11 April 2006
Now for what our prez said. This is a Hersh statement that I'm just gonna copy and paste: "A government consultant with close ties to the civilian leadership in the Pentagon said that Bush was 'absolutely convinced that Iran is going to get the bomb' if it is not stopped. He said that the President believes that he must do "what no Democrat or Republican, if elected in the future, would have the courage to do," and 'that saving Iran is going to be his legacy.'"
I very much doubt that saving Iran is going to be his legacy. His legacy is going to be driving America into three wars while we have a huge deficit. I personally believe that the only reason we're going into Iran is to forget about Iraq, much in the same way we went to Iraq to forget about Afganisthan. It seems the administration thinks American's are to forgetful and dumbfounded by whatever news they choose to tell, and will forget about the other two wars and the over 2000 soldiers who have died there.
07 April 2006
Another Strike Against George W. Bush
According to the Center for American Progress (http://www.americanprogress.org/), on September 30, 2003, Bush stated "There's just too many leaks, and if there is a leak out of my administration, I want to know who it is. I want to tell you something - leaks of classified information are a bad thing." Hmm... then why did he and Dick Cheney force a leak out of Scooter Libby. Maybe if the president does it it's not so bad? Because of the leak, Bush's approval rating is the lowest it's ever been: 36%. Am I the only one counting down the days until the 2008 elections. Yes, I'm going to take another chance to promote Russ Feingold. www.draftruss.com
06 April 2006
Get You Some Bats
The Bite:
Spring has arrived, and soon, so will the mosquitoes. To keep these pests at bay, skip pesticides and bug zappers and put a bat house in your yard.
The Benefits:
Many species of these misunderstood mammals are nature’s best control measure for night-flying insects like mosquitos. The little brown myotis, common across North America, can eat 2,000 in a night.
Electric "bug zappers" use more energy every month than two computers. Plus, these energy-suckers don’t catch a lot of blood-suckers: mostly they zap beneficial insects and harmless critters that would otherwise be food for birds, bats or fish.
The pesticide malathion, often used in mosquito control, interferes with the normal function of the nervous system and is highly toxic to frogs, honeybees, and other wildlife.
Dwindling habitats worldwide threatens bats’ survival, but bat houses can help. The odds of attracting bats with a well-built and mounted bat house are good - occupancy rates are up to 80%.
Wanna Try?:
Planet Natural - attractive cedar bat house attaches to walls or trees and can accommodate up to 40 bats ($40).
Bat-chelor Pad - designed for cooler locations preferred by solitary males, but is suitable for a small nursing colony ($27.50).
Build a Bat House - feeling batty and crafty? Build your own bat abode using these free plans.
Bat Conservation International - learn about the 1,100 species of bats (1/4 of the world’s mammal species!), become a member, or support conservation by purchasing bat houses and bat-themed gifts .
http://www.idealbite.com
03 April 2006
"You Can Be Nice To Mice"
"The patient was alive and alert but unable to move an inch. A client brought veterinarian Dianne Ferris and animal who was paralyzed but not from a fall or from being hit by a car - the tiny mouse was hopelessly mired in a glue trap. Dr. Ferris found that "[a]ll four limbs, the abdomen, and the tail were mired in the glue, rendering the animal unable to move. The skin, muscles, and tendons on the dorsal aspect of the left forelimb had been chewed through in an apparent effort by the mouse to free [himself]." After being carefully freed from the trap with vegetable oil, the starving mouse gratefully ate and drank for perhaps the first time in days.
Most mice and rats caught in these "pans of pain" aren't lucky enough to be rushed to a veterinarian. Instead, they die slow, agonizing deaths from starvation, dehydration, or suffocation if their faces become stuck in the sticky goo. Glue traps are one of the cruelest "pest" control devices on the market today. They are indiscriminate, capturing not only rats and mice, but also birds, squirrels, snakes, gerbils, and other small animals, even kittens. Animals who become stuck to these boards often suffer for days before finally succumbing to starvation or dehydration. As the animals struggle to escape, the strong adhesive rips patches of skin, fur, or feathers off their bodies. Many animals chew off their own limbs in an effort to free themselves.
