Friday, June 29, 2007- - -
Sigh Forgive me, but I'm underwhelmed by the Republicans' recommitment to limited government. I'd have been much more impressed if they'd been committed to limited government when they were in charge of that government. I suppose it's unseemly to question the sincerity of their deathbed conversion, but where were they when they could have made a difference?
@8:52 AM
Thursday, June 28, 2007- - -
Things that make you say Hmmm.. I think Congress is being plenty cynical about this.
@7:46 AM
Wednesday, June 27, 2007- - -
How unique! It seems that the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance is sadly in need of a few geography lessons once again. Fresh from redrawing the borders of the Red Desert to take in half of southwestern Wyoming, now they've got the old Outlaw Trail passing through Adobe Town (we're looking north toward the Adobe Town badlands in my photo).
Awhile back I posted some photos I'd taken along the Outlaw Trail and noted that the trail is more a concept than a physical entity. While the Outlaw Trail probably didn't have much in the way of physical existence -- men on horseback didn't need a road to travel through that country -- it's generally agreed that it more or less followed the route of the old Rock Springs to Brown's Park freight road. Brown's Park was one of Butch Cassidy's favorite hideouts and was the headquarters of the Wild Bunch for much of their outlaw career.
Adobe Town is about 40 miles east of the Rock Springs to Brown's Park route, nowhere near the Outlaw Trail. There is an old brush fence in the Powder Mountains that's reputed to have been used by outlaws to hold their horses while they hid out one winter, but even that is several miles south of the Adobe Town badlands. So far as I know, there's no record, nor even any tall tales, about Butch and the Wild Bunch hiding their horses in Adobe Town, and I've spend quite a bit of time researching the history of those famous old outlaws.
Once again I'm forced to conclude that the good folks at the Biodiversity Conservation Alliance are as full of shit as your average pet bunny.
@7:54 AM
Tuesday, June 26, 2007- - -
Lake McDonald Ah! Blogger has finally decided to cooperate. Here's a file photo I snapped last year, the obligatory 'mirror image on the lake' shot. I've a feeling it looks considerably colder and ickier today, but we'll see. Stay Tuned!
@6:49 AM
"Kalispell" Old Indian word meaning too damn many stop signs. What's a town of 15,000 to do when they suddenly have 80,000 people driving their streets? Kalispell's street system -- and probably most of their public infrastructure -- is simply overwhelmed. In their infinite wisdom they've put a stop sign on every other street corner throughout the town, which certainly gives you an opportunity to turn left at 10 am. At 5 pm when everyone is trying to get home? Well.. let's just say it doesn't expedite traffic flow. I think it's the first time I've ever seen traffic jams on suburban side streets.
On the other hand, I certainly don't see any sign of the housing downturn that's hammered Denver. Everywhere you look there's new construction going up. The air smells like money. I bet plumbers are getting $100 an hour. It's not surprising that there are a few growing pains and I'm sure that if you live here you figure out how to beat the traffic. (Hmm.. if that were the case there wouldn't be so many people stuck in the traffic! Ed.)
At any rate it's an interesting study in modern-day boom town. And now, off to Glacier, where they got more than a skiff of fresh snow yesterday (aaack!). Don't know how much hiking we're going to get done, but we'll be scouting for the future.
@6:35 AM
Monday, June 25, 2007- - -
Ag Economics 101 No, I don't think that a push for ethanol fuel will starve the world's poor. Simple reason: When the price of an agricultural commodity goes up, more farmers will grow it, until the price levels off and returns to "normal" (whatever that might be). What will happen is quite different. As the demand for biofuels increases and the demand for food remains static, more land will go under the plow to meet the increased overall demand.
The world's poor aren't starving because of a lack of food anyway, but more because food is too often used as a weapon in the third world. Where I fear the problem will arise is in an increased loss of habitat for wildlife as more land goes under the plow, and in increased demand for sometimes limited water supplies.
@8:37 AM
Things that make you say Hmmm.. "Of course, if they'd done this kind of thing a year ago, they might still be in the majority." One of the InstaPundit's favorite comments. It strikes me though that this is the sort of thing the Republicans promised in their "Contract with America" way back in 1994. They had plenty of time to follow through with their promises. Of course, it's always easier to make promises when you can fall back on the excuse that you don't have the political power to do what you would, if you could, butyoucan't, sodon'tblameus! Witness the Democrats' first few months in the driver's seat. It's a different set of broken promises, but they're broken nonetheless.
