no place to go

Hole in the EarthNo, not fantastical to flood Sudan.
Or stilt Manhattan.

But it’s time for a bridled mind, not only scientific nor squinty faith, but a West of Yesterday bravado, against blood but guts willing.

Cathedral fall and we are more. Prove otherwise.

Catch up and take us along.

Jus’ tell gloomers you’re building new apartments, Apocalypse Circle by Upturn Associates. You know, those signs they put up at developments; something for everyone and a’ that.

There were two entrances to the Hollow Earth.

Hurry.

the next Rush Limbaugh

Sarah Palin, the next Rush LimbaughInside Radio reports Sarah Palin is making overtures to networks.

“The main objection to Palin as radio talk-show host is that she would have to hold forth for three hours a day.

“While some of her recent remarks may indicate a talent for improvisation, anyone who’s listened to Rush Limbaugh or Thom Hartmann or Don Imus or Howard Stern or even Ryan Seacrest knows it’s the rare personality who can blab extemporaneously for 15 hours a week.”

obama’s extermination plan

Puhleeze. The hidden threat in health care as circulated by mercenaries of the insurance industry:

Baby Boomers will begin retiring in multitudes, expecting to reclaim the hard earned money they have been paying into Social Security. But this Health Care Bill, HR3200, has other plans for them.

Those 65 and older will be required to undergo mandatory “end of life” counseling to determine if they are worthy to continue to not only live, but take much needed resources from those who are younger and more worthy to receive them.

Counselors will be trained to discuss how to end life sooner, how to decline nutrition and hydration, how to go into hospice, etc.

This will not be done without coercion.

For those who have amassed assets enough to take care of themselves in their old age will have these assets confiscated in the name of fiscal responsibility, because by this time, every citizen will be entered into a national database under the guise of improved efficiency.

This database will be run by a type of “star chamber” appointed by the president, that will determine whether or not you deserve the much needed operation your personal doctor thinks you need.

…and seniors will be the victims

And of course they’re selling books and stuff. I won’t offer the link.

At a recent town hall meeting, a man stood up and told Representative Bob Inglis to

Keep your government hands off my Medicare ”.

The congressman, a Republican from South Carolina, tried to explain that Medicare is already a government program — NYTimes

Did you ever think of this really really scary issue?

If there’s a public health system, employees of the insurance companies would go to work for the government!!

we, the rickety bridge

Mark Morford at SFGate:

This is the amazing thing about rabid global economic recessions combined with volatile environmental collapses combined with a tasty national identity crisis combined with a truly historic, revolutionary president combined with a gnawing sense that our species might not be long for this world after all combined with the overwhelming sense that something, somewhere, something big and meaty and interesting and maybe even profoundly and butt-shakingly unexpected, has got to give.

A tiny example, signifying nothing: California state parks. They say our new, brutally slashed budget means that upwards of 100 of our beloved public pastures will just up and close. No hiking, no camping, no poison oak, no pissing in the wind. They say, furthermore, that Mexican pot cartels are already gleefully swooping into these selfsame parks and cranking up pot production to “epidemic” proportions, simply because the government can no longer afford to monitor and police them, and it’s prime growin’ land and, well, why the hell not?

Really, we as a country haven’t really been this unstable, this uncertain of who we are and where we fit into the world since we first split from England to go off on our own and slaughter some Indians and invent pornography and discover Starbucks.

the purpose of a big bank

They said pay is based upon bringing in profits, but NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo discovers “there is no clear rhyme or reason to how the banks compensate or reward their employees.”

Wall Street bonuses exceed earnings:

• Goldman Sachs, which earned $2.3 billion last year and received $10 billion in TARP funding, paid out $4.8 billion in bonuses in 2008 – more than double their net income.

• Morgan Stanley, which earned $1.7 billion last year and received $10 billion in bailout funds, handed out $4.475 billion in bonuses, nearly three times their net income.

• JPMorgan Chase, which earned $5.6 billion in 2008 and received $25 billion from the government, paid out $8.69 billion in bonus money.

• Citigroup and Merrill Lynch lost a combined $54 billion last year. They received a total of $55 billion in bailouts and paid out $9 billion in combined bonuses.

How to keelhaul under a hi-rise.

lobbyists exploit this weak link

Congressional hearings are supposed to have a high purpose.

That hearings have degraded so egregiously is indeed troubling. Yet to really understand the problem, one must place hearings within the context of the larger issue of how Congress informs itself about the issues of the day and uses that information to create policy. In that context, the Congress of today is doing both better and worse than the Congresses of before.

