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Press Clips: 10-12-07

Written by: Sheri Divers on Oct 15, 2007 9:00 AM EDT

1) Area leaders make impact, poststar.com

http://www.poststar.com/articles/2007/10/12/news/local/12978727.txt  

2) DraftGore.com, blogvj558136.blogspot.com

http://blogvj558136.blogspot.com/2007/10/draftgore.html

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Reply

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 9:03 AM EDT

Governor Howard Dean was, is and will be first in the hearts of true Democrats.

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 9:03 AM EDT

We've finally arrived through the space time travel -- a new front thread.

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 9:07 AM EDT

The only thing more inefficient than ethanol is the gasoline it replaces.

Think long and hard before you repeat oil company talking points.

a corn field is a carbon sink

Are you meaning to say that natural gas, hydro and solar cells are all less efficiant than ethanol? I don't think so.

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 9:08 AM EDT

1. yes, but I was here first until you were first. LOL

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 9:09 AM EDT

The blog clock is still 12 minutes behind. I don't know how that happens. The spouse's linux box does it too.

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 9:09 AM EDT
82.
Huron John
Mon, 10/15/07
8:43 am

Reply to this

KUNSTLER ON ETHANOL

http://www.kunstler.com/

Out in Iowa last week, you could see that they had planted corn clear up to the highway on-ramps, and shiny new grain storage bins were everywhere. The ethanol program is in high gear there. It is, of course, a net energy loser when you figure in all the fossil fuel "inputs" and procedures needed in making the stuff. It was interesting to hear that a lot of "normal" Iowans regard the enterprise as exactly what it is -- an arrant government subsidy racket intended to enrich agribusiness, while blowing "green" smoke up the rest of America's ass.

  83.
Phil Specht
Mon, 10/15/07
8:58 am

84.
Monica Smith
Mon, 10/15/07
9:00 am

Reply to this

82. It's my understanding that the left-over mash is still able to be used as animal feed--sort of like coal ash is used to make concrete blocks. The secondary products might have to be factored in. And then, there's the question of what comes out of the tailpipe when ethanol rather than gasoline is burned. It may be a net loss in terms of oil used and it may not. I'd like to see the figures and then compare them to the constructing and fueling of a nuclear power plant.

  85.
86.
Phil Specht
Mon, 10/15/07
9:05 am

Reply to this

The vast agricultural infrastructure is already all in place to use the surplus corn supply for fuel rather than dumping the surplus on the world market driving third world farmers out of business. It is not the answer it is just one little piece of the puzzle.

Believe me Americans jumping in an SUV to run to Walmart to buy goods shipped from China made from raw material shipped from America is the inefficient part of the equation, not whether or not 10% of the fuel is made from corn.

Farmers would give up all subsidies if the competition did too.

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 9:09 AM EDT

4. Yep, I noticed that -- that's why I didn't mention Howard, since you had already taken care of that.

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 9:27 AM EDT

Ok, now that we've, in the words of The Doors's Van Morrison, have (with Sheri's help) done a  "break on through to the other side" to finally a new front thread --

-- I have a question (and I'll use the lyrics of the rock musical Jesus Christ Superstar to ask it) --

Which song do you personally identify more with, and why ?

http://members.tripod.com/~JCSKelly/lyrics.html

...

A.) 

What's the Buzz


APOSTLES
What's the buzz? Tell me what's happening.

JESUS
Why should you want to know?
Don't you mind about the future?
Don't you try to think ahead?
Save tomorrow for tomorrow.
Think about today instead.

APOSTLES
What's the buzz? Tell me what's happening.

JESUS
I could give you facts and figures.
I could give you plans and forecasts.
Even tell you where I'm going.

APOSTLES
When do we ride into Jerusalem?

JESUS
Why should you want to know?
Why are you obsessed with fighting
Times and fates you can't defy?
If you knew the path we're riding,
You'd understand it less than I.

APOSTLES
What's the buzz? Tell me what's happening.

MARY MAGDALENE
Let me try to cool down your face a bit.

JESUS
That feels nice, so nice....
Mary that is good -
While you prattle through your supper -
Where and when and who and how
She alone has tried to give me
What I need right here and now.

APOSTLES
What's the buzz? Tell me what's happening.

...

Everything's Alright


MARY MAGDALENE
Try not to get worried, try not to turn on to
Problems that upset you, oh.
Don't you know
Everything's alright, yes, everything's fine,
And we want you to sleep well tonight.
Let the world turn without you tonight.
If we try, we'll get by, so forget all about us tonight.

APOSTLES' WIVES
Everything's alright, yes, everything's alright, yes.

MARY MAGDALENE
Sleep and I shall soothe you, calm you, and anoint you...
Myrrh for your hot forehead, oh.
Then you'll feel
Everything's alright, yes, everything's fine.
And it's cool, and the ointment's sweet
For the fire in your head and feet.
Close your eyes, close your eyes
And relax, think of nothing tonight.

APOSTLES' WIVES
Everything's alright, yes, everything's alright, yes.

JUDAS
Woman your fine ointment, brand new and expensive
Could have been saved for the poor.
Why has it been wasted? We could have raised maybe
Three hundred silver pieces or more.
People who are hungry, people who are starving
They matter more than your feet and hair.

MARY MAGDALENE
Try not to get worried, try not to turn on to
Problems that upset you, oh.
Don't you know
Everything's alright, yes, everything's fine,
And we want you to sleep well tonight.
Let the world turn without you tonight.
If we try, we¹ll get by, so forget all about us tonight.

APOSTLES' WIVES
Everything's alright, yes, everything's alright, yes.

JESUS
Surely you're not saying we have the resources
To save the poor from their lot?
There will be poor always, pathetically struggling
Look at the good things you've got.
Think while you still have me!
Move while you still see me!
You'll be lost, you'll be so sorry when I'm gone.

MARY MAGDALENE
Sleep and I shall soothe you, calm you and anoint you...
Myrrh for your hot forehead, oh.
Then you'll feel
Everything's alright, yes, everything's fine.
And it's cool and the ointment's sweet
For the fire in your head and feet.
Close your eyes, close your eyes, and relax....

