couch dope
The average gamer, far from being a teen, is actually a 35-year-old man who is overweight, aggressive, introverted — and often depressed.
our disease of ignorance
The Washington Post:
5 Myths About Health Care Around the World
- It’s all socialized medicine out there.
- Overseas, care is rationed; limited choices; long lines.
- Foreign systems are inefficient, bloated.
- Cost controls stifle innovation.
- The most persistent myth of all:
America has ‘the finest health care’ in the world.
We are the people with the most costly, confusing bureaucratic mess. Almost all advanced countries have better health statistics than the United States.
We should learn how our nation can be frozen in lies.
A very important reason companies argue against national reform is that there are currently few regulations over any type of insurance. Congress and the courts have avoided the insurance sector since the early 1800s.
Today, it’s health insurance firms worrying about losing their structure of regional monopoly, a very longtime favor:
Why is the American health system so crazy? Why do Americans spend so much more than anybody else for outcomes that aren’t a lot better? Well, we talk about the health market. We don’t have a health market. We have 50 state markets.
And although there are many, many insurers, in many states there are only one or two who are active.
probably a good thing
George W. Bush most vacated president notes CBS.
977 days of vacation, 2.68 years, 33%:
Yes, that’s 487 days. And Camp David is not even where the president has spent the most time when not at the White House: Knoller reports that Mr. Bush has made 77 visits to his ranch in Crawford during his presidency, and spent all or part of 490 days there.
next-gen fuel refinery
Continuous multi-nodal biomass, because 80% of all land suitable for crop production is already being used for other purposes.
June 2009:
The Plantagon Greenhouse was elected ‘Most Sustainable Innovation’ at the Globe Forum Investor Conference in Stockholm.
nation
Our junk theology of us:
sloppy killing
There’s more than enough slop to pay for sick.
Here’s an industry that loudly protests the high cost of liability insurance and the injustice of our tort system and yet will not wash their hands.
My dad became a statistic—merely one of the roughly 100,000 Americans whose deaths are caused or influenced by infections picked up in hospitals.
One hundred thousand deaths: more than double the number of people killed in car crashes, five times the number killed in homicides, 20 times the total number of our armed forces killed in Iraq and Afghanistan.
how to grow a bridge
For a tribe in India, whenever and wherever the need arises they simply grow their bridges.
Roots are guided over a river until a sturdy, living bridge is produced.
The root bridges, some over a hundred feet long, can support the weight of fifty people.
no bulbs to switch
NASA Tech Brief:
Approximately 57% of electric energy generated in the USA is consumed by industrial electric motors.
to beg your carbon
What say a rap performed in Beijing?
Let’s look into the future and see the opportunity
Wind turbines will spin with great velocity
Solar panels will provide a clean revolution
To wean us off coal, and get rid of the pollution
Solar wind geo bio all on the table
But they are missing the tech to enable
A paradigm shift, power grid face lift
Better be swift, clean energy’s a gift
That must be delivered in a different way
Distributed and digitized, wouldn’t you say?New energy is cool and all but I have to beg your pardon
Cause in the end it’s all about the carbon
We have to account for the emissions we made
Gonna be a carbon price under cap and trade
CDM, CER, AAU, EUA,
It’s a new language, parlez vous carbonais?
Supplementarity caps and additionality
Rising emissions are a solemn reality
So many targets that are yet unmet
Psh, have you ever even bought a carbon offset?Yo but for real we gotta keep our heads straight
There are so many emissions that we must abate
I’m not sure if we can wait
The earth’s warming faster, we can’t be too late
But the world is changing, now Obama’s leading
It’s the sun’s energy off which we’ll be feeding
Financial crisis here, but we won’t back down
Put a smile on your face, I don’t want to see no frown
Clean energy is the future, we all know that
Global warming’s going down, ‘nuf said about that.
demolition of cornucopianism
William R. Catton Jr., Professor Emeritus, Washington State:
Abundant evidence suggests industrial civilization must be “downsized” to curb damage to the ecosphere by the “technosphere.”
Trends behind this prospect include prodigious population growth, urbanization, cultural dependence upon ravenous use of fossil fuels and other nonrenewable resources, consequent air pollution, and global climate change.
Despite prolonged Cold War distraction and entrenched faith that technology could always enlarge carrying capacity, these trends were well publicized. But there remain eminent writers who persist in denying that human carrying capacity (Earth’s maximum sustainable human load) has now been or ever will be exceeded.