HEALTH HAZARDS
Makers of glue traps claim that they help to prevent the spread of diseases, but trapped animals continue to urinate and defecate, and their bodies are often left in the traps for weeks or months. In one case, a hospital that used glue traps did not check them for more than a year - during that time, the dead mice who were stuck on the traps became hosts for the flies who caused illness among the hospital's patients.
AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION
Glue traps aren't just extremely cruel; they are also ineffective. Biologists and wildlife experts agree that the only long-term way to control rodent populations is to modify the habitat so that the area is unattractive or inaccessible to the animals. Otherwise, when animals are removed from an area, others simply move in to occupy the newly vacant niche. The best solution is prevention: Patch holes larger than 1/4" in diameter, seal cracks in the walls and floor, and close gaps around plumbing, doors, and windows. Also, keep food and trash in sturdy, sealed containers, and make sure foundation plantings are neat and weeded.
SUFFERING FOR SALE
Victoria, Australia, is considering outlawing glue traps, citing a study that concluded that glue traps cause "enormous distress...even if the trapped animals are found after just a few hours and then humanely dispatched." But despite causing suffering that would violate many state anti-cruelty laws, glue traps are widely sold in "big box" stores, such as Home Depot and Lowe's, and even in drugstores, such as Rite Aid. Peta has launced a campaign to convince stores to pull these rodent torture chambers from their shelves, and we've already had some success. CVS drugstores and two major supermarket chains have agreed to stop selling glue traps, and other stores are reviewing the information that we sent to them. So far, Rite Aid has refused to budge. The store needs to hear from its customers that there's no money to be made in being merciless to mice.
If you have mice, try petamall.com for humane "traps".
UPDATE:
Since this article RiteAid has agreed to remove all glue traps. yay!
Animals In Captivity
*Since 1990, incidents involving big cats have resulted in the killings of approximately 110 big cats, 62 human deaths, and more than 235 human injuries worldwide. Incidents since 1990 involving primates have resulted in the killings of 458 primates, two human deaths, and more than 160 human injuries.
*In June 2005, a lion and a tiger who were kept captive at Best Buy Auto Warehouse in Minnesota bolted from their cage and attacked a 10-year-old boy. The child is now a quadriplegic.
*In March 2005, a man was attacked by two chimpanzees who had escaped from their cage at the Animal Haven Ranch in California. The chimpanzees bit off the man's nose, lips, and testicles, most of his fingers, and his left foor and gouged out one of his eyes before bing shot and killed.
*In NOvember 2004, a 14-year-old boy was attacked by a tiger at the St. Johns County Fair in Florida.
*Also in November 2004, a circusgoer was bitten on the cheek by a chimpanzee at the Hadi Shrine Circus while posing for pictures.
*In June 2004, a 10-year-old Toronto boy was attacked by a Siberian tiger who was let out of his cage so the child could take his picture.
*A North Carolina woman's tiger fatally mauled her 10-year-old nephew in December 2003 after pulling him under a fence and into his cage.
It's not worth it to capture and encage exotic animals. Visit http://www.WildlifePimps.com for ways to help.
02 April 2006
Feingold's Committee Hearing Statement
Committee Hearing Statement on the Call To Censure the President
As Prepared by US Senator Russ Feingold
US Senate Judiciary Committee
March 31, 2006
Mr. Chairman, first, thank you for scheduling this hearing. I know you recognize that this is a serious issue, and I thank you for treating it as such. I want to welcome and thank our witnesses, some of whom – Mr. Fein, and Professor Turner -- were with us just a few weeks ago, and one of whom -- Mr. Dean -- last appeared before a congressional committee in 1974. I am grateful for your participation, particularly given the short notice that you were given of this hearing.
There is a time-honored way for matters to be considered in the Senate. Bills and resolutions are introduced, they are analyzed in the relevant committee through hearings, they are debated and amended and voted on in committee, and then they are debated on the floor. We have now started that process on this very important matter, and I look forward to seeing it through to a conclusion.