APOSTLES' WIVES
Everything's alright, yes, everything's alright, yes......

...

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 9:30 AM EDT
typo -

...

Everything's Alright

s/b -

...

B.)

Everything's Alright

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 9:36 AM EDT

As the soldier interviewed on Frontline about extended tours. "I'd like to see the political leaders come over here and just do 24 hours of my duty, but hey. It's all good."

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By Tom Bearse on Oct 15, 2007 9:37 AM EDT

rdorgan wrote "typo - Everything's Alright s/b - B.) Everything's Alright."

That's not quite as glaring as calling Jim Morrison Van.

 
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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 9:40 AM EDT

The Doors is apt as is Jefferson Airplane's White Rabbit, but how about the Dead and "what a long strange trip it's been"

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 9:44 AM EDT

truckin

bbl

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 9:44 AM EDT
11.


Tom -

Yep, boy that was a real typo. (please forgive me all The Doors fans here).

Ok, selection time:

A.) What's the Buzz  ?

or 

B.) Everything's Alright  ?

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By Tom Bearse on Oct 15, 2007 9:52 AM EDT

rdorgan wrote "Ok, selection time"

I would opt for Everything's Alright, but rely more on the 1973 cover of the Mojos' song of the same name by David Bowie on Pin Ups. 

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 9:55 AM EDT

6. You're right, Phil. But, an addendum--it's largely an accounting problem that gives us a false picture of reality. Waste (pollution, rot, consumption by vermine) doesn't count and doesn't exist, if it's not paid for. Economics has to be the only "science" where the measuring stick (money) becomes the thing measured (money). The economy grows when more money is used to mediate transactions. Which is what makes this whole thing so ironic because if industry starts having to pay for waste disposal as a normal business expense, the economy will grow. But, as long as government is seen as responsible for dealing with negatives and what government spends is subtracted from the "economy" in the form of taxes, efforts to deal with (clean up) wastes are going to be resisted because government doing it is counted as a drag on the economy.
The private/public distinction is entirely artificial--something to make the accounting more managable.

Some support for privatization was actually based on the expectation that accounting for our activities would become more rational. I know I never realized until recently that the prime motivation for privatization was simply to remove the transfer of public assets and resources into private coffers from public view.

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 9:54 AM EDT

15.

ok, you answered the which but now the why "everything's alright" ?

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 9:58 AM EDT

Apparently, some people consider the impact of the Freedom of Information Act to have much greater significance than those of us who have nothing to hide. LOL
Just think, that wasn't passed until 1966.

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 10:04 AM EDT

3.

Monica Smith
Mon, 10/15/07
9:07 am

......
The only thing more inefficient than ethanol is the gasoline it replaces.

Think long and hard before you repeat oil company talking points.

a corn field is a carbon sink

Are you meaning to say that natural gas, hydro and solar cells are all less efficiant than ethanol? I don't think so.
--------

!!!

Even though, it depends on WHAT are we talking about.

If we are talking about DEPLOYMENT of one or the other KIND of energy source FOR the benefits of a FEW at the expense of MANY then THE EFFICIENCY (the coefficient of energy extraction per its unit) DOES NOT MATTER! With ANY KIND of energy source people are just going to SERVE the energy’s ever increasing CONSUMPTION (as it is happening now!).

E.g. ultimately it is NOT about specific “kind” of energy source itself but TO WHOM it BELONGS - to PEOPLE or to CORPORATIONS!

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By Tom Bearse on Oct 15, 2007 10:08 AM EDT

rdorgan wrote "why ‘everything's alright’?

I recall year after year during the Reagan administration, listening to the radio, watching the news and reading the paper, always with the same reaction. It was mood depressing and enervating, like sensing the beginning of the end. The economy was turning top heavy, deficit spending was soaring. We heard about welfare queens, voodoo economics and the Iran-Contra scandal. You know, what Republicans consider to be Morning in America.

The Republican recent hegemony is about to be broken. The ideological spectrum does shift, and Democrats are timid in power, but I think the evolution of this country’s values as a world citizen is imminent. The policies of the Clinton administration were no panacea by any means, but they made Morning in America seem like Midnight on the Titanic by comparison.

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 10:18 AM EDT

20

Thoughtful response.  I tend to be a more "everything's alright" here on this blog (the screw slowly turns but it turns).

On the Obama '08 blog, I tend to be more of a "what's the buzz", for bringing up my concerns.  I, and others that post that way, often get labeled as "debbie downers" (labeling coming from the "ursula uppers"? -- ok, I just made up the ursula term, was thinking of James Bond movies and had to come up with a naming to counter the SNL term debbie downer).

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 10:37 AM EDT

20. I don't see much difference between Clinton and Reagan/Bush. There's been a rather consistent program of asserting a ruling class whose wealth is derived from the labor of others and supported by the threat of the use of force. In a sense, it's the plantation system writ large.
It's the threatened use of force that's central. The real use of force as in suppressing the strikes in the early part of the twentieth century and trying to contain the civil right movement obviously didn't work very well. That's because the direct use of force inevitably prompts physical resistance. Using force against a third party to make an example is much more effective. "We'll fight them over there, so we don't have to fight them over here."
Have you asked who "them" is? You assume it's "terrorists." Right? But who's a "terrorist"? Why does the Department of Justice refer to "law enforcement and the war on terror" as a unified program? Why have local police departments all around the country been issued riot gear? No doubt, to line the pockets of the people who make such stuff. But, why else?

What's the difference between gated communities being built up in Iraq and the gated communities springing up in the U.S? What are the denizens of these enclaves afraid of? That failure over there will be replicated here? Gated communities are an affront. Not because people lock themselves in, but because other people are excluded. You see, civil rights are meaningless you live in a private enclave rather than a civil society.

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By Tom Bearse on Oct 15, 2007 10:39 AM EDT

Monica wrote "I don't see much difference between Clinton and Reagan/Bush. There's been a rather consistent program of asserting a ruling class whose wealth is derived from the labor of others and supported by the threat of the use of force. In a sense, it's the plantation system writ large."

Yeah, I know, but besides that they seem different.

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 10:45 AM EDT

22.

