Sugar Daddy

March 8th, 2010

After poisoning the land, losing half a billion dollars, who you gonna call to bail you out? The politicians you bough and paid for, that’s who.

“United States Sugar was, as one official put it during an interview, ‘pretty much in the driver’s seat.’ ”

“On Nov. 15, 2007, two United States Sugar lobbyists met in the governor’s office”

“The lobbyists, J. M. Stipanovich and Brian Ballard, had supported Mr. Crist’s campaign for governor”.”

“Mr. Crist said in an interview that he could not remember ‘the particulars’ of when or how the idea had originated. ”

Gee, that’s a whole lotta campaign contributions you forgot there Charlie.

“This is a death warrant for the Everglades”

“while the water district agreed to pay United States Sugar nearly $7,000 an acre for citrus land, it is now selling for $4,000 an acre”

“Thomas Van Lent, a hydrologist for the Everglades Foundation, said he had “no idea” why the state had agreed to purchase it as part of the deal.”

“An environmental assessment presented to the district revealed that 49,000 acres of the United States Sugar land was contaminated with high levels of copper, DDT, selenium and other chemicals. Arsenic was detected at levels above human health standards in more than 6,000 acres of land, the documents showed.”

Sugar companies have been poisoning the Everglades since they began. Let’s not even talk about the politically motivated tariffs on imported sugar, that make them millions. Now that the land is trashed, unload it on the government, aided by corrupt politicians, lawyers and lobbyists. After all, it worked for the banks didn’t it ?

Excuse me, I have to take a shower now.

Sweet, sweet money

Great Moonbuggy Race

March 6th, 2010

WASHINGTON, DC — More than 100 student teams from around the globe will drive their specially crafted lunar rovers through a challenging course of rugged, moon-like terrain at NASA’s 17th annual Great Moonbuggy Race in Huntsville, Ala., April 9-10.

Some 1,088 high school, college and university students from 20 states and Puerto Rico, Canada, Germany, Bangladesh, Serbia, India and Romania are expected to participate in the race at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center.

Students begin to prepare for the event each year during the fall semester. They must design, build and test a sturdy, collapsible, lightweight vehicle that addresses engineering problems similar to those overcome by the original Apollo-era lunar rover development team at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville in the late 1960s.

The buggies are based on the design of those classic rovers, which American astronauts drove across the moon’s surface during the Apollo 15, 16 and 17 missions in the early 1970s. Teams of students build their vehicles using trail bike tires, aluminum or composite-metal struts and parts. The best teams drive trains, gears, suspension, steering and braking systems they find or construct.

Top prizes are awarded to the three teams in both the high school and college/university divisions that post the fastest race times, which include assembly and penalty times. A variety of other prizes are given by race corporate sponsors. These include “rookie of the year” and the “featherweight” award, presented to the team with the lightest, fastest buggy.

NASA’s Great Moonbuggy Race is one of many educational projects and initiatives the agency conducts each year to attract and engage America’s next generation of scientists, engineers and explorers. They will carry on the nation’s mission of exploration to unchartered destinations in our solar system.

“NASA is committed to inspiring young people in science, technology, engineering and math, and the Great Moonbuggy Race is an excellent way for us to reach out to young people and get them excited and involved in technical opportunities available to them,” said Mike Selby, an avionics technical assistant in the Marshall Center’s Engineering Directorate. While completing his engineering degree at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, Selby was a member of the school’s moonbuggy teams, helping them to a second-place finish in 1995 and to first place in 1996. Since 2001, he has served each year as a volunteer scorekeeper.

The race is hosted by the U.S. Space and Rocket Center, and is sponsored by Lockheed Martin Corporation, The Boeing Company, Northrop Grumman Corporation, and Jacobs Engineering ESTS Group, all of Huntsville.

Eat Your Share

March 6th, 2010

And act like you like it.

“Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may force lenders including Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc. to buy back $21 billion of home loans this year as part of a crackdown on faulty mortgages.”

Heeheehee, sob. I dunno whether to laugh or to cry.

“JPMorgan said in a presentation last month that it loses about 50 cents on the dollar for every loan it has to buy back.”

So,: US Govt owns 79.9% of Fannie and Freddie and is paying tens of billions every quarter to keep em afloat. So its a good thing right, that F&F gets some money back from the crooked banks ?
Not so fast, look again. The Federal Reserve is monetizing the banks, and get this, this is the good part: any loss the Fed takes is an obligation of the US Treasury

so.. we are moving money from one pocket to another…and i think there is a hole in both. Because falling real estate is worth far less than the notes already, and because the banks are getting slammed by rising default and rising loss severity on all asset classes. US taxpayers unto the third generation hence will pay. Like I said, eat your share.

Read all about it
Circles of Debt

With Friends Like These…

March 3rd, 2010

You can’t make this up.

