will cause him frequent problems.

Unpredictable Wind Makes Power Management Tough

"My biggest fear is if you see 20 percent wind on your system, and then it comes off at a time period where you don't have resources to replace it — that's going to, could, result in a blackout situation," he says.

Wind power is not predictable. That morning, the wind is steadily producing about 3,000 megawatts — about 5 percent of the total power being used in the region. But Benbow says he's seen wind power become increasingly variable as more wind farms come on line. And grid operators can't order wind plants to produce like they can other power plants.

"If the wind is not blowing, you just don't have that resource available," he says. And when the wind is blowing, it can be hard to make wind turbines shut down. "A lot of these plants are not manned — if we need to turn them off, we have to send a person out to actually do that," he says.

Lots of other things about wind frustrate the Benbows of the world — wind blows hardest at night when electricity demand is lowest, there currently aren't ways to store wind for later use, and you can't count on it on hot summer days when you need it most.

"You can put all that wind in, but I still need to have all this other generation that I need to have available — all my coal, nuclear, all the gas — for my peak load day," Benbow adds.

So when Benbow thinks about the new wind turbines and new transmission lines carrying their energy toward his control room, he sees more than clean energy. He also sees a lot of headaches coming his way.

. . . .Outta here. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the precious moments before they pass through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets out alive, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right fucking here and now. This ain't no dress rehearsal.
Got your back, out there in the night somewhere.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

12 May 2009

Tuesday

Tuesday May 13, 2009

Today's playlist: it's Red Dirt Tuesday. Red Dirt bands are based out of the Oklahoma/Texas border and almost universally answer the question "Are you a rock band or a country band?" with the same answer. "Yes".

. . . .Pet Peeve: "I don't like my job"
- just ask the 5.1 million who've lost theirs since this recession began whether or not they'd like a paycheck, even for a job they didn't "like". That's why it's called "work" for those nitwits who don't get that. The other one, where we get to do what we like, when we like, without the pressure of deadlines or expectations or producing something is called "time off". That would be time without pay, OK?

. . . . .#2 Pet Peeve: Entitlement
- That would be the one where someone who has some bare minimum level of education, some skills (of any kind), and 10 fingers and toes and is able-bodied does nothing at all, but expects that the money will keep coming in from some agency, some branch of government or an individual to enable them to continue to do what they like, when they like, at their own pleasure and pace. That's my, and other people's like me, money, that I've sweated for and earned. I realize jobs are few and far between right now, and many people got put on the street, but for God's sake, don't just sit and expect it, and act like you're entitled to it, pitch in, volunteer, go help at the church, the shelter, the mission, somewhere, anywhere, there's so many people in need right now.

. . . .Cognitive dissonance - Liz Cheney comparing her father, Dick Cheney's waterboarding fight to Al Gore's climate change fight

. . . .Eugene Robinson in The Washington Post this morning on Cheney - "The Old Faithful of Nonsense"

This is the crux of Cheney's "argument," and I put the word in quotation marks because it isn't really a valid argument at all. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the Bush administration approved programs and methods that previously would have been considered illegal or unacceptable: arbitrary and indefinite detention of terrorism suspects, waterboarding and other abusive interrogation methods, secret CIA prisons, unprecedented electronic surveillance. Since 2001, there have been no new attacks on what the Bush administration creepily called the "homeland." Therefore, everything that was done in the name of preventing new attacks was justified.

The fallacy lies in the fact that it is impossible for Cheney to prove that anti-terrorism methods within the bounds of U.S. law and tradition would have failed to prevent new attacks. Nor, for that matter, can Cheney demonstrate that torture and other abuses were particularly effective.

Other high-ranking officials from the previous administration, including George W. Bush himself, have had the manners and good sense to follow long-established custom and refrain from attacking the new president and his policies. Cheney, however, is not only accusing President Obama of knowingly putting American lives at risk -- an outrageous charge -- but also diving headlong into partisan politics.

Schieffer asked him about Rush Limbaugh's assertion that the Republican Party would be better off if Colin Powell left and became a Democrat. One would think that Cheney would have at least a measure of respect for a longtime colleague with whom he had served in two administrations. But one would be wrong.

"Well, if I had to choose in terms of being a Republican, I'd go with Rush Limbaugh, I think," Cheney said. "I think my take on it was Colin had already left the party. I didn't know he was still a Republican."

Let's see: Given a choice between a former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and secretary of state who has given to his nation a lifetime of exemplary public service or an entertainer who brags about how much money he makes from bombast and bluster, Cheney would go with the gasbag. This is advice that's supposed to help the Republican Party?

I really think Cheney would be happier if he were home on the range. I'm sure the deer and the antelope would enjoy listening to what he has to say.

. . . .
Paul Abrams on Cheney's lifetime pattern of sabotaging the security of the United States in reverse chronological order:
#4. Releasing the detainee memos
#3. Outing Valerie Plame
#2. As CEO of Halliburton, carrying on (illegal) business with Iraq and Iran
#1. As Congressman, voted against banning plastic guns
. . . .Go back to shooting your friends whilst on hunting excursions Dick and leave the rest of us along, we've got a country that we're trying to repair from your 8 years of Darth Vader imperialist rule from an undisclosed location.

. . . . .From NPR, Part 4 of the on-going series on repairing/renovating/upgrading the national electrical grid:
Tammy Yeakel had an unusual request for her 44th birthday present: a storm door. This stay-at-home mom from Allentown, Pa., got the idea from the Web site of her electric company, PPL Corp.

When PPL put a smart meter on Yeakel's house, she didn't even notice at first. But when the company launched the Web site to help customers use information from the meters to save money, it brought out the passionate kilowatt-pincher lurking inside her. It's become her new obsession.

"I love this site," says Yeakel as she clicks through bar charts of her family's energy use. "I called PPL and said, 'Did you design this for me?' Because I'm one of these people who love to know where my dollars [are] going and how can I save."

President Obama wants to use stimulus money to help install 40 million smart meters nationwide to help Americans save electricity and money. Smart meters can track energy use daily, hourly, monthly and even instantaneously, and send that data to power companies. The advanced meters can save companies money, because they no longer need meter readers, and they can fix outages more efficiently.

More Than Just Meters

But PPL and other utilities that have begun installing the smart meters are finding that you need more than just the meters to help customers save power — there needs to be some kind of informational device, like a Web site, that will tell customers how much power they're using.