Mr. Chairman, I have looked closely at the statements you have made about the NSA program since the story broke in December. We have a disagreement about some things, but I am pleased to say we are in agreement on several others. We agree that the NSA program is inconsistent with FISA. We agree that the Authorization for Use of Military Force did not grant the President authority to engage in warrantless wiretapping of Americans on U.S. soil. We agree that the President was and remains required under the National Security Act of 1947 to inform the full Intelligence Committees of the NSA program, which he refuses to do.
Where we disagree, apparently, is whether the President’s authority under Article II of the Constitution allows him to authorize warrantless surveillance without complying with FISA. You have said you think this is a close question. I do not believe he has such authority and I don’t think it’s a close question. We will continue to debate that I’m sure. But I think the fact that you have proposed legislation on this program undermines your argument that such presidential authority exists. Because if it does exist, then nothing that we can legislate, no matter how carefully crafted, is worth a hill of beans. For starters, your proposed bill may or may not cover what the NSA is now doing. You and I have no way of knowing because we have not been fully briefed on the program, and I am a member of the Intelligence Committee as well. But regardless, if the President has the inherent authority to authorize whatever surveillance he thinks is necessary, then he surely will ignore your law, just as he has ignored FISA on many occasions.
If Congress doesn’t have the power to define the contours of the President’s Article II powers through legislation, then I have no idea why people are scrambling to draft legislation to authorize what they think the President is doing. If the President’s legal theory, which is shared by some of our witnesses today, is correct, then FISA is a dead letter, all of the supposed protections for civil liberties contained in the reauthorization of the Patriot Act that we just passed are a cruel hoax, and any future legislation we might pass regarding surveillance or national security is a waste of time and a charade. Under this theory, we no longer have a constitutional system consisting of three co-equal branches of government, we have a monarchy.
We can fight terrorism without breaking the law. The rule of law is central to who we are as a people, and the President must return to the law. He must acknowledge and be held accountable for his illegal actions and for misleading the American people, both before and after the program was revealed. If we in the Congress don’t stand up for ourselves and for the American people, we become complicit in his law breaking. A resolution of censure is the appropriate response – even a modest approach.
Mr. Chairman, the presence of John Dean here today should remind us that we must respond to this constitutional crisis based on principle, not partisanship. How we respond to the President’s actions will become part of our history. A little over 30 years ago, a President who broke the law was held to account by a bipartisan congressional investigation and by patriots like Archibald Cox and Elliot Richardson and yes, John Dean, who put loyalty to the Constitution and the rule of law above the interests of the President who appointed them. None of us here can predict how history will view this current episode. But I hope that thirty years from now, this Senate will not be seen to have backed down in the face of such a grave challenge to our constitutional system.
I look forward to hearing from our witnesses. Thank you Mr. Chairman.
The History of April Fool's Day ~ A Day Late
From Beverly Hernandez
Taken From About.com
Learn all about the history of April Fool's Day
In sixteenth-century France, the start of the new year was observed on April first. It was celebrated in much the same way as it is today with parties and dancing into the late hours of the night. Then in 1562, Pope Gregory introduced a new calendar for the Christian world, and the new year fell on January first. There were some people, however, who hadn't heard or didn't believe the change in the date, so they continued to celebrate New Year's Day on April first. Others played tricks on them and called them "April fools." They sent them on a "fool's errand" or tried to make them believe that something false was true. In France today, April first is called "Poisson d'Avril." French children fool their friends by taping a paper fish to their friends' backs.
When the "young fool" discovers this trick, the prankster yells "Poisson d’Avril!" (April Fish!)
Today Americans play small tricks on friends and strangers alike on the first of April. One common trick on April Fool's Day, or All Fool's Day, is pointing down to a friend's shoe and saying, "Your shoelace is untied." Teachers in the nineteenth century used to say to pupils, "Look! A flock of geese!" and point up. School children might tell a classmate that school has been canceled. Whatever the trick, if the innocent victim falls for the joke the prankster yells, "April Fool! "
The "fools' errands" we play on people are practical jokes. Putting salt in the sugar bowl for the next person is not a nice trick to play on a stranger. College students set their clocks an hour behind, so their roommates show up to the wrong class - or not at all. Some practical jokes are kept up the whole day before the victim realizes what day it is. Most April Fool jokes are in good fun and not meant to harm anyone. The most clever April Fool joke is the one where everyone laughs, especially the person upon whom the joke is played.
