Saturday, January 30, 2010

Against the Grain: Biofuel v. Grain


According to reports based on United States Department of Agriculture information one quarter of all US grain crops now go into manufacturing ethanol based bio-fuel. This is a result of bio fuel programs and incentives started in the Bush administration. The impact is now showing up in world food supplies and costs.
Studies show that the grains grown in 2009 and used for fuel was enough to feed 300 million people for one year at average world consumption levels .

"Continuing to divert more food to fuel, as is now mandated by the US federal government in its renewable fuel standard, will likely only reinforce the disturbing rise in world hunger. By subsidizing the production of ethanol to the tune of some $6bn each year, US taxpayers are in effect subsidizing rising food bills at home and around the world," said Lester Brown, the director of the Earth Policy Institute, a Washington think-tank that conducted the analysis.

read the story at guardian.co.uk

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Vermont’s Recovery Website Fails Transparency Test


The Vermont Recovery Office information website is rated among lowest in the nation. Vermont’s official recovery web site scored 13; it’s at the bottom with 11 other states.
We are tied with Alaska and fall below Louisiana’s score of 16.
Online news site Vtdigger tells about the study conducted by Good Jobs First, the results of which were released by VPIRG. This updates an earlier effort to rank how effective state recovery websites are in basic transparency. Vermont scored low in that review also.
States are judged on how well their sites convey information in these areas:
• categories of stimulus spending
• distribution of spending in different parts of the state
• details of specific projects funded by American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) grants and contracts incl. impact on employment

One of Tom Evslin’s prime tasks as Vermont’s Chief Recovery Officer was to make public information available about how our money was being spent.
It was the order of the day.
ARRA mandated that federal, state and local government organizations receiving stimulus funds report data on how and where these funds are being spent, so that citizens could monitor the expenditure and use of recovery funds.

The Burlington Free Press reports that Vermont officials now claim they wanted a no frills web page to save money. No estimate of the alleged savings is available. When asked about specific information one Vermont official said it was available by request and added
“We don’t withhold information. We have elected not to put it all on the Web. ... It would take a contractor to do that.”

Frills aside, they offer no explanation why, according to this study, even the basic website fails to meet so many requirements for accountability and transparency.

After less than one year as Chief Recovery Officer and with the state at the bottom of the pack by this assessment, Evslin moved on .He was appointed by Governor Douglas as Vermont Chief Technology Officer. In this capacity he will be in charge of reviving the stalled E-State initiative and overseeing the state’s new smart grid technology applications.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Douglas borne manner of upper bracket tax relief


Vermont Governor Jim Douglas is asking all Vermonters to make sacrifices during these difficult times. State services are being cut to the bone, state fees are being increased and there is talk of cutting unemployment benefits.

However minus any hint of shared sacrifice Douglas has proposed replacing a 40% capital gains tax exemption removed last year that favors those in upper income brackets. This move and other changes he proposes would, according to the Times Argus, result in $9.9 million loss of state revenue.

He attempts to justify this by rising the fear that Vermont’s rich will have no incentive to stay unless their taxes are lowered.
Douglas would revoke the first of those changes, restoring the old capital gains exemption, but not the second, leaving the reductions in the top income tax brackets in place.

Douglas acknowledged last week that if his proposal were enacted it would effectively be a tax reduction for top earners. Vermont's having among the highest top margin rates risks driving wealthier Vermonters out of the state, Douglas said.

"We have to make sure there are people in those brackets in the years to come," he said. "I think we are going to see fewer of them."
In addition, Douglas would roll back changes made last year that reduced how much money could be excluded from Vermont's estate taxes.

How deeply Governor Douglas’ fear will touch those experiencing Catamount health cost increases, cuts in human services, housing support service cuts and limited state Medicaid programs remains to be seen.
No explanation was offered why an exodus of upper bracket Vermonters didn’t leave the state in droves over the past year. Perhaps some sympathy could be had if he were to document the coming exodus, show the empty mansions, the derelict condos, the luxury cars packed high with goods abandoned along the highway in hurried flight from the tyranny of a closed capital gains tax loophole.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Private Jesus Sights with Bible Codes


UPDATE:In a release on Thursday, Mr. Bindon’s son, Stephen Bindon, wrote, “Trijicon has proudly served the US military for more than two decades, and our decision to offer to voluntarily remove these references is both prudent and appropriate.”