For Yeakel, PPL's site helps her analyze her family's energy use and gives her lots of tips on ways to cut back. She got that storm door, she switched to compact fluorescent light bulbs, she wrapped her water heater and hot water pipes with insulation, and she keeps going back to the Web site for more ideas.

"I went around with the foam insulation, and where I could see leaks outside from my basement, I squirt them," she says energetically. Her electric bills are about 20 percent lower than they used to be, and she's beating the competition.

"This is one of my favorite things," Yeakel says, reading from the computer screen. "How does my home compare to similar homes in my area? And I'm always about $120 less than everybody. So that's kind of neat. That's like vacation."

Monitoring Home Usage

One recent afternoon, Tom Stathos from PPL is looking over Yeakel's shoulder as she clicks through the site. He notices that Yeakel's electricity use surges upward around 8 p.m. and asks her to explain what happens in her house at that time.

"My husband comes home," she says. He turns on the television and lights, leaves doors open and starts cooking. "We're always behind him turning everything off," Yeakel says with a giggle, adding that even her 4-year-old twins pitch in.

Stathos says that so far, Yeakel is unusual. Overall, PPL customers use 20 percent more electricity than they did 20 years ago. Many people don't realize how much charging iPods and cell phones adds to their electric bills. And some new products, like flat-screen plasma TVs, are electricity hogs, even when they're not being used.

Yeakel says PPL's site has changed the way she thinks about energy.

Making Smart Choices

"For Christmas, we got one of those nice digital pictures. And everyone says 'Why don't you leave it on?' Cause it's an energy sucker, right? I learned that on the Web site."

Stathos says that's a great example of how the site can help people save power.

"It's not a matter of doing without — it's just a matter of making smart choices," he says. "The meter is the absolute direct connection with the customer. So this is definitely the start of a smart grid," Stathos says. With information from the smart meters, PPL is launching a new pricing program. It's offering two rates — one during times of peak energy use, and a cheaper, off-peak price. The company hopes this encourages customers to use less power when electricity is priciest. And Stathos says that's just a beginning.

"I've got some brainstorms about the things I'd really like to do," he says. For instance, Stathos wants to give customers handheld devices — similar to TV remotes — that they could use to monitor their energy use and scale it back without leaving their armchairs. "I don't think that's far-fetched," he adds.

Some electric companies say they hope to use smart technologies to reach into their customers' homes and actually turn thermostats up or down, change settings on water heaters or tell refrigerators not to defrost.

In fact, in the future, when electric cars are popular, some utilities even hope to be able to store power on their customers' electric vehicles and put it back on the grid when they need it.

. . . .From CNN, top Administration officials say that 750,000 new jobs will be created from the stimulus package by the end of the President's next 100 days.

. . . . .Again, from CNN, this interactive at the jump here shows where the approximately $2.7 trillion spent so far to fix the economy has gone, or is intended to go.

.. . . From Open Congress, H.R. 1728, the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act passed by roll call vote on May 7.
. . . .Again, from Open Congress, S.414 the Credit Card Accountability Responsibility and Disclosure Act of 2009, the one sponsored by Sen. Christopher Dodd of Connecticut is still in committee. I like this one, it's a little stiffer with the credit card companies than the House version, and one provision says that if you miss a payment, and the company jacks your rate to an unbelievable rate, it must go back to it's original if you make your payments on time for 6 months.

. . . .From the Nation, Rep. Carolyn Maloney, the original sponsor of the House bill (H.R. 627) for Credit Card Reform and her views on "Credit Card Holders Have Rights Too":
Momentum has shifted in Washington toward credit card reform. After passing the House last fall, the confluence of Barack Obama's longtime interest in credit card reform, federal regulators' implementation of new regulations, Senator Christopher Dodd's renewed championing of the issue, and the massive bipartisan margin of victory in the House (357-70) on my Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights two weeks ago, the Senate is, as I write, grappling with the task of finding sixty votes.
The sensible, balanced provisions in my bill are the result of well over two years of coalition-building and negotiation begun after Democrats regained the majority in the House in 2007. I held numerous roundtables, six Congressional hearings and many individual meetings to determine how Congress, federal regulators and credit card companies could work together to help improve services and protections for card holders. On a parallel track, after an administrative finding that card company practices were "unfair" "deceptive" and "anti-competitive," the Federal Reserve drafted new rules governing card issuers. When posted for the comment period last summer, these garnered over 60,000 public comments, leading to the Fed's vote last December to implement their new regulations in July 2010.

The Fed's finding confirmed what many of us in Congress have been saying for years: responsible re-regulation of the financial services industry is needed to correct unfair and deceptive practices. I reintroduced the Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights (HR 627) this year with House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA) and 128 cosponsors.

HR 627 draws a line in favor of consumers by banning most retroactive rate increases on existing balances (except where the card holder is thirty days late in making payment) and increasing notification of any interest rate hikes going forward to foty-five days. It also stops the annoying tricks and traps that cost card holders money: due-date gimmicks, misallocation of payments on balances with different interest rates, double-cycle billing; and it bans issuance of cards to minors.

It goes further than the Federal Reserve's rules by banning so-called "pay-to-pay" fees, by giving cardholders the right to set a "hard" limit on their credit line if they choose (or if they'd prefer, allowing them to opt in to an over-limit program for a specific fee) and establishing new data-reporting requirements for the industry so that regulators, legislators and the public may monitor the impact of card-holder and industry practices.

The Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights would also be better than the regulators' rules simply by virtue of being in statute--with the full force of law--changeable only by the courts or future legislation, and immune to the pressures of any future administration that might prefer more lax enforcement and oversight of the credit card industry. In opposing HR 627, card issuers argue they will be forced to cut credit lines, increase rates and restrict issuance of new cards. But who are they kidding? Card issuers are already massively reducing credit lines and increasing interest rates, even on customers with good credit scores and flawless histories of paying on time. And their use of fear-mongering rings hollow: these companies also opposed this measure in good times, using different arguments, long before the current economic crisis.

The Senate is poised this week to begin debate on their version of credit card reform, where Senator Christopher Dodd's Senate Banking Committee reported his "Credit CARD Act" (S. 414) to the Senate floor by a one-vote margin in March.

American credit card holders need the protections from arbitrary rate hikes and exorbitant fees now more than ever, as many turn to their credit cards to help pay bills, buy groceries and make ends meet in this economic crisis.