You'd almost guess that sincerity is a bit lacking among the political class, but that's not really true. They sincerely want the power and they sincerely hope you won't watch too closely what they do with it.
@7:56 AM
19 Billion buys a lot of congresscritters.. The InstaPundit links to an interesting exchange between Max Sawicky and NZ Bear. I haven't been a particularly vocal supporter of PorkBusters but I certainly agree with their efforts. It's not the amount of pork, it's the secrecy and the corruption that chap my hide. On the other hand, I've got a big problem with folks who've "... got a long list of swell things the government could be doing." Mainly because there's just no end to the list of "swell things". There's not enough money on earth to do all those "swell things" and the government tends not to do "swell things" very well at all.
Take a drive through one of our Indian Reservations (we've driven through several in the last couple days) and you'll see what happens when government bureaucracy controls the economy and tries to do lots of "swell things". Oddly enough, it tends to leave the citizenry with barely enough money to keep leaky roofs on their tarpaper shacks, despite a wealth of natural resources. A much shorter list of "swell things" would be fine with me.
But then, I'm an evil tool of the military/industrial complex. Or not. Having been an S4 -- responsible for the budget and supply of an armored battalion -- I've seen the military waste money in mass quantities and there's certainly plenty of room for reform there too. But when it comes to reining in government spending you've got to start somewhere and the military isn't where I'd choose. Some apparently would rather not start. Might shorten their list of "swell things".
@7:03 AM
"Nobody told me about rain!" My wife is not amused. ... Here we are in "sunny" Kalispell, Montana, all ready to go hiking in Glacier and.. It's just a bit soggy outside. And getting soggier by the moment. Sigh. Oh well, I suppose we should spend some time with my Dad. The weather is supposed to be better tomorrow through Thursday too.
And to continue my whine list, Blogger doesn't seem to be accepting photos at the moment. Not critical, I was just going to post a photo of Lake McDonald that I took last year. I'd rather expected Verizon to have BroadBand access in Kalispell -- it is the Jackson Hole of Montana -- but it seems that the cell phone & air card barely work at all. I've been trying to upload a photo for the last 45 minutes, just to test the system, and it's no go, at least for now. Ah well, the phone & air card do work, and as I've quoted J.D. MacDonald in the past: "It's not so amazing how well the bear dances, but that it dances at all." It's danceing with a pronounced limp this morning, but could be due to the weather I suppose (I hope!).
@6:18 AM
Good Grief! I notice that this old guitar is back up for sale! Harmony F-63 sn. 4931H1215 ca. 1950s all birch archtop with faux grain finish; needs set up, OSSC AS IS $95.00 I'm really hoping that it's just miscommunication between their Returns department and their website guys, 'cause it sure needs a bit more than "set up"! I won't name any names until I see how long they continue to list the poor thing, and if they return my money with no hassles, but these guys are really making me wonder.
@5:44 AM
Friday, June 22, 2007- - -
But.. Who would take them?
@9:20 AM
A carrot and two onions.. Hey, at least they don't contain phthalates. Or isn't that the deeper meaning we're fishing for here?
HT: Again the InstaPundit, who's just full of it today.
@9:04 AM
This isn't so dumb.. Trent Lott suggests something akin to an electric fence along the border.
The BLM is allowing more use of electric fences and I hate those things. They can be an absolute bugger to get across without getting zapped. It's only painful, not lethal, and the reason they're so popular is that they're cheap and easy to erect. The darn things will even keep the racoons out of your corn patch, so you know they're bad. And hey, if you're going to put up a border fence as a symbolic gesture -- which it is unless it's heavily guarded and if the border were heavily guarded we wouldn't need a fence -- isn't cheaper better? Best of all, AlGore will love it -- they're often solar-powered.
HT: InstaPundit
@8:49 AM
Run Ralph, Run!! The InstaPundit is just full of tasty tidbits today. First we learn that Ralph Nader is considering another run for president. If he really wants to generate some attention he should compete with Fred Thompson -- while Thompson tours the country in his red pickup, Nader could drive just slightly ahead of him in a '69 Pinto!
Next we learn that John Edwards has been raising money to fight poverty. His own poverty. He's spent most of the donations jetting around the world. But hey, you wouldn't expect him to spend his money would you? Politicians don't do that.
Then we move on to the dangers of sex toys! Man, there's an opening for ol' Ralph. I can see it now: "Vibrators! Unsafe at any speed! Poetic. A phalus campaigning against phthalates.
