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Saturday, 26 April 2008

How to Win the War on Global Warming

Wgreen_0428

Instead of crawling under the bed w/ a bottle of the strongest stuff I can find and bemoaning the utter horrible destructive insane waste of the last 8+ years, I'm ready to look ahead to a time when we might have a president w/ a brain, some integrity, and a vision of positive government. It could happen.

Considering the looming environmental crisis, we've got to get serious fast.

How to Win the War on Global Warming.

[F]or a country that rightly cites patriotism as one of its core values, we're taking a pass on what might be the most patriotic struggle of all. It's hard to imagine a bigger fight than one for the survival of the country's coasts and farms, the health of its people and the stability of its economy—and for those of the world at large as well.

The rub is, if the vast majority of people increasingly agree that climate change is a global emergency, there's far less consensus on how to fix it. Industry offers its plans, which too often would fix little. Environmentalists offer theirs, which too often amount to naive wish lists that could cripple America's growth. But let's assume that those interested parties and others will always be at the table and will always—sensibly—demand that their voices be heard and that their needs be addressed. What would an aggressive, ambitious, effective plan look like—one that would leave us both environmentally safe and economically sound?

Forget precedents like the Manhattan Project, which developed the atom bomb, or the Apollo program that put men on the moon—single-focus programs both, however hard they were to pull off. Think instead of the overnight conversion of the World War II�era industrial sector into a vast machine capable of churning out 60,000 tanks and 300,000 planes, an effort that not only didn't bankrupt the nation but instead made it rich and powerful beyond its imagining and—oh, yes—won the war in the process.

Halting climate change will be far harder than even that. One of the more conservative plans for addressing the problem, by Robert Socolow and Stephen Pacala of Princeton University, calls for a reduction of 25 billion tons of carbon emissions over the next 50 years—the equivalent of erasing nearly four years of global emissions at today's rates. And yet by devising a coherent strategy that mixes short-term solutions with farsighted goals, combines government activism with private-sector enterprise and blends pragmatism with ambition, the U.S. can, without major damage to the economy, help halt the worst effects of climate change and ensure the survival of our way of life for future generations. Money will get us part of the way there, but what's needed most is will. "I'm not saying the challenge isn't almost overwhelming," says Fred Krupp, president of the Environmental Defense Fund and co-author of the new book Earth: The Sequel. "But this is America, and America has risen to these challenges before."

Read further for recommendations. Share with friends. I really think that this is one of those issues on which Americans can find common ground. I've given up on the apocalypse-loving weirdos and the intractable capitalists, but it's possible that we could reach even them. Hopefully that pull-together spirit hasn't completely left us (though, to be honest, I do despair).

Maybe this will help: How to Talk to a Climate Skeptic.

Thursday, 20 September 2007

Resista, Tourista

Just as I was thinking I was dying to have lunch at this spot, I thought it ain't going to be a "five-star wilderness" for v. long if we have to helicopter to it.

Five-Star Wilderness.

Internationalbasin

Heck. Why can't I be like the Repugnicans and not care? Frickin' "do unto others" gene. Grr.

Wednesday, 05 September 2007

Today's Visitor

What a cutie! First thing I saw when I stepped out the door this morning. Poor db had to interpret my frantic hand signals and strained pantomime for "get the camera!" I really should just walk around w/ a camera. The world is full of critters!

Another gray tree frog, I'm guessing. Look how teeny!

Graytreefrog

And a close up of the handsome devil. I don't think he was even an inch long.

Froggycloseup

Monday, 23 July 2007

Global Warming Flooding

An incredible shot of the flooding around around Tewkesbury in Gloucestershire, England (Stephen Hird/Reuters). It's even scarier when you click and enlarge it.

23flood06

Heavy Floods Inundate Britain, Texas and China.

Flood waters caused misery, cut essential services and forced evacuations in widely spaced parts of the globe today, including southwest England, Texas and Asia.

