Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts

Sunday, February 6, 2022

The Corruption of Science.

As a kid, I remember being taught some basic science and led to believe science was the pursuit of truth and understanding.  Like most children, I accepted this as a reality in itself, but times have changed.  We see in today’s world that science and politics have blended together and if you disagree with the politics, you are called names.  They can be simple names like “science denier”/ “climate fanatic,” or rude names like “deplorable”/ “Karen,” or vicious names like “homophobe” and “racist.”  Once the name-calling begins all reasonable conversation ends.


As I look at people who call themselves scientists, I realize they can only exist if someone is paying for the science.  I think that has almost always been the case.  It was no different when I was a young boy, it was just the teachers never wanted to point this reality out.  Leonardo DaVinci was a brilliant man, but without sponsors, he would have ended up an unknown beggar.  If we look at the scope of his work we can see the brilliance of his mind, but every once in a while, he had to do something to make a living.  That could have been painting the Mona Lisa, or designing a battle tank.

Galileo and Copernicus studied the stars, and taught at universities, but without sponsorship would we know of their work?  What happened when the Catholic Church, took issue with their findings? It took a generation of more discovery before the Church was willing to alter their position, during that time they were both condemned as heretics, although Copernicus had died before the Church could hold him accountable for his sin. In 15th Century Europe who had the power to tell the Church, they were wrong?

The same thing holds true today.  Who has the power to tell the government they are wrong about the science they’ve paid so much for, or more importantly what scientist is willing to question the science and risk their future research because of the people who pay for that research question his loyalty?  Are the inquisitions of today any different than the inquisitions of the 15th century?

For the past 50 years, the world’s scientists have been warning us of the devastation of Climate Change.  Anyone who questioned those predictions was condemned for denying science.  First, we were to enter an ice age, then we discovered global warming.  The oceans would rise as the ice caps melted, the polar bears would die, the coastal cities would flood, there would be world famine and nuclear war.  Over ten years ago Psychologists were predicting everyone would become so depressed by the crisis that mass suicides were likely.  Al Gore gave us until 2010 before the end of the age of man, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is planning on 2030, unless of course, we change our path and abandon fossil fuels and spend a lot more money on something painted green.  NASA, NOAA, and even the DOD have jumped on the bandwagon telling us the end of the world is near.  So, it must be true.  I kind of miss the days when you got these kinds of warnings from some long-haired, wild-eyed dude on the corner.

Now we have the science of the Wuhan Virus, which for political purposes can’t be called by where it originated, so it is COVID-19.  We were told the world population would be devastated if we didn’t listen to all the policies all the politicians put into place at the recommendation of all the government experts who know exactly how this virus will perform.  We’ve gone through lockdowns, mask mandates, school closures, vaccines, boosters, and huge economic impacts yet still the virus continues to kill thousands despite all the assurances that if we only do all the things “some” of the experts say we will be okay.  Unfortunately, those experts don’t take kindly to other “experts” suggesting alternative strategies.  So once again the political opinion media gets called in to assure those who listen to only one side that the other side is responsible for all the bad stuff happening.  

As far as I can tell neither side is really willing to look at the data to see what strategies are effective, and which ones only give the illusion of help.  We have people who wear masks 24/7 to protect themselves and we have those who refuse to be vaccinated because they fear their DNA will be altered and they will wake in the morning with a strong desire for a banana and a branch to hang on.  Of course, our political elites and their media friends all have their opinions, which as far as I can tell are based solely on which government official they like.

Then again we have the fringe “social scientists” who believe basic biology is passe and that a six-year-old should be able to decide what gender they should be, based I assume, on its lifetime of experience.

Finally, just before the age of Trump, we developed “internet fact-checkers” who were supposed to research all the internet rumors and tell us what was real and what was false.  Unfortunately, those same “fact-checkers” have been proven themselves to be political town criers who offer little more than the approved government taking points/opinions, as long as the government is controlled by those they agree with.

I guess it is safe to say I will never view science and those who claim to be scientists with the same idealist view my 10th-grade chemistry teacher tried to instill in me. 

 

Friday, September 18, 2020

Magic Pills

 

We’ve been conditioned to believe the government can offer solutions (i.e. Magic Pills) promising to make our lives perfect.  It’s been my impression these cure-all's rarely perform as we would want them to, and too often lead to requiring other pills to fix the problems created by the first magic pill.  Climate science seems to me like a big campaign to sell such a magic pill.