And that's just the first three posts I read this morning! The InstantOne claims not to be a one-stop news source, but what more could you possibly want?
@7:36 AM
Wednesday, June 20, 2007- - -
Yep, that about sums it up “I used to be disgusted, now I try to be amused.” -- Elvis Costello
@7:45 PM
Well, somebody had to have dreams of Bosler.. Well, I write you this letter from my downtown apartment, I pray you receive it before I am gone. Says I'm going out west just as soon as I'm able, and I's kinda hoping you might come along.
Well there's something that's calling me when I am sleeping or locked in the bathroom at work getting stoned. ... as hard as I'm trying this Emerald City don't feel like my home.
I dream of a trailer in Bosler, Wyoming, with tires on the roof, dear, and you by my side. We can have hot wings and bourbon for breakfast. Yes, I dream of Bosler when I close my eyes
Well I picture you holding your Harlequin novel, getting baked like a pot pie in the afternoon sun. While I fix the fan belt that goes to the engine of the '69 Pinto that don't never run.
And dirty-faced children come ten, twenty, the fruit of our loins and the tubes we ain't tied. They play in the street and they don't ask for money, 'cause in Bosler, Wyoming there ain't much to buy.
And I dream of a trailer in Bosler, Wyoming, with tires on the roof, dear, and you by my side. We can watch Flintstones and draw unemployment. Yes, I dream of Bosler when I close my eyes
The wind may blow, the rain may pitch, the TV may blare while the neighbors all bitch. But we'll have it made in the shade as we lay on the hide-away matress that lives in the couch.
And I dream of a trailer in Bosler, Wyoming, with tires on the roof, dear, and you by my side. We can pitch horseshoes at stray cats on Sunday. Yeah, we can have hot wings and bourbon for breakfast. We can watch Flintstones and draw unemployment. Yes, I dream of Bosler when I close my eyes.
Well, I write you this letter from my downtown apartment, I pray you receive it before I am gone. Says I'm going out west just as soon as I'm able, and I's kinda hoping you might come along. -- Jalan Crossland The guy's a musical genius!
@9:33 AM
Tuesday, June 19, 2007- - -
I didn't know Lloyds had a Nigerian branch!Lloyds TSB Group plc 25 Gresham Street London EC2V 7HN Attns
Briefly, I am Cynthia Wood a citizen of London and work as a group finance director in Lloyds Bank Tsb London.
I discovered a dormant account in my office, as Group finance director with Lloyds bank London . It will be in my interest to transfer this fund worth {£20,000,000,00} Twenty million GB Pounds Sterling in an account offshore. If you can be a collaborator to this please indicate interest immediately for us to proceed.
Remember this is absolutely confidential. My husband does not know about this. My family will be in shambles if it burst out and I will also be in trouble as well as lose my precious job. Your contact phone numbers and name will be necessary for this effect.
Regards and respect,
Cynthia Wood.
Group Finance Director Lloyds Bank London. I suppose what's interesting about this scam is that most of these folks claim the money is theirs. This one seems to be offering the opportunity to join a criminal conspiracy. 'Course when they clean out your bank account you can't claim you didn't know you were dealing with criminals!
@6:55 AM
Friday, June 15, 2007- - -
Life-long goals..
Maybe just once, someone will call me 'Sir' without adding 'you're making a scene'. -- Homer Simpson
@6:20 AM
Wednesday, June 13, 2007- - -
Bad news for global warmers Via Benny Peiser, Reuters reports that worldwide use of coal continues to grow. While US consumption decreased slightly during 2006, coal use is increasing by over 2% per year in China and India. China and India jointly account for nearly half of all the world's coal consumption, and China will pass the US as the world's largest carbon emitter this year.
Wait for someone to point out that with 1.3 billion Chinese and 600 million Indians, their per capita carbon footprint is still much smaller than ours. Perhaps we just live in the wrong country.
@6:42 PM
Tuesday, June 12, 2007- - -
Did a comet impact cause the extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna? Fascinating stuff. I first heard about this in a short article published in the dead tree edition of today's Casper Star. Unfortunately, they don't have the article on line, but it's taken from this Washington Post piece. Recently, a group of more than two dozen scientists offered a new explanation. They have found signs that a comet -- or multiple fragments of one -- exploded over Canada about 12,900 years ago with the force equivalent to millions of nuclear weapons. That unleashed, they said, a tremendous shock wave that destroyed much of what was in its path and ignited wildfires across North America.
