Saturday, June 18, 2005

Global Warming, Grazing, Oil, and Fixing the Facts

From the Washington Post, U.S. Pressure Weakens G-8 Climate Plan:

Bush administration officials working behind the scenes have succeeded in weakening key sections of a proposal for joint action by the eight major industrialized nations to curb climate change.

...

One deleted section, for example, initially cited "increasingly compelling evidence of climate change, including rising ocean and atmospheric temperatures, retreating ice sheets and glaciers, rising sea levels, and changes to ecosystems." It added: "Inertia in the climate system means that further warming is inevitable. Unless urgent action is taken, there will be a growing risk of adverse effects on economic development, human health and the natural environment, and of irreversible long-term changes to our climate and oceans."


From the LA Times, Land Study on Grazing Denounced:

A government biologist and a hydrologist, who both retired this year from the Bureau of Land Management [BLM], said their conclusions that the proposed new rules might adversely affect water quality and wildlife, including endangered species, were excised and replaced with language justifying less stringent regulations favored by cattle ranchers.

...

Eliminated from the final draft was another conclusion that read: "The Proposed Action will have a slow, long-term adverse impact on wildlife and biological diversity in general."

Also removed was language saying how a number of the rule changes could adversely affect endangered species.

"This is a whitewash. They took all of our science and reversed it 180 degrees," said Erick Campbell, a former BLM state biologist in Nevada and a 30-year bureau employee who retired this year. He was the author of sections of the report pertaining to the effect on wildlife and threatened and endangered species.

"They rewrote everything," Campbell said in an interview this week. "It's a crime."


Is there a pattern of "the intelligence and facts" being "fixed" to satisfy preordained policies?

The sad thing is that if we chose to do more for the environment, we could - From Homegrown Fuel Supply Helps Brazil Breathe Easy:

While Americans fume at high gasoline prices, Carolina Rossini is the essence of Brazilian cool at the pump.

...

"You save money and you don't pollute as much," said Rossini, who paid about $18 to fill her nearly empty tank. "And it's a good thing that the product is made here."

Three decades after the first oil shock rocked its economy, Brazil has nearly shaken its dependence on foreign oil. More vulnerable than even the United States when the 1973 Middle East oil embargo sent gas prices soaring, Brazil vowed to kick its import habit. Now the country that once relied on outsiders to supply 80% of its crude is projected to be self-sufficient within a few years.

...

Today about 40% of all the fuel that Brazilians pump into their vehicles is ethanol, known here as alcohol, compared with about 3% in the United States. No other nation is using ethanol on such a vast scale. The change wasn't easy or cheap. But 30 years later, Brazil is reaping the return on its investment in energy security while the U.S. writes checks for $50-a-barrel foreign oil.

"Brazil showed it can be done, but it takes commitment and leadership," said Roland Hwang, vehicles policy director for the Natural Resources Defense Council in San Francisco. In the U.S. "we're paying the highest prices at the pump since 1981, and we are sending over $100 billion overseas a year to import oil instead of keeping that money in the United States…. Clearly Brazil has something to teach us."

Thursday, June 16, 2005

30 Days

Last night I watched the premiere of 30 Days, a TV series by Morgan Spurlock from the famous (or is that infamous?!) documentary Super Size Me. The concept of the show is very similar to Super Size Me - the results of 30 day lifestyle experiment are recorded (and accompanied by a social commentary).

In the first episode, he took his fiancée to Columbus, Ohio and they lived on minimum wage for a month. With the underlying point of the show being that a minimum wage job ($5.15 / hour) is inadequate to support someone, yet alone a family. They actually found jobs that paid slightly more than minimum wage (~$7/h), but had a quite depressing life. Despite living in an ant-infested former crack house (apartment), they ended up earning less than they spent in the month. (Mostly because of ~$1000 in hospital bills - it's kind of hard to pay that off when you only make ~$44/day after taxes)...it makes me grateful to have grown up like I did and to have a decent job.

I think in future episodes other people will be the guinea pigs and Spurlock will just narrate.

Friday, June 10, 2005

Daredevil

You learn something new each day. Today, after watching Daredevil I learned that dull movies and action movies are not mutually exclusive.

Monday, June 06, 2005

Crazy Question

Sometimes living in a big city is an adventure. I was at the grocery store, minding my own business while selecting some peaches [Yay! Peaches are in finally season. :-)] when a guys walks over and asks How do you spelling 'kidding', as in 'just kidding'...I look up and realized he is busy text messaging on his phone. (But, I'm not sure if that reduces the strangeness of the brief conversation though).

Thursday, June 02, 2005

What We Still Don't Know

The BBC has made a list of What we still don't know (in response to the identity of Deep Throat being revealed). It's an interesting idea to ponder. However, the list is somewhat British (and a few items are fickle, such as the HP6 reference).

What do you think they left out from their list? (I'd go with the alleged 1947 Roswell UFO crash...)