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Lincoln's Grave Warning Realized

...a letter from President Abraham Lincoln to William F Elkins on 21 November 1864:

"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country...corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed."

Eight Principles of Uncivilization

by Paul Kingsnorth and Dougald Hine


‘We must unhumanise our views a little, and become confident
As the rock and ocean that we were made from.’


  1. We live in a time of social, economic and ecological unravelling. All around us are signs that our whole way of living is already passing into history. We will face this reality honestly and learn how to live with it.

  2. We reject the faith which holds that the converging crises of our times can be reduced to a set of‘problems’ in need of technological or political ‘solutions’.

  3. We believe that the roots of these crises lie in the stories we have been telling ourselves. We intend to challenge the stories which underpin our civilisation: the myth of progress, the myth of human centrality, and the myth of our separation from ‘nature’. These myths are more dangerous for the fact that we have forgotten they are myths.

  4. We will reassert the role of story-telling as more than mere entertainment. It is through stories that we weave reality.

  5. Humans are not the point and purpose of the planet. Our art will begin with the attempt to step outside the human bubble. By careful attention, we will reengage with the non-human world.

  6. We will celebrate writing and art which is grounded in a sense of place and of time. Our literature has been dominated for too long by those who inhabit the cosmopolitan citadels.

  7. We will not lose ourselves in the elaboration of theories or ideologies. Our words will be elemental. We write with dirt under our fingernails.

  8. The end of the world as we know it is not the end of the world full stop. Together, we will find the hope beyond hope, the paths which lead to the unknown world ahead of us.



The Dark Mountain Manifesto

(excerpt)
Walking on lava

The end of the human race will be that it will eventually die of civilisation
Ralph Waldo Emerson

Those who witness extreme social collapse at first hand seldom describe any deep revelation about the truths of human existence. What they do mention, if asked, is their surprise at how easy it is to die.

The pattern of ordinary life, in which so much stays the same from one day to the next, disguises the fragility of its fabric. How many of our activities are made possible by the impression of stability that pattern gives? So long as it repeats, or varies steadily enough, we are able to plan for tomorrow as if all the things we rely on and don’t think about too carefully will still be there. When the pattern is broken, by civil war or natural disaster or the smaller-scale tragedies that tear at its fabric, many of those activities become impossible or meaningless, while simply meeting needs we once took for granted may occupy much of our lives.

What war correspondents and relief workers report is not only the fragility of the fabric, but the speed with which it can unravel. As we write this, no one can say with certainty where the unravelling of the financial and commercial fabric of our economies will end. Meanwhile, beyond the cities, unchecked industrial exploitation frays the material basis of life in many parts of the world, and pulls at the ecological systems which sustain it.

Precarious as this moment may be, however, an awareness of the fragility of what we call civilisation is nothing new.

‘Few men realise,’ wrote Joseph Conrad in 1896, ‘that their life, the very essence of their character, their capabilities and their audacities, are only the expression of their belief in the safety of their surroundings.’ Conrad’s writings exposed the civilisation exported by European imperialists to be little more than a comforting illusion, not only in the dark, unconquerable heart of Africa, but in the whited sepulchres of their capital cities. The inhabitants of that civilisation believed ‘blindly in the irresistible force of its institutions and its morals, in the power of its police and of its opinion,’ but their confidence could be maintained only by the seeming solidity of the crowd of like-minded believers surrounding them. Outside the walls, the wild remained as close to the surface as blood under skin, but the city-dweller was no longer equipped to face it directly.

The remainder of the essay can be read online: Dark Mountain manifesto.


Paul is the author of One No, Many Yeses and Real England. He was deputy editor of The Ecologist between 1999 and 2001. His first poetry collection, Kidland, is forthcoming from Salmon Poetry. His website is www.paulkingsnorth.net

Dougald writes the blog Changing the World (and other excuses for not getting a proper job). He is a former BBC journalist and has written for and edited various online and offline magazines. His website is www.dougald.co.uk

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Editorial Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The "Eight principles of uncivilisation" are expanded in the Dark Mountain manifesto (also available as PDF or purchased as a limited-edition, hand-stitched pamphlet.

See the site for the blog and information about their upcoming festival May 28-30.

Several Energy Bulletin contributors are on their Blogroll, including John Michael Greer, Sharon Astyk, Rob Hopkins and Dmitry Orlov. Also mentioned are Wendell Berry and Ivan Illich.

George Monbiot recently wrote a column in the Guardian about Dark Mountain Project: I share their despair, but I'm not quite ready to climb the Dark Mountain.

