Some links for the day:
Organic food is no healthier, study finds
"A systematic review of 162 scientific papers published in the scientific literature over the last 50 years, however, found there was no significant difference."
The "Food miles" lie: buying local could be no greener than importing
Conclusion from article: "So, the best way to help reduce our impact on the environment when buying our food is paying much more attention to seasonality. In other words, unless consumers radically changed their lifestyles by becoming vegan or eating more seasonal foods, it may be better to import staple foods and avoid the emissions caused by refrigerating British produce for long periods, the report concludes."
Spoiled: Organic and Local Is So 2008
From article: "Consider our love affair with food miles. In theory, locally grown foods have traveled shorter distances and thus represent less fuel use and lower carbon emissions—their resource footprint is smaller. And yet, for all the benefits of a local diet, eating locally doesn't always translate into more sustainability. Because the typical farmers market is supplied by dozens of different farms, each transporting its crops in a separate van or truck, a 20-pound shopping basket of locally grown produce might actually represent a larger carbon footprint than the same volume of produce purchased at a chain retailer, which gets its produce en masse, via large trucks."
Organic food exposed
From Article: Norman Ernest Borlaug, the American plant geneticist who won a Nobel Peace Prize for breeding the high-yield, disease-resistant wheat varieties (triggering agriculture's 'Green Revolution'), is despairing of the organic fad. "This shouldn't even be a debate. Even if you could use all the organic material you have – the animal manures, the human waste, the plant residues – and get them back on the soil, you couldn't feed more than four billion people."
Also from this article:
"Non-organic farmers make use of chemicals to achieve these goals. Just prior to World War I, German chemists Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch learned to make ammonia synthetically. Their chemical reaction is still used today to produce more than 450 million tonnes of artificial fertiliser per year, and sustains the agriculture which feeds about60 per cent of the Earth's population.
Organic farmers source nitrate from manures, gradually broken down by soil organisms. They use only naturally-occurring products to control pests, such as the elements sulphur and copper; pyrethrins and rotenone (both made by plants); BT spray and Spinosad (both made by bacteria). However, these natural pesticides are not harmless. For instance, sulphur irritates the lungs, and rotenone has been shown to cause Parkinson's disease in rats."
In the conclusion of this article... and if this stuff interests you this particular article is very comprehensive:
"Popular or not, it's clear that organic food is not necessarily healthier, nor more sustainable or better for the environment. With the Earth's climate changing fast, and the human population heading for nine or 10 billion, we need solutions based on scientific evidence rather than faith and good intentions."
GM crops, algae, technology and science in general always has been and WILL BE the answer to feeding more and providing sustainability, not ridiculous steps backwards in food production which are much more about government politics and cutting down big business than it is any scientific research, or sound logic.
We should embrace, not fear technology. Overall our lives are much better than those of our ancestors due to the very things certain factions of the population are demonizing. Industrialization, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Genetic Engineering. Science will create sustainability.
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Inconvenient Science
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Tuesday, July 28, 2009
"Keep an Open Mind"
This is a powerful, emotional clip from CNN, in the words of Sgt. Crowley's colleagues. I wasn't going to weigh in on this particular issue because, quite frankly, I didn't really feel capable of conveying my thoughts in a manner that would not immediately be judged as a pre-existing bias by someone of an opposing mind. No police reports, No historical evidence on either of the men involved in this controversy would be sufficient. However, this is probably as close as you can come to giving those hardened by assumptions of racism, a little pause.....
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Monday, July 27, 2009
Maryland/DC trip day 4: July 6th
On the last day with my Aunt Rita, Kate and I accompanied her to Annapolis. The weather was absolutely spectacular as you can see from the photos. We first went on a harbor cruise which gave details on the city, and gave a sort of aquatic tour of the Naval academy. Following the hour long boat ride we went to lunch at a pub called "Middleton Tavern" that had some side walk seating that I was eager to take advantage of. The state house can be seen through the trees in this shot. We tried going in, however it appeared to be too late in the day to get inside.
After walking around the town for a while we headed towards the Naval academy in hopes of getting to see the campus. After passing through a security check point we strolled the grounds which were very beautiful. The green scapes of the grounds with majestic trees, paths, fountains, and gazebos was nothing like the cold granite-bricked campus of my imagination.
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Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Maryland/DC trip day 3: July 5th
My Aunt Rita was a wonderful host for Kate and I, getting some great fruit ready for breakfast in the morning before we ultimately got on the road to the Metro. Below is my Aunt Rita and my cousin Hope's handsome son, Justin. In his arm is Pengy, a stuffed penguin that my Mom bought for him for Christmas this past year.
To close out the evening Aunt Rita, Kate, and I headed downstairs to their home theater and watched Gran Torino. It was the second time I've seen this movie, and it really is one of the best films I've seen in a long time.
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Associated Press does Factcheck on "The One"
Holy Cannoli!
Is the tide finally rolling out?
Am I reading this correct?
Is there hope that people are going to see Obama-care for what it is?
THIS IS A MUST READ.
FACT CHECK: Obama's health care claims adrift?
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George N. Parks
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11:11 PM
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Sunday, July 19, 2009
Maryland/DC trip day two (the 4th of July)
We began our day by leaving our La Quinta Inn outside of Baltimore and driving our wee Kia Rio to Huntington Station which is the end of the Yellow line on the D.C. metro. We parked the car there and took a bus to Mt. Vernon, the first attraction of the day. The was a substantial line, we were probably in it for a half an hour (which honestly I didn't was too bad, not to mention it was gorgeous out). I told Kate I was going to take a picture of her being put off to capture the experience, however she couldn't help but smile.
