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Fairweather

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Everything posted by Fairweather

  1. "The one thing we could do for a country like Mexico, for example, is to stop every illegal immigrant at the border, give him a good rifle and a case of ammunition, and send him home. Let the Mexicans solve their customary problems in their customary manner." --Ed Abbey
  2. meanwhile... http://www.boston.com/news/world/latinamerica/articles/2009/04/09/moves_against_chavez_foes_denounced_in_venezuela/
  3. Branson paid a handsome ransom to keep his grandson from being pushed off the transom.
  4. Any tracks coming up the Easton Glacier side? (Snow machine or otherwise?)
  5. Black muslim teenage boys killed on the high seas under direct orders of the war criminal Obama. I predict an apology.
  6. Lib testosterone smells just like spoiled tofu.
  7. Are you sure that diesel car is really "green"? (see link) Also, I have yet to see the input energy of the hybrid's battery production (and disposal/recycle processes) plugged into any net vehicle life/energy use equation. Just a thought: Did upwind diesel particulate help darken and kill the White Chuck Glacier? http://www.agu.org/sci_soc/prrl/prrl0233.html American Geophysical Union/Stanford University/National Science Foundation Joint Release WASHINGTON - Laws that favor the use of diesel, rather than gasoline, engines in cars may actually encourage global warming, according to a new study. Although diesel cars obtain 25 to 35 percent better mileage and emit less carbon dioxide than similar gasoline cars, they can emit 25 to 400 times more mass of particulate black carbon and associated organic matter ("soot") per kilometer [mile]. The warming due to soot may more than offset the cooling due to reduced carbon dioxide emissions over several decades, according to Mark Z. Jacobson, Associate Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University. Writing in the Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres, Jacobson describes computer simulations leading to the conclusion that control of fossil-fuel black carbon and organic matter may be the most effective method of slowing global warming, in terms of the speed and magnitude of its effect on climate. Not only does soot warm the air to a much greater extent than does carbon dioxide per unit mass, but the lifetime of soot in the air (weeks to months) is much less than is that of carbon dioxide (50 to 200 years). As such, removing soot emissions may have a faster effect on slowing global warming than removing carbon dioxide emissions. The model Jacobson used tested 12 identifiable effects of airborne particles, known as aerosols, on climate, eight of which had not previously been described in scientific literature. Jacobson notes that it is not currently possible to quantify each of these effects individually, only the net effect of all of them operating simultaneously. "Since 1896, when Svante Arrhenius first postulated the theory of global warming due to carbon dioxide, control of carbon dioxide has been considered the most effective method of slowing warming," Jacobson says in an interview. "Whereas carbon dioxide clearly causes most global warming, control of shorter-lived warming constituents, such as black carbon, should have a faster effect on slowing warming, which is the conclusion I have drawn from this study. The Kyoto Protocol of 1997 does not even consider black carbon as a pollutant to control with respect to global warming." The reason the issue of diesel versus gasoline is important, says Jacobson, is that, in Europe, one of the major strategies for satisfying the Kyoto Protocol is to promote further the use of diesel vehicles and specifically to provide a greater tax advantage for diesel. Tax laws in all European Union countries, except the United Kingdom, currently favor diesel, thereby inadvertently promoting global warming, Jacobson says. Further, some countries, including Sweden, Finland, Norway, and the Netherlands, also tax fuels based on their carbon content. These taxes also favor diesel, he notes, since diesel releases less carbon per kilometer [mile] than does gasoline. Nevertheless, the small amount of black carbon and organic matter emitted by diesel may warm the atmosphere more over 100 years than the additional carbon dioxide emitted by gasoline. In Europe and the U.S., particulate emissions from vehicles are expected to decline over the next decade. For example, by 2005, the European Union will introduce more stringent standards for particulate emissions from light duty vehicles of 0.025 grams per kilometer [0.04 grams per mile]. Even under these standards, diesel powered cars may still warm the climate more over the next 100 years than may gasoline powered cars, according to the study. The state of California is implementing an even more restrictive standard in 2004, allowing only 0.006 grams per kilometer [0.01 grams per mile] of particulate emissions. Even if the California standard were introduced worldwide, says Jacobson, diesel cars may still warm the climate more than gasoline cars over 13 to 54 years. In an interview, Jacobson said that new particle traps being introduced by some European automobile manufacturers in their diesel cars