As I understand the whole issue of climate science it is a bunch of scientists feeding data into a bunch of computers and super-computers in an effort to solve the question “what came first the chicken or the egg.”  Just kidding.  They are trying to determine the causes of our on-going changes in climate and what politicians can do to stop them.  On the surface this seems a lot like asking Deep Thought for the answer to “life, the universe and everything.”  I guess we should consider ourselves lucky it hasn’t taken 7-million years to come up with the answer.[1]

In the Paris Climate Accords[2], signed by the US under the Obama administration and later rejected by the Trump administration, the whole purpose was to:

a)     Hold the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2 °C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels, recognizing that this would significantly reduce the risks and impacts of climate change;

b)    Increase the ability to adapt to the adverse impacts of climate change and foster climate resilience and low greenhouse gas emissions development, in a manner that does not threaten food production;

c)     Make finance flows consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development.

At the end of the day it was that last statement that was most significant.  The industrial nations are supposed to send money through the UN to the poor nations (with the usual pass through and handling graft) so they can improve their lot in life and the industrial nations feel good about what they’ve done to pollute the earth.  The rich can still fly their planes and sail their yachts but they have to pay some poor slob to use his/her “carbon credits.” (e.g.   Sir Elton John flies Prince Henry and Meagan to France)

As in all things – once the political is introduced into the scientific equation everyone is forced to take a side.  We are no longer capable of finding a moderate solution, it becomes an all or nothing choice.  On the one side are all those people who know they are smarter than everyone else because they are rich, highly educated, are paid to play sports or entertain us, or are just plain famous.  On the other side are all those who want to be left alone to live their lives as they’ve grown accustom to.  Caught in the middle are all those who would like to do the right thing, but can’t decide on what opinions to believe and fear the costs of those choices.  Against this background we have the politicians who seek to become rich and powerful themselves by controlling the spending of our tax dollars.

Today we see the world differently than our ancestors, and in my opinion that is a good thing, the question is does it matter?  If we each took the time to pick up after ourselves, reduce the use of plastics and shift from societies that take convenience over sustainment we would all be better off, but ask yourself, is that likely to happen?  Is there some magic pill we could take the make everyone a little less entitled or more sensitive to the world around them?  From my perspective it seems unlikely.  We need only look at the climate activists who stage demonstrations against the fossil fuel industry to see the mess they leave behind them as they return to their entitled lives.  If these people can’t pick up after themselves then what are the chances the rest of us will.  Everyone seems to believe it’s someone else’s job to pick up after they’ve saved the planet.

Now we have a debate about the number of fires in the western United States.  Of course, those who accept climate science think it is the sole reason for the fires, and the choices of their politicians seem irrelevant.  Those who question the modeling reject that notion and place all the blame of the ineptitude of the politicians.  Neither side is willing to accept that maybe it is some of both, and God forbid a politician ever admit he/she may have a wrong position.  The real question for the climate science crowd is what actual short-term solutions do you offer for reducing the burning of the western United States?  As far as I can tell it all hinges on giant fans and solar panels to power electric cars which would require more electricity across an aging grid, which would start more fires.

Then we have arsonists.  Arson seems to be an increasingly fun way to express your displeasure with something.  Unfortunately, it also tends to start massive wild fires during the season when the west coast is mostly tinder.  Is there some climate change magic pill solution for those folks?

How about Hurricanes?  I’m told there are more Hurricanes in the Atlantic than any time in the last 100 years, but if one of them comes ashore at the exact same place one did about 16 years ago does that mean the climate hasn’t changed in 16 years?

All this reminds me of the big environmental disasters of the last century.

For example, I remember that time we were creating a hole in the ozone because too many women were using hair spray.  Back in the olden days we were able to reach an agreement that women would abandon the big bouffant styles of the ’70 and ‘80s and save the world.  Thanks to the courageous decisions of women worldwide, and the elimination of chlorofluorocarbons as a propellant we’ve at least stabilized and are (perhaps) reducing the size of the hole over the Antarctic.

Even before that we were using dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane or DDT to kill insects to, seemingly, make life better for all mankind by eliminating one of the leading causes of malaria (the lowly mosquito).  Unfortunately, for the larger birds of prey like the Bald Eagle there was an unanticipated side effect.  It caused the shells of their eggs to weaken and dramatically increased infant mortality, a leading cause of extinction.  Again, fortunately, we were able to agree we could live better with a few bugs than we could without eagles.