Monica Smith
Mon, 10/15/07
10:37 am

........
"We'll fight them over there, so we don't have to fight them over here."
Have you asked who "them" is? You assume it's "terrorists." Right? But who's a "terrorist"? Why does the Department of Justice refer to "law enforcement and the war on terror" as a unified program?
........
---------

Precise observation, imo!

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 10:51 AM EDT

A republic and a democracy are essentially the same critter in different languages. The elitism being promoted by Republicans is not, IMHO, unique to them. There are also elitists among those who call themselves Democrats. As the two groups have evolved, the main difference is the manner in which the elites maintain their status. On the Republican side, the elites prefer to use threats (law and order policies) to maintain their eminence. On the Democratic side, the elites prefer to use munificence (benefits and hand-outs) to keep the hoi poloi in line. Both tend to interpret the law as a formal instrument, as opposed to a regal whim, with which to rule the populace. That the law depends on the consent of the populace is something they'd rather not think about and, despite the evidence of the 2006 election, still in denial about. That's why Rham and the DLC keep nattering about what THEY accomplished. Popular rule is a really scary notion, probably because they know they've been abusive and fear that the tables will be turned on them.

It's interesting that Nancy Pelosi thinks that the protesters on her sidewalk are "protected" from being removed by the guarantee of their freedom of speech. She seems unaware that the right to travel freely is determinative. Arresting people for loitering is often tried and generally thrown out in court.

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 10:57 AM EDT

23. things are often not what they seem

Bill Clinton's first campaign was "rescued" by the same people who staked GHWB and GWB before and after and who employed Hillary when she was still a lawyer. I expect that Reagan was promoted over GHWB in the same way that Dubya was promoted over JEB--somewhat simple and therefor less threatening.

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 11:03 AM EDT

The vast agricultural infrastructure is already all in place to use the surplus corn supply for fuel rather than dumping the surplus on the world market driving third world farmers out of business.

That's scraping the bottom of the barrel as an excuse for ethanol.

Burning fuel to produce more fuel to burn is the height of folly.

It's time to kick not just the oil habit, but the entire burning habit. It's about the future.

Subsidize wind farms, not carbon fuel farms. 

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By Monica Smith on Oct 15, 2007 11:05 AM EDT

How is the invasion of Poland by the Nazis different from the invasion of Iraq by the Bushes? Ah, yes, Poland was right next door.
But, some things have changed haven't they? When airplanes can circumnavigate the globe in a single day, everybody's almost next door. And just think, drones are being directed to drop bombs on Iraq from computer consoles in Nevada and Denver.

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By TeatimeTim*in*NEOhio on Oct 15, 2007 11:09 AM EDT

Phil Specht
Mon, 10/15/07
9:09 am

 

    Hi Phil.

 

            I would argue that it is time to rethink farming all together in this country.  Corn should be a viable crop for feed in this country.  That means our ethenol sources should be effecient, ie.. sugar beets, sorgum caine, and switch grass.  

         If we meet the right mix we would see land used in a much more various way that would be health for all, would provide for a good corn harvest with out subsidizing the extra product which we need to do now through ethonol.  Corn is one of the most inefficient was to make ethenol.  Its best use is for cattle and human consumption.

       there is a really good article about this in this months Nation Geographic.

       Also, world production of Bio-Diesel should note the Physic Nut which has 3 times the yield of oil as soybean, grows for 40 years and is happy living in dry conditions.  Many area's of our southwest that are marginal for other crops could easily grow them.

 http://www.news-press.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200770914047

 

 

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By floridagal . on Oct 15, 2007 11:09 AM EDT

Here's Howard Dean's videos on C-Span Friday.  Two of them.  

http://journals.democraticunderground.com/madfloridian/1580

Really great speech at John Hopkins and question and answer session to 3 colleges via satellite.

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By Tom Bearse on Oct 15, 2007 11:08 AM EDT

Monica wrote "things are often not what they seem."

I guess that settles things.  Bill Clinton, Ronald Reagan; what's the difference?  Vote for either or none.   This comes as a relief if nothing else, but tends to undermine Sen. Wellstone's sentiments, for example, when he explained that "I'm for more investment in Head Start, I'm for more investments in children's education. I'm for expanding health care coverage. I'm for more environmental protection. I'm not telling you we're not going to have to organize hard after Al Gore wins, but I'm telling you the differences between Al Gore and George W. Bush on these issues make a difference to the lives of ordinary people, and we shouldn't have too much distance from those problems, everyday problems that people have to say it makes no difference."

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 11:16 AM EDT

27.

Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
11:03 am

....
It's time to kick not just the oil habit, but the entire burning habit. It's about the future.

---------

!!!

...and not even "entire burning habit" but the entire consumerist LIFESTYLE forced upon People by Corporations when People simly become SERVANTS of such a lifestyle.

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By Joan* In*Florida on Oct 15, 2007 11:16 AM EDT

A big congrats to John Edwards in getting the Iowa SEIU endorsement. This is big since the National SEIU declined to endorse anyone, leaving it up to the states.

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 11:19 AM EDT

33.

Yep, saw that earlier today. He worked hard for the endorsement, kudos to him.

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 11:22 AM EDT

That means our ethenol sources should be effecient, ie.. sugar beets, sorgum caine, and switch grass.

They still dump carbon into the atmosphere both to be produced and to be used. 

I guess it needs to made still simpler...... 

Burning bad. 

 

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 11:24 AM EDT

A big congrats to John Edwards in getting the Iowa SEIU endorsement.

Here's to hoping it helps him as much as it did Dean. 

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By Michael Ellis on Oct 15, 2007 11:34 AM EDT

Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
11:24 am
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Yeah..............BIG Fn DEAL

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By Mz*Little on Oct 15, 2007 11:37 AM EDT

36 - OUCH!!!

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 11:42 AM EDT

Endorsements are meaningful only to political insiders. It's just a little game they play with each other. Climb onto the right bandwagon early enough and you get rewarded later.

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By Joan* In*Florida on Oct 15, 2007 11:40 AM EDT

36/37

Sour grapes guys! Every endorsement can mean in difference in Iowa.

ABC = Anybody But Clinton

 

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By Pat in Colorado on Oct 15, 2007 11:43 AM EDT

Morning Folks,\

First snow fall here, mostly a dusting and ice crystals, but the sun returns, always welcome.