"The first of April is the day we remember what we are the other 364 days of the year. "- American humorist Mark Twain
31 March 2006
Check out this poem
Sunday, March 19, 2006
Angsty Poem
Current mood: contemplative
Category: Writing and Poetry
Sometimes when I get down I write really angsty dark poetry. I don't know that it helps but the words seem to come from somewhere so I just let them flow. Its not good poetry but its just got to get out.
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
When you look at me
Can you see into my soul?
Do you know who I am?
Or do you judge me before you know.
Icy fingers of loneliness wrap
Around my heart and I feel
Myself slipping yet again.
Will you just let me go?
I've been here before
And I know this place
Things are so cold and empty here
Yet so familiar to me.
There are times I have
No choice but to be
Sometimes I come here
And wander aimlessly
Alone.
I wonder if there is a way
To fix what is broken
In truth I know
I will always be who I am.
Does it matter if I smile
And play this game?
Will my efforts mean nothing,
Will I always be damned?
I am not a martyr
I don't deserve sainthood
For I am no fallen angel
Nor have I been crucified
This thing inside me
Takes away all of my will
And I feel like
My soul as been sacrificed
Broken.
The darkness knows no bounds
Fear I can taste
But in so many ways
I no longer care.
Do I reach for a hand,
And ask for help?
Will they turn away?
Do I even dare?
But there is no help for me
Except the passing of time
One day I'll feel better
Leave here once more.
Let sunshine in and
Turn my eyes to the light
I cannot quit,
Don't want to be depression's whore.
Sorrow.
It hurts and I cry
But nothing seems to help
I struggle to make sense
And yet I fail.
My life isn't so bad
Others have far worse
I look at their troubles
And mine simply pale.
I hate this weakness in me
Shame fills my heart
Knowing I passed it on
Makes the guilt so much worse.
If I could stop it, I would
But I cannot spare him
And I suffer in silence,
As my son lives with my curse.
Falling.
Her profile is here: http://www.myspace.com/alassante
Alternative Outfitters
A Lesson I've Learned
Crazy Thursday Drivers
The next one wasn't quite as bad. We were in the rear parking lot of JC Penney's when we were driving through looking for a spot to park when a white van pulled out of it's spot way too fast without looking and stopped maybe 5 inches from our front bumber. Again, I noticed it first. I ought to be a good driver with that kind of reaction speed! :-)
Other than that it was an uneventful shopping day. Since my room is so bare I've been buying a lot of decor, but all I could find yesterday were a glass slipper, a jade dragon, and a green reflective coat hanger. But at least the mall weren't crowded. And we're going back to Target to get my desk and to Pier 1, a store I've never been in without drooling over something.
29 March 2006
Getting Ready To Move



Computer Woes
24 March 2006
Something else I found in Marie Claire
Richest:
Luxembourg: $62,700
Norway: $42,400
United States: $41,800
Poorest:
East Timor: $400
Malawi: $600
Somalia: $600
Americans don't take much vacation time
Argentina: 14 Days
Australia: about 4 weeks
Belgium: 20 days
Bulgaria: 20 business days
Canada: at least 2 weeks
Chile: 15 working days
China: 0
Czech Republic: 4 weeks
France: 5 weeks
Germany: 4 weeks
Hong Kong: 7 days
Hungary: 20 work days
Ireland: 4 weeks
Israel: 14 days
Japan: 10 days
Mexico: 6 days
Northern Mariana Islands: 0
Poland: 18 working days
Puerto Rico: 15 days
Saudi Arabia: 15 days
Singapore: 7 days
South Africa: 21 consecutive days
South Korea: 10 working days
Spain: 30 calender days
Sweden: 5 weeks
Taiwan: 7 days
Netherlands: 4 weeks
Turkey: 12 work days
UK: at least 4 weeks
Ukraine: 24 calender days
US: about 2 weeks
Venezuela: 15 days
this info comes from: http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/research/QuestionOfTheMonth/archive/vacationtime.html
23 March 2006
"Censure the RNC" from alternet
Posted by Evan Derkacz at 12:42 PM on March 22, 2006.
