Saturday, October 13, 2007

Newsweek Article on Global Warming Deniers

Follow the money!

From: olcharlie

Newsweek Chronicles Relentless History of Climate Deniers

Global-Warming Deniers: A Well-Funded Machine

Newsweek Magazine, Aug 13, 2007

Aug. 13, 2007 issue - Sen. Barbara Boxer had been chair of the Senate's Environment Committee for less than a month when the verdict landed last February. "Warming of the climate system is unequivocal," concluded a report by 600 scientists from governments, academia, green groups and businesses in 40 countries. Worse, there was now at least a 90 percent likelihood that the release of greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels is causing longer droughts, more flood-causing downpours and worse heat waves, way up from earlier studies.

Those who doubt the reality of human-caused climate change have spent decades disputing that. But Boxer figured that with "the overwhelming science out there, the deniers' days were numbered." As she left a meeting with the head of the international climate panel, however, a staffer had some news for her. A conservative think tank long funded by ExxonMobil, she told Boxer, had offered scientists $10,000 to write articles undercutting the new report and the computer-based climate models it is based on. "I realized," says Boxer, "there was a movement behind this that just wasn't giving up."

If you think those who have long challenged the mainstream scientific findings about global warming recognize that the game is over, think again. Yes, 19 million people watched the "Live Earth" concerts last month, titans of corporate America are calling for laws mandating greenhouse cuts, "green" magazines fill newsstands, and the film based on Al Gore's best-selling book, "An Inconvenient Truth," won an Oscar. But outside Hollywood, Manhattan and other habitats of the chattering classes, the denial machine is running at full throttle and continuing to shape both government policy and public opinion.

Since the late 1980s, this well-coordinated, well-funded campaign by contrarian scientists, free-market think tanks and industry has created a paralyzing fog of doubt around climate change. Through advertisements, op-eds, lobbying and media attention, greenhouse doubters (they hate being called deniers) argued first that the world is not warming; measurements indicating otherwise are flawed, they said. Then they claimed that any warming is natural, not caused by human activities. Now they contend that the looming warming will be minuscule and harmless. "They patterned what they did after the tobacco industry," says former senator Tim Wirth, who spearheaded environmental issues as an under secretary of State in the Clinton administration. "Both figured, sow enough doubt, call the science uncertain and in dispute. That's had a huge impact on both the public and Congress."

Just last year, polls found that 64 percent of Americans thought there was "a lot" of scientific disagreement on climate change; only one third thought planetary warming was "mainly caused by things people do." In contrast, majorities in Europe and Japan recognize a broad consensus among climate experts that greenhouse gases mostly from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas to power the world's economies are altering climate. A new NEWSWEEK Poll finds that the influence of the denial machine remains strong. Although the figure is less than in earlier polls, 39 percent of those asked say there is "a lot of disagreement among climate scientists" on the basic question of whether the planet is warming; 42 percent say there is a lot of disagreement that human activities are a major cause of global warming. Only 46 percent say the greenhouse effect is being felt today.

As a result of the undermining of the science, all the recent talk about addressing climate change has produced little in the way of actual action. Yes, last September Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed a landmark law committing California to reduce statewide emissions of carbon dioxide to 1990 levels by 2020 and 80 percent more by 2050. And this year both Minnesota and New Jersey passed laws requiring their states to reduce greenhouse emissions 80 percent below recent levels by 2050. In January, nine leading corporations including Alcoa, Caterpillar, Duke Energy, Du Pont and General Electric called on Congress to "enact strong national legislation" to reduce greenhouse gases. But although at least eight bills to require reductions in greenhouse gases have been introduced in Congress, their fate is decidedly murky. The Democratic leadership in the House of Representatives decided last week not even to bring to a vote a requirement that automakers improve vehicle mileage, an obvious step toward reducing greenhouse emissions. Nor has there been much public pressure to do so. Instead, every time the scientific case got stronger, "the American public yawned and bought bigger cars," Rep. Rush Holt, a New Jersey congressman and physicist, recently wrote in the journal Science; politicians "shrugged, said there is too much doubt among scientists, and did nothing."

It was 98 degrees in Washington on Thursday, June 23, 1988, and climate change was bursting into public consciousness. The Amazon was burning, wildfires raged in the United States, crops in the Midwest were scorched and it was shaping up to be the hottest year on record worldwide. A Senate committee, including Gore, had invited NASA climatologist James Hansen to testify about the greenhouse effect, and the members were not above a little stagecraft. The night before, staffers had opened windows in the hearing room. When Hansen began his testimony, the air conditioning was struggling, and sweat dotted his brow. It was the perfect image for the revelation to come. He was 99 percent sure, Hansen told the panel, that "the greenhouse effect has been detected, and it is changing our climate now."

The reaction from industries most responsible for greenhouse emissions was immediate. "As soon as the scientific community began to come together on the science of climate change, the pushback began," says historian Naomi Oreskes of the University of California, San Diego. Individual companies and industry associations representing petroleum, steel, autos and utilities, for instance formed lobbying groups with names like the Global Climate Coalition and the Information Council on the Environment. ICE's game plan called for enlisting greenhouse doubters to "reposition global warming as theory rather than fact," and to sow doubt about climate research just as cigarette makers had about smoking research. ICE ads asked, "If the earth is getting warmer, why is Minneapolis [or Kentucky, or some other site] getting colder?" This sounded what would become a recurring theme for naysayers: that global temperature data are flat-out wrong. For one thing, they argued, the data reflect urbanization (many temperature stations are in or near cities), not true global warming.

Shaping public opinion was only one goal of the industry groups, for soon after Hansen's sweat-drenched testimony they faced a more tangible threat: international proposals to address global warming. The United Nations had scheduled an "Earth Summit" for 1992 in Rio de Janeiro, and climate change was high on an agenda that included saving endangered species and rain forests. ICE and the Global Climate Coalition lobbied hard against a global treaty to curb greenhouse gases, and were joined by a central cog in the denial machine: the George C. Marshall Institute, a conservative think tank. Barely two months before Rio, it released a study concluding that models of the greenhouse effect had "substantially exaggerated its importance." The small amount of global warming that might be occurring, it argued, actually reflected a simple fact: the Sun is putting out more energy. The idea of a "variable Sun" has remained a constant in the naysayers' arsenal to this day, even though the tiny increase in solar output over recent decades falls far short of explaining the extent or details of the observed warming.