Thanks to Tom Huges for all you work and best wishes for success.  Couldn't get ot the blog yesterday.

And here, you've probably all read it and chuckled, but in case you haven't from the Huffington Post.

Also, and Phil, you're the one to answer this.  I've read that cows shouldn't be eating corn, that their digestive systems are supposed to, that grasses are their proper feed.  We get our beef from McGreagor Ranch here in Estes Park, and it's all grass fed.  Can you shed some light on the corn and cows connection?

 


Supreme Court Gives Gore's Nobel to Bush

Posted October 14, 2007 | 03:53 AM (EST)


Read More: al gore, George Bush, Hillary Clinton, Nobel Peace Prize, Breaking Politics News
stumbleupon :Supreme Court Gives Gore's Nobel to Bush   digg: Supreme Court Gives Gore's Nobel to Bush   reddit: Supreme Court Gives Gore's Nobel to Bush   del.icio.us: Supreme Court Gives Gore's Nobel to Bush

Just days after former Vice President Al Gore received the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts on global warming, the United States Supreme Court handed Mr. Gore a stunning reversal, stripping him of his Nobel and awarding it to President George W. Bush instead.

For Mr. Gore, who basked in the adulation of the Nobel committee and the world, the high court's decision to give his prize to President Bush was a cruel twist of fate, to say the least.

But in a 5-4 decision, the justices made it clear that they had taken the unprecedented step of stripping Mr. Gore of his Nobel because President Bush deserved it more.

"It is true that Al Gore has done a lot of talking about global warming," wrote Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the majority. "But President Bush has actually helped create global warming."

Even as Mr. Gore was being stripped of his Nobel, he received strong words of support from Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, who said that the former vice president's Nobel win "shows that he is devoting his life to the right thing and should definitely stay the course."

In an interview with reporters in Iowa, Sen. Clinton said that "Al Gore should remain dedicated to the cause of global climate change, at least through November of 2008."

Sen. Clinton suggested that Mr. Gore could further research the source of global warming by immediately boarding a rocket ship to the sun.

The Borowitz Report, October 12 2007

Andy Borowitz is a comedian and writer whose work appears in The New Yorker and The New York Times, and at his award-winning humor site, BorowitzReport.com. He appears at the 92nd St. Y in NYC on Nov. 7 with Alec Baldwin, Arianna Huffington, and Mo Rocca. For tickets go to 92y.org.

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 11:46 AM EDT

27.Sitka

That's scraping the bottom of the barrel as an excuse for ethanol.

Burning fuel to produce more fuel to burn is the height of folly.

It's time to kick not just the oil habit, but the entire burning habit. It's about the future.

Subsidize wind farms, not carbon fuel farms
=====================

Sitka,

Stick to something you know like politics and rock music. Ethanol extracts carbon from the air and recycles it back into the air. It doesn't take it out of geologic storage like petroleum.

Nothing "makes" carbon. We take it from one place to another. Taking out of cold storage, where it's been accumulating for hundreds of million of years and releasing it into the atmosphere in a few decades is what's created the problem.

Ethanol takes it out of the air and then puts it back when we burn it. It does not add carbon to the atmosphere.

Ethanol is an experiment in the making. Soon we'll find more efficient ways to make it, and even better things to make it from. I think it is great that the government is subsidizing a form of alternative energy.

I guess you're going to call me a troll for explaining how naive you are. You ahead, but that makes you the troll, and most people know it.

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By Linda on Oct 15, 2007 11:50 AM EDT

Good Morning All,

 

Back from the the Oral surgery......I know you're all just thrilled.  But he sure seemed good. 

 

NOW, something to wet your whistle.......

 

Mr. Gore has uploaded 3 personal videos on current.com!!!

 

YES!

 

Iraq, stating clear he believes we should re deploy as soon as possible

Health Care , on FILM, stating we should have a SINGLE PAYER HEATH CARE

Civil Protection and strenghening our Constitution-put in more protections from this over reaching power and eaves dropping .

 

ENJOY!!!

http://current.com/people/algore 

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 11:53 AM EDT

Repeat after me.

Burning make CO2.

CO2 make earth too warm.

Burning bad. 

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 11:54 AM EDT

Nymex Crude Future 85.06 1.37 1.64 11:23
Dated Brent Spot 82.39 1.33 1.64 11:53
WTI Cushing Spot 85.00 1.31 1.57 09:08

http://www.bloomberg.com/energy/


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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 11:55 AM EDT

http://www.bloomberg.com/energy/

PRICE* CHANGE % CHANGE TIME
Nymex Crude Future 85.06 1.37 1.64 11:23
Dated Brent Spot 82.39 1.33 1.64 11:53
WTI Cushing Spot 85.00 1.31 1.57 09:08

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By TeatimeTim*in*NEOhio on Oct 15, 2007 12:00 PM EDT
35.


Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
11:22 am

 

      There is no cabon gain from burning reprocessed carbon.  Problems do occur when the process of creating such products uses fossel fuel, which is stored carbon.

 

Either way, you turn on the lights, you go somewhere, you type on a computer your using carbon.

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 12:01 PM EDT

44.Sitka

Repeat after me

================

Batteries and electronics create toxic vapors and extremely toxic solid waste.

All fuels burn, including hydrogen.

Batteries, electrical devices, and electronics create extremely toxic air and water pollution when produced and recycled.

There is no energy utopia. All paradigm shifts take time.

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 12:08 PM EDT

47.teatimetim NE Ohio

There is no cabon gain from burning reprocessed carbon. Problems do occur when the process of creating such products uses fossel fuel, which is stored carbon

=================
It is a myth that you need petrochemicals to farm. It is a red-herring the oil companies have created as an inevitability. People have been growing more efficiently long before petro-chemical fertilizers and pesticides existed.

Ever hear of composting and organic methods? Eventually, we'll find species of grains or grasses that "grow on air and water" and are much more efficient alcohol producers too, but we need capital for the infrastructure while it is being developed.

The hydrogen economy will take decades to develop, if ever, ethanol is something to fill in the meantime.