On Common Dreams, Robert C. Koehler wrote a related piece: Dark Green.

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Original article available here
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Our American Objectives

"Our national goals must be to rejuvenate the domestic economy; transfer the economic basis of our nation from consumptive to productive; recapitalize education and the technologies industries; achieve complete energy independence; move towards renewable energy sources;
restore public confidence in the government's ability to undertake large national infrastructure projects, and re-assert its right to set goals and policies to ensure those projects proceed smoothly; define the overarching standards for a reconstructed America including a federal review of the building and planning codes now in use, and probably the writing of new mandates that set out 21st-century standards and priorities for energy use, urban and transportation planning, and environmental design, which once put into law and accepted into general use, will be very difficult to change; commit funding for a massive 10- or 20-year program that will upgrade or replace failing components of America's infrastructure as the nation is broke (as it was in FDR's day) and this kind of spending needs to be seen as the long-term investment in our economic future that it is; restore a fair, honest, broad-based system of public contracting that will put large numbers of Americans to work on these new projects (and write the new rules in a way that ensures that the firms doing the most innovative work don't have to compete with unfair behemoth corporations like Halliburton and Lockheed for the lion's share of the funding) so that once there is a healthy, competitive construction industry that knows how to build sustainable projects—and is relying on the government to keep it in business—we will get a political constituency that will fight to ensure that the rebuilding will continue for the next several decades, regardless of what political party is in power; use the forces of globalization and information to strengthen and expand existing democratic alliances and created new ones; employ these alliances to destroy terrorist networks and establish new international security structures; lead, through our historic principles, on international cooperative efforts in spreading economic opportunity and democratic liberties, nation building, counter-prolification, and optimum environmental protection and safeguards; and cherish, honor, and protect our history and traditions of liberty and freedoms domestically particularly with respect to the Bill of Rights."

"The renewed social contract for America with its middle class and poor must:
  • Raise the minimum wage still higher and on a regular basis. It has fallen far behind increases in inflation since the 1970s, and that affects higher level wages as well.
  • Encourage living-wage programs by local governments. Governments can demand that their contractors and suppliers pay well above the minimum wage. There is substantial evidence that this does not result in an undue loss of jobs.
  • Enforce the labor laws vigilantly. Minimum-wage and maximum-hour laws are violated to a stunning degree. American workers shouldn't be forced by their employers to understate the number of hours worked or be locked in the warehouse so they can't leave on time. Workers often make only $2 and $3 an hour.
  • Unions are not seeking a free pass to organize secretly when they advocate for open check-offs on cards to approve of a union vote. They are seeking to organize without persistent and often illegal management interference. Penalties for illegally deterring such organizing are so light, it makes little sense for management not to pursue strategies to stop organizing even at the cost of prosecution.
  • Request that trading partners develop serious environmental standards and worker-protection laws. This is good for them, bringing a progressive revolution and a robust domestic market to their countries. It is good for America, which will be able to compete on a more level playing field.
  • Demand that the president, governors and mayors speak up about unconscionable executive salaries and low wages. The influence from the top cannot be underestimated. A president who looks the other way sends a strong signal to business. A president who demands responsible treatment of workers will get a response. Business does not like such attention.
  • These measures should be accompanied by serious investment in modernized infrastructure and energy alternatives, which can create millions of domestic jobs that pay good salaries. It should also be accompanied by a policy that supports a lower dollar -- contrary to Rubinomics -- in order to stimulate manufacturing exports again. Accomplishing this may require a new system of semi-fixed currencies across the globe. The unabashed high-dollar policy of the past twenty years has led to imbalances around the world that have contributed fundamentally to US overindebtedness.
  • And finally, the nation needs more balance on the part of the Federal Reserve between subduing inflation and creating jobs. Americans can live with inflation above 2 percent a year. There is no academic evidence to support a 2 percent annual target, although the Fed has made this its informal target."

The Continuing Case for The Second Bill of Rights for All American Citzens

...from Michael Lind on Salon.com on 11 January 2010 ....

The Case for Economic Rights

FDR said it and it holds 66 years later: There are benefits and opportunities every American should expect to enjoy

Three score and six years ago, the greatest president of the 20th century gave one of his greatest speeches. On Jan. 11, 1944, in a State of the Union address that deserves to be ranked with Lincoln's "Gettysburg Address" and King's "I Have a Dream" speech, President Franklin D. Roosevelt called for recognition of a "Second Bill of Rights." According to FDR:

"This Republic had its beginning, and grew to its present strength, under the protection of certain inalienable political rights -- among them the right of free speech, free press, free worship, trial by jury, freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures. They were our rights to life and liberty. As our nation has grown in size and stature, however -- as our industrial economy expanded -- these political rights proved inadequate to assure us equality in the pursuit of happiness."