In what would become a key tactic of the denial machine think tanks linking up with like-minded, contrarian researchers the report was endorsed in a letter to President George H.W. Bush by MIT meteorologist Richard Lindzen. Lindzen, whose parents had fled Hitler's Germany, is described by old friends as the kind of man who, if you're in the minority, opts to be with you. "I thought it was important to make it clear that the science was at an early and primitive stage and that there was little basis for consensus and much reason for skepticism," he told Scientific American magazine. "I did feel a moral obligation."

Bush was torn. The head of his Environmental Protection Agency, William Reilly, supported binding cuts in greenhouse emissions. Political advisers insisted on nothing more than voluntary cuts. Bush's chief of staff, John Sununu, had a Ph.D. in engineering from MIT and "knew computers," recalls Reilly. Sununu frequently logged on to a computer model of climate, Reilly says, and "vigorously critiqued" its assumptions and projections.

Sununu's side won. The Rio treaty called for countries to voluntarily stabilize their greenhouse emissions by returning them to 1990 levels by 2000. (As it turned out, U.S. emissions in 2000 were 14 percent higher than in 1990.) Avoiding mandatory cuts was a huge victory for industry. But Rio was also a setback for climate contrarians, says UCSD's Oreskes: "It was one thing when Al Gore said there's global warming, but quite another when George Bush signed a convention saying so." And the doubters faced a newly powerful nemesis. Just months after he signed the Rio pact, Bush lost to Bill Clinton whose vice president, Gore, had made climate change his signature issue.
Groups that opposed greenhouse curbs ramped up. They "settled on the 'science isn't there' argument because they didn't believe they'd be able to convince the public to do nothing if climate change were real," says David Goldston, who served as Republican chief of staff for the House of Representatives science committee until 2006.

Industry found a friend in Patrick Michaels, a climatologist at the University of Virginia who keeps a small farm where he raises prize-winning pumpkins and whose favorite weather, he once told a reporter, is "anything severe." Michaels had written several popular articles on climate change, including an op-ed in The Washington Post in 1989 warning of "apocalyptic environmentalism," which he called "the most popular new religion to come along since Marxism." The coal industry's Western Fuels Association paid Michaels to produce a newsletter called World Climate Report, which has regularly trashed mainstream climate science. (At a 1995 hearing in Minnesota on coal-fired power plants, Michaels admitted that he received more than $165,000 from industry; he now declines to comment on his industry funding, asking, "What is this, a hatchet job?")

The road from Rio led to an international meeting in Kyoto, Japan, where more than 100 nations would negotiate a treaty on making Rio's voluntary and largely ignored greenhouse curbs mandatory. The coal and oil industries, worried that Kyoto could lead to binding greenhouse cuts that would imperil their profits, ramped up their message that there was too much scientific uncertainty to justify any such cuts. There was just one little problem. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC the international body that periodically assesses climate research had just issued its second report, and the conclusion of its 2,500 scientists looked devastating for greenhouse doubters. Although both natural swings and changes in the Sun's output might be contributing to climate change, it concluded, "the balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on climate."

Faced with this emerging consensus, the denial machine hardly blinked. There is too much "scientific uncertainty" to justify curbs on greenhouse emissions, William O'Keefe, then a vice president of the American Petroleum Institute and leader of the Global Climate Coalition, suggested in 1996. Virginia's Michaels echoed that idea in a 1997 op-ed in The Washington Post, describing "a growing contingent of scientists who are increasingly unhappy with the glib forecasts of gloom and doom." To reinforce the appearance of uncertainty and disagreement, the denial machine churned out white papers and "studies" (not empirical research, but critiques of others' work). The Marshall Institute, for instance, issued reports by a Harvard University astrophysicist it supported pointing to satellite data showing "no significant warming" of the atmosphere, contrary to the surface warming. The predicted warming, she wrote, "simply isn't happening according to the satellite[s]." At the time, there was a legitimate case that satellites were more accurate than ground stations, which might be skewed by the unusual warmth of cities where many are sited.

"There was an extraordinary campaign by the denial machine to find and hire scientists to sow dissent and make it appear that the research community was deeply divided," says Dan Becker of the Sierra Club. Those recruits blitzed the media. Driven by notions of fairness and objectivity, the press "qualified every mention of human influence on climate change with 'some scientists believe,' where the reality is that the vast preponderance of scientific opinion accepts that human-caused [greenhouse] emissions are contributing to warming," says Reilly, the former EPA chief. "The pursuit of balance has not done justice" to the science. Talk radio goes further, with Rush Limbaugh telling listeners this year that "more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is not likely to significantly contribute to the greenhouse effect. It's just all part of the hoax." In the new NEWSWEEK Poll, 42 percent said the press "exaggerates the threat of climate change."

Now naysayers tried a new tactic: lists and petitions meant to portray science as hopelessly divided. Just before Kyoto, S. Fred Singer released the "Leipzig Declaration on Global Climate Change." Singer, who fled Nazi-occupied Austria as a boy, had run the U.S. weather-satellite program in the early 1960s. In the Leipzig petition, just over 100 scientists and others, including TV weathermen, said they "cannot subscribe to the politically inspired world view that envisages climate catastrophes." Unfortunately, few of the Leipzig signers actually did climate research; they just kibitzed about other people's. Scientific truth is not decided by majority vote, of course (ask Galileo), but the number of researchers whose empirical studies find that the world is warming and that human activity is partly responsible numbered in the thousands even then. The IPCC report issued this year, for instance, was written by more than 800 climate researchers and vetted by 2,500 scientists from 130 nations.