Another group, with the help of DNA evidence extracted from mammoth bones, teeth and ivory, has for the first time identified two distinct genetic groups among mammoths. They found that one group had died out by 40,000 years ago for unknown reasons, leaving the second to continue until the species went extinct.
The comet blast and firestorm could have dealt that death blow to the mammoth and more than 15 other species of large mammals, or "mega fauna," including the mastodon, the saber-toothed cat, the American camel and the giant ground sloth, the other researchers said. They presented their findings last month at a meeting of the American Geophysical Union in Acapulco.
...
In more than 20 locations from Arizona to Canada and California to the Carolinas, the scientists found glass-like carbon, microscopic diamonds, enriched iridium and other materials that they say are indicative of an extraterrestrial impact lying in a sediment layer corresponding to the time period. Just above that layer they found charcoal soot, decayed plant life and other debris consistent with widespread burning.
Above that, the remarkable thing is what they did not find: further evidence of the mammoth and the other large animals.
"The mammoths come up to the line and not beyond it," said James Kennett, a marine geologist and professor emeritus at the University of California at Santa Barbara. "At some sites, the black layer with impact material shrouds the bones."
The explosion may also have spelled the end for the Clovis culture, the prehistoric North Americans who hunted with distinctive stone spearheads that have been found in the bones of the fossils of mammoths and other animals, researchers said. While humans as a species survived the cataclysm, the Clovis culture and its relatively advanced stone tools did not endure.
"At many Clovis sites, like in Arizona and New Mexico, you get the Clovis tools up to the impact layer, and then they never go beyond it," Kennett said.
The comet theory, while adding a new twist to the tale, is not wholly incompatible with earlier explanations for how the mammoth met its end. Researchers said it is possible that the Ice Age beasts, which stood about 9 feet tall and weighed three tons, struggled as the climate warmed, that increasingly skilled and numerous human hunters dramatically thinned their numbers, and that the exploding comet finished them off.
"Our theory is that if this event had not happened, that mammoths would still most likely -- not certainly, but most likely -- be wandering around North America now," said Allen West, a retired geophysicist who is a leader of the research team. "Almost certainly, humans hunting animals can have a major effect on populations. It seems like there was, in a sense, a perfect storm going on -- of overkill, the comet, climate change, possibly disease. I don't think this theory negates any of the other theories. It's just one more of a mix of things that were absolutely lethal to these animals." John McKay discusses this theory and offers an interesting overview of the various theories of extinction that's worth the read. As he notes, impacts of various extraterrestrial objects are in vogue at the moment, so it's perhaps not surprising that this theory has arisen now. It's also not surprising that there would be evidence of an ET impact at the end of the Pleistocene; if not for erosion, the earth would look very much like the moon, we've taken a lot of hits over the course of earth's history. Still, as Allen West observes, it seems that a perfect storm hit the Pleistocene megafauna.
The biggest problem with the cometary impact theory is touched on in the WaPo piece: Some mammoths apparently died out 40,000 years ago of unknown causes. I'd add that there were actually several species of mammoths that died out at different times over the last million or so years. Likewise, there is, so far as I know, no archaeological evidence of the hunting of mastodons in North America and some believe they may have died out around 25,000 years ago. The giant long-horned bison (B. crasicornus) also died out around 25,000 years ago. On the other hand, evidence from Natural Trap cave in the Pryor Mountains of Montana indicates that the Pleistocene horse and the American cheetah survived until around 10,000 years ago, somewhat after this cometary impact. These last two are the most problematic. Being plains-adapted species, why would the horse and cheetah become extinct at the end of the last ice age, just when the forests were shrinking and plains grasslands expanding?
It's unlikely we'll be able to prove or disprove this theory: Accurate dating is a bugger at the time in question. Radiocarbon dates, especially those derived from bone, can have standard deviations of a thousand years or more. Couple this with the paucity of faunal remains (I've been looking for 30 years and I haven't found a mammoth yet) and the rarity of Paleoindian sites, and it's like trying to get an idea of what a picture puzzle looked like when you only have half-a-dozen of the 1000 pieces (and you're not entirely sure they're all from the same puzzle). Best to take all this with a tablespoon of salt.