Republicans' Feingold ad gives you a lie and 2 distortions for the price of 1!
The RNC missed the satire in Stephen Colbert's report on truthiness. In an attempt to scare the bejeezus out of an America that has precious little bejeezus left in it, the RNC is using lies distortions to attack Sen. Feingold for proposing to censure Bush.
Despite the fact that Feingold has repeatedly asserted that "No one questions -- no one questions -- whether the government should wiretap suspected terrorists," an RNC radio ad attacks Feingold for reprimanding the president "for pursuing suspected members of al Qaeda."
"Which," as Emi Kolawole writes, "isn't true."
Couple thoughts. A. The fact that that they're taking the trouble to lie in order to smear Feingold means that the bejeezus has been scared out of the Republicans as well and B. They have every right to be scared because although America's representatives aren't for censure -- yet -- America is. To the tune of 48% to 43%.
Kolawole's article also notes deceptive claims about the Patriot Act and Democratic calls for impeachment. Three deceptions, one ad. Very economically sound. Too bad the same can't be said for other Republican policies. (Factcheck)
Evan Derkacz is a New York-based writer and contributor to AlterNet.
20 March 2006
"Americans favor Feingold's proposal to censure Bush"
Posted by Evan Derkacz at 11:45 AM on March 19, 2006.
taken from altern
What Americans want to see.
A poll by the American Research Group last week reveals that 48% of American voters support Senator Feingold's call for a senate censure of President Bush (note: the articles of impeachment must come from the House of Representatives... As a senator, Feingold has no Constitutional power to propose impeachment). 43% of voters oppose the measure.
Amazingly, nearly a third of Republican respondents favored censure while nearly a fifth even favored impeachment. Three-fifths of Democratic respondents and nearly half of Independents favored impeachment.
Censure, many have argued, doesn't actually DO anything, and impeachment is very unlikely given the current make up of Congress -- so what's the use?
Well, when this many people favor a firm response to an outrageous transgression of the law -- illegal domestic spying -- it capitalizes on public anger, focuses it, keeps the lawbreakers on the defensive, and begins to revitalize the public image of an opposition party struggling to be perceived as having integrity and the guts to assert it.
Evan Derkacz is a New York-based writer and contributor to AlterNet."
I love the fact that Russ Feingold does what he feels is right. He doesn't sit in the background and play along; he gets up there and says what he thinks. He's the man for the 2008 Democratic nomination, as I've said before.
14 March 2006
09 March 2006
Why Women Still Makes Less Than Men
From Robert Longley,Your Guide to U.S. Gov Info / Resources.FREE Newsletter. Sign Up Now!
"... death, taxes and the glass ceiling."Despite a sense of continued progress toward gender equality in the workplace, the federal government has confirmed that the workplace earnings gap between men and women still persists today.
According to General Accounting Office (GAO) Report GAO-04-35, the weekly earnings of full-time working women were about three-fourths of men's during 2001. The report was prepared from a study of the earnings history of over 9,300 Americans for the last 18 years.
Even accounting for factors such as occupation, industry, race, marital status and job tenure, reports the GAO, working women today earn an average of 80 cents for every dollar earned by their male counterparts. This pay gap has persisted for the past two decades, remaining relatively consistent from 1983-2000.
In attempting to explain the discrepancies in pay between men and women, the GAO concluded:
*Women in the workforce are also less likely to work a full-time schedule and are more likely to leave the labor force for longer periods of time than men, further suppressing women's wages. These differing work patterns lead to an even larger earnings gap between men and women - suggesting that working women are penalized for their dual roles as wage earners and those who disproportionately care for home and family.
*Men with children appear to get an earnings boost, whereas women lose earnings. Men with children earn about 2% more on average than men without children, according to the GAO findings, whereas women with children earn about 2.5% less than women without children.
*Women have fewer years of work experience.
"The world today is vastly different than it was in 1983, but sadly, one thing that has remained the same is the pay gap between men and women," said U.S. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-New York, 14th). "After accounting for so many external factors, it seems that still, at the root of it all, men get an inherent annual bonus just for being men. If this continues, the only guarantees in life will be death, taxes and the glass ceiling. We can't let that happen."