Although Clinton did not even try to get the Senate to ratify the Kyoto treaty (he knew a hopeless cause when he saw one), industry was taking no chances. In April 1998 a dozen people from the denial machine including the Marshall Institute, Fred Singer's group and Exxon met at the American Petroleum Institute's Washington headquarters. They proposed a $5 million campaign, according to a leaked eight-page memo, to convince the public that the science of global warming is riddled with controversy and uncertainty. The plan was to train up to 20 "respected climate scientists" on media and public outreach with the aim of "raising questions about and undercutting the 'prevailing scientific wisdom' " and, in particular, "the Kyoto treaty's scientific underpinnings" so that elected officials "will seek to prevent progress toward implementation." The plan, once exposed in the press, "was never implemented as policy," says Marshall's William O'Keefe, who was then at API.

The GOP control of Congress for six of Clinton's eight years in office meant the denial machine had a receptive audience. Although Republicans such as Sens. John McCain, Jim Jeffords and Lincoln Chafee spurned the denial camp, and Democrats such as Congressman John Dingell adamantly oppose greenhouse curbs that might hurt the auto and other industries, for the most part climate change has been a bitterly partisan issue. Republicans have also received significantly more campaign cash from the energy and other industries that dispute climate science. Every proposed climate bill "ran into a buzz saw of denialism," says Manik Roy of the Pew Center on Climate Change, a research and advocacy group, who was a Senate staffer at the time. "There was no rational debate in Congress on climate change."

The reason for the inaction was clear. "The questioning of the science made it to the Hill through senators who parroted reports funded by the American Petroleum Institute and other advocacy groups whose entire purpose was to confuse people on the science of global warming," says Sen. John Kerry. "There would be ads challenging the science right around the time we were trying to pass legislation. It was pure, raw pressure combined with false facts." Nor were states stepping where Washington feared to tread. "I did a lot of testifying before state legislatures in Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Alaska that thought about taking action," says Singer. "I said that the observed warming was and would be much, much less than climate models calculated, and therefore nothing to worry about."

But the science was shifting under the denial machine. In January 2000, the National Academy of Sciences skewered its strongest argument. Contrary to the claim that satellites finding no warming are right and ground stations showing warming are wrong, it turns out that the satellites are off. (Basically, engineers failed to properly correct for changes in their orbit.) The planet is indeed warming, and at a rate since 1980 much greater than in the past.

Just months after the Academy report, Singer told a Senate panel that "the Earth's atmosphere is not warming and fears about human-induced storms, sea-level rise and other disasters are misplaced." And as studies fingering humans as a cause of climate change piled up, he had a new argument: a cabal was silencing good scientists who disagreed with the "alarmist" reports. "Global warming has become an article of faith for many, with its own theology and orthodoxy," Singer wrote in The Washington Times. "Its believers are quite fearful of any scientific dissent."

With the Inauguration of George W. Bush in 2001, the denial machine expected to have friends in the White House. But despite Bush's oil-patch roots, naysayers weren't sure they could count on him: as a candidate, he had pledged to cap carbon dioxide emissions. Just weeks into his term, the Competitive Enterprise Institute heard rumors that the draft of a speech Bush was preparing included a passage reiterating that pledge. CEI's Myron Ebell called conservative pundit Robert Novak, who had booked Bush's EPA chief, Christie Todd Whitman, on CNN's "Crossfire." He asked her about the line, and within hours the possibility of a carbon cap was the talk of the Beltway. "We alerted anyone we thought could have influence and get the line, if it was in the speech, out," says CEI president Fred Smith, who counts this as another notch in CEI's belt. The White House declines to comment.

Bush not only disavowed his campaign pledge. In March, he withdrew from the Kyoto treaty. After the about-face, MIT's Lindzen told NEWSWEEK in 2001, he was summoned to the White House. He told Bush he'd done the right thing. Even if you accept the doomsday forecasts, Lindzen said, Kyoto would hardly touch the rise in temperatures. The treaty, he said, would "do nothing, at great expense."

Bush's reversal came just weeks after the IPCC released its third assessment of the burgeoning studies of climate change. Its conclusion: the 1990s were very likely the warmest decade on record, and recent climate change is partly "attributable to human activities." The weather itself seemed to be conspiring against the skeptics. The early years of the new millennium were setting heat records. The summer of 2003 was especially brutal, with a heat wave in Europe killing tens of thousands of people. Consultant Frank Luntz, who had been instrumental in the GOP takeover of Congress in 1994, suggested a solution to the PR mess. In a memo to his GOP clients, he advised them that to deal with global warming, "you need to continue to make the lack of scientific certainty a primary issue." They should "challenge the science," he wrote, by "recruiting experts who are sympathetic to your view." Although few of the experts did empirical research of their own (MIT's Lindzen was an exception), the public didn't notice. To most civilians, a scientist is a scientist.

Challenging the science wasn't a hard sell on Capitol Hill. "In the House, the leadership generally viewed it as impermissible to go along with anything that would even imply that climate change was genuine," says Goldston, the former Republican staffer. "There was a belief on the part of many members that the science was fraudulent, even a Democratic fantasy. A lot of the information they got was from conservative think tanks and industry." When in 2003 the Senate called for a national strategy to cut greenhouse gases, for instance, climate naysayers were "giving briefings and talking to staff," says Goldston. "There was a constant flow of information largely misinformation." Since the House version of that bill included no climate provisions, the two had to be reconciled. "The House leadership staff basically said, 'You know we're not going to accept this,' and [Senate staffers] said, 'Yeah, we know,' and the whole thing disappeared relatively jovially without much notice," says Goldston. "It was such a foregone conclusion."

Especially when the denial machine had a new friend in a powerful place. In 2003 James Inhofe of Oklahoma took over as chairman of the environment committee. That summer he took to the Senate floor and, in a two-hour speech, disputed the claim of scientific consensus on climate change. Despite the discovery that satellite data showing no warming were wrong, he argued that "satellites, widely considered the most accurate measure of global temperatures, have confirmed" the absence of atmospheric warming. Might global warming, he asked, be "the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people?" Inhofe made his mark holding hearing after hearing to suggest that the answer is yes. For one, on a study finding a dramatic increase in global temperatures unprecedented in the last 1,000 years, he invited a scientist who challenged that conclusion (in a study partly underwritten with $53,000 from the American Petroleum Institute), one other doubter and the scientist who concluded that recent global temperatures were spiking. Just as Luntz had suggested, the witness table presented a tableau of scientific disagreement.

