Showing posts with label Ecology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecology. Show all posts

Monday, June 30, 2008

Rising Red Tide, Not What Mao Was Thinking

With less than six weeks before it plays host to the Olympic sailing regatta, the city of Qingdao has mobilized thousands of people and an armada of small boats to clean up an algae bloom that is choking large stretches of the coastline and threatening to impede the Olympic competition ... Officials in Qingdao said pollution and poor water quality did not have a "substantial link" to the current outbreak, according to Xinhua.
Yeah, right... sure it didn't. You gotta love the Chinese though, who else can order 20 or 30 thousand people to go and remove tons and tons of algae. Now!
State media reported that 100,000 tons of the algae had already been taken out of the water. Much of it was being transported to farms as feed for pigs and other animals, according to news reports.
Some algae will be reeducated through labor and become a active members of the working class, if it knows whats good for it.

The earth is angry...
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Sunday, April 6, 2008

George W. Bush Sewage Plant


You don't even want to know what this is, er, was.
But people in SF want to name the treatment plant after GWB.

We've Been Cleaning Up Bush's Mess for a Long Time.
People in San Francisco Want to Make it Official.

You've heard of Reagan Airport (used to be called National Airport.)

San Francisco wants to honor our 43rd President.

SFist

Looking to honor the forty-third President of the United States of America, George W. Bush, the recently formed Presidential Memorial Commission of San Francisco is looking to change the name of the Oceanside Wastewater Treatment Facility. It seems the group would like to rename the SF Zoo adjacent facility to the "George W Bush Sewage Plant."

Genius.

The local grassroots movement, helmed by "Wayne Pickering," is proposing an ordinance initiative for the November 2008 San Francisco ballot in order to get the poop/pee/vomit plant's title changed. Why? To honor our current leader of the free world with an "appropriate and enduring legacy, for no other president in modern American history has accomplished so much in such a short time.
Check out the diagram.



As you can tell from the diagram (or this more detailed explanation), this plant calls for technical competence.

Ironic, actually, considering it's to honor George W. Bush.

But well, competence is what's needed to clean up messes, piles of steaming crap spread all over the world, not to mention the image of the United States.

Wouldn't it be great if sewage plants, land fills, and failed strip mines everywhere were named in GWB's honor? Or perhaps the GWB oil spill, for a particularly ugly ecological disaster?

Thank you San Francisco. Good work. Good luck in November.

h/t Huffington Post.
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Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Montana High School Cancels Nobel Laureate Talk


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Republican Town Refuses Global Warming
Lecture for High Schoolers


There is a reason there were dark ages.

Some people are proud of being stupid.

Some people refuse to learn.

Always, some people line up with pitchforks and lighted torches to burn intelligence to the ground.

The Enlightenment was a long, hard time coming. And in places such as Choteau, Montana, complaints from conservatives were enough to get the superintendent to cancel a lecture to 130 high school students from Professor Steven W. Running, Nobel Laureate.

The New York Times

Dr. Running was a lead author of a global warming report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the 400-member United Nations body that shared last year’s Nobel Peace Prize with former Vice President Al Gore. But when some residents complained that his presentation here would be one-sided because no opposing view would be offered, the superintendent of Choteau School District No. 1, Kevin St. John, canceled it.

Dr. Running was surprised.

“Disbelief was the primary reaction,” he said in a telephone interview. “I’ve never been canceled before. But it was almost comical. I had a pretty candid discussion with the superintendent and the school board, and they said there were some conservative citizens who didn’t want me to speak.”

Mr. St. John said that numerous residents had complained to school board members and that they in turn had suggested that the program be called off.

People on Main Street here were divided over the cancellation. Melody Martinsen, the editor of The Choteau Acantha, a local weekly, said that while she rarely received letters to the editor, “this week I have nine and seven are on the subject, and they are all chastising the school board.”

Kirk Moore, the owner of a farm and ranch store, is a school board member who favored canceling the talk. But he declined to say why. “No comment,” Mr. Moore said. “Go talk to the superintendent.”

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The Republicans legacy leaves our children further and further behind every first world country... in science, math, technology, preparing for an uncertain future.

We sent men to the moon on man-made fire. Now children in Montana are taught to be afraid of the lightening.