This GAO study updates a 2002 report it conducted at the request of Rep. Maloney, which examined the glass ceiling for female and male managers. This year's study used data from a more comprehensive, longitudinal study - the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. The study also accounted for a slew of external factors for the first time, chief among which were the differences in men's and women's work patterns, including more leave from work to care for family.
taken from http://www.about.com
07 March 2006
More Discrimination In the U.S.
More recently, discrimination has showed up in the form of headstone battles. Here's part of the article from alternet.com: "The National Guard had no problem taking Wiccan Patrick Stewart when he decided to serve his country. They even listed Wicca on his dog tags.
Now that he's been killed in action in Afghanistan (remember Afghanistan?), however, they refuse to put his religion's symbol on the headstone. Right now, the stone remains blank:
[His widow, Roberta] said she had no idea the pentacle could not be used on her husband's memorial plaque until she had to deal with the agency after the death of her husband. "It's discrimination," she said. "They are discriminating against our religion."
According to The Pagan Veterans Headstone Campaign: "thirty-eight different "emblems of spirit" allowed on veterans' headstones, and despite the fact that there are thousands of Pagan veterans and hundreds more currently serving today, none of those are the Pentacle..."" Here's a site to check out: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Pagan-Headstone-Campaign/
27 February 2006
Heraclitus
21 February 2006
Radio Frequency Identification
Whenever I read something about computer chips being implanted in people, I always think of the Left Behind books I read five years ago. In one of the books, the "satanists" decide to put "the mark of the devil" on people in the form of RFID technology. Although I doubt very much that's the case here, it's not unbelievable to think that the government could potentially do harm with this, but I guess we'll just have to wait and see. ~*Ashley*~
13 February 2006
Check out this blog!
Talk About a Tyrant!
In 143 BC, the Romans attacked the Celtic city of Numantia, which is near Madrid. The Celts held out until 134 BC when Rome sent over Scipio Africanus. His 60,000 men fought against the Celts, only 8000. When 400 young Celts decided to ride for help, Scipio cut of all their hands. But the hardy Celts still didn't surrender. Many committed suicide when faced with the prospect of being made into slaves.
Michelle Kwan
10 February 2006
I Love Sweden!
Sweden Plans to Be World's First Oil-Free Economy· 15-year limit set for switch to renewable energy· Biofuels favoured over further nuclear power
by John Vidal
Sweden is to take the biggest energy step of any advanced western economy by trying to wean itself off oil completely within 15 years - without building a new generation of nuclear power stations.
Sweden...gets almost all its electricity from nuclear and hydroelectric power, and relies on fossil fuels mainly for transport. Almost all its heating has been converted in the past decade to schemes which distribute steam or hot water generated by geothermal energy or waste heat.
The attempt by the country of 9 million people to become the world's first practically oil-free economy is being planned by a committee of industrialists, academics, farmers, car makers, civil servants and others, who will report to parliament in several months.
The intention, the Swedish government said yesterday, is to replace all fossil fuels with renewables before climate change destroys economies and growing oil scarcity leads to huge new price rises.
"Our dependency on oil should be broken by 2020," said Mona Sahlin, minister of sustainable development. "There shall always be better alternatives to oil, which means no house should need oil for heating, and no driver should need to turn solely to gasoline."
According to the energy committee of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, there is growing concern that global oil supplies are peaking and will shortly dwindle, and that a global economic recession could result from high oil prices.
Ms Sahlin has described oil dependency as one of the greatest problems facing the world. "A Sweden free of fossil fuels would give us enormous advantages, not least by reducing the impact from fluctuations in oil prices," she said. "The price of oil has tripled since 1996."
A government official said: "We want to be both mentally and technically prepared for a world without oil. The plan is a response to global climate change, rising petroleum prices and warnings by some experts that the world may soon be running out of oil."
Sweden, which was badly hit by the oil price rises in the 1970s, now gets almost all its electricity from nuclear and hydroelectric power, and relies on fossil fuels mainly for transport. Almost all its heating has been converted in the past decade to schemes which distribute steam or hot water generated by geothermal energy or waste heat. A 1980 referendum decided that nuclear power should be phased out, but this has still not been finalised.