 Nuclear power is clean energy, but we seem unwilling to really discuss that as a favored choice.  There are some really good reasons most of us tend to shy away from that discussion, at least right now.  Us older folks remember Three Mile Island in PA, and Chernobyl in the Ukraine where the reactors failed.  In the case of the Soviet Union, the Chernobyl disaster created a contamination zone of about 162,150 km2.  More recently we had the disaster in Japan, where a tsunami knocked out the Fukushima Diichi nuclear plant.  Of course, scientists promise us new reactors will be much safer than those old reactors, but until we come up with a way to dispose of all the nuclear waste, we still have a potential environmental catastrophe just waiting to happen. 

Finally, as we move on to the “environmentally friendly” solutions of wind and solar power I wonder how we will deal with the unanticipated side effects of that magic pill.  As I understand the manufacturing of these miracles of modern science all require exotic materials and metals to function properly.  As we dispose of the aging and no longer effective solar panels what environmental pitfalls await us?

·      “The problem of solar panel disposal “will explode with full force in two or three decades and wreck the environment” because it “is a huge amount of waste and they are not easy to recycle.”

·      “The reality is that there is a problem now, and it’s only going to get larger, expanding as rapidly as the PV industry expanded 10 years ago.”

·      The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) in 2016 estimated there was about 250,000 metric tonnes of solar panel waste in the world at the end of that year. IRENA projected that this amount could reach 78 million metric tonnes by 2050.”[3]

While we are talking about solar panels lets talk about some other environmental issues. When assessing solar panels as a key energy resource, it is important to weigh up any concerns. One of the issues confronting the solar industry is that many of the materials used to produce solar panels can be hazardous. Some potential issues include:

·      Sawing silicon into discs for use creates silicon dust called kerf, with up to 50% waste. Kerf can be inhaled by workers, causing severe respiratory problems.

·      Silica gas is highly explosive, and has been known to spontaneously combust.

·      Silicon production reactors are cleaned with sulfur hexafluoride, which is the most potent greenhouse gas per molecule according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. It also can react with other chemicals to produce sulfur dioxide, which is responsible for acid rain.[4]

Then there is the question of what the heavy metals used in the batteries required of many of these systems will actually do as they are disposed of, or even the cost to the individuals who have to dig those metals out of the earth.  I’ll leave that discussion for another day.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

In this Age of Outrage, Does the Law Matter Anymore?


The New York State Attorney General sued the ExxonMobil Oil Company (hereafter referred to as Exxon) in State Court on a securities fraud charge based on what it claimed was a misrepresentation of Exxon’s risk to investors because the NY AG thought the company didn’t correctly represent the dangers of climate change and the company’s liability for that change.
At the end of the trial the judge ruled that even with the lower standards of proof required for a securities fraud case, the AG had failed to prove that Exxon had broken any laws.  In its defense, Exxon attorneys noted that the case was a concerted effort by the “anti-fossil” fuel advocates (supported by the New York AG) to destroy the reputation of the giant oil company.
That spurs this question.  In this age of emotion where opinion seems to outweigh facts are we really concerned about the law?
We have politicians filling social media with outrage about Administration policies that reflect support for the current laws.  These would be the same politicians who are in a position to change the law if they could focus on cooperation rather than attack.  If we don’t like a law we used to change it.  Take, for example, prohibition.  We were all up in arms about the devil’s brew and so condemned the production and consumption of it by changing our Constitution.  It didn’t take but a few years to realize that was a pretty stupid idea so we undid the change.
It doesn’t seem to be the case anymore.  It is much easier to appeal to the mob, so at what point do we just abandon the law and revert back to the way life was before we had laws?

Friday, October 4, 2019

Climate Change Hysteria

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has the most amazing twitter feed.  She was showing one of her town hall meetings to talk with what is supposed to be her constituents when this occurred.

I'll be the first to admit I don't know whether this woman is sick or just a troll, the fact we've come to the point where anyone thinks about this as an option to solve the whole climate change debate shows how the fear-mongering of the political left, as well as the idea human life is cheap and disposable, has shaped the discussion on human impact to the climate.

Yea Us.

