Saturday, August 27, 2011

Wash, rinse, repeat

I just finished reading about Our Oil-Constrained Future and was struck by the following statement:
If this model is accurate—and if the ceiling on global oil production really is around 90 mbd and can be expanded only slowly—it means that every time the global economy starts to reach even moderate growth rates, demand for oil will quickly bump up against supply constraints, prices will spike, and we'll be thrown back into recession. Rinse and repeat.
So our economic future, perhaps the global economy going forward, depends upon alternative energy. You'd think the leaders in Congress who are most concerned with economic growth might be in favor of this?  You'd be wrong.
They have more important constituents to look after.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Starbucks CEO to DC: You've been cut off

Starbucks CEO to DC: You've been cut off

I am imposing a one week personal moratorium on mocking or otherwise deriding the Buckys. Well done, sir. Well done.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Big Trouble

The latest from Weathervane Music's Shaking Through Volume 2 is big fun powerpop from Ridgewood, NJs Big Troubles. Enjoy, listen, download, contribute.

Friday, April 08, 2011

Rand Paul doesn't care about his constituents (or the deficit)

I mean, you knew that already, but this pretty much proves it.
"Every regulation doesn't save lives," Paul said in the hearing, later adding that the regulations so far have done a “pretty good job” of reducing black lung. "There is a point or a balancing act between when a regulation becomes burdensome enough that our energy production is stifled. We have to assess the costs of regulation and whether they save lives."
Except in this case, they do save lives. Provably, empirically, they save lives. Rand Paul's constituents lives, since Eastern Kentucky is coal country and his constituents are still dying.

But Rand Paul clearly values campaign contributions over constituents lives.


CandidateOfficeAmount
Manchin, Joe (D-WV)Senate $178,848
Blunt, Roy (R-MO)House $145,253
Portman, Rob (R-OH)
$128,025
Maynard, Elliott (R-WV)
$112,300
Paul, Rand (R-KY)
$99,627  

What does this have to do with the deficit? According to The Hastings Center:
The mortality of chronic lung disease is predicted to decrease at a rate of 1.5% a year until 2030, and yet the cost of treating it is predicted to more than double from $176.8 billion in 2006 to $389.2 billion in 2011 and to reach $832.9 billion in 2021. The reason for this skyrocketing increase is a 31.1% increase in the number of diagnoses predicted by the Milken Institute.
Medicare spent over $8 billion on respiratory disease, excluding pneumonia, in 2006, a figure that is bound to increase tremendously in the next decade.
 Wouldn't someone trying to cut the deficit want to prevent expensive, chronic disease?

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

So you just wanna buy the box set, huh?



Srsly, don't. Friends don't let friends by "remastered" compressed crapola. End the loudness wars, for pete's sake.

Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Glad we didn't get a lot of snow this year

Otherwise there's a chance my town could have used radioactive brine to melt the snow and ice. Like in West Virginia:
In West Virginia, for example, environmental regulators and highway officials last year announced plans for the state to start paying around five cents per gallon for gas drilling wastewater known as brine, which tends to be extremely salty, to melt ice on roads. They planned to buy about 1.2 million gallons at more than 120 sites around the state and to buy more as needed.
They know it might be radioactive, by the way, they just don't seem to think it's a big deal. West Virginia officials "said that only wastewater from shallow wells would be used, thereby reducing levels of radioactivity."


Lest you think this is just a winter-time problem, and hey, Global Warming will eliminate the danger, think again:
More than 155,000 gallons of this wastewater was sent by a drilling company called Ultra Resources to nine towns for dust suppression in 2009, state records show. The water came from two gas wells in Tioga County and contained radium at almost 700 times the levels allowed in drinking water.
“I was told nothing about frack water or any gas-well brines or anything else,” said Deborah Kotulka, the secretary of Richmond Township, in Tioga County, whose name appears on the state record. Her township received 101,640 gallons of the water from wells with high radioactivity, those records show.
 So when the dust bowl hits, I for one will stand against it with my glow-in-the-dark squirt gun.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

And that's all I have to say about that!

I guess if I hadn't said anything at work in 5 years I might get a bad review or lose my job. Unless I was a Supreme Court Justice.

Now that evidence is mounting that suggests his silence was purchased I wonder how much longer he will remain mute?

Friday, February 11, 2011

Thursday, January 06, 2011

They could have used jumpy stilts

All of the hullabaloo and bluster from Senator Survey claiming all of our problems would go away if we just build the danged fence turns out to be (wait for it) a truckload of shit.

It's not the gaps in the fence that make it a completely ineffective waste of money it's the fence itself. Observe:



I think this dude could probably shave a couple of seconds off their times:


Friday, December 17, 2010

Faux News, indeed

This survey took the time to prove what I already knew: 
Those who watched Fox News almost daily were significantly more likely than those who never watched it to believe that most economists estimate the stimulus caused job losses (12 points more likely), most economists have estimated the health care law will worsen the deficit (31 points), the economy is getting worse (26 points), most scientists do not agree that climate change is occurring (30 points), the stimulus legislation did not include any tax cuts (14 points), their own income taxes have gone up (14 points), the auto bailout only occurred under Obama (13 points), when TARP came up for a vote most Republicans opposed it (12 points) and that it is not clear that Obama was born in the United States (31 points).
Faux News Channel seems a pretty appropriate moniker, after all. All of the above are false. And all of the above are talking points pushed by Fox on a nearly daily basis. The "so-called" stimulus, the "so-called" public option, the "failed stimulus" and the best of all, the Lie of the Year.

Now, how is it that the folks at Fox can just apparently just make things up and stay on the air? Maybe it's because the edict to do so from the top?

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Cliff Lee!

So who's your fourth starter? Hot stove season finally warmed up in always sunny Philadelphia. Cliff Lee is a Phillie (again).
Here's another Philadelphian named Lee to start off the day "shouting out loud":

Boomtown Rats

The lead in this story is my daughter's school. She doesn't attend the high school in the former GlaxoSmithKline building, though. ...