The decision to abandon oil puts Sweden at the top of the world green league table. Iceland hopes by 2050 to power all its cars and boats with hydrogen made from electricity drawn from renewable resources, and Brazil intends to power 80% of its transport fleet with ethanol derived mainly from sugar cane within five years.
Last week George Bush surprised analysts by saying that the US was addicted to oil and should greatly reduce imports from the Middle East. The US now plans a large increase in nuclear power.
The British government, which is committed to generating 10% of its electricity from renewable sources by 2012, last month launched an energy review which has a specific remit to consider a large increase in nuclear power. But a report by accountants Ernst & Young yesterday said that the UK was falling behind in its attempt to meet its renewables target.
"The UK has Europe's best wind, wave and tidal resources yet it continues to miss out on its economic potential," said Jonathan Johns, head of renewable energy at Ernst & Young.
Energy ministry officials in Sweden said they expected the oil committee to recommend further development of biofuels derived from its massive forests, and by expanding other renewable energies such as wind and wave power.
Sweden has a head start over most countries. In 2003, 26% of all the energy consumed came from renewable sources - the EU average is 6%. Only 32% of the energy came from oil - down from 77% in 1970.
The Swedish government is working with carmakers Saab and Volvo to develop cars and lorries that burn ethanol and other biofuels. Last year the Swedish energy agency said it planned to get the public sector to move out of oil. Its health and library services are being given grants to convert from oil use and homeowners are being encouraged with green taxes. The paper and pulp industries use bark to produce energy, and sawmills burn wood chips and sawdust to generate power.
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2006
07 February 2006
Weapons
The most evil weapon of all time is, without question, the Atomic bomb. The degree of destruction is almost unknowable. Even though it's been 61 years since Hiroshima, Japan is still feeling the effects of the radiation. I actually believe that the end of the world is very likely going to be nuclear holocaust.
My Favorite Era
The 7 Wonders of the World
7 Wonders of the World
Pyramids of Egypt: Only one still standing. In Cairo, Egypt.
40-ft tall Statue of Zeus from 435 bc. Stood in Olympia. Made of Gold and ivory.
Mausoleum of Halicarnassus: 353 BC. Huge marble tomb built for King Mausolus of Caria in Asia Minor.
Hanging Gardens of Babylon: Nebuchadnezzar II, the Chaldean king, probably built the gardens in about 600BC as a consolation to his Median wife who missed the natural surroundings of her homeland.
Pharos of Alexandria: Stood on island in harbor of Alexandria and was over 440ft tall.
Colossus of Rhodes: 280BC. 100ft high, built to guard entrance to the harbor at Rhodes.
Temple of Artemis: Built in Ephesus in Asia Minor in 356BC. destroyed by the Goths in AD. 262
The Origin of "Plantagenet" and "Big Ben"
Big Ben: named after Sir Benjamin Hall (commisioner of works). 13.5 ton bell first rang out in 1859.
06 February 2006
Quote
"The time approaches when the summers of Inisfail will be flowerless, when the cows shall be without milk, and the men will be weak and the women shall be shameless; the seas will be without fish, the trees without fruit and old men will give false judgements; the judges will make unjust laws and honour will count for little and warriors will betray each other and resort to thievery. There will come a time when there will be no more virtue left in this world."~Domnu, Celtic Myths and Legends, Peter Berresford Ellis
30 January 2006
Conserving energy in winter requires simple living and wise use practices by David Reister
Wear warm clothing, add a sweater. Set the thermostat back to 55 degrees at night or when leaving home for an extended time - heat pumps, however, should be set back only two degrees to prevent unneeded use of backup strip heating. Install a programmable thermostat that is compatible with your heating system.
Traditional fireplaces are an energy loser. It’s best not to use them because they pull heated air out of the house and up the chimney. When not in use, make absolutely sure the damper is closed. If you decide not to use a fireplace, block off the chimney with a piece of rigid insulation from the hardware store that fits snugly into the space.
Reduce hot water temperature. Set your water heater to the “normal” setting or 120 degrees, unless the owner’s manual for your dishwasher requires a higher setting. Savings are seven to eleven percent of water heating costs. Insulate the first five feet of pipe coming out of the top of your water heater.