Roosevelt did not argue that economic rights had superseded basic, old-fashioned political and civil rights. The argument of authoritarians and totalitarians that economic rights are more important than non-economic liberty was abhorrent to him. Instead, with the examples of the fascist and communist regimes of his time in mind, he argued that the purpose of economic rights was to support and reinforce, not replace, civil and political liberties:

"We have come to a clear realization of the fact that true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence. 'Necessitous men are not free men.' People who are hungry and out of a job are the stuff of which dictatorships are made.

In our day these economic truths have become accepted as self-evident. We have accepted, so to speak, a second Bill of Rights under which a new basis of security and prosperity can be established for all -- regardless of station, race, or creed."

President Roosevelt was not promoting economic rights that were necessarily enforceable in court, but rather economic benefits and opportunities that every American should expect to enjoy by virtue of citizenship in our democratic republic. Many of the rights he identified have been secured by programs with bipartisan support. These include:

"the right to a good education" (the G.I. Bill, student loans, Pell Grants, Head Start, federal aid to K-12 schools) and

"the right of every family to a decent home" (federally subsidized home loans and tax breaks for home ownership). But even before the global economic crisis, the U.S. fell short when it came to full employment --

"the right to a useful and remunerative job in the industries or shops or farms or mines of the nation"

-- and a living wage --

"the right to earn enough to provide adequate food and clothing and recreation."

Roosevelt's vision was controversial at the time and is contested today. When it comes to providing a safety net for Americans, there are three distinct paradigms, which I would describe as economic citizenship, welfare corporatism and faith-based charity.

Supporters of faith-based charity among "theoconservatives" such as Marvin Olasky argue that modern social insurance like Social Security and Medicare was a mistake. The medieval British and colonial American systems of relying on religious institutions to care for the sick and poor should have been continued and built upon, with government subsidies to "faith-based institutions."

The secular business-class right, however, has shown little interest in faith-based charity, perhaps because it is difficult for rent-seeking bankers, brokers and other private sector actors to extract huge amounts of money from tax-exempt church hospitals and church soup lines. The right's preferred alternative to the progressive vision of economic citizenship is what I call "welfare corporatism." Whereas economic citizenship views protection against sickness, unemployment and old age as entitlements of citizens in a democratic republic, welfare corporatism treats these necessities of life as commodities like groceries or appliances, to be purchased in a market by people who are thought of as consumers, not citizens.

Let's contrast ideal versions of the two approaches. In the ideal America of economic citizenship, there would be a single, universal, integrated, lifelong system of economic security including

single-payer healthcare,

Social Security, unemployment payments and

family leave

paid for by a single contributory payroll tax (which could be made progressive in various ways or reduced by combination with other revenue streams). Funding for all programs would be entirely nationalized, although states could play a role in administration. There would still be supplementary private markets in health and retirement products and services for the affluent, but most middle-class Americans would continue to rely primarily on the simple, user-friendly public system of economic security. As Steven Attewell points out, the Social Security Act of 1935 was intended not merely to provide public pensions for the elderly but to establish a framework for a comprehensive system of social insurance corresponding to President Roosevelt's "right to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accident, and unemployment." Attewell writes: "We need to go back to the original drawing board -- the Social Security Act of 1935 -- to finish the job it began and create a truly universal and comprehensive social welfare state."

In the utopia of welfare corporatism, today's public benefits -- Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance and, in a few states, public family leave programs -- would be abolished and replaced by harebrained schemes dreamed up by libertarian ideologues at corporate-funded think tanks like the Cato Institute and the Heritage Foundation. Tax subsidies would be funneled to insurance companies, brokers and banks. Social Security would be replaced by a bewildering miscellany of tax-favored personal savings accounts. Medicare would be replaced by a dog's breakfast of tax subsidies for purchasing health insurance and personal medical savings accounts. Unemployment insurance would give way to yet another Rube Goldberg scheme of tax-favored unemployment insurance accounts. As for family leave -- well, if you're not wealthy enough to pay out of pocket for a nanny for your child or a nurse for your parent, you're out of luck.