In my opinion, the fact the audience remained passive and allowed this woman to continue suggests they were at least considering the 
pros and cons of the idea.

Ms. Ocasio-Cortez put out a few tweets afterward condemning those who mocked this woman who she says is a mental case.  The fact is the left has conditioned the opposition to these responses by their acceptance of the same thing when someone reacts to a conservative position with insane support seems to be lost on her, as it is with most self-serving politicians.

Again, yea us!

Saturday, January 20, 2018

Climate Change


“Global Warming,” “Climate Change,” “Environmental Disaster,” all terms we hear fairly often in the news, across social media, and in government positions.  As in most things in today’s America we’ve chosen to make this a political issue that rages on, but is really about the size and role of government, the desired priorities of spending, and just who should be in charge since they know best what to do.  Actual effective action is never really part of the script.
There are certain truths, certain fictions, and undeniable consequences to modern society.  This post will give my views on those three things as I see them.  I tend to believe my views are rather centrist on this whole climate change battle.
Truth 1:  The climate is changing.  Anyone who says it’s not -- has no concept of the reality of the earth.  The questions that swirl around this truth deal only with the speed of change, and its root cause.
The earth has gone through vast ranges of temperature change during its existence.  At one point the northern polar ice cap reached down to central North America, Southern Europe and into what is today China.  The glaciers carved vast swaths of land as they moved forward with the cooling and left behind wide valleys and deep channels as they receded.  We, the western civilizations, have studied the weather in a scientific or near-scientific manner for what, about 200 years?  Prior to that, we have anecdotal data derived from the few scattered scientists (after they invented the thermometer), and the other earth sciences like geology and paleontology.  But prior to the advent of advanced computers, we could not accurately model something global in nature like the interaction of the various weather patterns?  The best we could do was observe localized weather and make predictions on what those localized patterns would do over the next several days.  A hundred years ago, or even 50-years ago we heard little about the long-term projections of what the climate would do and the environmental impacts of those projections.
The U.S. Department of the Interior has an interesting publication on the Great Ice Age,[1] published in 1992 before the great polarization of views, it makes an interesting statement about temperatures during the Great Ice Age.
After a period of warm and equable climate, a worldwide climatic refrigeration initiated the Great Ice Age glaciers. At times during the Great Ice Age, the climate was cooler and wetter and at times warmer and drier than today.  Many attempts have been made to account for these climatic fluctuations, but their ultimate cause remains unclear.  Although we cannot predict a period of climatic cooling, another Ice Age in the future is a possibility.”
Truth 2:  Our ability to accurately predict future outcomes is, at best, limited. 
Because of the lack of verifiable historical data, the computer models and predictive tools used by scientists must, of necessity use assumptions to fill in the blanks.  As errors in data are found and corrected the questions surrounding those decisions lead to legitimate questions regarding their value in the computational models.
Also because of the polarization of views and the geo-economic/political implications of those views, the dialogues over how the models are affected and what variables actually have the greatest effect on change has been shut down.  On the one side, we have those who defend the models claiming those who question them are science deniers, and on the other side we have those who question the models accusing the defenders of fake science.  Nothing highlights this foolishness better than the statement “The science is settled.”
Truth 3:  The human population has skyrocketed since the pre-industrial era.
If we accept the industrial revolution began in the late 18th and early 19th centuries then it is striking to see the magnitude of the population growth linked to it.  As noted in the World Population Clock[2] “At the dawn of agriculture, about 8000 B.C., the population of the world was approximately 5 million. Over the 8,000-year period up to 1 A.D., it grew to 200 million (some estimate 300 million or even 600, suggesting how imprecise population estimates of early historical periods can be), with a growth rate of under 0.05% per year.”  It had reached 1-billion by 1800.  Today it stands at about 7.6-billion, with the greatest change coming in the 20th century, where growth rates were close to 2.0%.  Although growth rates are declining they are still around 1%.
To say an exponential growth in mankind does not have an impact on the global climate would seem to fly in the face of logic.