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By mary vb on Oct 15, 2007 12:06 PM EDT

The Iraq War has not made us safer says the National Counterterrorism guru. Well, no kidding!

http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Counterter...

I hope Clooney plays all Howard's clips of his supposed *gaffes* and then shows the reality and how Howard was right about it all. Howard was so ahead of the knuckleheads in DC.

-------
Forgot to say good morning to all!

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 12:12 PM EDT

There is no cabon gain from burning reprocessed carbon.  Problems do occur when the process of creating such products uses fossel fuel, which is stored carbon.

If you burn anything made of carbon, CO2 will be the byproduct. 

The molecular formula for ethanol is CH3CH2OH.

"C" means carbon 

If you burn it, it will pollute. 

 

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 12:19 PM EDT

What will be the effect of putting trillions of tons of H2O into the atmosphere from burning hydrogen as opposed to trillions of tons of CO2 from burning carbon? And where will the energy to produce hydrogen come from?

And it will take how many billions converting to ethanol just so we can spend how many billions more converting to hydrogen -- just to keep altering the environment in a different way.

Wind, solar, hydro. It's the right way. Just do it.

T163029

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By TeatimeTim*in*NEOhio on Oct 15, 2007 12:19 PM EDT
51.


Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
12:12 pm

 

      Your half correct.  True you burn anything the byproduct is carbon.  The other half:  If it grew this year in take the same amount of carbon out of the atmosphere.  Plants remove carbon.  

 The net carbon foot print is zero.   

T163029

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By TeatimeTim*in*NEOhio on Oct 15, 2007 12:21 PM EDT

And Sitka purposal for living in modern society? 

   To be quite honest Sitka, I can survive without anything but a knife, or rock splintered like a knife.  But I don't know of many who can do the same. 

Default_user

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By Joan* In*Florida on Oct 15, 2007 12:20 PM EDT

49.

Howard was so ahead of the knuckleheads in DC

Hi Mary,

And Howard still is ahead of the same knuckleheads in DC and even elsewhere as well as the new ones that keep cropping up.

I wonder if he will be asked to input anything into the movie or will the  movie be a third person's view of everything Howard has done or has happened to him. Who will play Howard? Judy?

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 12:35 PM EDT

53. teatimetim NE Ohio

Your half correct.
=================

He's totally incorrect. The water and carbon come from the hydrosphere and atmospere and go back to the atmosphere when it is burned.

Hydrogent production uses water too, just as much or more, and it goes into the atmosphere when burned.

Hydrogen production requires a huge technical infrastructure and uses much more electricity than we can create with wind and solar for a long time. Wind and solar requires a huge industrial development too, if used on a mass basis.

Biofuels like ethanol can be literally produced in your garage.

Img_2726_tinythumb

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By mary vb on Oct 15, 2007 12:38 PM EDT

Hi Joan - I read this AM that hunky George Clooney will play hunky Howard Dean. LOL.

Have a great day - much to do.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 12:49 PM EDT

A "manhattan project" rush to build solar cells would cause mining refining and idustrial pollution of heavy metals and chemical pollutants in our air, water, and ground that we have never seen before. It would consume huge amount of energy too, which is now very expensive to produce.

Batteries even worse. I don't think Sitka has ever had to live near a battery production plant in West Virginia and breathe the toxic/acidic emissions, or an electronics plant in China.

In China, a Lake’s Champion Imperils Himself

By JOSEPH KAHN

Lake Tai, the center of China’s ancient “land of fish and rice,” succumbed this year to floods of man-made waste. By then, the activist who had been trying to save the lake was in jail.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/14/world/...

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 12:50 PM EDT

If it grew this year in take the same amount of carbon out of the atmosphere.  Plants remove carbon. 

We need to reduce the amount of CO2. Growing plants will do that, but burning them won't. 

And Sitka purposal for living in modern society?

Be modern. Use existing, and develope better, technology to produce truly clean energy. It's there waiting to be exploited. All it takes is the will and the investment.

Burning carbon is not modern. It's the old troglodyte way.

 

796t373

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By Annilow on Oct 15, 2007 12:56 PM EDT

Ok Good Day Borgie-- I am caught up on my thread reading.

63. I supposed it's my disillusionment that's coming out. I really thought that Friends of the Earth cared about the environment and were keen to end pollution and its general despoilation. But, what they turned out to be mainly about was keeping other people from using and enjoying the earth's prime spots. So, it was a selfish, self-centered cohort which demonstrated virtually no interest in the actual welfare of the earth or its human population. I'm not sure if there's an official connection, but the FOE were also big on ZPG (zero population growth), as if the despoilation of the planet was the result of the number of humans, most of them poor.

----

I hate to tell you this Monica but too many people is at the root of just about everything environmental that has gone wrong, from water shortages, to pollution to etc, etc, etc. It's like kitties and doggies -- it's why we spay our pets -- there's no place to put them all -- doggies, kitties, people have been just too darn successful at procreating.

75. Really FINE pix of Al Gore, Linda.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:00 PM EDT

59.Sitka

We need to reduce the amount of CO2. Growing plants will do that, but burning them won't.

=============
Burning hydrogen made with wind and solar wont reduce carbon either. But research in plants to use for ethanol may help us understand what plants absorb more carbon from the atmosphere.

R & D for hydrogen won't teach us anything.

Not against a hydrogen economy, but what you say about ethanol is wrong. There is nothing inherently wrong with carbon. You burn carbo-hydrates and fat it in your body, every time you take a breath. It is nature's very efficient way of storage and releasing energy.

There is no guarantee burning hydrogen won't pollute. It must use the air (oxygen) to burn, and may react with other gases in the air to make pollution.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:01 PM EDT

Wind power potential

Wind's long-term theoretical potential is much greater than current world energy consumption. The most comprehensive study to date[43] found the potential of wind power on land and near-shore to be 72 TW (~54,000 Mtoe), or over five times the world's current energy use and 40 times the current electricity use.

 

Default_user

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By Joan* In*Florida on Oct 15, 2007 1:02 PM EDT

Rice patties produce lots of methane gas which is a greenhouse gas as well.

Our bodies, other than water, are mostly carbon, so choosing to be cremated at death can cause global warming.

