Sunday, April 08, 2007

No more corruption and no more discussion





This is not a 'hands off' issue the USA is facing. The government and the data available to it's regulatory agencies may have been corrupted in 'misdirection' by the current administration.


I invite all the contributing scientists to the latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to support their collegues in the USA as they will serve to provide the guidance to Greenhouse Gas Regulation in the USA. This is a global initiative requiring cooperation of many nations, but, the USA carried the most burden and needs to take leadership to achieve the estimates by Al Gore leading to 90% carbon dioxide free emissions by the USA no later and perhaps sooner than 2050.


I make a strong suggestion that the USA legislature immediately act to create a task force lead by James Hensen that has been in this debate for decades. He is the expert the USA needs to lead and facilitate the best solutions for the USA. He is to be free of encumbrances that might be levied from the Executive Branch. I remind this is a legislative task force that answers only to them and not the president. He and his administration has been grossly incompetent on this issue.


Carbon Credit Legislation has to be tightly scrutinized for effectiveness and Mr. Hensen can provide that from his Goddard Labs. Additionally, the pitfalls of ethanol has to be known and either resolved or the fuel needs to be abandoned as an answer for the USA.

If religious leaders of the USA are looking for a moral issue to engage, I suggest they start with saving the god given world human beings were provided to enjoy and steward. I wish all those so inclined an enjoyable and reaffirming holiday. Quite frankly, I couldn't imagine a better way to start it. Rebirth. The Free World Renaissance.
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Mauna Loa Laboratories is built on volcanic soil a top a mountain in Hawaii


This laboratory is so sophisticated it can EASILY discern 'human induced carbon dioxide' from natural occurrences. I think Mauna Loa knows something about volcanes and their emissions and whether or not natural occurrence overrides the Greenhouse Gas Emission of human.

This is a government instillation. It's IGNORED by the current president, the entire executive branch and Republican Legislation.

That is corruption. Responsibility for this disaster rests on the shoulders of people ill prepared to discern 'the truth' from 'corruption.'
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Al is having a good time since is award winning film.


Evidently, so are the legislators that need to heed his message on Human Induced Global Warming.

What do we know about 'the worries' we have for ourselves and our children?

We know issues like this are out of our control unless they are acted upon by government. We act to empower that government through the choices we make at an uncorrupted ballot box. When emergencies like this occur we expect our government leaders to take expert advise seriously and legislate to provide well being for us.

Write letters as a regular act of reassurance to the priorities your legislators need to take, but, in all honesty the people we have in office should be able to discern 'the truth' from 'corruption.' If they can't they don't deserve our confidence. Our confidence in our choices in leadership are vital to reduce 'the worries' of our life when government ignores our worries and acts in opposition to them.

No more negligence of the electorate and the Public Trust.


Published April 7, 2007


Al Gore, once held in disregard by friend and foe alike for his performance in the 2000 election, blew into Washington recently, trailing clouds of glory. His global warming film, "An Unpleasant Truth," had just won an Academy Award, his name was being mentioned for the Nobel Peace Prize and there was an incipient "Draft Gore" movement on the rise. Clothed in that suit of lights, he appeared before both House and Senate committees to tell them about — what else? — global warming.


"This is not a normal time," he said. "We are facing a planetary crisis."


He said that the global temperature increases, now foreseen by a consensus of scientists, would cause polar ice to melt, sea levels to rise dramatically, hurricanes to increase in devastation and wildfires and droughts to become more prevalent. Then he played the Thermopylae card, recalling the battle of 480 B.C. when a few hundred gallant Spartans stood against thousands of invading Persians in defense of Western civilization. If global warming could be stalled, he said, we could tell future generations: "This was our Thermopylae. We defended civilization's gate." (Forgetting perhaps that the Spartans lost the battle. Athens was burned.)


Never mind. The Democrats broke into virtual applause. The Republicans didn't.
Sen. James Inhofe, chairman of the Flat Earth caucus in the Senate, who has called global warming "the greatest hoax ever perpetrated on the American people," said:
"It is my perspective that your global warming alarmist pronouncements are now and have always been filled with inaccuracies and misleading statements."