“Critics of the teaching of evolution in the nation’s classrooms are gaining ground in some states by linking the issue to global warming, arguing that dissenting views on both scientific subjects should be taught in public schools. ”

‘a bill recently introduced in the Legislature would encourage teachers to discuss “the advantages and disadvantages of scientific theories,” including “evolution, the origins of life, global warming and human cloning.” ‘

Read all about it:

The stupid, it burns

Earthquake Leaves Haze Over Santiago Chile

March 2nd, 2010

This NASA images shows the haze lingering over the metropolitan area of Santiago, Chile, following a magnitude 8.8 earthquake on February 27, 2010. In an image from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA’s Terra satellite at 14:25 UTC, black smoke hung over the northern part of the city, while light-colored haze (perhaps pollution and/or dust) covered the southern part of the city and filled a canyon that cuts eastward into the mountains.

Earthquake Leaves Haze Over Santiago Chile

Earthquake Leaves Haze Over Santiago Chile

Afghanistan War

March 2nd, 2010

The following email was sent to me by United for Peace and Justice. Can anyone substantiate their claims?

The U.S. occupation of Afghanistan passed a sobering milestone last week.  The 1,000th U.S. soldier to die in Operation Enduring Freedom lost his life in the Marja offensive, even as 27 Afghan civilians were killed Sunday by a NATO airstrike in nearby Uruzgan province.

In a campaign initiated by American Friends Service Committee, UFPJ member groups throughout the country staged vigils, rallies and ceremonies calling for an end to the bloodshed.   Reading the names of dead U.S. soldiers and Afghan civilians, they expressed sorrow, anger and frustration at the rising violence.   They signed postcards calling on Congress to immediately end funding for the Afghanistan war.

In the ninth year of war, violence is escalating in Afghanistan, making life less safe both for the occupied and occupier.  Almost one-third of the 1,000 U.S. deaths, 317, took place last year, and 2,412 Afghan civilians lost their lives.

The U.S. is sending additional troops, doubling the number of U.S. forces to 100,000. Each U.S. soldier in Afghanistan costs $1 million per year – making our investment there $100 billion per year.    Meanwhile, people in the U.S. lack health care, jobs, and housing, teachers are being laid off, and nothing is being done about the climate crisis.

Call on Congress to stop funding the war.   The U.S. must announce an immediate cease-fire, stop sending additional troops, withdraw all U.S. troops, and end U.S. control of bases in Afghanistan.

In peace,
United for Peace and Justice

Protection Racket

February 26th, 2010

Want cops ? Pay up.

“That bill is for their share of the operating costs of the Unified Police Department.”

$186 for homeowners. $81,912 for Wal-Mart.

“Hospitals, churches and non-profit organizations will also be assessed the fee.”

Gotta pay to pray.

The mob might be cheaper.

Coming soon to a neighborhood near you

Making Wind Turbines Builds Career Interest

February 23rd, 2010

The wind turbine that Louis Solis and Jose Santistevan fashioned in about 20 minutes promptly registered a 5.1 on the voltage meter in their Denver West High School classroom, tops in the class.

But Solis and Santistevan, both 17-year-old juniors, were determined they could do better. So, they bent and trimmed the balsa wood, flattened the angles on the blades, and tried again. They flipped on the house fan and, what do you know, the meter read 5.3 volts.

Definitely worth some high-fives.

“This appeals to me,” Santistevan said. “To try to find new technology to make renewable energy more accessible and more affordable, that’s important. Enjoying your job, having a good time while you’re working, that’s also important to me.”

Rick Shin, science consultant with NREL’s Education Programs, presented the hands-on lesson aimed at sparking interest in clean-energy careers for students who don’t necessarily see a bachelor’s degree in their futures.

The Energy Workforce Program of Goodwill Industries of Denver sponsored the visit.

Inspiring the Work Force of the Future
“We are well aware of the future challenge of filling such jobs in our nation,” said Cynthia Howell, NREL’s Education Programs manager. “We’re partnering with education to home-grow such technicians and engineers.”

A major goal at NREL is to spark the development of a work force for the renewable energy economy of the future. NREL’s Education Programs staff visit local schools dozens of times each year to instruct and inspire.

About 28 percent of American adults have a bachelor’s degree. The remaining 72 percent vie for a number of jobs that may require specialized training or certification. For example, there are 874,000 electricians and 773,000 hair stylists in the United States.

More education — or at least more training — typically means more income.

According to the U.S. Census, the average American with a bachelor’s degree earns about $51,000 a year; those who drop out from high school earn $18,700; and those with a high school diploma but not college degrees earn an average of $28,000.

Of course, there are huge variables in income among those with high school diplomas, the higher-paying jobs going to those with the most marketable technical skills.

Soon the renewable energy industry will be looking for electricians, welders, pipefitters and turbine installers.

“There are all kinds of good jobs that don’t take a lot of education after high school,” Shin told the students. “For those jobs, you need about nine months or a year of training after high school.”

Most of the students participating in West’s Energy Careers class already are determined to pursue a technical career.