These reference numbers 2COR4:6 and JN8:12 are biblical passages from the New Testament and unbelievably are intentionally stamped inside the tritium illuminated rifle sights supplied to the US military by defense contractor Trijicon.The UK is deciding what to do about the sights but New Zealand will remove the stamped inscriptions.

Trijicon confirmed to ABCNews.com that it adds the biblical codes to the sights sold to the U.S. military. Tom Munson, director of sales and marketing for Trijicon, which is based in Wixom, Michigan, said the inscriptions "have always been there" and said there was nothing wrong or illegal with adding them. Munson said the issue was being raised by a group that is "not Christian." The company has said the practice began under its founder, Glyn Bindon, a devout Christian from South Africa who was killed in a 2003 plane crash.


The Trijicon company says it is "Guided by our values, we endeavor to have our products used wherever precision aiming solutions are required to protect individual freedom." They received a $660million long-term contract to supply sights to the Marine Corps.

It is reported that Muslim groups reacted angrily Wednesday after it emerged that the US military in Iraq and Afghanistan were using rifle sights inscribed with coded Biblical references.
The Muslim Public Affairs Council (MPAC) called on US Defense Secretary Robert Gates to immediately withdraw from combat use equipment found to have inscriptions of Biblical references


2COR4:6 "For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ." Second Corinthians 4:6

JN8:12 "Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness, but will have the light of life."
Book of John 8:12

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Living Containerization: or You May Keep the Box



Worldwide,by the early 2000s, 300 million 20-foot containers were moved by sea each year, with over a quarter of those shipments coming from China. It has even been predicted that, at some point, container ships will be constrained in size only by the depth of the Straits of Malacca—one of the world's busiest shipping lanes—linking the Indian Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. This so-called Malaccamax size constrains a ship to dimensions of 470 m in length and 60 m wide (1542 feet by 197 feet).

The millions of containers used to ship the wealthy world’s products may now be used to house the poor. Intermodal shipping units (metal shipping containers) are widely being considered as potential housing pods. Emergency housing for use in disasters such as Haiti’s recent earthquake and even longer term housing uses are being explored.

I guess we should be pleased that a secondary use can be found for the ubiquitous symbol of world trade. It is a practical, well intentioned reuse of these containers but is this the best we can do for the chronically poor nations of the world? Wealthy nations should put some thought into changing this system that litters the globe with giant metal boxes, only to hand them down to the poor for housing after discarding them.

A university press release this week touts this container industry funded effort.
Many Caribbean countries import more containers than they export, which leads to the surplus of containers in those nations.
“The project has a double mission: to address the local need of providing adequate housing for people in need while solving a global problem of recycling – giving purpose to empty containers that would otherwise be discarded,” said a Clemson University professor involved in the container industry funded project

As part of this research, the group is studying the cycles of natural disasters by looking at the larger picture through mapping and logistics to understand how containers move, available surpluses and ultimately coordinating the cycles of natural disasters with the ebb and flow of container supplies worldwide.

Also posted at Green Mountain Daily

Friday, January 15, 2010

Minute Added to the “Doomsday Clock”


Well the originators of the “Doomsday Clock”, the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists are feeling optimistic this week!
My guess is this is not your average jolly bunch of academics. They may not habitually be a pessimistic bunch, but that is just my assumption.
In a symbolic gesture reflecting how close humanity teeters on the edge of destruction, scientists turned the hand of the "Doomsday Clock" back one minute on Thursday in New York, citing a more "hopeful state of world affairs."

For the first time in two years, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists changed the setting of the symbolic time piece, moving the clock to six minutes to midnight from five to midnight.

The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists (BAS) was founded in 1945 by former Manhattan Project scientists troubled by their role in the creation of atomic weapons. In 1947, they created the Doomsday Clock to mobilize support against the use of nuclear weapons.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Tylenol,steroids and Ari Fleischer


Tylenol, steroids and baseball, stories land at the feet Ari Fleischer.
I noticed some odd connections between two news items today. Stories surfaced this week about James W. Lewis and his wife, who have supplied DNA and fingerprint samples to the FBI. Both were under suspicion for the 1982 Chicago-area Tylenol tampering case. Lewis served 12 years for attempted extortion, but no one was ever found directly responsible for the seven deaths from taking poison laced Tylenol.