Which leads me to this book linked by the InstaPundit a couple of days back, wherein Peter Ward asserts that rising co2 levels leading to global warming, albeit not anthropogenic(!), caused the Permian extinction 200 million years ago. Now ask yourself, if we can't say for sure what caused an extinction event 12,000 years ago, how much less evidence do we have of the events leading to an extinction event 200 million years ago? Here it's wise to remember John McKay's observation that these theories arise as much from whatever is currently in vogue as from the preponderance of scientific evidence. Did the climate change during the Permian? Well of course, the climate changes all the time. Did co2 levels fluctuate during the Permian? Sure they did, again co2 levels fluctuate all the time. Did co2 levels rise and cause global warming and thus cause the permian extinction? That's a bit of a house of cards, especially when you consider all the ET impacts that occurred back then!
But Ward throws caution to the wind: "Ward asserts that humankind has flourished during a remarkable period of climatic stability and notes how tragic it will be if our carbon habit brings this boon to a catastrophic end. An important addition to the necessary literature of global warming." How timely. How painfully predictable.
@11:56 AM
Monday, June 11, 2007- - -
"Art" thief nabbed..
Loveland - Those who have brushed up against 46-year-old Randall "Randy" Zandstra say he's got his charms.
The Newton, N.J., man is good with his hands, seems to have a way with women and knows his way around the poker table, winning $15,840 and placing ninth in a World Series of Poker event in 1996.
Those same people say if anyone deserves to be behind bars, it's Zandstra.
Before being nabbed after a dangerous high-speed chase in Greeley in April, he led a two-decade-long crime spree that spanned four states.
His convictions include attempted murder and mail fraud. Along the way, he was accused of being married to two women at the same time and stealing his Loveland wife's Salvador Dali prints.
He also has been banned from casinos in Atlantic City and Las Vegas for cheating, and authorities say he established small marijuana farms in Loveland and Greeley while using up to 16 aliases.
His most recent marijuana-growing operation yielded up to $500,000 worth of pot in a quiet, suburban Greeley neighborhood, said Lt. Steve Nelson of the Weld County Drug Task Force.
...
"He's got bad breath, he's ugly, and he smells, but for whatever reason, people are taken with him," Sanzone said.
Zandstra was convicted in Dallas County, Texas, in 1994 for a Valentine's Day 1988 aggravated assault and attempted murder, according to court records.
He served two years of a 12-year attempted-murder sentence when his conviction was tossed out because of a technicality, Walsh said. He disappeared before he could be retried and most likely fled to Mexico, she said.
He re-emerged in 1999 only to be convicted for federal mail fraud a year later. But he skipped out before sentencing.
While that trial was going on, Zandstra pocketed $16,500 that should have gone from a client to the New Jersey landscaping firm for which Zandstra was working.
...
In the meantime, his wife Lisa Spain of Loveland accused him in court papers of stealing seven Dali prints worth $20,000. She also said Zandstra had married a second woman under a false name. He may have been a charmer, but he certainly wasn't very bright. First, he married a woman dumb enough to invest $20,000 in Salvador Dali prints. Then he stole the prints. Wish I knew where he fenced them, I've got some great black velvet Elvis paintings I'd like to sell.
@9:39 AM
Friday, June 08, 2007- - -
It breaks my heart.. .. to see those stars, smashing a perfectly good guitar I don't know who they think they are, smashing a perfectly good guitar ...
There oughta be a law with no bail, Smash a guitar and you go to jail With no chance of earning parole, you don't get out until you get some soul -- John Hiatt This is what happens when you entrust a guitar to one of our major parcel delivery services without adequate packing. Yes, the delivery boys stomped it good (I think scrawling "fragile" on the box just issues a challenge sometimes), but the music store's web site description and the receipt of sale said "OSSC" and these usually came in a fairly sturdy pasteboard case because they were mail order guitars back when. Instead there was no case of any description, just a funky antique guitar in a flimsy cardboard box with an assortment of newspapers, bubblewrap, cardboard chunks, and styrofoam wrap.
When I called to complain they said 'but that old case wasn't worth anything!' Perhaps not, and given the severity of the crushing in transit it's unknown whether a pasteboard case would have saved it, although the instrument survived this long with no better protection. I'm promised a refund, but I'd rather have had a perfectly good guitar. Instead a small bit of history is reduced to kindling and somewhere the guitar gods weep.
@8:25 AM
Thursday, June 07, 2007- - -
Our tax dollars at work.. CHELSEA, Vt. -- Jayna Hutchinson, of Lebanon, N.H., was charged with cruelty to a police animal and resisting arrest after "staring at him in a taunting/harassing manner," according to the police affidavit. The State's Attorney dropped the charges after viewing a videotape of the incident.