The strongest case for economic citizenship instead of welfare corporatism is economic. Economic citizenship is more efficient and cheaper in the long run, because the government need only meet costs, while subsidized private providers must make a profit. The Democratic and Republican supporters of welfare corporatism justify their system of massive subsidies for for-profit healthcare and retirement security with the claim that market competition will keep down prices. If only that were true. Competitive markets are probably impossible to create, in the highly regulated insurance sector and the highly concentrated financial sector that sells private retirement goods and services.

It follows that a policy of subsidizing oligopolies and monopolies, via government subsidies to consumers, in the absence of government-imposed price controls, is a recipe for cost inflation, as the providers jack up their prices, sending the consumers back to Congress to demand even more public subsidies. By its very nature, welfare corporatism funnels public resources, in the form of tax breaks, to rent-seeking, predatory firms in the FIRE (finance, insurance, real estate) sector, with ever-swelling dead-weight costs on the economy. Welfare corporatism equals corporate welfare.

Unfortunately, most progressives have failed to make the case against the libertarian myth of market competition in the provision of social insurance. All too many, including President Obama, have made the too-clever-by-half argument that the public option would keep prices down by means of market competition. In other words, the center-left has borrowed a bogus argument about competition from right-wing free-market fundamentalism in order to defend a token public program that ceased to be of any interest once Obama and the Democrats in Congress ruled that Americans with employer-provided insurance would be banned from joining the public option. When you're reduced to parroting the opposition's erroneous theories, in the process of begging for a slight modification of the opposition's pet program, you clearly don't have the nerve or the patience to play the long game in politics.

In a response to one of my earlier columns, Will Marshall wonders how I can dare to criticize the legacy of Bill Clinton, a Democrat. My reasons should be clear by now. I am not a partisan Democratic operative focused on winning the next election. I am interested only in strengthening the republic through a gradual expansion of economic citizenship in the tradition of Franklin Roosevelt's Second Bill of Rights. If this means criticizing Democratic presidents who expand welfare corporatism instead of economic citizenship, so be it.

As part of his opportunistic policy of triangulation between his own party and the opposition, Bill Clinton joined the Republicans in a three-pronged assault on New Deal economic citizenship. He and the Republican Congress abolished Aid to Families With Dependent Children, a flawed and unpopular means-tested program for the poor that should have been reformed as a national program rather than turned over to the states as the neo-Confederate right insisted. Instead of piecemeal expansion of single-payer healthcare, Clinton pushed a version of employer-based welfare corporatism plus subsidies that came out of the playbook of moderate Republicans like Nixon. And we now know that Clinton secretly agreed to support Newt Gingrich's drive to partly privatize Social Security, in return for dedicating the federal government's imaginary future surpluses to what was left of Social Security. In 2005, Will Marshall argued in favor of private accounts, on the grounds that they would soften up Americans for cuts in Social Security: "If today's workers start saving and investing more in stocks and bonds, the returns they earn would allow us to trim their Social Security benefits later, without reducing their overall standard of living."

While George W. Bush pushed for partial privatization of Social Security, he failed because of massive public opposition. But Bush and the Republican majority in Congress succeeded in enacting the Social Security drug benefit, a flawed but genuine expansion of economic citizenship. Clinton is the only president to have successfully supported the destruction of a New Deal entitlement, while Bush presided over the greatest expansion of the Rooseveltian entitlement system since Lyndon Johnson passed Medicare.

For his part, Barack Obama, like Bill Clinton, rejected single-payer in favor of a moderately conservative welfare corporatist approach to healthcare reform. In contrast, Obama's proposal for student loan reform, an idea discussed in the Clinton years, would move in the right direction, away from welfare corporatism and toward economic citizenship, by replacing subsidized third-party lenders with direct government provision of student loans to needy college students.

Parties are coalitions of interest groups, they are not public philosophies, and presidents, great and minor, are and have to be opportunists. In contrast, reformers only have a chance of succeeding if they stick to their basic principles and keep their eyes on the prize. Progressives should support any politician, Democrat or Republican, who expands economic citizenship to the detriment of welfare corporatism, and they should oppose any politician, Democrat or Republican, who expands welfare corporatism to the detriment of economic citizenship.

Any more questions?