Every effort to pass climate legislation during the George W. Bush years was stopped in its tracks. When Senators McCain and Joe Lieberman were fishing for votes for their bipartisan effort in 2003, a staff member for Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska explained to her counterpart in Lieberman's office that Stevens "is aware there is warming in Alaska, but he's not sure how much it's caused by human activity or natural cycles," recalls Tim Profeta, now director of an environmental-policy institute at Duke University. "I was hearing the basic argument of the skeptics a brilliant strategy to go after the science. And it was working." Stevens voted against the bill, which failed 43-55. When the bill came up again the next year, "we were contacted by a lot of lobbyists from API and Exxon-Mobil," says Mark Helmke, the climate aide to GOP Sen. Richard Lugar. "They'd bring up how the science wasn't certain, how there were a lot of skeptics out there." It went down to defeat again.

Killing bills in Congress was only one prong of the denial machine's campaign. It also had to keep public opinion from demanding action on greenhouse emissions, and that meant careful management of what federal scientists and officials wrote and said. "If they presented the science honestly, it would have brought public pressure for action," says Rick Piltz, who joined the federal Climate Science Program in 1995. By appointing former coal and oil lobbyists to key jobs overseeing climate policy, he found, the administration made sure that didn't happen. Following the playbook laid out at the 1998 meeting at the American Petroleum Institute, officials made sure that every report and speech cast climate science as dodgy, uncertain, controversial and therefore no basis for making policy. Ex-oil lobbyist Philip Cooney, working for the White House Council on Environmental Quality, edited a 2002 report on climate science by sprinkling it with phrases such as "lack of understanding" and "considerable uncertainty." A short section on climate in another report was cut entirely. The White House "directed us to remove all mentions of it," says Piltz, who resigned in protest. An oil lobbyist faxed Cooney, "You are doing a great job."

The response to the international climate panel's latest report, in February, showed that greenhouse doubters have a lot of fight left in them. In addition to offering $10,000 to scientists willing to attack the report, which so angered Boxer, they are emphasizing a new theme. Even if the world is warming now, and even if that warming is due in part to the greenhouse gases emitted by burning fossil fuels, there's nothing to worry about. As Lindzen wrote in a guest editorial in NEWSWEEK International in April, "There is no compelling evidence that the warming trend we've seen will amount to anything close to catastrophe."


To some extent, greenhouse denial is now running on automatic pilot. "Some members of Congress have completely internalized this," says Pew's Roy, and therefore need no coaching from the think tanks and contrarian scientists who for 20 years kept them stoked with arguments. At a hearing last month on the Kyoto treaty, GOP Congressman Dana Rohrabacher asked whether "changes in the Earth's temperature in the past all of these glaciers moving back and forth and the changes that we see now" might be "a natural occurrence." (Hundreds of studies have ruled that out.) "I think it's a bit grandiose for us to believe ... that [human activities are] going to change some major climate cycle that's going on." Inhofe has told allies he will filibuster any climate bill that mandates greenhouse cuts.

Still, like a great beast that has been wounded, the denial machine is not what it once was. In the NEWSWEEK Poll, 38 percent of those surveyed identified climate change as the nation's gravest environmental threat, three times the number in 2000. After ExxonMobil was chastised by senators for giving $19 million over the years to the Competitive Enterprise Institute and others who are "producing very questionable data" on climate change, as Sen. Jay Rockefeller said, the company has cut back its support for such groups. In June, a spokesman said ExxonMobil did not doubt the risks posed by climate change, telling reporters, "We're very much not a denier." In yet another shock, Bush announced at the weekend that he would convene a global-warming summit next month, with a 2008 goal of cutting greenhouse emissions. That astonished the remaining naysayers. "I just can't imagine the administration would look to mandatory [emissions caps] after what we had with Kyoto," said a GOP Senate staffer, who did not want to be named criticizing the president. "I mean, what a disaster!"

With its change of heart, ExxonMobil is more likely to win a place at the negotiating table as Congress debates climate legislation. That will be crucially important to industry especially in 2009, when naysayers may no longer be able to count on a friend in the White House nixing man-datory greenhouse curbs. All the Democratic presidential contenders have called global warming a real threat, and promise to push for cuts similar to those being passed by California and other states. In the GOP field, only McCain long a leader on the issue supports that policy. Fred Thompson belittles findings that human activities are changing the climate, and Rudy Giuliani backs the all-volunteer greenhouse curbs of (both) Presidents Bush.

Look for the next round of debate to center on what Americans are willing to pay and do to stave off the worst of global warming. So far the answer seems to be, not much. The NEWSWEEK Poll finds less than half in favor of requiring high-mileage cars or energy-efficient appliances and buildings. No amount of white papers, reports and studies is likely to change that. If anything can, it will be the climate itself. This summer, Texas was hit by exactly the kind of downpours and flooding expected in a greenhouse world, and Las Vegas and other cities broiled in record triple-digit temperatures. Just last week the most accurate study to date concluded that the length of heat waves in Europe has doubled, and their frequency nearly tripled, in the past century. The frequency of Atlantic hurricanes has already doubled in the last century. Snowpack whose water is crucial to both cities and farms is diminishing. It's enough to make you wish that climate change were a hoax, rather than the reality it is.

With Eve Conant, Sam Stein and Eleanor Clift in Washington and Matthew Philips in New York


Monday, October 8, 2007

For West, Climate Change Is About Water

Some facts, some hype and frosting on top.
It is not this easy, It is not going away by having a wet winter and which
is not predicted anyway.

And the snazzy closing line we just have to work together implies their is a
solution.
I doubt this as the population is growing, demand is growing while the
source is diminishing.
Their are drawing board plans in California for more reservoirs or bigger
reservoirs and the engineering companies find this more than appealing. Arny
wants a 9.5 billion bond issue in March 2008 for water related construction.
The federal government has no plans to help California finance it's water
infrastructure. So Joe and Jane of ARM mortgage fame will be picking up the
tab. You say they are broke i say you are right and so are most of the
counties.
But if we are in a drought over most of the state just where is the water
coming from to fill those fancy holes?