There's still more Congress can do to help consumers. I've reintroduced my Banking Hotline bill (HR 1455), which establishes a single toll-free number and website to help consumers register complaints about their banks. And my Overdraft Protection Act (HR 1456) brings overdraft fees--which have exploded with the rise of debit cards--under the Truth in Lending Act, has already had a hearing in March before the Financial Institutions and Consumer Finance Subcommittee.




. . . .Slate, today launched a new women's website, DoubleX, in their own words a "new site for smart women"

. . . .I've held off just a bit from publishing anything about the marijuana legalization debate for a while now. To me, it's a simple proposition, legalize it, period. I say that as someone who's been clean and sober for over 28 years now, who does smoke cigarettes (far more deadly) and drink coffee, and gets headaches when he's not had enough caffeine. Alcohol is legal if you're over 21, and again, alcohol is addictive, and deadly. A large chunk of my friends (in their late 40's and early 50's) still smoke dope, and they don't have a problem with it. My addictions and my problems with mood-altering substances are precisely that, my problems. What I will say is this, when I was younger and getting high, the most violent I ever got when smoking dope was shoving someone out of the way because they were going for the last box of Bugles. Drinking was an entirely different story, I drove drunk, drove in blackouts, endangered others, and the surest way in my community to see a fight was to follow me through a night of drinking. Legalizing what is right now the largest cash crop in California, Alabama, Kentucky and countless other states would lead to a revenue tax stream that would pull a lot of states out of their budget problems. Do you know that the Mexican drug lords fear far more than the U.S. Army? Legalization. The simple fact is that legalizing the sale and use of marijuana would cause an instant drop in the murders on the Mexican border as the cartel leaders down there found themselves in competition with American farmers. As for any other practicality, America still leads the world in two things, drug use, and number of people in prison (yes, we beat Russia and China), most of them, over 68% there for non-violent drug related offenses. I sooner my tax money go to something else. Is it a gateway drug? I don't know, I'm not qualified to say, but I know this, regardless of whether or not it's legal, it's use will still continue, and I dare to surmise, the number of people entering treatment programs and joining 12-Step groups for their addictions won't probably spike upwards, but would stay about steady.

. . . .Outta here, I may add more later on today. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do. Seize the precious moments before they fall through your hands. This rodeo is a one-way ticket, and no one gets out alive, and there ain't no tomorrow. It's about right fuckin' here and now, this ain't no dress rehearsal. Go change your life, and you'll change the world.

Love y'all, got your back out there in the night

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

11 May 2009

Monday AM further

Monday May 13, 2009

. . . .
Further on Monday A.M.

. . . .Good morning, playlist and podcast are activated again this AM. If you want to watch the videos that I put up over the weekend whilst everyone was having a Saturday night and doing Mother's Day, go up to the upper left hand side of the page you're on here, look at the little podcast player called Podbean, and in the narrow bar near the top there are 3 small green buttons, click the middle one to pause the podcast, and that way you can either read in silence or play the videos below without crossfeed. And remember just subscribe to this column as an RSS feed, and you get the music that I play every day and capture it as an MP3 file. And remember that the previous 30 days worth of columns is all available down below, so you can get caught up.

. . . . .From this morning's New York Times, Paul Krugman, one of the economists who has been right all along and a progressive, liberal critic of the Administration weighs in with his opinion of the news announced yesterday and today about the policy work being done on health-care. His opinion? Solid praise for the Administration, Orszag, the budget director and the health care industry trade associations that are trying to hammer out a policy.

The signatories of the letter say that they’re developing proposals to help the administration achieve its goal of shaving 1.5 percentage points off the growth rate of health care spending. That may not sound like much, but it’s actually huge: achieving that goal would save $2 trillion over the next decade.

How are costs to be contained? There are few details, but the industry has clearly been reading Peter Orszag, the budget director.

In his previous job, as the director of the Congressional Budget Office, Mr. Orszag argued that America spends far too much on some types of health care with little or no medical benefit, even as it spends too little on other types of care, like prevention and treatment of chronic conditions. Putting these together, he concluded that “substantial opportunities exist to reduce costs without harming health over all.”

Sure enough, the health industry letter talks of “reducing over-use and under-use of health care by aligning quality and efficiency incentives.” It also picks up a related favorite Orszag theme, calling for “adherence to evidence-based best practices and therapies.” All in all, it’s just what the doctor, er, budget director ordered.
. . . .More on the developing policy here.

. . . .And of course, the nutjobs on the extreme Right who want to see America fail, so they can become a ruling class have stepped into this one too already. Click here to see this one from The Washington Post describes how the same folks who "swiftboated" John Kerry are stepping it up on health-care reform already.

. . . .Former National Security Adviser Richard Clarke this morning on a subject near and dear to my heart, how to operate as a Nation and a National Entity in the cyber-world:
The reasons that this decision is important have been spread across the media this last month. Among the facts revealed are that foreign intelligence services have penetrated the control systems of the US electric power grid and have left behind "logic bombs" and "trap doors;" data about America's latest fighter aircraft, the F-35 Lightning II, has been copied off the networks of defense contractors and sent overseas; the Pentagon plans to appoint a new four star general to run a new Cyber Command based on the National Security Agency (NSA); and a National Academy of Sciences blue ribbon panel has urged caution about the US engaging in offensive cyber war.


. . . . .Gary Sargent, over at Who Runs Gov, a Washington Post cybersite puts this one up this morning, and it appears that the White House will release the "holy grail" of torture memos, thus granting Dick Cheney his wish, and I don't think this is going to turn out the way Mr. Cheney envisions it:

Government officials familiar with the CIA’s early interrogations say the most powerful evidence of apparent excesses is contained in the “top secret” May 7, 2004, inspector general report, based on more than 100 interviews, a review of the videotapes and 38,000 pages of documents. The full report remains closely held, although White House officials have told political allies that they intend to declassify it for public release when the debate quiets over last month’s release of the Justice Department’s interrogation memos…

Although some useful information was produced, the report concluded that “it is difficult to determine conclusively whether interrogations have provided information critical to interdicting specific imminent attacks,” according to the Justice Department’s declassified summary of it.

. . . . .From the Daily Beast today, this one here that breaks news of a new study, a respected one that suggests that those with disorders in the autism-specturm do not lack empathy, but in fact, the root cause of what goes on with them may be the fact that they empathize with others too much, feel others emotions too deeply to cope.