Monetary Cost of Iraq War

31 May 2008

Hope's Daughters: Anger and Courage

The words of this speech given by Chris Hedges at Furman University in South Carolina on Wednesday 28 May are about as clear an explanation as ever been made concerning the corporate takeover of the United States and the clear economic decline of the citizenry that has been underway for going on 30 years. The speech includes a very broad historical background and gives one an understanding why life has gotten worse for most. Can this powerful negatively downward trend be reversed ? Hedges offers a framework in this speech. It is possible, but only will become probable with the elimination from public office on all levels of the treacherous agents in government dedicated to the power and greed of the Corporacy who have facilitated it. The biggest questions are if enough Americans have the courage to do so, or even if they care or understand enough to even try.
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http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/20080531_the_corporate_state_and_the_subversion_of_democracy/
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http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/05/31/9331/
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*****

29 May 2008

The Worst Corporations for Customer Service

Most of the names on this list will not come as a surprise for most people. The usual derilect inept greedy suspects are at the top of the list -- cable television corporations, cellular telephone corporations, financial institutions, insurance corporations, retailers, and computer manufacturers. Most of these corporations have a long history going back well over a decade and often much longer of being recognized as utter failures and boobs in the area of customer service to the point of being acclaimed as rude, selfish, foolish, incompetent, unresponsive, and stupid -- and plenty more. The movement of the customer service departments of these corporations to foreign countries like India, Mexico, Singapore, the Phillipines, and China has only seriously exacerabated the problems. The only way to start to deal with these corporations poorly and regularly negligent customer service operations is to radically break up these corporations into small pieces limited to business within one to three states and require local community customer service everywhere where the corporation offers and sells its products and services. We can only hope this will happen someday as this will make this a better world for consumers, clients, subscribers, and customers everywhere -- among a huge number of other benefits to the American citizenry by having mega-corporations partitioned and significantly reduced in size, scope, market share, and power.
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http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/SmartSpending/ConsumerActionGuide/HowCompaniesWereRanked.aspx
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*****

Emissions Pollution Less in Pacific Coast Metro Areas

Do you want to live where pollution is less than elsewhere ? Then head west to the Pacific Time Zone. Generally, metro areas there produce less of a "carbon footprint" than their counterparts in the Midwest, Southeast, and Northeast. Honolulu ranks best followed surprisingly by the Los Angeles metro area, then Portland-Vancouver; New York; and Boise. Other high ranking metro areas include the San Francisco-Oakland-San Jose metro area; Seattle; San Diego; Las Vegas, Tucson, El Paso, Columbia, SC; Buffalo; and, surprisingly, Chicago. Scoring worst was Lexington, KY; followed by Indianapolis; Cincinnati; Toledo; and Louisville. In the Mountain Time Zone, Denver scored worst followed by Salt Lake City; Albuquerque; Phoenix; and Colorado Springs-Pueblo. Nearby Central Time Zones cities Dallas-Fort Worth; Tulsa; Kansas City, Oklahoma City, and St Louis scored poorly. The study was conducted by the Brookings Institute, an internationally respected research and public policy institute based in Washington, DC.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/29/us/29pollute.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&ref=us&adxnnlx=1212112925-IuaYpcrgoKFFaFE6TWpj3g
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http://www.brookings.edu/metro/CarbonFootprint.aspx
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*****

28 May 2008

Climate Change Across the American West

Climate change as a result of global warming is already underway across the American West and it is likely to intensify which will result in significant noteworthy changes to lifestyles, qualities of life, ecosystems, and local economies. Temperatures will rise probably more greatly than expected; for example, places like Denver and Cheyenne in 20 years or so will have temperatures with regularity now seen in Roswell and Carlsbad, NM. The more critical change will occur with precipitation. Rainfall will replace snowfall in many places for a much greater time of the year, and the frequency and intensity of rainfall will change from being gradual and spread out to being more greater in quantity during single events and less in frequency throughout the year. This will be particularly true in mountain regions and other higher altitude locations where the snowpack will become less. Snow will start falling later, melt sooner, and be of a lesser quantity overall. Moisture will come much more frequently in the form of intense thunderstorms which will drop rain quickly and ferociously. Most important, drought will becoming the predominant feature of the entire region, as rainfall and snowfall patterns will change markedly. Some areas that now enjoy adequate moisture will alter into a more desertlike environment with extended periods of limited at best precipitation. Some of this can already be seen in parts of the Central and Northern Rockies where fires are occuring more frequently and in times earlier and later in the year than what has occurred historically. Adjacent prairie and plains areas are also being beset by warmer temperatures, lesser occurences of rainfall and snowfall, and longer and more intense periods of drought. Within a quarter to half century, most of the American West will resemble the Great Western Basin of Utah and Nevada with mountains being more similar to the desert mountains of New Mexico and Arizona. The challenge for leadership throughout this region will be in finding and maintaining adequate water supplies for the population and agricultural economy. Residential vegetation, particularly lawns and decorative trees and shrubs, will have to be limited to meet human and agricultural needs especially as the population is expected to nearly double in the Mountain States region in the next 35 years.
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http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/sap/sap4-3/final-report/default.htm
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/27/AR2008052702639.html?hpid=topnews&sid=ST2008052702928
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*****