Thousands of people were forced from their homes in Gloucestershire and Herefordshire in western England after a month of heavy rain forced the rivers Thames and Severn out of their banks and into neighborhoods. More than 48,000 homes in those areas were without electricity as the flooding closed a power plant.

Clean water supplies were also threatened as water plants were inundated and more rain was in the forecast.

The country’s Environmental Agency warned that water could rise to a “critical level” in the affected areas and issued nine severe flood warnings for different regions. People in the areas covered by the warnings were advised to evacuate their homes.

“The situation is looking critical at the moment,” a spokesman for the agency said. “Unfortunately, the misery is set to continue.”

In south and central Texas, the floods began receding after 17 inches of rain fell in some areas over the weekend. Helicopters were used to rescue dozens of people isolated by flooded roads. An Amtrak train was stopped about 75 miles west of San Antonio after rising water covered the tracks.

[snip]

In Asia, the monsoon rains produced the usual floods, landslides, evacuations and loss of life. In China alone, more than 150 people were reported to have died in the last week and 3 million were displaced across vast tracts because of the heavy rain.

The usual? Inured to disaster, are we?

Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Another Diapered Jackass

No, not Republican Senator David Vitter this time.

BBC NEWS | Africa | Anger at Kenya donkey nappy plan.

Donkey owners in the Kenyan town of Limuru are up in arms over an order from the municipal authorities that their animals must wear nappies.

No word yet if the donkeys are Republicans.

Sunday, 15 July 2007

Aaaaaaiiiiiiyyy!!

Some visitors are slightly (sic) less welcome when we're engaged in our usual death match struggle w/ the yard. Treefrogs, slugs, toads, bluebirds, dragonflies, worms, and random yucky creepy crawlies all welcome.

Seconds before this picture was taken, I was lugging across the yard the rock underneath which this little lady was hiding/hanging out. Aaaiiiyy!!

Thank you, Ms. Black Widow, for not biting me.

Blackwidow

Brrrr.

Saturday, 14 July 2007

Oh, Heyull No

Attack of the Phallic Thingies.

Phallicdubai

Fitting that I am following up the Rumsfeld story w/ this.

Tuesday, 10 July 2007

Oh, You Think You're Cranky?

This is how I feel today.

Crankyfrog

Gray treefrog (?) sitting on our banister on Sunday. About 1.5-inches and crabby as the day is long. What a face!

Tuesday, 19 June 2007

Not Gone, Mighty

Awesomeness.

Love it! So smart, so well done, and it's a commercial. That's better than half the films I saw last year.

[via]

Can't Win for Losin'

Well, that's just perfect.

Driver ticketed for using biofuel.

Bob Teixeira decided it was time to take a stand against U.S. dependence on foreign oil.

So last fall the Charlotte musician and guitar instructor spent $1,200 to convert his 1981 diesel Mercedes to run on vegetable oil. He bought soybean oil in 5-gallon jugs at Costco, spending about 30 percent more than diesel would cost.

His reward, from a state that heavily promotes alternative fuels: a $1,000 fine last month for not paying motor fuel taxes. He has been told to expect another $1,000 fine from the federal government.

To legally use veggie oil, state officials told him, he would have to first post a $2,500 bond.

Teixeira is one of a growing number of fuel-it-yourselfers -- backyard brewers who recycle restaurant grease or make moonshine for their car tanks. They do it to save money, reduce pollution or thumb their noses at oil sheiks.

They're also caught in a web of little-known state laws that can stifle energy independence.

State Sen. Stan Bingham, R-Denton, is known around Raleigh for his diesel Volkswagen fueled by used soybean oil. The car sports a "Goodbye, OPEC" sign.

"If somebody was going to go to this much trouble to drive around in a car that uses soybean oil, they ought to be exempt" from state taxes, he said.

The state Department of Revenue, which fined Teixeira, has asked legislators to waive the $2,500 bond for small fuel users. The department also told Teixeira, after the Observer asked about his case this week, that it will compromise on his fine.

How magnanimous (and logical) of them. Sheesh.

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