Some folks may say: 'Oh well, it'll work out as it always has.' I don't
think so... if history is any indication.
And the worst place tobe in a draught of significant long duration is where
most of us are living in concentrated urban areas.

The bottom line i feel is we must recognize this is not just cyclical this
is climate warming and all predication are questionable if they are based on
past cycles.

Every residence in California which is landscaped should be switching to an
edible landscape. this would accomplish about a dozen good things at once.

Ok, I'm willing to try for the list...
A drip system will save allot of water over the alternative overhead
sprinkler system.
What you grow you eat or the neighbors do.
Less transportation of produce to your table from a farm in Mexico or Chili.
Less CO2 emissions.
It's healthy for you.
It's healthy for the environment. ]
Less toxics.
We all save water with a vegetable garden.
We compost for our garden.
If we can't do it ourselves we form a group and pay someone to get it going
for us.
It looks nice.
Bees like vegetable gardens.
If we live in an apartment we garden on the roof.
Our health improves and our expenses go down.
Did i mention we save allot of money growing our own?
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/connelly/334592_joel08.html
If we also used conservation of energy we would not need to import fuel.
This is not so radical a though or scary possibility.
As Greenspan the great man himself recently stated i think it is agreed the
wars in the middle east are about oil. We'll I'll be!

Friday, October 5, 2007

Librarians under new management - Yahoo! News

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071004/ap_on_re_us/outsourcing_libraries
Reading the full story you will find it doesnt really seem to be working.
So it is cost cutting and union busting which is the real accomplishment.
A library is not a book store where the incentive is to sell a product and
make a profit.
With a library we are serving ourselves with out the need to all buy
individual copies of books. So this for the contractor becomes an issue of
cutting services and wages to increase their corporate profit.

The library becomes the prison system where corporation run the systems and
cut corners to fill their pockets. Of course we turn our heads on that one.
But here it is difficult to turn our heads on our selves.
So we have to say. "Unions are no good they cost me money" A little saying
the wealthy have taught us to repeat after them.
And since our jobs have gone to China or maybe Blackwater we have plenty to
be resentful about.
And it is always safer to kick down while kissing the bosses foot.
We end up exploiting ourselves and blaming the wage earner next to us who is
also getting exploited.
This has worked for the rulers so why expect change now? Though we could
hope once taken some folks would say hay that's gone to hurt if we let them
do it again.

Bloomberg.com: US

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=a1N56kFq9Z8s&refer=us
i have heard the remark by more than one person that at least WM is Ok.
Apparently not anymore and the worst is yet to come.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

National Geographic Magazine/oct 2007

The October issue of National Geographic is a thoughtful and revealing issue on climate change and energy related issues.
Growth Industry..bio fuels is the lead article.

The charts on the earths surface temperature changes are unfortunately convincing.
Grains for fuel are now a 'growth industry' for ADM and Monsanto. Enormous profits are being made while the grains and in this case corn that could be used for food are being shoved in the gas tanks of first world countries.
And if we put all the actual cost into that gallon of E85 or biodiesel is it cheaper and is it actually less CO2 generated? The short answer I would say is: No.
But their are allot of people who would like us to believe it is.

My conclusion is action is essential on all fronts and now. Using the 'energy wedges' which they describe.

Drastic reduction in all forms of industrial production. Drastic reduction in all forms of transportation including all forms of jet flying and sea transportation.
This includes emphasis on conservation from the paper cup at Starbucks to all forms of plastic use.

And what should we all be doing to reduce the carbon dioxide output?
In mass we need to switch to public transportation and double or triple gas mileage for all personal transportation vehicles is what I'm reading.

So say good bye to the McMansion and forced air heating and cooling of those 2000 sq. This will also be the end of suburbia. And they say that is just a start. The technology is their but we collectively lack the will or foresight to make drastic changes.

If we made drastic changes now?
We would then not need to import oil and aswell fuel for the military and the navy which protects the imported fuel sources and supply routes.
Possible? yes!
Will we change our current foreign energy sources? Not likely... unless it becomes very expensive and the 'national leadership' are collectively struck by the sun god.
http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/ngm.html
The up side of world 'peak oil' is those that use the most will initially be able to continue to pay the price. But shortly as crude resources shrink and they are diminishing world wide. the price will cross the hurt line even for the likes of us.
This is not tree hugging this is survival and that's for some.. not all.


Since the National Geographic has always been considered by parents to be somewhere between the wisdom of the founding fathers and the word of god on glossy paper. It now seems surprising that NG has recently changed and is reporting on current and serious issues. They now also have a children's issue.
the NG from it's founding in the nineteen century had viewed the world and it's peoples as apples to be plucked by the Empire. Now it seems reality has arrived and revenue issues has forced them to make amends and acknowledge the earth was here before the Empire.
And I appreciate their efforts as they are doing it well.

Back to Climate change and peak oil.
And have these types of disasters ever happened to a nation before? Yes, we are not the first though never to this extent for all the people all over the world.
Empires have collapsed over water, energy, climate issues. and of course expansion issues as well.
Though it is begging to look like we are a 'special world generation' as we have all of the above problems as well as population explosion.

We do not have a cabinet post for the environment and we will not see significant changes until the neo cons are gone.
But reaching the people who use the most resources is major. And what is safer than the National Geographic? So i suggest sending friends a suggestion to read this issue.

Monday, October 1, 2007

Wi-Fi Unsafe

Germany Warns Citizens to Avoid Using Wi-Fi
By Geoffrey Lean
The Independent UK
Sunday 09 September 2007
People should avoid using Wi-Fi wherever possible because of the risks
it may pose to health, the German government has said.
Its surprise ruling - the most damning made by any government on the
fast-growing technology - will shake the industry and British ministers, and
vindicates the questions that The Independent on Sunday has been raising
over the past four months.
And Germany's official radiation protection body also advises its
citizens to use landlines instead of mobile phones, and warns of
"electrosmog" from a wide range of other everyday products, from baby
monitors to electric blankets.
The German government's ruling - which contrasts sharply with the
unquestioning promotion of the technology by British officials - was made in
response to a series of questions by Green members of the Bundestag,
Germany's parliament.
The Environment Ministry recommended that people should keep their
exposure to radiation from Wi-Fi "as low as possible" by choosing
"conventional wired connections". It added that it is "actively informing
people about possibilities for reducing personal exposure".
Its actions will provide vital support for Sir William Stewart,
Britain's official health protection watchdog, who has produced two reports
calling for caution in using mobile phones and who has also called for a
review of the use of Wi-Fi in schools. His warnings have so far been ignored
by ministers and even played down by the Health Protection Agency, which he
chairs.
By contrast the agency's German equivalent - the Federal Office for
Radiation Protection - is leading the calls for caution.
Florian Emrich, for the office, says Wi-Fi should be avoided "because
people receive exposures from many sources and because it is a new
technology and all the research into its health effects has not yet been
carried out".