A Possible Cancer Cure

In April I wrote of a promising cancer cure that was reported on CBS 60 Minutes. This is yet another promising cure being discussed. GDC-0449 is an experimental drug which is demonstrating quite promising results in the limited number of cases it has been used on. Cancer is a challenging disease and condition to address as no two cases are identical, and the disease attacks the body in many different and diverse ways which often results in treatment being less than effective. Obviously, research and studies on this new cure have a ways to go to become authorized for regular use. Unfortunately this will take a number of years which will largely mean it will never become available for the millions whom have cancer currently and seemingly are doomed to die before a more sure cure exists.
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*****

Childhood Lead Exposure Creates Criminals ?

That is the finding from a longterm research study by University of Cincinnati officials and professionals. Lead was a common ingredient in many chemicals used in households until its government mandated removal in the early 1970s. However, the substance still remains as part of the makeup of older homes particularly in poorer and more rundown areas even to this day. The research seems to implicate lead as having a chemical effect on brains of children which result in a distortion of the parts which direct and dictate behaviors and attitudes. More research is probably needed, but efforts should be intensified to locate and remove lead from homes and areas where children are.
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http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0528lead0528.html
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_poisoning
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead_paint
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http://www.omahahealthykids.org/leadfacts.html
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*****

27 May 2008

Politicians Avoiding Peak Oil Like the Plague

Peak Oil is the third biggest crisis mankind and society is facing behind global warming and nuclear energy and weapons prolification in the last 70 years. Without question, American Capitalism is based on increasing economic growth, construction and sprawl, and vast out of control consumerism. Inexpensive oil is the engine of the ideology and all it consists of. It is becoming quite clear that oil will no longer be inexpensive -- it is actually becoming quite expensive and will increasingly so rather rapidly. The end of the long largely uninterupted reign of American economic dominance globally is quickly coming to an end, and with it also comes a serious diminishing of American political and military strength across the planet as well. Many economists and historians see parallels in the American future with those experienced by prior world powers such as Britain, France, Spain, and Venice. This future is not necessarily bad, as the citizens in those nations live simpler, richer lives with a quality of life that is more just and fair with greater equality and peace of mind than when their nations were world powers.
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http://www.alternet.org/environment/85841/?page=entire
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http://www.truthout.org/article/130-oil-is-that-a-tipping-point
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*****

26 May 2008

James Kunstler's Take on the Future

James Kunstler is a well respected knowledgeable observer of what to expect in the future, and his conclusions are disconcerting to say the least. It would be good to be aware of how the nation was settled and populated relative to a century ago before the start of the rise of the automobile. Basically, if one does not live within a few miles of a railroad, circumstances look to be grim for those living in distant locales far away from rail corridors and transportation. This is important not only for individual transportation, but also in respect for the transportation of raw materials, finished goods, and virtually all consumer goods.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/23/AR2008052302456.html?nav=hcmodule
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http://www.kunstler.com/
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Howard_Kunstler
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*****

An Economical Commuter Car

Smartcar looks like a great value and an excellent motor vehicle purchase to make for all those individuals burdened with a commute of some distance that has gotten increasingly expensive with fast rising fuel costs. The vehicle is relatively inexpensive and gets superb fuel economy numbers. With gasoline headed past $4.00 per gallon this year and beyond $5.oo per gallon in 2009, look to see increasing numbers of economical vehicles like this in communities across the US. Vehicles like this are the answers for many consumers until alternative fueled vehicles that utilize substances like hydrogen join the cost-effective mainstream later in the 2010s decade.
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http://www.smartusa.com/index.aspx
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smart_(automobile)
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http://www.usatoday.com/money/autos/2007-11-11-smartcar_N.htm
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*****

Memorial Day 2008

On this Memorial Day 2008, best wishes and gratitude are extended to all those over the years whom have served our nation and, in particular, those individuals currently serving our nation both near and far. Many thoughts and feelings of deep appreciation go out to the families and loved ones of those who passed in the service of our nation.
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*****