Truth 4:  The modern industrial nations have moved from the natural packaging of natural products to petrochemical-based packaging of increasingly synthetic products.
In the 20th century, we began to fully exploit the chemical possibilities of petroleum to make synthetic polymers that are today used in everything from nylons to the plastics that make up much of our world.  The unfortunate by-product of these materials is the fact they do not break down in nature when disposed of.  We see this in modern awareness campaigns that talk about all the plastic drifting around in the oceans, and its adverse effect on marine wildlife.
Truth 5:  The modern industrial nations have become societies where consumer consumption has skyrocketed and all products have relatively short lives before disposal.
It can be argued that the modern industrial nations have become ones of consumer excess where products are routinely thrown away rather than repaired and reused.  Consumer electronics is a wonderful example of this.  As a boy, I remember having to occasionally replace the tubes in the television, or if something more serious was wrong having the repairman come to fix it.  Today I am not sure television repairmen even exist.
The entire world economy now revolves around the production of raw material, like crude oil, into these disposable items demanded by consumers with sufficient funds to meet not only their needs for shelter and food but their desire for entertainment and connectivity.
Truth 6:  There are more truths (but I don’t feel like spending more time on them).
While there are undoubtedly more facts that can be laid out I think I’ve touched on the major ones with a possible exception of what all the climate alarmists focus on, which is the use of petroleum as an energy source.  There is enough information about that you can form your own opinion and won’t be persuaded by anything I say anyway.
Fiction 1:  Signing a UN agreement is a vital first step in solving all the world’s climate problems.
The United Nations is a wonderful ideal.  Unfortunately, that ideal has not been realized because of man’s greed and ambition.  As an organization, it is capable of good things, but as often as not, the political agendas of the various nations get in the way of effective action.  Take, for example, one of its founding purposes: to end wars between nation-states.  I suppose it could be suggested it has limited war, but one could equally argue it has stood idly by while various wars have been waged.  What is often forgotten are the wars it has actually approved of, like Korea, Desert Storm, and Iraqi Freedom.
At the basis of this fiction is the belief that a central world power would be able to marshal the world's resources to engage in what must be a unified effort if there is to be any hope to succeed.  Unfortunately, nothing in the history of the UN suggests it has either the will or power to actually do that.
The Paris Accord is little more than a wealth redistribution plan with no ability to actually lower the petrochemical emissions at all.  True – it sets targets for a reduction in climate temperature increase, but it leaves to the signatories the actual implementations to meet those goals.
What it does do is effectively create fiction 2
Fiction 2:  Creating another bureaucracy will ensure all nations remain focused and committed to action.
Bureaucracies seem only to grow, they become self-serving and ultimately focus more on their own long-term survival than implementing the visions for which they were created.  There is nothing in my personal experience to suggest they ultimately are either extremely efficient or timely.
For this, I will draw on my experience in military acquisition for an example.  Almost everything we do today with regards to the acquisition of a new weapon system comes as a result of some corrupt act that Congress felt needed to be corrected and remedied through legislation.  We have moved the act of buying equipment from the people who will use it into a vast bureaucracy of acquisition “professionals.”  These are men and women trained to comply with the myriad of laws and regulations we have put into place to ensure no one can defraud the government (although that seems to happen fairly routinely) while getting the “war-fighter” the best possible weapon.  What this organization does very effectively removes personal accountability except in the grossest cases of mismanagement.  Even then, the person who ultimately failed is probably protected from any real penalties other than reassignment or resignation.
As a result of these new regulations and the organizations created to deal with them, as well as the federally approved destruction of competition in the aerospace business the cost of a C-130 has gone from roughly $3M in 1975 to a little over $70M today.  Although some of that can be attributed to inflation (actually only $10.6M) [3] the majority of the cost is from regulatory compliance, new engineering standards and corporate profiteering due to a lack of competition.
Fiction 3:  Government rules and regulations can force a change in human behavior.
Many people believe if we just right the right laws, rules, and regulations then everything will change and all the problems will go away.  Looking at society I believe nothing can be further from the truth.  We are for the most part a law-abiding society, until such time as those rules and regulations get so burdensome people begin to ignore them.