. . . . .4 very different visions of an alternate reality: Wolverine X-Men Origins - Star Trek - Terminator: Salvation - Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Which one would you choose, which one is more "real" to you, which is the one that you'd wish the world would be. All 4 are actually quite different in their vision of reality, and the answers you give are quite telling.

. . . . .From Nicholas Ciarelli, a new search engine launching this month, may well kill Google, and is one of those unique singularities (see my earlier entries this month on chaos theory, nodal points and unique points that change everything) that may completely change the way we use the Internet and World-Wide Web
Step away from your Google search for a moment and consider the following scenario: What if a search engine, instead of giving you a long list of Web pages, simply computed the answer to whatever question you threw at it?

. . . . Part 3 of the NPR Series on upgrading the national electrical grid:
To create a new energy economy using much more solar and wind power, the Obama administration needs to build thousands of miles of new transmission lines. Despite the promise that these are needed to get more green energy from solar and wind generators, the proposal faces a host of obstacles.

Chris Miller, president of the Piedmont Environmental Council and an advocate of renewable energy, points out that new transmission lines may not be dedicated just to "green" electrons.

"There is a real potential that what you are expanding is the capacity to move coal-fired electrons," says Miller, "and that the cheapest power supplies, which are the dirtiest plants, will have access to markets they didn't use to."

And here's something else to consider: Does everyone really want renewable energy brought in from distant producers over power lines subsidized by the federal government?

Maybe not, says Ian Bowles, the energy secretary for Massachusetts. Bowles says that might undercut homegrown wind projects in New England. "When you decide upfront [that] transmission is the problem, you've put your hand on the scale and said, 'We want to help out particularly those remote sources of wind and green electricity.' "

The man picked by President Obama to resolve these questions is Jon Wellinghoff, the new chairman at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

"I think everybody has to play ball," Wellinghoff says. "I think that we have to realize that we're all in this together, and that nationally, we do have a huge problem."

In Whose Backyard?

Wellinghoff says local and state politics can be daunting. "You have to do siting. Where are they going to go? And that's where you get very contentious," he says. "In whose backyard are you going to run the line?"

For a power line to cross 10 states, each of those states must approve that siting.

Wellinghoff hopes he'll soon have the authority to overrule states if they balk. FERC had that power until recently when a federal court took it away, and now the Senate Energy Committee is writing a bill that would give it back to FERC. The bill has strong support from members of Congress who want to see a new grid built quickly.

Energy Secretary Steven Chu says that no matter how much authority it has, the Energy Department shouldn't play the bully by simply declaring eminent domain when it wants to build a new line. He says states and citizens have to be partners, and enjoy some of the benefits.

"If you just go in and say, 'I'm going to pass a law that has a huge stick,' " Chu says, "what will invariably happen is that you end up in lawsuits."

Among these uncertainties, one thing is sure — making the grid smarter and greener will cost a huge amount of money. Chu says that could be well over $100 billion over several decades.

Reid Detchon, director of the Energy Future Coalition advocacy group, says Americans have paid big money for a collective benefit before.

"If you accept that there's a national objective here, just as we did with the national highway system, then you create the national authority to expedite that at the federal level," Detchon says.

Eventually, that national authority will have to decide who's going to pay for the new grid.

. . . . .What I hope that the recent, (and still current) fears and warnings about the H1N1 virus really tell us is that it just isn't a good damn idea to cram birds or pigs in together so closely in our factory farming in an effort to increase our "efficiency" at food production. Did some research and pulled this "old" Rolling Stone investigative piece out from 1998:

We have been living in a tenuous stasis with influenza for 30 years. Every 12 months or so, a slightly new variant of the flu virus circles the globe, bringing illness and death to a relative few. That's because most of the population is already immune to enough of what remains, genetically speaking, of the previous year's strain. During this "interpandemic" phase, as scientists call it, about 10 to 20 percent of the population contracts the illness each flu season, which reaches its peak in January and February in the Northern Hemisphere. One percent of those who get the flu are hospitalized; 8 percent of all hospitalized flu patients die — about 20,000 Americans annually, most of them elderly. The cause of death is typically flu-induced viral pneumonia.

Eventually, however, an "antigenic shift" will occur, producing a superflu — a strain to which no one has immunity — and initiating a pandemic with unknown consequences. The passage of 30 years without a pandemic suggests to some experts that we are long overdue.

"We all have the emotional sense that we've been lucky so far," says Stephen Morse, director of the Program in Emerging Diseases at Columbia University's School of Public Health. "And I think everyone feels that, you know, it's there — it's brewing. What's tragic is that we cannot predict it?. We're all waiting."

One of the more remarkable aspects of the influenza virus is the way it jumps between species, often from the world's waterfowl population — which is considered by many scientists to be influenza's primary reservoir — into other animals and human beings, forming new recombinant viruses along the way. For this reason, influenza will never be eradicated. And given the speed with which dangerous new flu strains can evolve, most scientists consider existing flu surveillance, which includes 110 sites in 79 countries, to be grossly inadequate.


. . . .That's why I consider the CDC's refusal to accept disease surveillance data from this company, Veratect, almost criminally negligent. This is cutting edge stuff these guys are doing, monitoring almost 10,000 news feeds simultaneously, blogs, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc and doing data-mining, then analysis, all based on what people are putting out into cyberspace, kind of a macro iReporting, like CNN's effort, only a larger scale.

. . . .Saw the new Star Trek, way, way over the top and incredibly geeky cool. I cried at the end when You-Know-Who's voice did the ageless "These are the voyages. . . ." voiceover. Can't give away any plot for those who haven't seen it, but trust me, Zachary Quinto will never need to be Sylar again in his life. Just as Leonard Nimoy became Spock, Zachary is a worthy replacement, and it's the part he was born to play.

. . . .Outta here, I'll continue to update throughout the day. Kiss you kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands, this rodeo is a one-way ticket and no one gets out alive, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, but right frickin' here and now, this ain't no dress rehearsal, so get up off your butt and go do something.

The Desolation Angel
[where: Hell, Michigan]

Monday morning

Monday May 13, 2009

. . . .For those of you that missed it, which was probably everyone due to it's being Saturday night, and the night before Mother's Day, the monologue delivered by Wanda Sykes at the White House Correspondent's Dinner on Saturday night was absolutely priceless, and shouldn't be missed, so for your viewing pleasure. . . .