“An honest politician,” he declared, “is one who when he is bought, stays bought.”

the radiation ratepayer

Moody’s says investing in new nuclear plants involves significant risks and huge capital costs at a time when national energy policy is uncertain. Yet power utilities are trying to find $6 billion for new nuclear projects. Fourteen companies have submitted applications to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to build 17 new reactors.

As Moody’s downgrades the investment ratings of these utilities, guess who puts up the capital?

bootricity

Piezoelectricity, electricity from movementShe answered, “Oh, that fella running by is recharging his phone.”

The Engineer magazine cites Leeds in the U.K. are reducing soldiers’ backpack weight by harvesting energy from movement.

Small piezoelectric transducers around the knee will extract energy as a soldier stretches his leg.

No more heavy batteries.

Piezoelectricity wiki.
More on Flexoelectricity.

rebooblicans

Kansas City Star:

Marked by accusations and backstabbing, it’s the story of how a small but intense movement called “birthers” rose from a handful of people prone to seeing conspiracies, aided by the Internet, magnified without evidence by eager radio and cable TV hosts, and eventually ratified by a small group of Republican politicians working to keep the story alive on the floors of Congress and the campaign trails of the Midwest.

It’s a powerful story about what experts call political paranoia.

find a way to fix this

What are we doing, what are we thinking?

We need to wake up.

Food, this gift that nourishes our body and soul, that brings us together in celebration and in grief, we are putting it in the hands of people who don’t give a shit about anything except profit.

I cried for my son and his future.

One: wherever and whenever, try to know or find out the source of your food. And two: every time you buy food, it’s a vote for more of that food; if it’s excellent, you’re asking for more; if it’s shitty food, you’re asking for more.

Off the cuff by popular food author Michael Ruhlman.

either swim or brew

http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2009/07/30/2640838.htm

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=bio-ocean-mixing

moonshiners and oil fats

When a line at the door reaches a certain length…

C.D. Howe Institute finds that the lowest-cost and highest-value programs are NOT properly supported.

  1. solar air heating
  2. solar water heating
  3. solar electricity
  4. wind
  5. biomass

The Canadian government’s cost to displace one ton of CO2 from any of these technologies ranges from CAN $4 per ton (for solar air heating) to CAN $30 per ton (for biomass).

In stark contrast, the most expensive government programs underwriting liquid biofuels cost taxpayers CAN $295 to $430/ton of CO2 displaced from ethanol and CAN $122 to $175/ton of CO2 displaced from biodiesel.

McKinsey & Company found that better buildings, efficient equipment, and sealing leaks is the fastest and best way to cut USA energy – quick reductions “greater than the total of energy consumption of Canada” while pocketing $1.2 trillion by 2020. [US Energy Efficiency Report, .pdf] Ecogeek points to fixing electronics sucking energy while not in use leading to energy savings equal to the yearly electricity consumption of the Netherlands.

I see the Canadian incentives study as striking. Our human mind is so vulnerable to fashion.

scale is astounding

China recently shut down 7,467 coal fired power generators, moving 400,000 to new jobs.

That’s 124 million tons less carbon dioxide than its average emission of 6.2 billion tons.

Plus the government is paying 70% of the cost of new solar systems.
[figures from cranky AP]

psychopathocracy

Chris Hedges says the move from “managed capitalism” to “unfettered capitalism” over the last four to six decades – accomplished with the help of government deregulation – has refashioned America as a “corporate state run by and on behalf of corporations rather than citizens.”

Chris Hedges “Empire of Illusion”Hedges is no garden-variety prophet. Pulitzer Prize-winner.

“Our manufacturing base has been destroyed. Tens of millions of Americans live in real or near poverty. Our infrastructure is collapsing. We have massive deficits that we can never repay.

And we have a permanent war economy that eats up “half our discretionary spending.”

How do we react to all this? We shop, watch TV, shop some more, watch a bit more TV.

And, for the most part, we love it.

“What is so mendacious and pernicious about this is that until these institutions collapsed, all they talked about is the market and unfettered capitalism. And when, because of their own folly, greed, and mismanagement, it collapsed, they are raiding the Treasury.

We’ve become a socialist nation – but socialism for corporations.

converging crises

We expect high unemployment during a crash, but

the steep job losses during this recession should not be looked at in isolation.

They are the continuation and intensification of a trend that began in the 1990s, and really took off with the 2001 recession.