A case in point is the increasingly popular view by some communities that the consumers are drinking too much sugar-based soda and that it is in their best interest for the government to step in and make it illegal to sell or consume the offending product.  A case in point was NYC’s decision to outlaw the “Big Gulp” size soda, or the Obama administration’s rules on what was acceptable for the school lunch program.  The most recent example was Seattle soda tax that effectively doubles the cost of a case of soda.  Costco made the news with its pricing that shows consumers what they would pay, the taxes they must pay and the new total for a case.  It was also rumored Costco advised patrons where they could go to circumvent the new tax.
Finally, as we’ve seen with our sixty-year war on drugs effort, if the government were to ban the use of popular plastics I believe all we would do is create an underground market for those who find a use for them.  But at this point is it really possible to replace the cheap petrochemical-based products with environmentally sound organic solutions?  This leads to fiction 4.
Fiction 4:  Climate change regulation will help the poor.
The NAACP has recently decided to join the bandwagon of climate justice warriors with their statements that “Environmental injustice, including the proliferation of climate change, has a disproportionate impact on communities of color and low-income communities in the United States and around the world.”[4]
A wonderful statement that turns a blind eye to the actual injustices levied on the poor by government regulations that increase the cost of living and industry so the poor will never achieve a viable living wage.  Oh sure, we have movements pushing for something called a living wage, but all it really does is raise the minimum wage for the unskilled worker, causing job opportunities to diminish and the consumer cost index to rise, again trapping the poor in a no-win situation.
How much did the move to ethanol in our gasoline cost those at the poverty level who needed their car?
As we force the move to renewable energy sources how much will the average utility bill go up, forcing the poor to choose between warmth and food?
Do we expect that the government should cover all the cost increases so the poor see no change due to climate change initiatives?  If so, what incentive do they have to participate?
Oh sure, if we could without reservation quantify the cost of a series of actions and define their specific effect on the climate then perhaps the cost/benefit analysis would show us the best course of action, but we have moved far away from logical discussion on what we can and what we should do.
Undeniable Consequences
If the polar ice caps (both north and south) recede in the long term, there are undeniable changes that will occur over the coming years. What is questioned is exactly what those changes will be, and how best to respond to them.  I believe the problems we human beings face is our timeline of concern is measured in years, decades, and sometimes centuries.  While actual climate shifts are measured in centuries, millenniums, and eons.
The changes in coastlines would seem to present the biggest immediate risk if the oceans rise, but because of the nature of the modeling, the complexity of the variables and the shutdown over debating the issues; it is unlikely we will ever have a clear and understandable cause-effect-options-solution discussion presented for public understanding. 
If we banned the use of petrochemical-based products like plastics and eliminated the use of oil as an energy source would it actually stop the climate change?  If so, what would be the cost to our global economy?  Would life as we appreciate it today continue or would we return to the golden days of ox-drawn carts around the world?  One of my favorite experiences was being on a huge cruise ship steaming up to a glacier in Alaska and being told how man is destroying the environment.  On the way in and the way out we must have passed a dozen other ships doing exactly the same thing.  Maybe if those concerned with the environment would forsake their money making efforts and stop cruising up to the glaciers they might not recede quite as fast?
A generation of young seems to have bought into the fear mongering campaigns of the alarmists.  I’ve seen comments where they say it is already too late to fix the planet.  If they are right then we can end the debate today, and go along our merry way until the earth is flooded, the sky turns red and the current species are turned to dust (or mud) if that is what will actually happen?  In the end, the cycle of existence will start over again as the earth appears to be self-healing over the long term.  That is, of course, assuming the sun keeps burning at its current rate.
Finally, the poor will bear the greatest cost to whatever course is chosen.  This is a simple fact, it may be debated but it is inescapable.  They are the economic class least able to handle change, and they are the largest of the population groups.  Therefore through sheer numbers alone they will be impacted to the greatest degree.