Thursday, September 27, 2007

3 2 1 gold ... Welcome!

On some great and glorious day, the plain folks of the land will reach their
hearts desire at last, and the White House will be adorned by a down right
moron.
H.L.Menken

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

graint2.jpg

http://lindabeekeeper.files.wordpress.com/2007/09/graint2.jpg
Interesting and of course disturbing world grain production chart.

If we look at this and as well world population growth charts just where do
we fit in the proposal for diverting grains for ethanol or biofuel?
Switch grass... yes.
Maybe cane sugar can be justified to make ethanol but diverting
corn/beans/grains into fuel will be short term how much the profits maybe
for ADM.

San Jose Mercury News - Trends point to dry winter

http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_6991737?nclick_check=1

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Saturday, September 22, 2007

The Oil Drum | The Four Day Work Week: Sixteen Reasons Why This Might Be an Idea Whose Time Has Come

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/2996
The author lists lots of good reasons to go to the four day week and we
already know allot of them.
But then the 10 hour day is again what we end up with.
And people will sometimes accept the 10 hour day for awhile and then it
wears them down.
Also this proposal is about less hours as well as less days of travel to and
from work.

In my opinion a few things will have to change before this can be taken
seriously.
The price of gas will have to increase to $5.00 gallon or maybe even more as
initially it will just be more car pooling and alternatives such as scooters
and bikes as gas price goes up. It won't in itself change the work hours.

And our collective perspective on climate change will also have to change.
People will readily accept the reality of a refined fuel shortage but not
the reality of climate change or even the broader oil issue ...peak oil and
it's direct effects.

We might say: oh my, another severe hurricane, another drought, another
boiling summer or severe winter. Or, yes the glaciers are reported to be
melting. oops it seems they are now gone!
But those are still weather reports unless our own roof blows off and then
we become a believer.
We are not their yet by a long way. And the government aswell as the
American media do not intend to warn us as they have no answers to propose.

As to employers this can be a plus for them in some ways and which have
described many times. But generally the longer they have us at the job site
for the least amount of cost the better they like it.
We are selling our labor and the employer is not our friends as well.

Bush: Kids' Health Care Will Get Vetoed - washingtonpost.com

you gotta love Saturday morning news stories.
It's like blowing the boilers as the real dregs comes out on Saturday.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/22/AR2007092200508.html?hpid=moreheadlines
This the story of how our glories noble and dear leader is saving these
children from wretched lives.
Because he knows these gutter snips, feeder fish and ghetto trash(read:
niggers*) could only grow up to be drug crazed alkies before they we on to
became criminals and terrorist.

* As Cheney was over heard saying on one of his 'buttered rum' hunting trips
to another good ole boy.
"They can call themselves what ever they want but niggers they are and
niggers they be."

Cheney had a perfect voting record while he was in Congress as he voted
against all health programs for the general public as well as any increases
for veterans. And why not he was never in the military himself.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Wheels of Change

My dog is a Kelpie and when called: Metta! very promptly responds... unless she is doing a variety of other things.
She is featured in the October, issue of: The Bark...
The Bark is the quality dog magazine ...and what dog doesnt deserve the best?
That's Metta, aka: Kindness.... sitting in her Bajaj Autorickshaw on page 64. And "Wheels of Change" is definitely the appropriate title for the article. Change is what we all seriously need to consider if we want to continue to be part of this round ride.

Metta wanted to make a statement about the environment and enjoy a classy and somewhat exotic ride aswell.
And i think we can agree with her.... saving the world for the dogs would defiantly be a kindness.
And the payoff for us. As we all know dog are perpetually forgivining so i would expect they would let us continue to tag along on the other end of the lead.

Three wheel motor bikes and small electric vehicles where also considered. But in the end we both felt the dogs of India have the best ride for the least Ruby's. And the Rick is certified to be good to the air and Metta thinks it's fun.
And of course she loves the attention! What dog wouldn't?

If you aren't a subscriber to: The Bark and don't see it at the news stand they also put some of the articles on their web site: www.thebark.com by about now.

And if you want more info on Bajaj 'three wheelers' it's: www.bajajusa.com
I bought mine from the dealer in Napa, California.... who has also given me very good follow up service. www.bigkidtoys.com ..

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

321energy :: Corn Ethanol & its Unintended Consequences for California :: Juliette Anthony

New products but same old energy scams.
The originating site for this article is also very informative.
This article gives some details as to water requirements for these wonder fuels they are telling us will change the transportation energy sources.
Water sources and water demand is what it will eventually get down too regarding crops for fuel or food.
And who actually calls the shots on all water issues is and area to be closely scrutinized.
If you have seen the movie: Who killed the electric car, it is evident as to how state resource boards can actually be controlled.
Also it was again recently pointed out hydrogen is not an energy source for transportation.
And eliminating imported oil/fuel for personal transportation would be possible if all the current vehicles getting the 25 to 30 mpg where trashed and we all drove vehicles getting twice that mileage.
And they are out their but we are being trained to look at alternative fuels and glamorous break through in technology and keep our fleet of gas hogs.
I believe i saw that also stated in 'A Crude Awakening' a 2 part video on the Google site.
http://www.321energy.com/editorials/anthony/anthony091807.html
Does that mean the troops could come home? We'll as far as that aspect for transportation fuel for private vehicles i believe the answer would be: yes.
As to shutting down the profiting from our national war machine. No
As to controlling the middle east politically or supporting Israel in their long term plans. i believe the answer would still be. NO

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

August foreclosure filings highest since Jan 05 | Reuters

http://www.reuters.com/article/businessNews/idUSN1734756020070918
This is news... today.
Will the FED half point rate cut stop the real-estate slide?
I really doubt it as who will be the house buyer to step up with wallet in
hand and say:
"This is the R-E market bottom. So now is the time for me to buy."
I think most folks see it as a falling knife and will continue to keep their
wallets in their pockets.