The study of global warming causes goes on with much still to be discovered. That is one reason there were a few errors in Gore's movie -- causes and effects are being discovered and changed rapidly even before the ink is dried.

bbl

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:05 PM EDT

We should do everything possible to burn as little of anything as possible.

We need the will to implement solutions instead of excuses why it has to keep being be the way it's always been. 

 

Default_user

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 1:03 PM EDT

59.

Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
12:50 pm

...
Be modern. Use...technology to produce truly clean energy. It's there waiting to be exploited. All it takes is the will and the investment.
-------

!!!
Necessary but NOT sufficient, imo.
"The investment" BY WHOM?

The term itself (as we know it today) implies "return", the "monetary" one, the profit.

The deployment of the CLEANEST available energy source will produce NEGATIVE result and will ultimately pollute environment...if deployed by Corporations!

Ed_rooney_tinythumb

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By Michael Ellis on Oct 15, 2007 1:06 PM EDT

teatimetim NE Ohio
Mon, 10/15/07
12:21 pm
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

me too.......bear grylls on man vs wild taught me everything.............I wont eat bugs......yet

796t373

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By Annilow on Oct 15, 2007 1:06 PM EDT

22. What's the difference between gated communities being built up in Iraq and the gated communities springing up in the U.S? What are the denizens of these enclaves afraid of? That failure over there will be replicated here? Gated communities are an affront. Not because people lock themselves in, but because other people are excluded. You see, civil rights are meaningless you live in a private enclave rather than a civil society.

-----------

People live in gated communities for the same reason they lock their doors -- out of fear someone will take their stuff. I've not (knock on wood) been robbed, but I know folks who have. When I lived in San Jose we had only carports, no garages. We were right on the edge of the barrio. We had graffiti right up to the edge of our (ungated) property. One time some of the cars (not mine, thank goodness, but a few Jag's I might say) were 'keyed' in the carports. I'm sure those car owners would have been happy to have locked garages and/or a 'gate.' Fear was one big thing that drove me to where I am now -- fear of gangs and guns and keyed cars -- I couldn't even take the dog out in the evening w/o locking my door behind me.

Ed_rooney_tinythumb

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By Michael Ellis on Oct 15, 2007 1:09 PM EDT

Joan* In*Florida
Mon, 10/15/07
11:40 am
___________________________________________________________________________

dean had enforsements up the ying yang............and he ended up getitng stomped

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:09 PM EDT

62. Sitka
============

Nothing wrong with wind, and they are rapidly developing it, but it is being used on a grid or connected to by wire , not as a portable fuel.

Hydrogen made from fresh water can produce hydrogen gas and oxygen gas from separating the molecules that make water. So far that is the only thing that can be done "simply" but there is much energy lost in the process, and it uses water.

796t373

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By Annilow on Oct 15, 2007 1:10 PM EDT

Anybody else wondering what happened to the Mexican trucking companies on US highways? I was and did a quick Google -- guess 'someone' put a quietus on the subject. This was the best I could find on the subject. Guess they are here, but being tracked by satellite (yeah, right) 'in fear' Congress defunds the project. Congress can't find it's head b/c it's stuck in it's...so if we aren't sqawking, and we aren't, well, hope no one here is trying to make a livelihood from trucking...do I sound like Rush today?

http://www.scdigest.com/assets/on_target...

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:15 PM EDT
63. Joan* In*Florida

We 're talking about dumping billions of tons of CO2 into the air on a constant basis, not cremation and growing food.

And while there is much to learned for virtually every subject, ignoring the information and conclusions about global warming is just foolish. But worse, it condemns people of the future to live in a worse world instead of a better one and that will be our failure.

Don't fall for and repeat the bunk put out by corporations desperate to maintain the staus quo that 'More study is needed; therefor do nothing."

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:15 PM EDT

68. Michael Ellis

================
Hi Mike, reading a book by a Brit living in Nazareth, "Blood and Religion" by Jonathan Cook. Cost a lot too, "printed in European Union." $25 for a little paperback.

Default_user

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By Linda on Oct 15, 2007 1:15 PM EDT

Give a recommend if you please.

Reclaiming our Democracy and the Relaunch of Current TV

Mr. Gore has uploaded 3 videos himself that can be viewed right now.

1. Iraq

2. Health Care

3. Overreaching powers and our Constitution

http://blogforamerica.com/view/22584

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:16 PM EDT
61.


FRED from OR
Mon, 10/15/07
1:00 pm

Burning hydrogen with oxygen produces water.

Using corn to produce ethanol is NOT very efficient. Most studies show that it only produces 1.5:1 efficiency which means it use nearly as much energy as it produces. Also, using a food basic competes with other uses and results in people starving, a moral quandary.

Using bio-waste product like switch grass or celluse will be the future of any ethanol production because it doesn't compete with any other use and it is more efficient. Unfortunately, we will have  built-in constituency that will OPPOSE any change.

Sorry, Phil. But your support of corn for ethanol is a special interest, and it is not rational!

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:20 PM EDT

Power grids can be improved at a fraction of the cost of invading countries to steal their oil.

Batteries can be recycled. 

Vehicles can be made to operate on electrically compressed air.

All we seem to hear are excuses why clean and environmentally neutral power can't be done instead of the will to do it. 

Default_user

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 1:18 PM EDT

66.

Annilow
Mon, 10/15/07
1:06 pm

.....
People live in gated communities for the same reason they lock their doors -- out of fear someone will take their stuff....
------

!!!

Right...., and there is NO LIMITS to "warranty" completely the security behind those gates...till to the point when People REALIZE that FULL and COMPLETE warranty may bring only those gates' ELIMINATION!

The question stays is the only one..., HOW to do it?

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:19 PM EDT

Sitka,

The carbon put into the air by bio-fuels is equal to the carbon used in their growth so technically that is carbon neutral. Of course, there are better and worse inputs and corn is one of the WORST. Corn is very mechanized and fertilizer and pesticide intensive, using oil and polluting our fields and streams.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:22 PM EDT

71. Sitka

Don't fall for and repeat the bunk put out by corporations desperate to maintain the staus quo that 'More study is needed; therefor do nothing."