The steps Johnson & Johnson, the makers of Tylenol, used to mitigate the PR problem surrounding the poisoning is recognized as being perhaps the birth of modern corporate crisis management. Since then, events that could otherwise have been total disasters are seen as manageable crises that, with the correct spin, can be handled in a way which lessens or blunts the PR damage.
The full flowering of crisis management (as pioneered in the Tylenol case) is in the sports pages today. Some characteristics are described in the book Damage Control:
The blurring of the lines between news and entertainment and the rise of the Internet is making aggressive responses to corporate crises more important than ever, Dezenhall and Weber write. Businesses will have to function like modern politicians: communications targeted at sympathetic audiences and pre-emptive attacks on opponents who will seek to undermine companies are the new rules of the game.

Now a man who helped Bush sell the Iraq War is controlling the spin.

The one-day plan — coordinated over the past month by Ari Fleischer, a former White House press secretary who runs a crisis-communications company, and the St. Louis Cardinals, who recently hired McGwire as their batting coach

He did it all in one afternoon, starting with a statement that was distributed widely to the news media, and that came across the Associated Press wire at 3 p.m.
The A.P. followed quickly with a story that featured an interview with McGwire, who subsequently spoke to numerous other news media outlets — including USA Today and The St. Louis Post-Dispatch; Tim Kurkjian and John Kruk of ESPN (both by telephone, not on the air); KTRS Radio in St. Louis; and The New York Times, before talking to Bob Costas live at 7 p.m. Eastern on MLB Network.


Mark McGwire’s full frontal corporate media blitz aimed at rehabbing his steroid tainted image is being managed by none other than former Bush White House press spokesman.Ari Fleischer the man that spun the Iraq War.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Vermont Yankee Groundwater Test Positive for Tritium


With a sneezing and wheezing the calliope crashed to the ground …



Around the same time today Entergy Vermont Yankee officials dealt with the news that their aging plant’s monitoring wells had tested positive for tritium (a radioactive isotope)Vermont Governor Douglas was urging the legislature to vote to extend the operating license and allow regulatory boards to handle the issue.
Today’s evidence of tritium in monitoring wells and an alarm caused by the oil level in a pump used to control the power level in the reactor come on the heels of Vermont Yankee new feel good about nukes PR blitz called I am Vermont Yankee
Reports say The problem at the 38-year-old reactor is similar to those cropping up at nuclear plants around the country, with the discovery of a radioactive isotope called tritium in a monitoring well.
Both Spokesman Rob Williams and William Irwin, radiological health chief for the Vermont Department of Health, said there was no threat to the public health and safety from the level of tritium reported. They said the 17,000 picocuries of radioactivity per liter of water measured at Vermont Yankee was 3,000 less than the 20,000 picocurie safety limit set for drinking water by the federal Environmental Protection Agency.

But Arnold Gundersen, a former nuclear industry engineer who has consulted with the Legislature on issues related to Vermont Yankee, on Thursday called the discovery of tritium on the plant site "a big deal."

"It's a sign that there's a pipe or a tank leaking somewhere" at the plant, Gundersen said. "It's highly unlikely that the highest concentration in the ground would happen to be at the monitoring well," he added.

This is a problem with older plants and its effect the cost of decommissioning could be significant.For a much more thorough run down of all things Yankee and tritium leaks in general Green Mountain Daily's Maggie Gunderson has more more.
Link here New Tritium Leak at Vermont Yankee

Monday, January 4, 2010

We are living in the future ...


One of my favorite blogs The Hyper Kitchen has the future now.
To be more precise The Hyper Kitchen has a great list of predictions made in 1981 for the year 2010 .Take at look at the World that was predicted.

Here are two past looks into the future:

In the year 2010
-A robot can now cross a busy highway without being hit

-Authoritarian governments in various nations are using mind and behavior control chemicals on their subjects to suppress dissent.