Mercury Rising 鳯女

Politics, life, and other things that matter

Archive for February, 2010

The best thing since the Branch Davidians

Posted by Charles II on February 17, 2010

Pity Waco.

Ken Starr has been named the President of Baylor College in Waco. Waco was famous, of course, for the Branch Davidian cult, which murdered several officers of the law (and suffered six deaths) to avoid being served with a warrant, thereby precipitating a law enforcement p–sing match in which 76 more Davidians including many children lost their lives. This is his vision for the college:

“Students. That’s what it’s all about. That’s why the faculty come together. The faculty come together to breed conversation and discovery,” said Starr.

As long as it doesn’t contradict the Scofield Bible.

You can read the rest of the smarmy little dishonest vision of this smarmy little man here. You may want to have your bath gear handy.

Posted in conservativism, corruption, Fundies, history | 2 Comments »

Solution For Medium-Sized Wind Generation?

Posted by Phoenix Woman on February 17, 2010

There’s been more movement away from the current model of horizontal-axis (aka Big Tri-Bladed Towers) units where wind power is concerned. People in urban areas, or in places where wildlife could be endangered by conventional horizontal-axis blades, are seeking out alternate ways to use wind power.

Just the other day, I saw a vertical axis unit on the side of the highway that looked a lot like this one. These types of wind generators aren’t as efficient as the big tri-bladed tower ones, but they can operate at lower wind speeds, can be set up in a wider variety of spots (i.e., they don’t need to be fifty feet in the air or on top of a ridge), and apparently pose less of a potential hazard to wildlife. (This manufacturer claims that one of its vertical-axis wind arrays hasn’t killed a single bird since it was put into operation in October of 2001. That’s quite a record!)

Posted in energy, environment, wind power | 3 Comments »

Shadowlands: the mortgages overhanging the banks

Posted by Charles II on February 17, 2010

Barry Ritholtz reproduces a chart from S&P that shows the magnitude of the mortgage problem. Basically, the Fed and the banks simply kicked it down the road:

Ritholtz says there are 5 million more foreclosures in the pipeline. He’s wrong that it’s useless to fight foreclosure. It is useless to fight it when you refuse to force owners to accept cramdowns and back up buyers with genuine subsidies, not the baloney that the Congress has so far produced. The idea was, as shown by the developments of the last eighteen months, to kick the problem down the road, in the hope that asset values would return to a reasonable level, at which point, the home could be sold to a greater fool.

Via the Calculated Risk blog, Diana Olick of CNBC says that few mortgage revisions have worked out. The S&P report cited above (and quoted in the WSJ) says “the supply of plausible candidates” for government-guaranteed re-fi is nearly exhausted.

And so we stand poised on the edge of a second financial crisis.

Posted in financial crisis, mortgage crisis | 4 Comments »

Asleep At The Wheel

Posted by Phoenix Woman on February 16, 2010

Sally Jo Sorensen at Bluestem Prairie reports the following information that local CBS affiliate WCCO missed in its report on Independence Party gubernatorial hopeful Rob Hahn’s proposal to allow betting on stock cars in local races:

Unfortunately, WCCO didn’t conduct the minimal fact checking about Hahn’s proposal. Effective in 1993, the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992 banned nearly all sports betting with the exception of a few states–and a few sports everywhere  While the law is being challenged in the courts, it’s likely that the case will take some time to be heard in the federal system.

Ooops.

Posted in Minnesota, wrong way to go about it, WTF? | Comments Off

Solar Power In Haiti

Posted by Phoenix Woman on February 15, 2010

One silver lining of the earthquake is that it may be what gets Haitians to move away from burning increasingly-expensive wood and coal for power and cooking fuel:

Solar setups are quick to install, mobile, and relatively inexpensive compared to the price of rebuilding a damaged electricity grid. They can also be incredibly robust. Alan Doyle, a science editor at MSNBC, recently wrote that a single solar water purification system, recovered from the rubble by the Red Cross, is now purifying 30,000 gallons (over 110,000 liters) of water a day.