Gore, backed by a U.N.-sponsored study by climate experts around the world that has called the fact of global warming "unequivocal," simply brushed aside Inhofe's remarks.
"The planet has a fever," he said, citing statistics for the steady increase in average temperatures in recent years.


"If your baby has a fever, you go to the doctor. If the doctor says you need to intervene, you don't say, 'Well, I read a science fiction novel that tells me it's not a problem.'"


You could tell Inhofe was on the ropes because he played the icicle card, the last refuge of global-warming scoundrels. Holding up a picture of an icicle, he said:

"How come you guys never seem to notice it when it gets cold? Where's global warming when you really need it?"


He is either the three dumbest people in the Senate or a complete charlatan. Even his Republican colleagues were somewhat embarrassed by the anti-Gore arguments in the House and Senate.


"It's possible to be a conservative without appearing to be an idiot," said Rep. Bob Inglis of South Carolina, thus libeling idiots.


It was a very entertaining show. As Gore ended his Senate gig, he turned to committee chairperson Barbara Boxer of California and said:
"You don't give out any kind of statue or anything?"


And when former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert called him a "movie star" he responded with: "Rin Tin Tin was a movie star. I just have a slide show."


My heart, once hardened against him, is beginning to melt like the polar ice cap. Gore has the facts on his side. While that is seldom crucial in guiding congressional debates, these are so one-sided as to be inexorable.


The U.N. survey was conducted by the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change, made up of hundreds of climate scientists from 113 countries and based on six years of research. They all agreed on the finding. There is no escaping its conclusions. And its general conclusion is that even if we and the other major carbon-producing countries take immediate, drastic steps to reduce that production, we still face future climate change that will produce severe alterations where we live.


If we don't do anything, those changes will be catastrophic. Those are the real choices: a four-car crash on the highway or a 24-car train wreck.


Gore's problem is not that he's an alarmist; it's that he's a cockeyed optimist.
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We have corporate leadership that profoundly cares about the world we live in.



This is a no brainer. Every aspect of American infrastructure has been sacrificed to fund an illegal war. The opportunity to rebuild in every aspect of American life and ELIMINATING carbon dioxide emissions along the way is all too obvious. The coal fired plants and corrupted carbon credit trading is left over from attempts to undermine 'the truth.' We have caught it in time. We need to move immediately to pull back from the permissive polluting and forest destruction by this administration to retun levels of carbon dioxide to PRE - October 4, 2002.


From there we might have some breathing room having to eliminated vortexes from our troposphere. The complications to that October 4, 2002 number is that biota existing then has experienced change and destruction. We might have to be patient with Earth and do slightly better, but, it's all doable and if we can eliminate the vortexes from the troposphere we can set longer term goals to benevolence as the 'timeline' to ice field destruction will be moved further into the future.

April 5, 2007


Our Crumbling Foundation



By
BOB HERBERT


Fifty-nine years ago this week — on April 3, 1948 — President Truman signed the legislation establishing the Marshall Plan, which contributed so much to the rebuilding of postwar Europe. Now, more than half a century later, the U.S. can’t even rebuild New Orleans.



It doesn’t seem able to build much of anything, really. According to the American Society of Civil Engineers, the U.S. infrastructure is in sad shape, and it would take more than a trillion and a half dollars over a five-year period to bring it back to a reasonably adequate condition.
If there’s a less sexy story floating around, I can’t find it. It certainly can’t compete with the Sanjaya Malakar saga, or with the claim by Keith Richards that he snorted his dad’s ashes with “a little bit of blow.”



But, as we learned with New Orleans, there are consequences to neglecting the infrastructure. Just a little over a year ago, a dam in Hawaii gave way, unleashing a wave 70 feet high and 200 yards wide. It swept away virtually everything in its path, including cars, houses and trees. Seven people drowned.