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Make it so Number 1

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I see California lawmakers are considering a ban on gasoline and diesel-powered vehicles.  I think this is great and they should do it immediately, but to be fair about it they should do it by political party affiliation. 

We know Republicans are: a) the minority party, b) climate change skeptics, and c) anti-progressive.  Therefore, don’t let them have the benefit of all this progress.  Make them drive these gas or diesel vehicles until they change their evil ways.  Maybe as a concession to the more moderate evil-doers allow them hybrids.

Only the progressive left should be allowed the benefit of the energy efficient all-electric cars available today.  They should be allowed to trade in their outdated and polluting vehicles for a cash bonus from all the excess money available within the California budget.

All the celebrities living within major metropolitan areas should convert within 30-days of the Governor signing the bill.  I think Rolls Royce must have a fully electric car by now.  Jay Leno should probably be forced to leave the state and relocate all his old gas and diesel cars.  I am not sure what to do with his Stanley Steamer, but that should probably go as well.

All the current gas stations in the state should be forced to convert to charging stations based on the party affiliation of their owners, or corporate sponsors.  For example, if the CEO of Exxon is a Democrat, all the Exxon stations must convert.  If the CEO of Sammy’s cheap gas is a Republican they won’t be allowed to convert until the CEO does.

Let’s let California bask in the glow of climate and identify politics, and make the world a better place.

Tuesday, June 20, 2017

Glenfell Towers

Are the residents of last week's London's Glenfell Apartment Tower fire victims of EU climate change initiatives, or just bad English civil engineering, or maybe both?

Friday, February 17, 2017

It Seems Like Only Yesterday

Do you remember when the news was reporting that climate scientists thought California’s drought could last a very long time?  Some predicted 200 years or more.  Remember these reports?





Weather and weather cycles are a funny thing.  Some people, like conspiracy theorists at Freedom Outpost, are convinced the government is purposely controlling the weather.  They have a nice video narrated by someone who sounds a lot like Martin Sheen where they detail how the world is moving to destruction in keeping with biblical prophecy.  Others, like the progressive government politicians of California, may be playing with the information to enrich those they see as providing a better way.  But my question is if the science of climate change is settled, why didn’t all the scientist actually know when the drought would end or how much rain would come to end it?  Very curious.

Thursday, December 15, 2016

10 Things I Don't Expect to Change in 2017

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1.     De-legitimizing the President.  For the past eight years’ supporters of the President have decried as fiction any criticism that questioned the legitimacy of the man for the role.  For the next four years those same defenders will do everything they complained about to the new President.  The irony of this transference will be lost on most people.

2.    The current trajectory of civil conversation

3.    The size of the Federal Government

4.    The use of government departments as overt political tools

5.     An honest public-assessment of the DNC goals, objectives, and its approach to helping the lives of the poor improve to escape the oppression of poverty and achieve a sense of worth

6.    Violence in the major cities

7.     Global climate change...

8.    Government spending greater than government income

9.    Terror as a political tool in the Middle East, Africa, Europe, North and South America, Asia, the sub-continent, and Australia.  I think Antarctica may be safe.

10.  The number of human beings who've landed on the moon

Tuesday, September 6, 2016

The End of Summer

With the passage of Labor Day, we see the end of summer approach.  The shortening of the days becomes noticeable, the cooling of the days and nights, and the leaves begin to turn from their summer greens to their autumn hues.  Here in the South, the children had returned to school a month ago, but with the passage of Labor Day they may now be returning in the northern states as well.
There they will rekindle friendships of those they’ve been apart from, and create new friendships with those they had not known before this year.  If they are lucky a few of those will become lifelong.
We forget that this is perhaps the most important time of year for the farmers.  They will be harvesting the grains, the corns, the grasses and all the other crops that feed this nation.  The apples of the Hudson Valley are ripening and await the coolness of the first frost to impart its crispness to them.
The vast fields of wheat stand golden on the plains of the mid-west waiting for the harvesters to cut them from the ground, shake them from their stalk, and prepare them for the trip to the grain silos where they will wait their turn to be made into some foodstuff or silage.
The corn, grown now for both energy and food will be harvested across this land.  Some with go to silage to feed the cattle in the winter, but much more will go to create ethanol or to be prepared for our tables.  The development of ethanol as a fuel additive to our gasoline is a somewhat interesting study in which came first the chicken or the egg.  Did our government experts decide ethanol should be added because it cleaned up the environment, or used up the overabundance of corn left in the field?  Perhaps we will never know.  What we do know is don’t let it sit in your tank for more than 30 days or it will turn to jelly.
In Aesop’s fable of the grasshopper and the ant, the industrious ant has been preparing all summer and into the fall for the onset of winter and its dark days and lack of food.  The grasshopper, on the other hand, has spent the summer enjoying all that nature provides, living in the moment would be the popular expression.  The grasshopper sees the ant and the methodical method of his existence as boring and unnecessary.  Soon the error of his thinking will become apparent as the first snows fall and he has nothing to eat.

Saturday, July 9, 2016

Global Warming

Ya know nothing says "I'm really concerned for the environment, and the global warming caused by the use of carbon based fuels," quite like taking you and your staff on a 747 to Spain where you are met by your security element who flew over on a couple of C-17's to carry your helicopters and motorcars.
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