And Part 2. . . . .



And as long as I'm on a video roll, one of my favorite, intelligent commentators, Henry Rollins on civil liberties and freedom



And as long as we're that this roll, Lewis Black on issues of faith and science



If you missed or don't watch Bill Maher, you're missing it, from this week's New Rules segment and closing monologue:



And his best segment this week, a dissertation on Joe the Plumber:


06 May 2009

Almost there, home ain't that far away now

Friday May 8, 2009

. . . .The playlist! Diversity rocks folks, just listen and enjoy!

. . . .Back in play

. . . .Time for solutions people. I'm gonna ask you to scroll down and refresh yourself on what I was referring to on two things, chaos theory, which isn't about chaos at all, and the ability to see nodal points, those points where all the information flows together to give an image of what's really going on.

. . . .The figures came in yesterday. Another half-million jobs lost in April, to bring the grand total now since the "recession" officially started to 5.1 million jobs lost. The other startling figure from yesterday is that 20% of American homeowners are now listed as having "negative equity", that is their mortgage obligations are now larger than their listed home.
. . . .So, the scamsters are at work now attempting to make money off people's misery and put them into a worse position. The only 'official' Governmental site for troubled homeowners is Making Home Afffordable.gov. If you're in trouble on your mortgage, or know someone who is, have them check the site out and see if they're eligible for relief.
. . . .As a skilled tradesman, as someone who always worked with his hands and is first and foremost, before anything else, an electrician, I recommend a site called Blue Collar and Proud of It, started by a tradesman himself, a great resource for getting trained in a trade and finding a career in it. The only way we're going to recover this economy is if we start to produce something again. We've had 30 years of Reaganomics and a trickle-down "service" economy and we all can see what it's gotten us, a global Depression. What made us great ws manufacturing and buildingand we have to start doing that again to make the dollar a dominant currency again.

. . . .The results of the bank "stress" tests are in, and the results are grim. It looks like the banks will need at least another $65 billion in capital, you can check out this interactive chart from the Wall Street Journal this morning here, along with the full report.

. . . . .I've said it before, I have an extreme distaste for bailing out the banks, especially since their "toxic assets" are the results of their buying ito AIG's Joseph Cassano's derivative scheme (read earlier entries for the history of how this whole mess started), but we have to, period. That's what most people don't understand, we don't have a system in place in this country in order to move away from a banking based credit system, and aren't ready to move to a cash or barter economy, which would be the alternative.

. . . . And with the dollar worthless, it's not a viable option anyhow. The Chinese yuan is right now the dominant currency, they've won and never fired a shot. The Chinese literally right now cannot spend the U.S. dollars they own fast enough, and are buying the world up; real estate, ships, mining equipment, buying U.S. and other county's debt, it's incredible.

. . . . .Star Trek opens tonight and I'm geeked, as an old Trekkie myself and an admirer of J.J. Abrams work on Lost, I wanna see what he's done with it. Also the rumors of Leonard Nimoy's appearance as Spock Prime makes me wonder just where they're taking this plot.

. . . . . .One of the most important things you can do with your dollars is watch your credit cards. The proposed credit card legislation was introduced in the House and was put on the Senate floor this week. The legislation is consumer-friendly and is designed to make the companies ease up on late fees, the fine print in the agreements, etc. you can track the legislation at Open Congress.org.
The House Version is at H.R. 2007 on Open Congress,
The Senate Version is at S.414 on Open Congress
Two others I'm tracking right now through the same site:
H.R. 1728, the Mortgage Reform and Anti-Predatory Lending Act
S.909 The Matthew Sheppard Hate Crimes Prevention Act.

. . . .And yes, I'm completely disgusted with the North Carolina congresswoman who called Matthew's death a "hoax", she needs to be voted out next term.

. . . . .I really, really don't care what your opinion of global warming, global cooling or climate change is. If you live in the United States and have lived through the weather the last couple of weeks and don't understand that our climate is changing and it's not for the better, and it is the largest threat we face to our children and grandchildren, you're a fool or lying to yourself and others, it's that simple. I work in the Gulf of Mexico, many of my friends live in the Deep South, and I live in the Upper Midwest on the Great Lakes, I get to see it all. Floods from Kansas to West Virginia, an unending rain storm in the upper Midwest, stronger and stronger tornados, temperature extremes, and now, a brand new type of straight line tornado that the media is trying to pass off as old hat, and having been here all along, a 'derecho', which is a straight line storm with winds in excess of 70 MPH that can stretch on a front 250 miles long. No, it's not old hat and it's new, I don't care what the TV says. You'd have to be blind, ignorant fool to sit there and say "Hey, the climate's not changing, what are they talking about?"
. . . .Sure, that's why the National Security chief delivers a separate report to the President every morning on climate change and it is now listed as the #2 threat to National Security.

. . . . .Part 2 here of the series I started last week from NPR on upgrading the grid, which is the most economical, efficient and fastest way to get some energy savings and efficiency going in this country. Remember, the actual figures are simple, around 4% of the energy required to light a simple light bulb in your house is what makes it there from the power plant. Around 96% of the energy that is initially required is lost along the grid due to inefficiencies:
The Obama administration wants to rebuild the national electric grid that delivers power to everyone's toasters and televisions. One reason is that the grid can't handle all the new solar and wind power the president wants to build to create a greener energy economy.

Here's the problem: Solar and wind power are intermittent. Sometimes it's sunny, sometimes it's not, and it's the same for wind. But the grid needs constant and reliable sources of power.

What's the answer? One solution, says Imre Gyuk, a researcher at the Department of Energy, is to store that energy. Gyuk and engineers at power companies have an idea for how to do that.

"You put a large number of small batteries around a neighborhood," Gyuk says, "just like the neighborhood transformers — just a little green box that's innocuous."

By small, he means about the size of the battery in a hybrid car, and it would be hooked up to the grid. In fact, DOE and American Electric Power, a large utility, plan to use batteries made for hybrid plug-in vehicles to create such a constellation of storage sites. The batteries are charged when there's surplus power — say, on an especially windy day —and then tapped on a cloudy or windless day.

"If you have these storage units sitting throughout the community, then you can simply withdraw half an hour's worth of storage to make up for the wind," Gyuk says.

Spinning Storage

The Department of Energy is plowing more than $600 million from the government's stimulus package into storage technologies. Another possible solution is something called a "flywheel" — a spinning metal rotor, floating in a vacuum inside a steel cylinder.