On the day after Christmas in Portland, Ore., a sinkhole opened up like something from a science fiction movie and swallowed a 25-ton sewer- repair truck. Authorities blamed the sinkhole on the collapse of aging underground pipes.



Blackouts, school buildings in advanced states of disrepair, decrepit highway and railroad bridges — the American infrastructure is growing increasingly old and obsolete. In addition to being an invitation to tragedy, this is a problem that is putting Americans at a disadvantage in the ever more competitive global economy.



Felix Rohatyn, the investment banker who helped save New York City from bankruptcy in the 1970s, has been prominent among those trying to sound the infrastructure alarm. Along with former Senator Warren Rudman, he has been criticizing the government’s unwillingness to invest adequately in public transportation systems, water projects, dams, schools, the electrical grid, and so on.



He recently told a House committee that Congress should begin a major effort to rebuild the American infrastructure “before it is too late.”



“Since the beginning of the republic,” he said, “transportation, infrastructure and education have played a central role in advancing the American economy, whether it was the canals in upstate New York, or the railroads that linked our heartland to our industrial centers; whether it was the opening of education to average Americans by land grant colleges and the G.I. bill, making education basic to American life; or whether it was the interstate highway system that ultimately connected all regions of the nation.



“This did not happen by chance, but was the result of major investments financed by the federal and state governments over the last century and a half. ... We need to make similar investments now.”



Politics and ideology are the main reasons that government has turned away from public investment over the past several years. Zealots marching under the banner of small government have been remarkably effective in thwarting efforts to raise taxes or borrow substantial sums for the kind of public investment that has always been essential to a dynamic economy.



That this is counterproductive in a post-20th-century world should be as obvious as the sun rising in the morning. There is a reason why countries like China and India are racing like mad to develop their infrastructure and educational capacity.



“A modern economy needs a modern platform, and that’s the infrastructure,” Mr. Rohatyn said in an interview. “It has been shown that the productivity of an economy is related to the quality of its infrastructure. For example, if you don’t have enough schools to teach your kids, or your kids are taught in schools that have holes in the ceilings, that are dilapidated, they’re not going to be as educated and as competitive in a world economy as they need to be.”



Mr. Rohatyn and Mr. Rudman are co-chairmen of the Commission on Public Infrastructure at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. They believe that failing to move quickly to address the nation’s infrastructure needs — through the establishment of a national trust fund, for example, or a federal capital budget — could lead to long-term disaster.



But words like trust fund and long-term and infrastructure find it very difficult to elbow their way into the nation’s consciousness. We may have to wait for another New Orleans before beginning to take this seriously.

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Six months after the first 'supercells' manifested in Earth's troposphere



October 4th of 2002 two vortexes just like this one manfested in the troposhere of Earth. As a matter fact this picture from NASA shows the second at the bottom right of this picture. See it? It's a cloud heat transfer system over the Baja Peninsula of North America making it's way to the Arctic Circle.

Much time has been wasted by profiteers attempting to defeat 'the truth.' It's profoundly time to move on.



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There is no doubt, humans are responsible for Global Warming



The deadly incease started with the Industrial Revolution.


There is no uncertainty.


The USA has an incredible opportunity before it.


To save the world, literally.


The USA did this and the USA can stop it.


There are no doubts.

The USA infrastructure is in desperate need of rebuilding. It's a perfect opportunity for Earth and for Americans to return to prominence and benvolence to a world we created and outsourced without guidelines to prevent the tropospheric emergency before us.

We have been empowered by every authority on Earth. The fight is over. Much work to be done.
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...life is what we make it...



It's Sunday Morning

Welcome to my crib
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Power to the People by John Lennon

Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on

Say you want a revolution
We better get on right away
Well you get on your feet
And out on the street

Singing power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on

A million workers working for nothing
You better give em what they really own
We got to put you down
When we come into town

Singing power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on

I gotta ask you comrades and brothers
How do you treat you own woman back home
She got to be herself
So she can free herself

Singing power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on
Now, now, now, now

Oh well, power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on
Yeah, power to the people

Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people
Power to the people, right on