There's no report on the condition of the dog after this harrowing ordeal.
@7:52 AM
Tuesday, June 05, 2007- - -
RIP Wyoming's US Senator Craig Thomas has died of leukemia. He was 74.
At first I'd thought not to say anything further for fear of speaking ill of the dead, but it occurs to me that the problem is really mine. After 17 years in the US Senate Thomas' accomplishments were notably few, but I've often espoused the philosophy that 'the government that governs least governs best', so I should consider him a very good senator. If only the rest of congress had done so little I think it's safe to say the country would be the better for it.
If I can't commend him for his accomplishments I should certainly praise him for his restraint, and I've a feeling that it's only in his passing that I'll come to appreciate him.
Update: There's much more in today's Casper Star, starting with an outline of his legislative career. I was a bit off: He spent about 17 years in congress, but the first four were in the House. To follow we have a gloss of his legislative record, which looks very good. From an energy development standpoint, stopping the sale of mineral leases in the Wyoming Range sounds bad, but it's probably better than the current system, where the federal land managers sell the leases and then deny attempts to develop them.
Energy development and tourism/recreation are the state's major industries and striking a balance between them is never easy. It looks like Thomas worked to strike that difficult balance and that's a very good thing. Another article notes that Thomas had a "take no credit" legislative style, which might be why it often appeared that he wasn't doing much.
I suppose I'm as annoyed as anyone with a 'do nothing congress' and I've more than once muttered that 'there oughta be a law'. There's got to be tremendous pressure on these folks to draft and sponsor bills, dole out the pork, roll logs for their colleagues, dole out the pork, support their local big bucks contributors, dole out the pork, and etc. We send them down to congress and demand that they 'Do Something!' Then we suffer the consequences. In retrospect, we really would do well to elect more congressmen with Thomas' restraint.
@9:28 AM
Harrrumph!! That's not a power tool. This is a power tool.
@9:17 AM
Things that make you sigh.. For a minute there, I thought the editors of the Casper Star got it. Following the silliness of a couple days ago when we were told that we in Wyoming are a bunch of co2-producin' pigs (It's all our fault for producing electricity, those millions of people who don't want to shiver in the dark are blameless. Blameless!), even the editors have acknowledged that analysis might be just a bit flawed. But then they go on to say: State officials and energy experts recognize that Wyoming needs to do everything it can to stem the tide of global warming. The state's focus needs to be on developing and implementing technology and engineering to burn cleaner fuels; use other resources such as sun, wind and geothermal to generate energy; and use carbon capture and sequestration. Sigh. It's not enough to reduce pollution because pollution itself is bad, we've got to do it to save the planet from global warming. To quote that reliable old lefty Ed Quillen, who gets it: In the meantime, the things we're supposed to do to combat global warming - reduce emissions, use more renewable energy like wind and solar, improve efficiency, grow more food close to home, walk more and drive less - are all things that would make us a more prosperous, secure and healthy society.
In other words, they're things we should do anyway, whether global warming results from our emissions or variations in solar radiation. So why can't we just do them? Why must we continually scare the carbon out of people with this pseudoscientific claptrap? This continual drumbeat of doom is getting tiresome, particularly when it comes from people who don't have a clue what they're talking about. Worse, it's too easy to excuse pollution in an attempt to debunk their co2 bogeyman, or to throw our hands up in despair when we learn that China is building a new coal electrification plant every week.
As an ironic aside, got to love Al Gore: after 25 years of fear-mongering -- Hidden satanic messages! Earth is in the balance! The ice caps are melting! -- now he writes a book bemoaning the use of fear tactics, and the lack of reason and science in politics. No projection there.
Update: Speaking of political buffoonery, here's another article talking about the conversion of coal to diesel and jet fuel (Technology developed by the Nazis! Gasp! (The prose does get a bit purple.)): Democratic Sen. Jon Tester of Montana is now saying coal should not expect a free ride. Tester said in a recent interview that any coal-to-liquids plant supported by federal dollars must include technology to capture and store carbon. The plants are projected to cost billions of dollars, making federal backing key to moving forward.
"They can do it with private backing if they want. But if they want public dollars, they have to do carbon capture and sequestration. That has to be part of the conversation," Tester said. Well sure, a plant converting coal to motor fuels is most likely going to produce some co2, but most of the co2 will be produced when the fuel is burned by the vehicle. Likewise, while natural gas produces a lot fewer pollutants than coal, both are fossil fuels and produce co2 when burned, so why does coal get the rap while natural gas is "good"? A lot of demagogery, but not much substance here.
