8.14.2007
More Arctic Hijinks
More countries are trying to claim that the rapidly-warming arctic belongs to their continental shelf. Great. At the rate that tropical storms are forming this season, it may be choice beachfront property in a few years, as well.
Big Brother News
Let's face it, when someone pries into your personal life or tries shut you up, you don't like it. Maybe this is something particular to Western societies, what with the long tradition of tolerated dissent (as long as you don't pose an actual threat to the people in charge). Most people who consider the First Amendment to be a good idea are a little afraid of corporations and governments that spend too much time trying to shut down the public exchange of information (see this article about self-serving wikipedia manipulation).
That's why there are so many people happy about Karl Rove retiring. In addition to being a political operative whose demagoguery was only outdone by the vice president himself, Karl Rove was an expert at manipulating public opinion and running roughshod over our unalienable rights.
There's nothing wrong with PR, mind you. It simply has to be balanced by some kind of ethical code. "Win at all costs" is not an ethical code.
Take the various Bush administration wiretapping scandals, for example. It's very hard to violate the basic precepts of constitutional law, lie about it, and be indignant when other countries who state openly that they don't care about privacy at all and actively want to control their population indicate they are going to do the same. I mean, c'mon, China even restricts what's allowed to come up on Google searches (which may end up hurting Google's popularity in the long run). Americans aren't even sure if they like undercover journalists. How did wiretapping get to be okay?
8.10.2007
Hot Enough For Ya?
In the wake of the Russia's titanium flag stunt, more information about why the polar icecaps are melting has come to light. A new study says that coal buring in the U.S. earlier this century was a major cause of global warming. Not only because of the carbon release, but also because the increase particulate matter in the air causes climatic change that has also been attributed to affecting the Atlantic hurricane season (or warming in the polar regions).
You'll remember debates earlier this summer about using coal to power the U.S. Capitol.
Despite new information coming out almost daily about increased global warming, I expect that the naysayers and brown nosers will have their way for some time
labels:
fossil fuels,
global warming,
polar icecaps,
politics
8.07.2007
Twenty thousand leagues under the melting polar dead zone
In a short-sighted land grab, a couple of Russian scientists planted a titanium flag under the melting polar ice caps. While I would normally laud such an obviously worthwhile endeavor, I find other ocean-based news stories to be more alarming.
I mean, sure, a high-stakes legal battle over one of the bigger oil reserves in the world is news, but what about the formation of a huge dead zone off the coast of Oregon or killer squid invading Monterey Bay. While the former isn't yet traced back to global warming and the latter will only result in the disappearence of fish sticks (a long time coming, in my opinion), you can't deny any longer that there will be some serious consequences due to global warming.
Even if you aren't in the firing line for the next round of Mother Nature's revenge, I still think it's good that some people are planning ahead.
labels:
fossil fuels,
future,
global warming,
oceans,
polar icecaps
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