================
Corporate America has much much more to make off a hydrogen economy than biofuels, but they haven't got it all figured out yet.

Meanwhile, I have seen very much MISinformation on biofuels, because the petro-chemical industry touches so many industrial sectors with a ripple effect.

Sitka, I have been interested in alternative energy for 35 years and have read books and subscribed to magazines on it. My father was a municipal air pollution inspector when I was a teenager. I've always been a handyman-tinkerer-nerd. Nothing is as simple as you think.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:24 PM EDT

Using bio-waste product like switch grass or celluse will be the future of any ethanol production because it doesn't compete with any other use and it is more efficient.

Just get away from the whole burning thing that cave people did. 

That's the real special interest since it invoves producing energy rather than exploiting what is already available. 

 

Ed_rooney_tinythumb

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By Michael Ellis on Oct 15, 2007 1:24 PM EDT

FRED from OR
Mon, 10/15/07
1:15 pm
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Thank you all the same, but I have been entering my "not getting involved anymore" phase of life................

However, as one of THE original attenders at The Sleepless Summer Tour in 2003, I am practicing acting for when I get that call from Clooney and Dicaprio.............

cheres

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:26 PM EDT

The carbon put into the air by bio-fuels is equal to the carbon used in their growth so technically that is carbon neutral.

With global warming well under way, cabon neutral isn't good enough any more. 

We have centuries of pollution to undo, and can't afford to simply maintain it at current level. 

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:25 PM EDT
79.


Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
1:24 pm

Hey, I'm not partial to burning anything!! Bicycle power.....burning carbs in the body is good for you!

But the energy is already there. It's a matter of converting it to a usable form. I favor plug-in electric with solar/wind/tidal power that is the least impacting of sources (everything has an impact, though) and uses the electrical generation at night when there is low demand so doesn't require any significant increase in generation.

796t373

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By Annilow on Oct 15, 2007 1:28 PM EDT

75.

former
Mon, 10/15/07
1:18 pm

former -- I honestly don't understand your post -- I will say that one answer to 'gated communities' is just not have any stuff. The older I get the sillier my 'stuff' seems to me. I just have to lug it around. It's like when you go on a trip and buy chotzkes and then have to stuff them in your bag and get them home somehow. I'm at the age I'm looking for folks/younger relatives to unload it (not money -- don't take my money) but stuff.

One thing is that as a woman I feel very vulnerable sometimes or I did in San Jose -- I've become braver as the years march on.

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:28 PM EDT
82.


Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
1:26 pm

First, we have to reduce the escalation of the increase, before we start DECREASING carbon emissions. But you miss the point. When the corn or grass is growing it takes carbon from the air and puts it in solid form. When we convert to ethanol, it is released. But the effect is neutral.

That is far better than oil which is releasing carbon that is sequestered underground.

One can always walk or ride a bike. But we will have to have other means of transpo.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:35 PM EDT

79.Sitka

Just get away from the whole burning thing that cave people did
=============

we have to get back to basics. High tech is not always the best route. Electronics and computers are already causing toxic pollution problems. The European Union is trying to get companies to take back their electronic components and recycle them to keep them out of landfills or being burned.

We should get that problem under control before we start another industrial source of toxic materials waste.

Most drugs come from nature, insects and plants. Nature uses carbon to store and release energy because it is most efficient way to do it. We just need to do it with minimal pollution and without adding carbon to the biosphere (not from the geosphere with fossil fuels.)

Ed_rooney_tinythumb

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By Michael Ellis on Oct 15, 2007 1:36 PM EDT

One can always walk or ride a bike. But we will have to have other means of transpo.

___________________________________________________________________________

THAT requires exercise............and look around at the vast majority of obese, out of shape and just plain lazy Americans..........their kids too.............

Aiont gonna happen........stop the oil, then maybe...........

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 1:34 PM EDT

84.

Indy Steve
Mon, 10/15/07
1:28 pm

......
One can always walk or ride a bike. But we will have to have other means of transpo.
-------

???
Can one..."always", in those gated (and even non-gated) suburban communities "ride a bike" TODAY?

Not that I know of. There is no walkways, not to mention bike roads!

Hopefully..., in the future!

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:34 PM EDT
80.


Michael Ellis
Mon, 10/15/07
1:24 pm

LOL. Can't wait to see you on the silver screen!

Those who don't get involved deserve what they get. How could you have that philosophy once Dean got things going?

 I like the quote, "By your silence or by your stand, you too shall enter the fray"!!

Default_user

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 1:37 PM EDT

84.

Indy Steve
Mon, 10/15/07
1:28 pm

......
One can always walk or ride a bike....

-------

May be for exersise..., around own house...

Not as a "lifestyle"..., city-lifestyle!

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:38 PM EDT
88.


Michael Ellis
Mon, 10/15/07
1:36 pm

Bikes....it's a two-fer. Health care and transportation without pollution or carbon.  Lobby your city and county for bike lanes.

 I know people here who ride in the winter when it's 20 below, but I'm not that hardy, so I tend to burn something!

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:42 PM EDT

82. Sitka

With global warming well under way, cabon neutral isn't good enough any more

================
I agree, but we aren't going to remove carbon from the atmosphere with hydrogen fuel, or wind and solar. Nature will do it with plants, and algae, etc.

The only thing we can do with energy production is not add to the net amount, and we don't with biofuels.

We can find ways to help nature to do what she does, but that has research has nothing to do with wind and solar power production.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:47 PM EDT

Clean power won't remove CO2 from the atmosphere, but it will allow natural processes to reduce it once we stop burning and dumping billions of tons into the air .

We need think even beyond green power to clean power.

Default_user

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 1:46 PM EDT

87.

FRED from OR
Mon, 10/15/07
1:35 pm


...High tech is not always the best route...

--------
IT IS....., IF deployed by People in their own INTERESTS.

357t234709

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By * rdorgan on Oct 15, 2007 1:49 PM EDT
66.


Annilow
Mon, 10/15/07
1:06 pm

+++

Annilow -

Thanks for posting that personal account about the need for gated communities.  I give you credit for having to live in such an environment in San Jose (don't know about how it is in Florida for you now).

Where I live, we don't even have fences separating our properties and both my cars are ungaraged, uncarported.