A couple of other issues to consider the Fed had already cut rates to banks
in an unofficial move a couple of weeks ago. So in affect this maybe a 3/4
to one point cut that's now in effect.
The ARMS are continually resetting and a large number will reset in the last
three month of this year as well as through 2008. Which will just continue
to flood the R-E mkt with homes that people cannot any longer afford to buy
or live in. Homes today are more than double the size of homes built in the
fifties.
Where we smaller or dumber then? I doubt it.
So it's heat, cool and landscape everyone's 'own' monster until we get 'the
letter' in the mail.

Also their is the dirty little secret that allot of folks have continued to
use the appreciating mkt price of the 'dwelling' to borrow more by
refinance... but no longer. And it wasn't all boats and snow mobiles coming
out the other end. They where paying down debt and buying groceries. Or
maybe even their taxes to defend democracy and the F word in the middle
east.

Will our noble leaders recent proposals to bail out the home mortgage holder
who is going under actually happen?
I'm seeing some analyst stating it sounds good and Fanny May and Freddy Mac
are going to be the piggy bank of last resort for these folks.
Unfortunately, the F's are unofficially insolvent as they haven't been able
to submit clean paper to the auditors in a few years. Definitely not a good
sign if anyone is thinking of handing them bad house paper for new coin.
Good money chases bad. It's been known to happen. But not here, it's... bad
catches bad.

Also in this attached article they mention Nevada by which they must be
referring to Las Vegas. Reno is now a ghost town since the California
Indians are now just giving away the wampum.
So who is moving to glitter and false gold at this time?
'Climate Change' translates for that SW area as turning up the oven.

And of course, you are right that's what the A/C is for and which is
attached to the electric meter and which is attached to the generating plant
and which burns coal and natural gas and which is attached to the
atmosphere.

And crude oil closed at $82 today which is up about a buck and half for the
DAY.
DOW up $335.
Translated...The dieing man gets the news official: It's leukemia! But worry
not we are giving you a transfusion!
So the neighbors then run out and buy stock in the a Hospice." We will be
rich" they all shout.

Then theirs Phoenix (something to do with ashes as i recall) the fastest
growing tumor in the south west. And besides who needs water when theirs so
much sunshine to enjoy?
So at some point and i feel soon we will have to stop running and
acknowledge running and expansion are not working for us.

It seems we are a consuming Hoover vacuum for the world and for some reason
we have equated collective gorging with happiness and for some godliness.
"Our god given right" is the term sometimes mentioned.
And if you think I'm diverging from the topic pull a buck from your pocket
and see who we trust with our money. It sure aint ourselves.

So will a national recession bring us to our senses? I doubt it! But i bet a
national depression will give us allot more time to ponder the bumpy road
ahead.

And I appreciate Harold forwarding the attached Reuters article it's a good
one.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Sept 17, 2007 The Recession Is Here Richard Benson 321Gold

http://www.321gold.com/editorials/benson/benson091707.html
Enough already!
Hardly, the funs just begun by Benson's report and he illustrates it with a
reality chart as well.

So anyone who is working at this time is surly not going to be Mall shopping
or ogling big ticket items even if last week they just had to have it.
Zero interest is great if you got the money to not pay the zero interest on.

How about drawing down on the inflated value of the McCottage? Hey, that's a
thought except the so called market value of the McAmerica dream home is
becoming hard to catch as it just keeps falling so is a lender going to
front more play money for another iphone type toy using the family over
sized box as ransom?

A "Disappointed" Greenspan Lashes Out at Bush's Economic Policies -- New York TImes

The Neo Con response to Greenspan's statements in his new book are also
special.
On the Issue of the Iraq war which Greenspan is calling for them to fess up
too was actually about stealing middle east oil.
Why heaven for bid what a terrible thought the neo's are saying.
So they stood Bill Gates up to respond to that one and i did not realize
Bill had any sense of humor.
But i was wrong. Try this one and Jay Leno move over.
"Mr. Greenspan is misinformed. The invasion (peace keeping missions) in the
middle east by the U.S. and it's allies and by which he must mean Israel and
Pakistan where purely intended to foster stability in the middle east and
which they are now achieving".
Maybe he is referring to the price of the poppy crop this season in
Afghanistan. Best year ever from what i read.
Not bad for an amateur comic.

And so should the troops in Iraq and Afghan. Now that they know why they
going home in boxes from those hell holes. It's for stability amongst
peoples who have "grown to love" us while we shoot them up with freedom and
democracy.

And this is going to hurt but i gotta say it. We all where figuring that
when we put those "We support the troops" stickers the minister handed us on
Sunday over the gas filler caps the troops would understand the trade off
was that we support you if you keep the price of gas down.
And now we all know they failed in their mission as it's twice what it was
when they went their to bring um F&D. So bottom line and don't you say it.
'Definitely a bunch of loser's.'

Blackwater was just told by the Iraq's to get out as the numerous massacres
(which we don't see reported) of the Iraqi civilians is becoming
embarrassing for the puppet government we keep caged in the green zone.

And as to Greenspan being faultless concerning our own trashed economy.
How about these apples? Gold @$710, dollar under 80. stocks falling again
today. And housing mkt in shambles with foreclosure notices in the mail. Oh,
I forgot oil which is over $80. Unemployment up. Now that looks like what
you get out of a paper shredder tome.

Greenspan seems to forgot he was also telling the public to go buy more
trash to help the economy.
And he also encouraged people to take out ARM mortgages if they where broke
and wanted the house to put the China junk in.