@5:38 AM
Monday, June 04, 2007- - -
It's more than a decline of manual skills.. The InstaPundit quotes an email from an over-the-road trucker who notes a lot of folks who don't seem to be able to change a flat tire. I suspect there's more to it than mechanical inability. We stopped to help a family from New York who'd flown out to Wyoming and rented an SUV to do some camping. When they had a flat on a back road they found that the jack and lug wrench provided with the vehicle were entirely inadequate for the job. The lug wrench didn't prvide enough leverage to break loose the wheel lugs and the jack was kind of scary, although it did work, sorta.
The tools provided with my 3/4-ton pickup were pretty inadequate too, but I'd provided myself with a decent jack and cross-wrench, which made short work of changing the tire on their little SUV. The moral of the story: It's not enough to have the mechanical skills, you've also got to have the tools for the job, and those made-in-China things? Well, best just call AAA, you could hurt yourself trying to change a tire with those.
Unfortunately, the problem extends beyond lug wrenches. I've found that the only hand tools and power tools to buy are the high-end contractor-grade jobbies. Your home/hobbiest tools are often worse than useless -- poorly made, under-powered, imprecise, and good for only a few hours of use before they kak. Of course, the two problems go hand-in-hand. When run-of-the-mill tools are near useless and good tools are ridiculously expensive it's no wonder that fewer and fewer people learn how to use them.
@4:52 PM
Now he tells us..DOUGLAS -- The war on terror won't end for a long time, Vice President Dick Cheney told more than 100 students and staff of the American Legion's Wyoming Boys State on Sunday.
"The issues that are at stake here are enormous," Cheney said during a surprise visit to Boys State at the Wyoming State Fairgrounds.
"This is a struggle we're going to be involved in certainly as long as I'm alive and probably as long as you're alive, and we've got to get it right," he said.
...
"We've still got a long way to go, it's a very tough problem," he said. "I believe it's the right thing to do and I think it's very important that we not walk away from Iraq."
"The fact of the matter is Iraq is part of the global war on terror," Cheney said.
...
The U.S. can win, but it needs to stay in the fight, he said.
"And that means we stay in Iraq until we win, and victory there is getting it to the point where the Iraqis can take care of it themselves where their security forces can handle the security threat and they've got a government that's functioning and they're capable of handling their own affairs," he said. Definitely read the whole thing. I believe Cheney is right, but this is a message that should have been hammered home in 2001. By 2003 it should have been internalized; being interested in politics and government, every one of these Boy's State kids should be able to recite this message in detail, whether they agree or not. I realize that the Bush administration has had some problems getting the message out, but from this end it doesn't look like they've been trying very hard either. Mostly, we've been told not to trouble our little heads about such things, go back to shopping and flipping real estate. The Vice President gets high marks for accuracy, but four years after we toppled Saddam this is much too little and much too late.
@6:17 AM
Sunday, June 03, 2007- - -
Hulk Hogan is afraid of horses? Why do I find the idea of a professional wrestler making a reality show so amusing?
@9:26 AM
Gad! Every time you think something is foolproof they come up with a bigger fool: An Ohio jury ruled against a prestigious Wyoming gun manufacturer this week and awarded damages to an Ohio man who lost his right leg in a firearm accident in Albany County four years ago.
Robert Taylor of Adamsville, Ohio, was awarded $600,000 in damages Thursday against Star Valley gun manufacturer Freedom Arms Inc. following a jury trial, said Taylor's lead counsel, Kent Spence of Jackson.
...
But Spence called on the company -- and several others producing revolvers with "the same defect" -- to recall and stop producing "these defective guns." Can't really blame some greenhorn from Ohio for not knowing you don't carry a single-action with a round under the hammer, but I just lost a lot of respect for Spence, I'd have thought he'd be above chasing that particular ambulance.
@8:56 AM
Kudos for NIMBYs!
WASHINGTON -- America may spew more greenhouse gases than any other country, but some states are astonishingly more prolific polluters than others -- and it's not always the ones you might expect.
The Associated Press analyzed state-by-state emissions of carbon dioxide from 2003, the latest U.S. Energy Department numbers available. The review shows startling differences in states' contribution to climate change.
The biggest reason? The burning of high-carbon coal to produce cheap electricity.
...
* Texas, the leader in emitting this greenhouse gas, cranks out more than the next two biggest producers combined, California and Pennsylvania, which together have twice Texas' population.