Take shorter showers. Simply reducing that lingering time by a few minutes can save hundreds of gallons of hot water per month for a family of four. Showers account for two-thirds of your water heating costs.
Use compact fluorescent light bulbs.
Air dry dishes instead of using your dishwasher’s drying cycle.
Plug home electronics, into power strips and turn the power strips off when the equipment is not in use.
Wash only full loads of dishes and clothes. Look for the Energy Star label on home appliances and products. Energy Star products meet strict efficiency guidelines set by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Department of Energy.
Driving Tips
Idling gets you zero miles per gallon. The best way to warm up a vehicle is to drive it. No more than 30 seconds of idling on winter days is needed. Any more time simply wastes fuel and increases emissions.
Aggressive driving (speeding, rapid acceleration and hard braking) wastes gas and will lower your highway gas mileage 33 percent and city mileage 5 percent. Avoid high speeds. Each five mph you drive over 60 mph equals to 10 cents more per gallon of gas. When you use overdrive gearing, your car’s engine speed goes down, which saves gas and reduces wear.
Use air conditioning only when necessary. Clean out your car; extra weight decreases gas mileage. Reduce drag by placing items inside the car or trunk rather than on roof racks. A loaded roof rack decreases your fuel economy by 5 percent.
Check into carpooling and public transit to cut mileage and car maintenance costs.
For further information visit:
Department of Energy http://www.eere.energy.gov/consumer/tips/
California Energy Commission http://www.consumerenergycenter.org/flex/tips.html
______________________
David Reister is a Member Sierra Club Sustainable Consumption Committee
Taken from January/February 2006 Old Dominion Sierran
25 January 2006
Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf
Happy News
North Shore Animal League America
24 January 2006
A Sweat-Shop Free Company
Dana Schutz
Who I Want To Win the Democratic Nomination
I've never wanted anyone to win their party's nomination this much. I recently read an article about him in Vogue, and I wanted to share with everyone what I learned about this man.
- He was the lone senator to vote against the Patriot Act, only 6 weeks after 9-11. Most senators felt that if they dissented, it would be political suicide.
- 1 of 23 to vote against the Iraq War Resolution.
- 1st member of congress to propose a timetable for withdrawal from Iraq.
- When he became Senator, he promised to keep his family home in Middleton, Wisconsin, accept no pay increases, and rely on in-state money for his campaigns. He vowed he would not "go Washington".
- He holds a public meeting in each of the state's counties (72 of them) every year.
Here are two good sites to do a little bit more research of Feingold:
http://www.draftruss.com/index.html
Wouldn't it be a great election if Russ Feingold and John McCain ran for President in 2008? Either way you really can't go wrong.
A New Low for Our Judicial System
"A military jury recommended a simple reprimand Monday for an Army officer who killed an Iraqi general by stuffing him headfirst into a sleeping bag and sitting on his chest during an interrogation.
"Welshofer, 43, was charged with murder, but was convicted over the weekend of negligent homicide and negligent dereliction of duty that carried a penalty of up to three years and three months in prison, a dishonorable discharge, loss of pension and other penalties.
"The murder charge carried a potential sentence of life in prison. Instead, Welshofer faces no jail time, the forfeiture of $6,000 in salary and what amounts largely to a restriction to his barracks for 60 days."
What's even more surprising is the poll on the same page as the Article.
It's too harsh
43%
It's too lenient
35%
I'm not sure
22%
Total Votes: 30,005
I've never had much faith in our judicial system. If someone kills a child they seem to get less time than people who commit money-related crimes. This just reiterates why something needs to be done, and why other nations hate America. How can we expect anyone to have faith in our government if murderers get to go (basically) free because the murdered party happened to be Iraqi? Despite the fact that Iraqi Maj. Gen. Abed Hamed Mowhoush was in jail, and the fact that we are in war with Iraq, is irrevelent. America's standards should be much higher than that, otherwise this nation is will never become great. The government is a terrorist in it's own right.
http://aolsvc.news.aol.com/news/article.adp?id=20060123171409990015
~*Ashley*~