Gene Hunt, communications director at Beacon Power in Massachusetts, says one of the company's flywheels spins at 16,000 revolutions per minute.

"It's the same principle as that of a potter's wheel," he says. "The potter's wheel is powered by the human foot, pumping the pedal up and down. It turns this wheel which has a certain weight, it brings it up to a speed, and when you take your foot away, it continues to spin. It's using the energy that's stored in there."

A small amount of electricity is needed to keep the flywheels spinning, and the machines store that power as rotational energy. Beacon is building flywheel "farms" that can return that energy as electricity in short bursts when operators need to meet a spike in demand on the grid.

Sharing Power

There are other ways to store electricity for the grid: Water can be pumped up into an elevated reservoir when electricity demand is low (and electricity production is in excess); then it can be released to flow through turbine generators to make more electricity when demand is high.

But all these devices need software to keep them linked to the grid. That's something a company called GridPoint does. Karl Lewis, the company's chief strategy officer, says the idea is to allow utilities to draw on electricity in household storage devices when customers don't need it, much like a virtual power plant.

That "shared" power could extend to electric cars. As the car wanders around the grid, Lewis says, "we know where the car is, where it's plugged in, how much energy it needs. And what happens is that the car becomes a smart charging asset available both to the consumer and the utility."

Lewis acknowledges that some people may not want the utility to know where they are all the time. He says people would have the choice to participate in a program like this. But, he adds, hooking up to the new grid as an energy partner may ultimately mean cheaper utility bills, and more wind and solar electrons running Americans' appliances or cars.

. . . .I think it's because people don't know, but you're probably spending between 300 and 500 dollars a year on your own electricity bill at home by not calling up me, or someone like me, to come into your home and for around 200 dollars, having us go through it and do some simple checks and work that would make your home that "electrically efficient". Call me, or your local electrician, it'll be worth it in the long run, and save you money back in your wallet you need.

. . . .Cognitive dissonance, thank you Dave P. for that wonderful discussion around that this week. Cognitive dissonance is holding two contradictory ideas in your head at the same time, and making an attempt to believe both. In that light, my buddies from the extreme Right, those who would see this country destroyed because they're no long able to exert their imperialist power:
Rush Limbaugh, Idiot #1 on Colin Powell
Joe (not his real name) The Plumber (no, he's not a plumber): "I don't want my children growing up near queers."
One of my favorite nutbags and hate-monger morons, Rep. Michelle Bachman of Anoka, Minnesota, a summary of her best moments.
And of course, we can't forget Sean Hannity, who this week finds fault with the President actually putting mustard (for God's sakes!) on a hamburger.

. . . . I'll update more throughout the day. Good to be back. Kiss your kids, tell the ones you love out loud that you do, seize the precious moments before they slip through your hands, this rodeo is a one-way ticket and none of us gets out alive, and we don't get to dictate the terms and circumstances of how the ticket gets punched, so it's not about yesterday or tomorrow, it's about right fucking here and now, this ain't no dress rehearsal.
This is the sight, the sound and the words of me taking a chance and putting it out there, regardless of what people think, what have you done for yourself lately? This is me changing my life.
Love you all, got your back

The Desolation Angel

05 May 2009

Even more fun with aircraft . . . . .!!!!



Tuesday May 5, 2009

 

. . . . .Ummmm!!! Nummers!!! New ethnic taste treat courtesy of our Filipino galley staff. . . . fish eyes and fish eggs cooked up in their own broth!. . . .Oh Boy!

 

 

. . . . . .Day 2: Broken bird on landing pad had a fire, that was the minor problem. Two mechanics brought out by boat last night looked younger than my neice's son, not confidence inspiring. Neither was the process of (a) work on engine for a while (b) run downstairs to frantically dial an outside line and get instructions (c) run back upstairs and work a while more (d) repeat process endlessly throughout evening. Finally quit working around midnight, how do I know? Guess who mechanics were berthed with? I'm having sooooo much luck.

Dawn breaks, a new day, fresh start, fresh perspective, it'll be all different now. . . .it is. . . .another broken bird back on the beach . . . .guess it was lonely. . . .Mechanics start new round of (a) work on engine (b) run downstairs, make phone call, wait for fax (c) run back upstairs to work some more (d) repeat process in endless loop all morning long.

Confidence factor in human ability for flight with mechanical assistance:

ABYSMALLY LOW!!!!

 

. . . . .Cravings and urges for chocolate milkshake and root beer float continue unabated, now joined for unbelieveable hunger for some of my own spaghetti sauce.

 

. . . .Youngest son e-mailed me his grades this morning, God I'm proud of him.

 

. . . .Back to politics I suppose soon, Bernanke testifying in front of Congress this morning, results of the stress tests not good, 10 of 19 banks will need capital. That sucks.

04 May 2009

Starting it up

Monday May 4th, 2009
 
. . . . . I do very sincerely regret not taking Spanish as a second language. Not only do I need it in my job anymore, half of the places I work would got a lot smoother if I could understand the native language of the people who worked there as well.
 
. . . . .Two freakin' broken helicopters last week meant 2/3's of the Gulf of Mexico West fleet that we use was out of commission. Today's breakdown of one on our platform completes a trifecta, 100% of the fleet. Now, every damn one of them has broken down out here in the Gulf. I am not the only one who is not happy! We all want to go to work in one piece and go home in one piece, and ever since the bad crash in January, that killed 7 of us, we're nervous enough. This shit ain't cool at all.
 
. . . . .The only saving grace is that the galley stocked up on ice cream, and we have Rocky Road, and Black Walnut and Butter Pecan to boot.
 
. . . . .I miss my sons, and I'm proud of them, they did damn good in school this semester and they make me proud every day.
 
. . . . .Movie madness coming at me when I get onshore. Wolverine, Star Trek, and Terminator:Salvation all in one fell swoop, I swear it!
 
. . . . .I have good friends, and I miss them.
 
. . . . In case you haven't figured it out, sometimes even us muckrakers, gadflys and watchdogs need some rest time.
 
. . . . .It's a good life, sunrise at sea today let me know that.
 
. . . . .Now if only they'd quit screwing with my calendar so I could make some plans, it'd be an incredible life, like way, way over the top. After all, I only represent an organization and coach people in planning an absolute schedule 3 months out, now if only my organization could set a calendar for those of use who teach it for more than 48 hours out, now that would only make sense.