Greedspan through out his life was a frog who never could find the pond he
thought he was made for.
First he was a Randite then a fiscal Republican though not for long. Now he
calls himself a Republican Libertarian. So life long party greed ends up as
personal greed and he's still looking for glory.
Hardly something to be proud of or that history will reward.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

In Bush Speech, Signs of Split on Iran Policy -- New York Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/16/washington/16diplo.html?_r=1&th&emc=th&oref=slogin
In a standoff between Condi and Dick who do you think will win?

Here are a couple of hints.

Who has had the say-so on major policy decisions in the area of invading the
middle east, the U.S. Supreme Court appointments, cutting taxes for
corporations and especially the oil companies.
Deigning the Geneva Convention accords regarding torturing prisoners and
judicial procedures? Also, cutting social service and health benefit issues
for kids and seniors. Their are still 42 to 47 million people here in the
U.S. with out any health coverage.

We'll it sure hasn't been Condi. She has no more ultimate 'say-so' than
Powell, O'Neil or Snow did for that matter. They are seen as the front men
or in Condi's case girl for the inner circle which is Cheney and yes, still
Rove and the village idiot lil george.

But they are now 'giving it all away' by the recent actions towards Syria
that it will be Israel that will make the initial strikes. The American
public and congressional response will be muted when it comes to publicly
criticizing any aggression by Israel.

Why? The American public has been trained too never say anything publicly
what ever about Israel actions as they are the U.S. only allies other than
Howard in Australia.
And besides we all know we are sending Israel money (60 billion recently) to
do exactly what they are doing. Provoke and expand our war in the middle
east.
And with out Zionist support in congress and the Senate any one running for
office is dead meat. You do not ever get elected with out Zionist support.
Does a foreign government control our governments decisions on middle east
issues? Does a bear prefer the woods to indoor plumbing?

And that's even in South Carolina or Alabama where Jews are openly hated.
"They killed our savior." Yes, the Zionist still call the shots on the
national seats.
How?
Tight organizing and unlimited funds which they have the U.S. congress vote
on for their vehicle to control us. We pay them to be controlled by the
Zionist.
The American public is considered by the Zionist to be simple children who
need to be led for their own good. And who knows how to do that?
We'll the Zionist think they are the ones that should be doing this as they
have been very successful in congress since the fifties.

And when people are tricked and manipulated they are usually not told: "Hey,
Dude you have just been had...again. Collectively you are fools. And if you
think the national issues are birth control, stem cell research, abortion,
keep the niggers and the spicks and of course the faggots and even us the
Jews on a choke chain. Who gives a .....? We control you and that's all 300
million who don't know the difference from Jehovah and our cast off that
fake "son of God".
And who was a Jew just like us and who you poor dupes have made into a sky
god."
So if you are seeing things from that perspective you sure must think you
are on top.

It's some times mentioned by Zionist that Christian are collective so dull
witted they could not think up their own God. They had been worshipping a
rock or a tree until they where told about this 'sky god' and then they took
one of our rejects when the Romans told them to bow down to that guy the
Jews just tossed.
You would almost think that they saw us as dim witted barbarians.
But if nothing else you can be sure they don't consider us 'God's Chosen'.
And yes, they are aware some of us the dumb down dupes have advance degrees
in the crafts of the day. But do we know how it's buttered? Not a chance or
we would do something about it.

From my own observation those that will speak out and against the Zionist in
our culture are usually (with a very few brave exceptions) politically aware
Jewish Americans who are willing to take allot of heat and who the Zionist
try and get fired from their jobs for speaking out against them.
Now that does limit the vocal criticism.
As to anti-Semitic..It's not the vocal critics of the Zionist who are
anti-Semitic it's the Zionist who hate all Jews who are not with them in
their death wish.

Again, not all Jews are Zionist. Zionist know this but state: Someday all
Jews will be Zionists aswell or they just won't be.

Ask yourself when if ever you have seen something printed or stated in the
media which was directly critical of Israel's (Zionist controlled
government) action in the middle east. You may see some journalistic
reporting when they bomb Arab refuge camps and which happens frequently.
Israel usually has a justification even for that. And in Israel Arabs are by
government statue second class none citizens.

You surely won't see any mention of the 250 nuclear weapons they have
mounted on ballistic missiles and which are furnished by the U.S.
government. And you surely will not see any discussion of any of the issues
i have mentioned in the note.

Do the Zionist control us or anyone you know? How many people will share
this e.mail or discuss these issues with friends? And why not?

We don't need to say it out load or in print.

Because most of us do fear the Zionist and their power to control us. So
yes, they do control all of us to some extent if we fear speaking out or
voting against them.
And if you are a citizen of Israel you have tobe Jewish and you had better
not speak out against the Zionist government repressive policy against the
Arabs.
And if Christians do not make the distinction between Judaism and Zionism
then Christians play right in to the Zionist favorite cover game.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Bush on Global Warming

Soup Kitchen USA

To whom it may concern...which is somewhere past 300 million of us.
http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_2412.shtml#top

It seems we are at the stage where those supposedly responsible for guarding
the chickens have eaten the birds and burnt the structure.
So the economy and the dollar based money system in these writers opinion
are nolonger functional and 'we are running on empty' or chickenless.

They also offer an answer to a question that has been puzzling me. Who is
buying the government bonds since it seems to now be an open secret that
China, Japan and Korea are now digging holes in their own back yards to bury
what they where sending us?
If you haven't heard the dollar is now falling faster than gravity.

We'll it seems it's the mutual funds, pension funds and other big
institutional investors who are dropping other paper investments ASAP.
So the bond mkt and the dollar so far don't look as sick as they actually
maybe.

You may doubt all this financial doom and conclude that of course the
economy is a mess but 'they' will continue to fake it with more fake money
along with lower interest rates.
Hey Dude, it worked sorta in former "down turns" and it's just the housing
market and maybe some of the lender that are in trouble. That's what they
would like us to think. And besides they are patching the holes in the
economic tub and it will soon be sea worthy...again.
We'll if you believe that you will believe we are winning in Iraq.

Ask yourself a related question. Do you really believe those supposedly in
charge our going to share their economic jump off a roof concerns with the
likes of us?
And if you can get assurance out of the answer to that one.
How about this one? Have they ever reported... big problems... to the people
while they where still within reach of a lamp post and a rope?