Milynda Montez, 17, sees a huge dichotomy between the dropouts who are on the road to trouble or to dead ends, and her Aviation Careers classmates who are acquiring skills for a technological world. Montez said she plans to enlist in the Air Force — one of nearly a dozen students who are interested in engineering and aviation.

But she sees renewable energy as a promising career choice, too. “It’s pretty important and vital to our nation,” Montez said. “I know it’s a growing problem.

Job Explosion in Renewables Expected
A key part of the new energy future equation is educating students, teachers and consumers. From elementary school mentoring to senior-level research programs, NREL’s education opportunities help provide the link to the new energy future. The goal is to engage young minds in renewable energy and support teachers’ commitment to excellence in teaching and learning.

An economic model developed last year by researchers at Yale University and the University of California-Berkeley predicted a net increase of 1.9 million green jobs by 2020 in the U.S. if Congress passes the Clean Energy Jobs Act.

Colorado is a promising location for green jobs if the West High students choose to stay near home. The state has established a requirement of 20 percent alternative energy by 2020 for major utilities. A bill introduced the current session of the Colorado Legislature would increase the requirement to 30 percent, with most of that additional clean energy generated by wind power.

“We hope our messages will travel home with the students to their parents,” Shin said. The hands-on activities aim to “inspire students to wonder and then seek more knowledge.”

Renewable Technologies Are Linked
Training in one renewable energy field often leads to related work.

For example, NREL is working with Xcel Energy to launch a wind-to-hydrogen demonstration project at the laboratory’s National Wind Technology Center near Boulder, Colo. The project links wind turbines to electrolyzers that pass wind-generated electricity through water to split it into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen then can be stored and used later to generate electricity from a fuel cell or an internal combustion engine.

Shin talked to the students about the shape of airplane wings and wind turbines, both of which are air foils, and about the increased importance of wind energy in the future.

He showed them a fuel cell that contains precious platinum, a catalyst that makes it easier to use wind energy to break down water into oxygen and hydrogen. They learned that by starting with wind and using water to produce hydrogen, a utility doesn’t have to store electricity in batteries. Instead, hydrogen can be stored in tanks, to be used later to make electricity when the wind isn’t blowing or the sun isn’t shining.

The students’ silence during the lecture part of the class had Shin wondering if he had connected with them.

But as soon as they were allowed to use their hands and their brains to model the kinds of wind turbines being tested at NREL, the classroom came alive.

Students used glue guns, balsa wood, dowels and plastic gears to design wind turbines.

“When we do hands-on, everyone feels more comfortable, working with each other, building something,” said Solis. “This is creative. You have to have a creative mind.”

John Foden, 17, foresees his interest in mechanics and welding with a job in clean energy. “It’s probably a good career,” he said. “You never know what’s going to happen a few years down the road with the Earth.”

Gerardo Espinoza, a senior, changed the blades on his model to make it more aerodynamic. “I’d like to go into mechanics and engineering,” he said. “All this, it’s like a difficult puzzle to solve. And I like puzzles.”

Students not Afraid to Fail
Amber Smith, who teaches the Energy Careers class as part of Career and Technical Training Education at West High, said the NREL program is effective because it exposes the students to real opportunities within their reach and rewards experimentation.

“The hands-on part that NREL provides is just amazing,” Smith said. “The NREL educators explained to the students, ‘This is what you’ll be doing in technical careers.’ When they see it and do it, it means so much more to them. They get a lot out of it. They love it, they become engaged.”

“Most of the time, children are afraid to fail, afraid to do something wrong. But with the NREL projects, I love that the children didn’t mind that the blades didn’t spin as fast as they wanted them to. They just said, ‘OK, back to the drawing board.’ That kind of attitude is hard to replicate in the classroom.”

Learn more about NREL’s Education Programs.

— Bill Scanlon

Stronger,Higher,Faster

February 22nd, 2010

No, this is not about the Olympics. An interesting article about wind power and an economic analysis.

A comparison of capital costs for a wind farm of larger vs. smaller towers:

“25 towers @ 4 MW
25 towers @ $500k/tower = $12.5 million in structure + foundation
10 miles roads @ $1.5 million/mile = $15 million
Total infrastructure cost = $27.5 million or $275,000/MW
100 towers @ 1 MW
100 towers @ $350k/tower = $35 million in structure + foundation
50 miles of roads @ $1.5 million/mile = $75 million of road
Total infrastructure cost = $110 million = $1,100,000/MW ”

Makes the case for larger towers ? Not quite: Read the whole article at
Reaching for the Sky

The Inhuman Condition

February 21st, 2010

Calling 911 will cost you money in this town.

“they will be charged $300 if they make a call for help. ”

How many people will not call 911 now ? Let’s say you were going down the road and see a wreck. Or a burglary ? Or an assault ? Will you pay to report it ?

What are we becoming ?

Going down the road, feeling bad



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