Bushism and Republicanism has failed our nation, has failed our children, has failed our planet, has just plain failed. Anyone with the sense of a dog avoiding a skunk knows what's been happening the last seven years is just plain wrong.

Telling children they can't hear a Nobel Prize winner is wrong. It's against everything this country stands for.

Shame on that superintendent and that school board, and shame on Choteau, Montana for being so out of touch with basic American values.

It's just plain wrong.
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Friday, November 23, 2007

What Is It To Be An Elder?


photo Kelly Presnell/Arizona Daily Star

Sabino Canyon, Arizona

Upon retirement, people seem to take one of two paths.

Get small -- retire into themselves, curl up into their home, go out less and less, perhaps have mental and physical slowdowns over longer and longer periods, and then, die.

Or...

Participate in life -- retire out into their local communities, engage with friends, find projects where they can contribute back to children and teenagers their wisdom and understanding. This engagement keeps our elders alive for much longer, and allows their Institutional Memory to be passed on.

Like all seven major life developmental stages -- infant, child, teen, young adult, transition to adulthood, adult, & elder -- we can not say ahead of time, if a particular person will navigate the change well or not.

All of us know people in their late twenties and early thirties who are protracted teenagers, people who failed to move successfully from being a teenager -- which developmentally runs from the onset of puberty to the early twenties, and is characterized by being focused primarily on one's self, and pushing away one's parents -- and now at say thirty, are still stuck being very self-centered, relating to sexuality in a teenage way, and trying to go out and party as if they were a teenager. They are a protracted teenager.

In the same way, we can not say how any adult making the transition to elder, will do. Even the most successful adult, may go down the path of turning inwards, and the less successful adults may, counterintuitively, become very successful elders.

Like all developmental transitions, the transition to elder will likely take a number of years to tell which way it goes. These transitions are not under our control as observers, and we should be clear, they are not really under the control of the person in the middle of it all. Well, not any more than becoming a teenager or transitioning into adulthood was under your control.

My mother, Patricia, 70, has been transitioning into being an elder. She is a part-time municipal judge in Tucson providing backup for the full-time judges, however it is fairly rare she is needed to take the bench. After a successful career spanning being a respected bankruptcy attorney in two states, serving as the Chief of Staff to the Chancellor at a major urban University, and before all that, being the Assistant Concert Master of the Tucson Symphony (not to mention raising three children), it's really been fascinating for me to watch my oh-so-successful mother struggle to redefine herself from these large roles around family, work and career, into something more personal, more consistent with her passions.

This past fall, inside my mom's love of the Arizona desert, inside her commitment that people have the opportunity to learn at a young age both to love the desert, and that caring for the ecosystems we necessarily are part of is essential -- we will all live or die together with our plants and water, air, birds, insects and animals -- my mother along with retired airplane pilots, financiers, artists, and a group of massively smart, talented people (I met some of them when I went to Tucson in October), has been training to be Volunteer Naturalists at Sabino Canyon, just north-east of Tucson against the Catalina mountains.

Sabino Canyon is a glorious canyon, where many of us from Tucson did a lot of hanging out when we were growing up. It has water flowing much of the year, including some terrific floods during the rainy seasons. Awesome snakes to watch out for, BIG boulders to jump on, these old bridges built by the WPA which still look super-cool, spanning up the entire canyon, and the whole thing is just so perfect for hiking and biking. Or if you're not up for that, there's a tram to take you all the way to the top of the road, where you can keep climbing, all the way up to the top of Mt. Lemon if you want -- and I have.

(That's Mom in the photo, by the way, third person to the right, in shorts, helping to hold the king snake. Well, petting it, anyway.)

Mom and her classmates have been studying all fall, day after day after day, cracking books, working in the canyon, taking tests, so they can be Volunteer Naturalists and work with the 8,000-10,000 elementary school-kids who come to the canyon every year to be out in nature. Last month, Mom told me, one of her classmates encountered a real mountain-lion, right there in the canyon!

I'm proud of my mother -- and of the people she's graduating with. Instead of turning inwards, they're turning outwards. These people, the younger ones and the elders alike, are giving back to their community in a very real way, passing on the heart of their love for the land to a new generation.

That is the essence of being an elder -- giving your heart back to the community.

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