Denials of ecological limits resemble anosognosia (inability of stroke patients to recognize their paralysis).
Some denial literature resembles their confabulations (elaborately unreal stories concocted as rationalizations).
Denial by opponents of human ecology seems to be a way of coping with an insufferable contradiction between past convictions and present circumstances, a defense against intolerable anomalous information.
the never choice
Please note. Our issues and protests are generally dumb.
Health insurance is an oligopoly at best and in many states a monopoly with one provider having more than 70% market share.
relaxing with pollution
Burning candles made from paraffin wax — the most common kind used to infuse rooms with romantic ambiance, warmth, light, and fragrance — is an unrecognized source of exposure to indoor air pollution.
“An occasional paraffin candle and its emissions will not likely affect you.
“But lighting many paraffin candles every day for years or lighting them frequently in an un-ventilated bathroom around a tub may cause problems.”
Candles made from bee’s wax or soy do not release harmful amounts of indoor air pollutants.
A bespoke design firm in Tokyo is making candles from waste cooking oil.
Filt “waste oil” candles combine recycling with nice packaging to make a product that looks good, smells good, burns well. [story]
lingering stink
If all people could have memories transferred directly into their brain, feudalism could finally end.
loops in the carbon cycle
There’s 2 billion square feet of Self Storage, 10 miles by 7 miles under roof, but the largest single energy bill in the USA is for 3 billion square feet of offices, research centers, and military bases managed by the U.S. government – heating, cooling and lighting about 10 by 10 miles. That’s enough space for 80 million Christmas trees consumed each year which could absorb 1,200,000 tons of CO2. Since carbon emissions are valued at roughly $50 per ton, that’s about $60 billion per year which could fund the annual uninsured portion of health care if all federal employees stayed home. 🙂
double and double again
How Health Insurance Premiums Are Eating Up Middle Class Income
Employer-sponsored health insurance on path to $23,842 per family by 2020, according to a new Commonwealth Fund report.
Middle and lower income families could end up priced out of health insurance.
black is heat
To my surprise soot alarms come and go.
nobody lookin’ out for us
Economic policy we can understand. Not.
“Six unemployed people for each available job”
we must be pointed
When we know where to go, we walk perfectly straight. When confused, we walk in circles.
Dr. Jan Souman confirms humans really do walk in circles and we shouldn’t trust our senses.
to fumigate dumb
up to 175 lbs per acre:
Methyl iodide – iodine mixed with methanol and red phosphorus – is so reliably carcinogenic that it’s used to cause cancer.
The largest market is California strawberries.
organic vs conventional
Mystery in the muck:
The organic vs standard ag debate is worthless but not because there is no issue to debate so much as because the debate is uninformed and superficial.
We really would benefit from getting higher quality information widely reported so that growers could respond to sensible market pressures rather than cynically meeting a nonsensical checklist that increases the value of their crops for no logical reason.
It can also be argued that this is an ethical issue of huge proportions since those who suffer the most from organic nonsense are the food insecure people in developing countries, those who can least bear the costs of this nonsense carry the largest burden.
newest economic engine
China got greened?
The new economic engine for China shall annually invest 1 trillion yuan into low-carbon technology development – $150 Billion each year until 2050.
“The money would be mainly used to introduce technologies that would raise the energy efficiency of end-users in industry, construction and transportation,” Bai Quan, another panel member, was quoted as saying by The China Daily.
China has signaled that it may be willing to adopt carbon intensity targets relative to economic growth and to make a huge investment in “new energy”, including nuclear, solar and more efficient coal plants.
Performance of officials to be measured not just by how they spur economic growth but also by the environmental soundness of that growth.
the neuron wars
Military folks are always telling stories, notice. They seem to know they’re doing it too. Here’s today’s. A creepy story about weapons that target brain function.
water deep in the mantle
Gary Egbert:
We don’t really know how much water there is on Earth.
There is some evidence that there is many times more water below the ocean floor than there is in all the oceans of the world combined.
outsourcing going south
Wal-Mart Hacienda:
Importing from China four years ago was 22% cheaper on average.
By year-end 2008, however, the average price gap with the U.S. had dropped to a mere 5.5%, which is often not large enough to be worth the hassle of sourcing something from halfway around the world.
The more surprising reversal is the comparison with Mexico. While China was around 5% cheaper on average than Mexico in 2005, China is now 20% more expensive. link to Brian Schwarz