Sol Inc, a US-based solar street lighting company, has sent a first shipment of lights for roadways, food distribution, and triage sites. This may sound mundane, until you imagine trying to perform street-side surgery or find family members in the dark. The LED lights can also withstand hurricane force winds – no small thing in a country that has also recently been hit by tropical cyclones. Sol Inc has promised to match donations for people wanting to contribute to the program.

Communications are another crucial need being met by solar. China’s ZTE corporation has donated 1,500 solar cellphones and 300 digital trunking base stations. The same technology was used in China when an earthquake hit the Sichuan Province in May of 2008. A similar project is being set up by a group from Holland.

My favorite among all these groups is the Sun Ovens company, if for no other reason than it provides a cheap and low-tech way for poor Haitians to cook their food. Sun Ovens are llittle more than cleverly-folded shiny pieces of metal.

Posted in Good Things, Haiti, saving the earth, solar, sustainability | 4 Comments »

Honduran Dictatorship, Day 19

Posted by Charles II on February 14, 2010

Via Adrienne, Cesar Silva has done a tremendous documentary on the coup and its aftermath, with English subtitles. I wish every member of Congress would watch this. You can see the huge crowds that turned out before the regime started assassinating people. Also from Adrienne, the home of the vice president of the beverage union was invaded, and the computer he used for organizing taken, the kidnapping and torture of a Resistance couple and their family , the murder of a leader of the nurses’ union, Vanessa Yamileth Zepeda , and for people of limited literacy such as our Congress, the Honduran coup in comic book form, and a report on the hacking of Vos el Soberano, which is probably the largest news aggregation site for the Resistance.

At Honduras Culture and Politics, RNS has an Orwellian story of how the official paper La Gaceta has been used to erase history. Nothing becomes law in Honduras unless it is published in La Gaceta, so the precise words of what it publishes are very important. The Congress approved a dam/reservoir to be built by Italian company, Eléctrica Nacaome, Sociedad Anonima (ENASA), with turbines to come from a Spanish company. Needless to say, this is not very popular with the electrical workers union– or, really, with anyone outside of the elite in a country with unemployment somewhere around 30%. So, La Gaceta published two editions: one with the controversial law, all copies of which were purchased by ENASA, and one without it. RNS says:

The administrator of the file room where the negatives of the pages of each edition of La Gaceta are filed has disappeared after asking for permission to take a leave of absence, along with the keys for the file room. The ex-President of Congress, Jose Alfredo Saavedra, under whose leadership the Congress approved supposedly approved the decreto in question, disclaims any knowledge saying he only oversees the discussion, not its content.

So there’s no record of what the contract says except what ENASA says it says.

Human Rights Commissioner Ramon Custodio

Ramon Custodio (image via Moderate Left)

The so-called Commissioner of Human Rights, Ramon Custodio, most famous for denying that the police were using live ammunition against the resistance even as more and more corpses appeared to refute him,  is warning that a Truth Commission could re-open the “Cuarta Urna:” the poll to ask whether the people want the Constitution reformed. This is the abomination that must not be discussed in Honduras. The proximate cause of his fear is that the Pretendisent, Porfirio Lobo, may be thinking of naming a Resistance leader to the Truth Commission. As was said in Honduras long ago, it’s cheaper to buy a congressman than a mule, so there’s probably no need to fear.

Brother John has a piece on Bartolome de las Casas, someone important to read to understand why, by 1860, the Spanish attitude toward slavery was very much more enlightened than the American.

Via Magbana at Honduras Oye, a link to a story by Kari Lyderson of In These Times on the murder of Vanessa Yamileth Zepeda, as well as a link to an interview of Juan Almendares, MD, that appears in Honduras Resists.

The Latin American News Dispatch claims that the Half-Truth Commission that Lobo is establishing will investigate the overthrow of Zelaya. I doubt that is true, but what is certainly true is the statement in that article that the World Bank will restore $390M in funding (thereby preventing Honduras from ending in default) with $120M in new funding. Tamar Sharabi of Upside Down World has an interview of journalist Cesar Silva. Here’s an excerpt:

CS: I was kidnapped on Monday December 29th when I was on my way from the south where I went to distribute a documentary about the resistance and met with related colleagues….