03 May 2009

Sunday's wrap-up

Sunday night wrap- and musings
 
. . . .I want a chocolate shake so bad right now, I can't stand it. The urge is overwhelming and there isn't crap-all I can do about it, it'll be one of the first things I do on Thursday.
 
. . . . A couch! I am now the owner of a couch for the place. No more perching on director's chairs or trying to get comfortable on a backless daybed to watch TV. I can't wait. And for cheap too! I truly am taken care of and loved! Thank you!
 
. . . . .I miss Bloom County, and the learnings of Opus the Penguin, and the profound wisdom of Bill the Cat! AAACCCKKKK!
 
. . . . .I miss Little League and slow spring evenings
 
. . . . .Tell you what, have it work out so that you wander on over into the Gospel Tent at the New Orleans Jazz Fest and spend an hour listening to the Greater Antioch Full Gospel Baptist Church Mass Choir, then have Aaron Neville walk into the tent with his brothers and bring the house down. I don't care who you are, you WILL be a believer, at least for a little while, it'll hang with you and the joy and spirit is infectious.
. . . . .Then go catch Doctor John playing in his hometown, and cap the day off with the Kings of Leon. Wow!!
 
. . . . .I'm old enough now that I've finally figured out what I want to be when I grow up. A roadie. Right back where I started, so long ago, working sound and lights for bands! Why not? I'm in a position now where I can, and on top of that, I'm good at it, I still have a perfect ear for what sounds good, and maybe this time around I won't do the things I did then that brought it all to a screeching halt whilst I pursued the youthful path of self-destruction.
 
. . . . .I miss my boys, it'll be good to see them at the end of the week.
 
. . . . .There truly is something seductive and peaceful about the sea, but as today's kick-off meeting for the 2009 Hurricane season reminded me, it does come at a price.
 
. . . . . That and young helicopter pilots that just came back from Iraq/Afghanistan and still think they're in combat. We're old guys going to work, and 45 degree banked turns at speed just truly aren't necessary.
 
. . . . . .I need to pray badly, need a lodge, I think there's a couple going on just after I get back, I hope so.
 
. . . . . .My landlord just is not the sharpest knife in the drawer, had to say that.
 
. . . . . .I'm tired, guess I'm finally getting caught up with myself, and seeing where I need to rest.
 
. . . . . .The cycle of life sometimes is hard, but there truly isn't anything more rewarding or painful that spending those last few weeks with a loved one.
 
. . . . . .I'm damn proud of my two boys, you done good this semester boys, you done good.
 
. . . . . The pretentiousness of some people is the only thing that can sustain them in this world I think, their worldview is so rigid and fragile, that they need to invent to stay sane, elst they will go insane. Their worldview gets so set, and this world can be chaotic and hard, that if they were to have reality put to them all at once, it would literally shatter their world, and they wouldn't be able to take it.
 
. . . . .I miss my dog, still, real bad. I don't let people know how much, but I miss Jake, real, real bad.
 
. . . . .Till the morrow, parting is such sweet sorrow. And all that jazz!
 
 

01 May 2009

And so it begins

Thursday/Friday April's End - May's Beginning


. . . .Playlist is nothing but instrumentals written for guitar, some of the best guitarists around, legends all, and absolutely no Satriani or Eric Johnson; strictly lead guitarists for bands, who know how to work within a band concept. Of course, the three greatest; Duane, Stevie Ray and Jimi, now gone from us, reserved for last, you'll have to listen to it all the way through to get to them.

. . . . .Absolute movie heaven! X-Men Origins: Wolverine opens today, in 1 week it's Star Trek, and in two weeks Terminator:Salvation. I sincerely hope that all 3 movies are as good as their trailers, I get really tweaky when I watch those trailers. Being my age, and having read the X-Men comics since they were first published, I was very skeptical when the movies first came out, Wolverine is an iconic character for the Marvel brand, and I thought it would be well nigh impossible to get him right on film, but Hugh Jackman has done an incredible job in bringing a fictional character to life and giving him breath. Christian Bale's intensity brought to the screen revived the Batman franchise, let's hope he can do the same for the Terminator franchise.

. . . . .Which leads me to muse, who do you want, when the chips are really, really down, having your back? Butch and Sundance? Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday? or my choice, Woodrow Call and Gus McRae?

. . . . .Oh yeah, and by the way, Happy May Day or Beltane to everyone. As for me, I'm really wishing I could be celebrating it in the old ways, for those of you who know what they are. If you don't, don't ask, you don't want to know.

. . . . . .I left the post from the start of the week up for a while, I wanted to make sure that the points got made that I felt needed to be made. What's happened now, in the intervening 3 days has only reinforced some of what I was trying to say about chaos; that is, it's not really chaos, or disorder at all, even seemingly random jumps or leaps can be seen to be part of an overall pattern, and if you can see the patterns, the way the nodal points are coming together, then you can see the pressure points, and see what, how or where the nudges need to take place.

. . . . . Bear in mind, all any of us can do is nudge, but remember that we can't completely predict the outcome, nor does any one of us have the control over that outcome. All we can do is be prepared for those "random" jumps or leaps.

. . . .BTW, that new Dylan really is that damn good, incredible sounding. It's amazing to me that someone can stay so productive and creative, but that just may be the secret to longevity, keeping the brain active, both the creative side and the logical side, who knows?

. . . . . I stumbled across Jurassic Park the other day on the TV, and remembered that it was one of the few movies to get it right, but also remembered that most people were so entranced with the CGI dinosaurs that they didn't pay attention to the dialogue, which was vital, and lifted straight from the book.

. . . . . Michael Crichton made no secret of the fact that the theme of his book was really, randomness, in nature. That nature cannot be controlled. The supposed secret of the island was that only male dinosaurs had been cloned, so there could be no breeding. But frog DNA was used to "fill in the gaps", and to biologists at least, it's a known fact that in single sex populations, frogs have been known to make a spontaneous, entirely natural sex change to ensure continuity and prevent extinction, therefore the fatal mistake by the scientists who created the park, the assumption that somehow they could entirely control nature, and ignore the probabilities in a chaotic system of jumps or leaps that were in the possibility range.