How can you stand though the idea of feeling cooped up behind a gate ?  For myself, in a similar situation, I would feel I was locked up behind bars.  (maybe it's just that I lived my whole life in New England)

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:51 PM EDT

Bikes....it's a two-fer. Health care and transportation without pollution or carbon.  Lobby your city and county for bike lanes

Bikes are great and I ride a lot. But we need mechanical transportation. That's an immutable fact.

It can be done cleanly. 

Default_user

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By Indy Steve on Oct 15, 2007 1:51 PM EDT
95.


Sitka
Mon, 10/15/07
1:51 pm

I agree...I long for the day when I can have an electric plug-in auto that is powered from solar on my roof. Use the sun to ride around. We are too dependent on the corporation and their interests to provide the technology (at their prices) that allow us to do so.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 1:58 PM EDT

77. Sitka

Power grids can be improved at a fraction of the cost of invading countries to steal their oil.

Batteries can be recycled.

Vehicles can be made to operate on electrically compressed air.
==========

Some may make excuses, but naively oversimplifying is just as bad for public disillusionment.

Battery recycling on a massive scale for automobiles is an extremely toxic industry, probably more so than new battery production, except for the mining of new material.

Vapors from some kinds of batteries are extremely toxic and odorless. Lead acid batteries require too much weight to be practical. The nickel, cadmium or litium required to run cars may not be available on a massive scale without a monumental mining revolution and new extraction technologies.

Electric Energy lost by power transmission over wire is very high. Energy needs to be produced near the source.

The best thing would be to bring back electric trains and trolleys. That would be a cheap easy way to get started.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 1:58 PM EDT

Wind generators are LOW Tech.

And right now there is 5 times the amount of energy, or 40 times the amount of electricity, the world currently uses being thrown to the wind.

Build the necessary grid for approxiamtely $100B. Subsidize midwest farmers to install them

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 2:01 PM EDT

92. former

...High tech is not always the best route...

--------
IT IS....., IF deployed by People in their own INTERESTS.

==================

NOT ALWAYS - depends on the situation. The automobile was much higher tech compared to trolley cars, which were so much more enviromentally friendly and efficient.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 2:02 PM EDT

Cost anaysis is only valid where profit is concerned. The cost of moving electricity produced inexpensively in the long by wind and solar is peanuts compared to bestowing a wrecked planet to our kids and theirs.

Sharon_christmas_angel_119_tinythumb

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 2:02 PM EDT

Wind, solar, hydro. It's the right way. Just do it.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sitka

I'm in basic agreement with you. add conservation as the first step though (and ethanol as a stop gap renewable combustion engine fuel replacement not from ME oil)

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 2:05 PM EDT

All I've been seeing are excuses why the problem can't be solved and corrected.

I expect it from companies eager to maintain the status quo for their own profit, but why from ordinary people who only have everything to gain by demanding and supporting truly clean energy? 

Sharon_christmas_angel_119_tinythumb

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 2:04 PM EDT

put a turbine at the corner of every big parking lot and plug ins to every car on rails between rows and fuel your car while shopping and everybody is happy even Republicans

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 2:07 PM EDT

100. Sitka

============
Nibody here is arguing with you, if fact the GE corporation TV ads are saying the same thing these days.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 2:09 PM EDT

102

and everybody is happy even Republicans
===============

Especially the republicans, most of them don't have to live near that noisy screamin turbine.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 2:10 PM EDT

Conservation is a good thing to do regardless of the energy source, but putting it first will at best only slow the damage. That's not good enough any more. 

 

Sharon_christmas_angel_119_tinythumb

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 2:09 PM EDT

Iowa's Governor just returned from Germany where he has lured the second wind turbine manufactor to locate in our state and this one makes towers 280 feet high so I expect they could crank out a pretty good output.

A train load went by the farm from the first plant and those big blades ride on special cars and the turbine takes up a whole car and the towers come in bolt together sections and it is sure easy to visualize tha change just one train load will make.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 2:13 PM EDT

put a turbine at the corner of every big parking lot and plug ins to every car on rails between rows and fuel your car while shopping and everybody is happy even Republicans 

That would be great. But why just one? 

And how many wind generators could your farm hold -- one/acre? 

Sharon_christmas_angel_119_tinythumb

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 2:11 PM EDT

Conservation is the quickest way to have a real impact. Just eliminating unnecessary trips.

Pat

your friend is right about beef and grass, healthier meat and for the environment

T163029

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By TeatimeTim*in*NEOhio on Oct 15, 2007 2:11 PM EDT

Sitka 

 

And the solution is?

Sharon_christmas_angel_119_tinythumb

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By Phil Specht on Oct 15, 2007 2:12 PM EDT

We need food too, I don't think turbines have to go on good farmland, it is rarer globally than wind.

Default_user

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By former on Oct 15, 2007 2:13 PM EDT

99.

FRED from OR
Mon, 10/15/07
2:01 pm

Reply to this

92. former

...High tech is not always the best route...

--------
IT IS....., IF deployed by People in their own INTERESTS.

==================

NOT ALWAYS - depends on the situation. The automobile was much higher tech compared to trolley cars, which were so much more enviromentally friendly and efficient.
---------

When deployed "BY People" IT WILL "depends on the situation" (e.g. depends on "having sense" for them - sometimes IT IS automobile too).

When deployed "BY Corporations" it will depend on profit margin ONLY and ALWAYS.

Default_user

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By FRED from OR on Oct 15, 2007 2:17 PM EDT

LED lights and DC power converters for appliances (power block, "vampires" etc.) that don't stay on all the time but switch on when the appliance goes on.

Incadescent bulbs indoors convert lots of energy to heat, so not as much is saved indoors when home is heated, but save lots in A/C homes. Flourescent lights are better but the ballast gets very hot too.

LEDs run cool.

Dean_tinythumb

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By Sitka on Oct 15, 2007 2:17 PM EDT

Let's turn the midwest into a giant windfarm. 

N734823365_4437_tinythumb

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By Susan Rowe on Oct 15, 2007 2:15 PM EDT

new thread

Default_user

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By Linda on Oct 15, 2007 2:24 PM EDT

new thread is up.

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