...
On a per-person basis, Wyoming spews more carbon dioxide than any other state or any other country: 276,000 pounds of it per capita a year, thanks to burning coal, which provides nearly all of the state's electrical power. The article goes on in this same vein to compare the per capita production of carbon dioxide across the country. Oddly enough, co2 production per capita is much higher in energy-producing states than it is in energy-consuming states (what a surprise!). A second article* quotes the Gov: "We're the largest net exporter of energy of any state in the country," Gov. Dave Freudenthal said. "That combined with the fact that we're the lowest population in the country creates an interesting circumstance." The gist of the articles seems to be that folks in California and New Jersey can feel good about themselves because they don't produce energy, they just consume it. Meanwhile, we've really got to do something about those pigs in Texas and Wyoming.
Notch one up for those sharp-eyed statisticians at the Associated Press. If there's any justice this brilliant expose' should really win a Pulitzer.
*Why does the Casper Star publish two slightly different versions of the same article? Not only is their reporting half-glassed, so is their editing. I don't think I'd have published this article even once, except to mock it brutally.
Update: This bit is particularly mockable: Dr. Tracy Murphy, the state epidemiologist, said he doesn't know of any health problems in Wyoming related to CO2 emissions. Really? You'd think between all those coal plants and the cow flatulence that we'd be dropping like flies!
But this was really the best bit: For people who want to reduce their household emissions, or their "carbon footprint," the state where they live really does matter.
After seeing Al Gore's documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth," Gregg Cawley used one of the many calculators available online to determine his "carbon footprint." The University of Wyoming professor lives in a small one-bedroom apartment and drives a moderately efficient Subaru, so he figured he contributes less to global warming than the average American.
But the calculations showed otherwise. They suggested Cawley produces more carbon dioxide than most Americans. Even if he reduced his energy consumption, the numbers would hardly budge. "My God," he thought, "what do I have to do to my lifestyle to change this?"
Then he changed his home state in the equation. He took out Wyoming and plugged in Washington state.
"I came in way low. I said, 'That's the problem. I live in the wrong damn state."' This guy is a professor? At our university? Heaven help us. (A quick google shows that Robert McGreggor (Gregg) Cawley, teaches political "science". Where do they find these guys?)
@7:28 AM
Saturday, June 02, 2007- - -
Where was the Secret Service? Isn't it their job to take a hit for the President?
HT: Best of the Web
@7:42 AM
All the news that's fit to suppress? Best of the Web Today quotes James Glanz, who is about to become the New York Times Baghdad bureau chief: "As the number of reporters there dwindles further and further because of the difficult conditions we work under, the kind of work they are able to publish becomes very important," Mr. Glanz said. "This tiny remaining corps of reporters becomes a greater and greater problem for the military brass because we are the only people preventing them from telling the story the way they want it told." [emphasis from WSJ]
@7:06 AM
Friday, June 01, 2007- - -
Things that make you go.. Huh? Consider these two brand new Gibson F-5 Master Model mandolins for sale at Elderly Instruments. The first is "distressed" -- aged to have "the visual appeal of a 1920's original". A dent here, a ding there, a few scratches, a little crackling of the finish, etc., made to look like it's been around for 80 years. They want $20,500 for it (yes, yow!). The second is also new, and not distressed but is "shopworn", with a few dings in the top. It goes for only $13,995. Now again, these are identical instruments except one has a few accidental dings and the other has lots of intentional dings. Must be like paying a premium for pre-worn jeans..
@2:18 PM
Oh Frabjous Day! The Wyoming Business Council is doling out the bucks* to their Business Ready Communities. To get any of the money your community has to be Business Ready, which in Washakie County's case meant raising our sales taxes. In return, we get money for "infrastructure improvements", most of which goes toward paying the salaries of bureaucrats and government employees.
I'm at a loss to explain how raising taxes and growing an ever bigger and more meddlesome bureaucracy and public sector is supposed to encourage business (it rather discourages mine!), but then I'm not a Certified Economic Development Professional with a whole four weeks of intensive training in business like our Wyoming Business Council staff. I just, ya know, own a business, so what would I know?
*Update: Read down the list of proposed grants and you'll see that this is corporate welfare at its finest. Tax everybody in the county and build a new shop for an oilfield service firm? Why, that makes perfect sense. Especially as, by the time the building is built the boom will probably be bust and the building can sit empty. Far-sighted, these Wyoming Business Council folks are.
@6:14 AM
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