22 May 2008

Ugly Gasoline Prices Continue to Soar Upward

The shocking rise of gasoline prices continues unabated much to the shock of many, although not all, Americans. The price of oil topped $133 per barrel on Wednesday and $140 will probably be surpassed in days. The $150 threshold will be approached in June, but probably not surpassed this soon. Look for that to happen, depending on world events, later this autumn. Prices for gasoline are highest in the Great Lakes region and in the Pacific Time Zone. Prices are lowest in Arizona, Wyoming, Montana, Missouri, and South Carolina. Here in Cheyenne, WY, prices are in the low to mid $3.50 per gallon range, which is about the least expensive price nationally outside of Tucson, AZ. At this point, this writer expects prices here in Cheyenne to rise about 15 to 20 cents per gallon in the next month or so before topping out and beginning a slow small fade back towards $3.30 per gallon through the remainder of 2008. Of course, this could all change with any number of unexpected events or circumstances developing somewhere on the planet. If any of these were to eventuate, the consequences could be grievous, with the price of a gallon of gasoline soaring over $5.00 per gallon in a matter of days, stunning and devastating citizens throughout the nation. And the likelihood of $10 per gallon gasoline in the next five years or so is becoming increasingly more probable. Life as we have known will be all but over when that happens.
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http://www.gasbuddy.com/gb_gastemperaturemap.aspx?z=0&lat=37.000000&long=-96.000000&ft=A&tl=48
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http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/SavingandDebt/SaveonaCar/WhatIfGasCost10DollarsAGallon.aspx
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*****

Obama Nears the 2026 Delegate Threshold

Illinois US Senator Barack Obama moved ever so closer to officially claiming the needed number of delegates to secure the Democratic Party nomination for President with his clear victory in Oregon earlier this week. Estimates at this point show Obama with 1,962 delegates, just 64 short of the needed 2,o26 total. Obama is generally picking up 2-4 superdelegates daily as he moves in on the nomination. At this moment, it is estimated 173 superdelegates are still uncommited and 40 superdelegates are yet to be allocated. The next primary is Puerto Rico on Sunday 1 June followed by the finales in Montana and South Dakota on Tuesday 3 June. Each primary is allocated as follows:
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Puerto Rico: 55 pledged, 8 super, 63 total delegates to be determined
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Montana: 16 pledged, 9 super, 25 total delegates to be determined
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South Dakota: 15 pledged, 8 super, 23 total delegates to be determined
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It looks likely that Obama will go over the top after these three primaries, perhaps as soon as Wednesday 4 June. The Clinton campaign holds out hope for the impossible with the disqualified Florida and Michigan delegates becoming eligible, but all signs indicate that is impossible. Lets hope it truly all does come to end in about two weeks after nearly two to three years of this endless campaign. Then comes the next part -- thank goodness it will only be about five months with the November general elections looming on the 4th day of the 11th month -- just 167 days from now which was 16 December 2007 167 days ago.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_Party_%28United_States%29_presidential_primaries%2C_2008
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Democratic_Party_%28United_States%29_superdelegates%2C_2008
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*****

12 May 2008

Bob Barr Slated to be Libertarian Party Presidential Nominee

Former Georgia US Representative Bob Barr announced over the weekend his intention to run for President under the banner of the Libertarian Party. Barr will become the party's official nominee before months end at the party convention in Denver. Barr and his candidacy could be a factor in the November election. He is viewed by many as more closely adhering to historic Republican philosophy and dogma than John McCain. Two key questions exist about the potential viability of his campaign: money and coverage. If Barr can generate enough cash to run a national campaign, he could be a force. But he would really need media coverage from mainstream media and local press to gain the name recognition and position to be a factor. He very well could repeat the successes of Ross Perot in 1992 and Ralph Nader in 2000. With Obama as the likely Democratic nominee, it seems impossible that Barr could win a state. But states like Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, and South Dakota are not completely out of the question for him to win outright. The arch-conservative Barr served four terms in the US House from '95 to '03 where he was known for being a military supporter and opposed to many government programs. He is also remembered by Democrats as being a bulldog about pushing the Clinton impeachment in 1998.
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http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-campaign13-2008may13,0,5031407.story
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Barr
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http://www.bobbarr2008.com
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*****