Mt Vernon was very active for the fourth of July. There was a band playing patriotic tunes a couple groups of revolutionary squadron "reinactors" (not sure what to call them....) were marching around the grounds. While we waited to enter the mansion we had some free birthday cake (for the U.S.A of course!).
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2 for 1
MGMT is supporting McCartney at Fenway, which gives me high hopes that Macca will perform a good deal of his newer material from "The Fireman" which was has some of the electronica backup, not unlike that used by MGMT. Apparently McCartney is a fan of the band, which suggests a personal invite. It sounds like they are quite popular in NYC, and I have heard the song "Kids" myself (See video below). The video is actually quite good (as well as the song) and perhaps would have done well if MTV still played music videos. I guess that is what youtube is for.
I'm not sure how well the hoards of baby-boomers who show up for Beatles and Wings tunes will receive MGMT, however, hopefully there will be enough younger fans, perhaps some MGMT fans, that can make it there and give them some deserved love.
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10:23 PM
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Thursday, July 16, 2009
Far out ideas!
Exxon Sinks $600M Into Algae-Based Biofuels in Major Strategy Shift
Check out the above article... an evil oil company investing in an evil biotech company (sarcasm intended of course... I work in biotech). If this technology can be made to be economically feasible, it would change the world as we know it.
The big question is... will the left be happy with their enemy Exxon collaborating with their other enemies, biological engineers?
If genetically modified algae can produce sustainable fuel that balances the CO2 intake and output will they be happy or come up with doomsday scenarios like they do for GM crops?
As I've stated in the past, we of course need to be careful when potentially impacting the environment with GM organisms, but to treat them like abominations is incredibly ignorant when our survival and continued existence may depend upon it.
This company's website is very interesting, it is worth checking out.
http://www.syntheticgenomics.com/index.html
Man, I'd like to figure out how to get in on these guys before they go public!
And more far out technology from one of the most famous evil geniuses around (again I'm being sarcastic):
Hurricane-calming technology? Bill Gates has a plan
You just have to read this one for yourself, it is just too cool... and it isn't just about Hurricane control either.
I'll finish up the trip posts soon... this was just really interesting. I thought it was a nice change from my negative interpretation of our political climate as well.
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George N. Parks
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11:51 PM
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Wednesday, July 15, 2009
He's still got it...
Paul McCartney performs the Ed Sullivan Theater... roof. I say he's still got it... but admittedly I'm a bit biased. I'm headed to see Macca at Fenway August 6th, and I can't wait.
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11:22 PM
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Monday, July 13, 2009
Trip Day 1: Baltimore
I thought I would take some time to post some of the photos that Kate and I took during our D.C./ Baltimore/ Maryland trip over the 4th of July weekend. On the third we spent the day with two of Kate's college friends, and her former roommates in Baltimore. We started by meeting up with them in their trendy neighborhood "Hampden" in North Baltimore. They have a small, but spacious town house apartment on a street abutting "The Avenue" or 36th street. The feeling of the area is both quaint and bohemian, and it is surprisingly serene for such an urban setting. After some hot dogs for lunch and chips and salsa we headed out on our tour.This first picture is "The original Washington Monument". It is deemed the original by Baltimoreans because it predates the D.C. monument by 20 years. We didn't make the hike to the top because ironically it was closed for the one holiday that it perhaps should have been open for. Next to the monument is the attractive church seen below, Mt. Vernon Place Church. I believe I'm getting the name correct, however I'm not 100% sure. Internet links lead to two churches with a similar name, this one, and a church that has a more Romanesque type of architecture. Perhaps one is new and the other old? Regardless, it is a pretty building.
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Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Proving that the public plan ISN'T about competition
Emanuel faces liberal pressure over 'trigger' comments (CNN)
"Emanuel's apparent suggestion in a Wall Street Journal article published Tuesday that the White House would be willing to consider a "trigger" clause on a public option — to delay full implementation of the plan if insurance companies met certain conditions on coverage and cost — drew outrage from liberal members of Congress and MoveOn.org, which has poured millions of dollars into a campaign supporting the president's health care proposal."
Ironic since the point of this is to improve health care availability and affordability. SO if guidelines are set for private industry to improve health care affordability and they meet them..... WHAT IS THE NEED FOR THE PUBLIC SYSTEM????
Frankly I think the "trigger" plan sucks too because it is still using bureaucracy to over regulate and essentially decrease the quality of health care for most in order to provide it for a small segment of the population, of which many didn't want it to begin with, or just weren't responsible enough to do what it takes to get it to begin with. If you have a choice for health care vs. cable TV, booze, and cigarettes, and other stuff you might not need.... and you choose the latter, then quite frankly I think you should pay the price and be a recipient of poor health care. And it will be poor health care, not an absence of health care as the widespread public misconception suggests.
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7:16 PM
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Wednesday, July 01, 2009
If she had been called at 3:00 AM
Officials: Clinton Pressed Obama to Take Harder Line on Iran
"Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton urged President Obama for two days to toughen his language on Iran before he did so, and then was surprised when he condemned Iran's crackdown on demonstrators last week, the Washington Times reported administration officials as saying."
Just wanted to let everyone know that I will be away on vacation until the 9th, when I'll resume the blogging. I'm headed down to DC for the 4th, perhaps I'll see the Obama's out on the lawn with Bo? Probably not.
Hope everyone has a fine weekend!!
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11:13 PM
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