. . . . .Same for any virus. A virus, or a population of viruses wants to live. They replicate, they consume their host, and they will do anything to survive; evolve, mutate, combine with other types of virus to create a new type. Anything, anything at all to survive. Sound familiar?
. . . .And, reiterating a point, it's not "swine flu", it's a genetic mutant, a tripartite combination of swine flu, avian flu and human flu, which is continuing to mutate as it evolves, therefore, it's proper name; H1N1.

. . . .NPR has been doing a really good series all week this week on the grid. Improving the efficiency of our power grid, making it smart, upgrading it, is probably the biggest bang for the buck we can get on improving our efficiency in improving energy usage, lowering our emissions, and putting more money back in people's wallets that doesn't or shouldn't have to be spent on electricity bills.
The series titled Power Hungry: Reinventing the U.S. Electric Grid is factual, and gives the research behind why we have to do it, and what can reasonably be accomplished to get it done.
To start, before I start publishing the 10 part series, click the link here for a great interactive map that gives a complete, total picture of the current U.S. Power grid. It's actually quite fascinating, and gives a very good picture of the current, fragmented, fractured state of the grid.
- Part 1: An Aged Electric Grid Looks to A Brighter Future

The nation's electricity grid is facing some huge challenges — it's outdated and unprepared for increasing demand and a future that includes more renewable sources of energy. In a weeklong series, NPR is examining the state of the nation's electricity infrastructure.
The economic stimulus bill passed in February includes $11 billion to upgrade the country's power grid, but that's just a down payment on a massive undertaking. That's because when it comes to electricity, not much has changed since Thomas Edison fired up the first commercial power grid in lower Manhattan on Sept. 4, 1882. The fundamentals he pioneered are still the basis for an electricity grid in the U.S. that is almost 100 percent reliable. But in recent years, that grid has started showing weakness.
On Aug. 14, 2003, a lot of people in the northeastern U.S. learned that they couldn't take reliable electricity service for granted anymore. A utility in Ohio failed to trim a few trees, causing a surprise outage that rolled across the region. Eventually, it left 50 million people without power for about a day. The risk of blackouts still exists in just about every region of the country.
"At this point, I think we are most vulnerable in our inability to quickly build transmission lines where we have congestion," says Arshad Mansoor, a vice president at the Electric Power Research Institute. Mansoor's group predicts that without big changes, the grid will become increasingly unreliable within just a few years.
He says the vulnerabilities are most evident in parts of the country with a lot of people, like New Jersey, New York and Washington, D.C., and other areas of the Northeast, as well as West Coast cities like Los Angeles and San Diego.
Not Ready For The Future
The existing grid also is not ready for a future that includes more wind and solar power. That's because keeping a grid running is a delicate balancing act — to avoid outages, the amount of power you put in must equal the amount taken out.
So the electricity you're using right now was created just a few seconds ago — most likely at a coal or gas-fired plant that an operator can ramp up or down to meet demand. But renewable energy sources, like wind or solar power, don't work like that.
"On [some] days, you would be lucky to predict wind at 10 percent accuracy," Mansoor says. With difficult-to-predict demand on one side and difficult-to-predict production on the other, it could be almost impossible to manage the grid manually in the future. That's where something called the smart grid comes in.
Digitizing The Grid
In its most basic form, the smart grid adds a computer cable to the electrical wire. With data points all along the system, computers can then manage the grid much faster and more efficiently than humans could.
Boulder, Colo., is set to become the first U.S. city with a smart grid. The local utility, Xcel Energy, has upgraded much of its network in the city and is in the process of installing new meters that also will give customers and the utility a lot more information about how and when energy is used.
Eventually, Boulder customers will be able to log onto a Web site at work and change settings for appliances and their heating system. And the utility will be able to tap into electricity stored in customers' plug-in electric hybrid cars during peak demand times.
The smart grid "is like taking us from the rotary dial phone to the iPhone overnight," says Sandy Simon, director of utility innovations and SmartGridCity at Xcel Energy.
Not only that, but it's expensive — more than $100 million just in this city of 100,000 people. Imagine every home, business, utility pole and substation in the country, and you start to get a sense of how much this undertaking will cost.
. . . . .OK, back over to the facts on the H1N1 virus:
. . . . .I've heard a number of people say that it's not at pandemic proportions yet, that the numbers of deaths are small, and localized. That's not the issue. The issue is that CDC and WHO use epidemiologists who are mathematically trained these days in, guess what, chaos theory. Their job is to try and get a handle not just on one possible model, but all the models, and go for the ones (multiple) that have the highest probability of occurring. That's why your local hospital is gearing up for it, why most hospitals right now in cities and large to medium size towns are setting up wings to be prepared for it. We live in a society in which the shocks we receive in the news now are too large, too significant, we're inundated with them. I don't mind the hospitals and municipal, state and federal governments going through the exercises. I expect that this strain of it will be a "non-event" within a couple of weeks, but it will be it's third or fourth pass around the world, as it continues to mutate and evolve that will get serious. Same as bacteria developed into MRSA and antibiotic resistant strains, soon a flu bug, like this one, will go through enough mathematical mutation permutations to become completely resistant and a super-virus. This particular one we're seeing now may be, in the future, known as it's grandfather or great-grandfather.

. . . .The other half of that, for me, is that we've lived with a previous administration who believed that no information, half-truths and innuendo were the best way to keep the citizenry informed so that we always lived in a shadowy world of partially formed fears and boogie men in the closets. I'd much rather have the facts, all the facts, and be able to make an informed decision based on those facts. It's not hysteria or panic when the light of day is shone upon it.

. . . . .Synchronicity time, this same attitude does apply to the torture memos, and any investigations. Same statement as above, we lived with an administration who did their work in the shadows, just outside the range of sight, sound and comprehension, and as a result, as a society we contracted a virus, that of turning our heads or not believing that it could happen, or justifying what we did. Just around the corner to the light of day folks, our rock and roll preacher has been trying to tell us that for about, oh . . . 30 years now.
. . . .I'll not even touch the ethical portion of torture today, or get into that moral quagmire as to whether or not it saved human lives by condoning it and practicing it. My opinions in that area are known. From the more practical standpoint, that of being someone who likes to have a plan when going into battle, and who has some loyalty to the people who stand behind me, in the long run, the practice of torture made our American servicemen and women fundamentally unsafer. For generations, our enemies and opponents in battle knew that if they flew a white flag of surrender, they would be treated humanely and this made them more prone to give up a fight, and less prone to keep on fighting. Now, what incentive is there for an enemy combatant to surrender? As a soldier, I know that I wou