They approached the taxi and held the driver at gunpoint, telling him to stay quiet otherwise they would kill him. They pulled me out of the taxi beating me up and took me into their car to a remote place in the mountains. We traveled about an hour while I was beaten inside the car. First they made me sit with my head between my legs, then they put a hood on me.

The kidnappers did not cover their faces nor were they wearing military clothes but by their vocabulary and communication by telephone with the ‘Jackal,’ it was clear they were getting orders. We reached an area away from the city where they put me in a dark room.

I was held from December 29 at 9:00am until the December 30th at noon. During these 27 hours I was interrogated every 45 minutes and punched in areas that leave no trace; my feet soles, testicles, stomach, and back, using their fists. I was naked and they kept wetting my body. In a moment of increased tension they tried to suffocate me with water. They threw water on my face until I was no longer able to breathe. I swallowed as much water as possible, but as I felt like I was drowning, another officer yelled that they would kill me another faster way.

The interrogations were about weapons; where they were, who were my contacts and how many leaders existed. They also asked where all my photos and videos were stored and what type of profile information we had of military leaders. They continued to threaten that I would not leave there alive and that I’d better trust in God. They offered me drugs to take to ease the pain of dying which I refused to accept.

On the morning of December 30, one of the officers told me that my life might be saved but that he wasn’t sure. Then I heard the torturers begin to plan my death. One of them suggested a shot in the head but then decided I would not suffer enough that way. Another one said they would let me hang myself from a tree or that they drag me attached to the car along the street. Then one of them said they could open my stomach and slowly pull out my intestines so I could talk as I died.

Hours later they took me out of there blindfolded with a hood and took me to “throw me out”. They dumped me in Tegucigalpa between the neighborhood ‘Cerro Grande’ and ‘El Chile,’ in a sector that is mountainous and very isolated.

Your tax dollars at work.

Posted in Honduras, Latin America | 1 Comment »

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Posted by Phoenix Woman on February 14, 2010

Whooooo killed the cupid?
I, said the sparrow, with my little bow and arrow,
I killed the cupid!

(Actually, it was probably a cat that did it. The arrow was added to fool people.)

Posted in Just for fun | 6 Comments »

The Case For Solar Power

Posted by Phoenix Woman on February 13, 2010

I’ve written in the past about the Solar Roadways concept. Well, thanks to a $100,000 grant from the US Department of Transportation last year, it’s now a bit more than just a concept:

On Feb. 5, Scott Brusaw demonstrated a 12-foot by 12-foot solar road panel in a friend’s garage in Sagle. A cameraman filmed the event, and officials with the U.S. Department of Transportation will likely visit the demonstration by the end of February.

[...]

“I thought, you know, I can build this,” said Brusaw. He started Solar Roadways four years ago with his wife Julie. “If they’re going to give me 100 grand, I’ll take half of it and buy the parts I need and put it together.”

So Brusaw spent the last six months in his home electronics lab building a small solar panel road prototype. By Feb. 12, he’ll submit a final report detailing his project’s feasibility to the USDOT.

[...]

After the demonstration, the USDOT will decide whether to give Brusaw an additional $750,000. That money would be used to build highway-size solar road panels that could be driven on and thoroughly tested.

Fingers crossed here. This may be what saves humanity. (Or at least saves humanity from a thousand-year period of starvation, famine and barbarism.)

Posted in energy, environment, Good Things, saving the earth, solar | 13 Comments »

And Now, A Word From Eli

Posted by Phoenix Woman on February 13, 2010

This whole post on Bathtub America is good, but I especially liked this part because it sums things up so well:

Starving the government because you don’t like everything it does is like starving your body because you’re pissed off about a hangnail, and then using your inevitable decline as proof that your body sucks and doesn’t deserve to be fed. And then insisting that you’re better off using the money you saved on food to pay for some nice efficient life-support machines to take care of you instead.

Thanks, Eli!

Posted in 'starving the beast', (Rich) Taxpayers League, 2010, Republicans, Republicans acting badly, Republicans as cancer, safety net, when government is a good thing | 4 Comments »

Friday Cat Blogging

Posted by MEC on February 12, 2010

Posted in Friday Cat Blogging, Lady Lightfoot | 5 Comments »