The trend is that of subpar job growth during economic expansion, and intensified job losses during recessions.

In short, the employment losses during this recession are not special.

Rather, they are the continuation of a trend caused by the ongoing, chronic trade deficit, most particularly the offshoring of employment.

facts, figures, charts

talkative at age 71

Madoff is shocked at failures of the SEC.

In a 4 1/2-hour interview at Butner Federal prison, “He opened up and told us everything about how the scam went down.” Madoff had little hesitation in answering questions.

New civil lawsuit implicates “a number of new people the SEC has never looked at.”

How did Madoff fool so many people for so long?

“No one bothered to ask simple questions. People foolishly – including accountants and regulators – never looked in the right places.”

development of a technique

Twenty five years ago I was working with Texan rig brokers to export innovative horizontal drilling. Today I notice tremendous headway:

The average conventional gas well produces about 250,000 cubic feet of gas a day.

By inserting virtually unlimited horizontal shafts into a single gas well, multistage hydraulic fracturing technology is delivering initial rates up to 11 million cubic feet per day.

Just what we need. More fossil fumes.

The wheel has already turned from the habit of fossil imports though it will be a long time before we can keep dollars at home. Current activity is now very much NorAm as extractive teams get funded again. This is the short- to mid-term and while we eagerly await sensible juice that won’t kill us, there’s no other choice I’m guessing.

Years ago one of my mentors said “old men do what young men think there’s not enough time for”.

I’m working on horizon energy technology that (likely) will take its part among an utter turnaround in the way we produce energy, extracting various gases and liquids from the bio-layer rather than pulling it up from dangerous carbon storage. But years go by…

In the meantime, this is a hot economy even in a dip, with exponential demands from several corners. There are top folks working very hard to increase production efficiencies.

far gone in arrogance and spite

Gore Vidal digs very much truth:

So let me mention the real issue. The real issue is class.

We have the greatest divide between the very rich and the very poor of any country on Earth, surpassing even France. And this division gets wider and wider as financial disasters overwhelm us. We were already in pretty bad shape before things began to fall apart a year or two ago.

We must acknowledge that our character, never much good in these matters, is now reprehensible, and the police seem to have taken it upon themselves to exact revenge for a full professor and his—plainly, in their view—insulting income, which they figure must be considerable.

The days of greed through which we all lived now have not done us much good, nor have they taught us any lessons, but you cannot live long with such divisions, which in my view as an outsider overlooking the scene seems to be a nation of total liars. Everybody is lying. Television lies, candidates lie. And everyone says, “Oh they always have.” I love that excuse.

Well they haven’t always done that. Sometimes lying to the people is a great mistake. And it is well-known that the rich will tell almost any lie to avoid paying taxes.

our mysterious ocean skin

Where the ocean and the atmosphere interact is a thin thin very very thin new ecosystem.

  1. The top hundredth inch of the ocean is chemically distinct.
  2. The top hundredth-inch of the ocean is like a sheet of jelly.
  3. The top hundredth-inch is an odd habitat thinner than a human hair.

sea-surface microlayerThe research ship Kilo Moana and it’s robotic skimmers are back to port.

Scientists have learned that the top .25mm of the ocean is an ecosystem all its own – a special kind of habitat for microbes that act as a biological pump, a critical gas membrane and primary food web.

It’s the ocean breathing through its skin.” [nytimesWall]

Bacteria within the biofilm play a key role in controlling greenhouse gases and our nitrogen cycle among other things. The lively boundary layer has a rich food supply of sticky carbohydrates in a broth of dissolved carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous and amino acids which enable vast microbial respiration across the globe. [pdf]

There’s much to learn about the sea-surface microlayer; this ‘layer of sudden change‘.

/rant/
The ocean’s gelatinous gas-managing biofilm is strong enough to withstand typical winds, whitecaps, downwelling and bubble swarms.

But pollution?

Tests show microbe-destroying chlorine and surfactants penetrating via the water column. And of course, dioxins and PCBs, our standby poisons. Plus polybrominated diphenyl ethers already leaching from e-waste. Plus our typical sampling of ibuprofen and mood drugs, the pouring antiseptic over the globe kitchen-and-bath bug killer triclosan…. Not to overlook the average blend of hydrocarbons and toxic dust.

One day I hope we manage our crushing industrial detritus along with the retail silt that has spread so far so deep so high we now call it micropollution.

Fixing Earth is not a burden, but an era of opportunity and good sense.
/end rant/