appear to reduce black carbon emissions to 0.003 grams per kilometer [0.005 grams per mile], even below the California standard. "I think this is great, and it is an indication that tough environmental laws encourage industry to change. But," he said, "diesel vehicles emitting at this level may still warm the climate more than gasoline over a 10 to 50 year period, not only because of black carbon emissions, but also because the traps themselves require addition fuel use. Gasoline/battery hybrid vehicles now available not only get better mileage than the newest diesels but also emit less black carbon." In practice, less than 0.1 percent of light vehicles in the United States run on diesel fuel, whereas more than 25 percent do in Europe. (Almost a third of new European cars in 2000 were diesel powered.) In both the United States and Europe, virtually all heavy trucks and buses are diesel powered, and American diesel consumption rates for all modes of ground transportation combined are about 75 to 80 percent of those in Europe. Control of fossil fuel black carbon and organic matter will not by itself eliminate long term global warming, says Jacobson. This would require reductions in emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, in addition to reduction of particles. Other strategies to be considered for reducing black carbon and organic matter from the atmosphere could include the phasing out of indoor biomass and coal burning and improved particle collection from jet fuel and coal burning, he says. This reduction would provide the additional benefit of reducing the 2.7 million people who die annually from air pollution, as estimated by the World Health Organization. The health costs of particulate pollution range, in industrial countries, from $200,000 to $2.75 million per ton, Jacobson notes. The research was supported by NASA, the Environmental Protection Agency, the National Science Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, and the Hewlett-Packard Company. **********
  8. True. But none of the ones I voted for were elected.
  9. I just love it when populism trips all over itself... http://www.foxnews.com/politics/first100days/2009/03/18/sen-dodd-admits-adding-bonus-provision-stimulus-package/
  10. Funny how congress just saw fit to vote themselves a big raise the other night despite their terrible management of the economy.
  11. Sting sums this thread up well: There is no political solution To our troubled evolution Have no faith in constitution There is no bloody revolution We are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Our so-called leaders speak With words they try to jail you They subjugate the meek But it's the rhetoric of failure We are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world Where does the answer lie? Living from day to day If it's something we can't buy There must be another way We are spirits in the material world Are spirits in the material world
  12. I just had my morning constitution, and now I'm going to work.
  13. Very nice. Does he like MGD?
  14. How does that go for you? You must obey, but must she? Her master is less persistent than mine.
  15. In your lap? No. The quote is from the scene where Luke appeals to his father's inner conflict--and the reply is Vader's response. I use this quote to feed my wife's belief that I am likewise conflicted between my brain, and, um, er, my master.
  16. Darth Vader.
  17. I was raised by a single dad who's an artist and won't even kill spiders. How did we turn out the way we did?
  18. He is my master. I must obey. ...so I tell my wife as I look down at my lap.
  19. I intend to use the knowledge I am acquiring as a hammer. So far, their Jedi mind tricks have not worked.
  20. Temporary cease fire? Prisoner exchange? U have me on ignore--or maybe it's mod-imposed separation. IAS/American Studies at UW Tacoma. Next up: Philosophical Perspectives on the Environment 363 History of Native American Cultures of the North Pacific Coast 464 American Foreign Policy in the 21st Century 321 P.S. This is all very confidential.
  21. That's PM material and would require at least a limited truce.
  22. Fairweather

    Netbooks?

    Anyone use one of these? I'm in need of web access, portability, and word processing--tired of racing around with a thumb drive from work to home to school and back. I don't want to lug a full-on laptop around. Anyone loaded Word 07 onto one using a transfer method (no optical drive)? The 16/32GB (flash) C drive sounds weak, but I'll be using it for web and word only. Anyone?
  23. I do. I agree. Careful there, cowboy. So, by your logic, the lien holder on your home should be allowed to allocate your unrelated personal finances? This is why I was against this shit to begin with. It's a step down the wrong path. The sad thing is that you, of all people, should know this.
  24. Where was he picked up? Was he snatched out of his home? His office? I mean, I'm sure he's just as innocent as can be 'n all, but, by any chance, was he firing on American troops around the time he was captured? Your story is a little short on the details that would help a reader form a clearer picture. Do you have a link? Anyway, he's on U.S. soil now, so yes, the constitution applies.
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