11 May 2008

Lies, Damn Lies, and Government Statistics

Kevin Phillips has a superb article in the May edition of Harper's that does a great job historically explaining the major economic statistical numbers released by the government: the unemployment index, the inflation rate, and the gross domestic product. These are the three key indices most businesses and individuals focus on monthly and quarterly to have an insight on how the American economy is doing. Unfortunately these indices are full of lies. The numbers have been doctored and fixed for years going back to the Kennedy Administration, but the Clinton and Bush Junior administrations have taken the deception and lies to whole new heights the last ten to fifteen years. The government reports the unemployment rate currently is around 5 %; in reality it is above 12 %. The report on inflation indicates an annual rate recently at a little more than 4 %; it really is above 12 % and rising. And we all know the GDP numbers are far worse than the 0.6 % growth rate reported for the first quarter of 2008,; the true number is somewhere between - 1.5 % and 2.0 % (NEGATIVE) and perhaps higher. The distortion of economic numbers by officials and bureaucrats in the Executive Branch is shameful and disgraceful, and there ought to be criminal ramifications for these government lies.
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http://www.mindfully.org/Reform/2008/Pollyanna-Creep-Economy1may08.htm
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*****

10 May 2008

The SAVE Act Struggles for Passage

North Carolina US Representative Heath Shuler (D) has drafted legislation to address the problem of illegal immigrants in the United States. HR 4088 has the support of over 190 congressional representatives which moves it close to being considered for enactment. The legislation is well written and comprehensive, and puts on a federal level many of the components passed on the state level in GA, OK, AZ, and CO. Currently the economic slowdown and mortgage foreclosure crisis are starting to slow the numbers of illegals within US borders, but a sensible and far-reaching federal legislative act is desperately needed to ensure a consistent strict national policy is in place to deal with this problem. One has to wonder if Congress will have the political will to address this festering and longterm issue and follow the wishes of the vast majority of American citizens. It is likely not too, leaving the states individually to create effective policy. This will result in some states becoming islands of illegals with broad inconsistencies and diverse consequences for Americans and the illegals themselves.
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http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0509immig0509.html
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http://www.heathshuler.com/issues_details.asp?id=41
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http://www.numbersusa.com/interests/attrition.html
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http://www.washingtonwatch.com/bills/show/110_HR_4088.html
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http://rightdemocrat.blogspot.com/2007/11/heath-shuler-proposes-save-act-for.html
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illegal_immigration_to_the_United_States
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*****

Crandall Mining Execs Destined for the Penitentary

The tragic mine collapse in Huntington, Utah, on 6 August, 2007, was due to corporate criminal incompetence, deception, and complicity which resulted in the deaths of nine miners; and a Congressional Investigative Committee has recommended the US Justice Department investigate Bob Murray and other officials in Crandall Mining for criminal charges. At the time of the disaster and tragedy, Murray claimed the collapse was due to an earthquake, a laughable claim and quite disgusting considering the tragedy. It is strongly likely Murray will be going to a federal penitentary for his fatal decisions and inactions, and Crandall Mining is likely to disappear as a corporation in due time.
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http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/09/us/09mine.html?adxnnl=1&ref=us&adxnnlx=1210374901-KvXojT/6vLF7DNFEZYVakg
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crandall_Canyon_Mine
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*****

09 May 2008

Recommended Book for Reading

"Bad Money: Reckless Finance, Failed Politics, and the Global Crisis of American Capitalism", by Kevin Phillips. This is Phillips' thirteenth book, and all have been poignant and quite interesting. Most of Phillips' works concern contemporary history, public policy, and economics. He did an exhaustive biography of the 25th President, William McKinley. Phillips' books do an intensive analyis of contemporary political, economic, and social environments and contexts and do a superb job of making conclusions and future outlooks that are usually uncannily accurate and presentiment. Many whom have read the book or listened to any of Phillips' presentations or interviews are described as having a "sobering" reaction to the content, conclusions, and implications discussed in his book as well as to many of his past works which have been widely read and well received.
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*****

Recession Official in Arizona & Elsewhere

Moody's, the financial analyis company, reported in its latest research that nine states across the nation are in a recession. Leading the list is beleagured Arizona, where the mortgage foreclosure crisis is ground zero and housing values are in a freefall throughout Phoenix and Tucson. It is estimated in excess of 100,000 homes are in foreclosure and most are empty and unoccupied in the Grand Canyon State. Other states in broad deep economic trouble are Nevada, California, Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Rhode Island, Tennessee and Wisconsin. The foreclosure crisis is a strongly significant factor in all but TN and WI. As the foreclosure crisis continues to worsen and expand, look for other states to join this list in the coming months. One can expect over 20 states to be in recession by summers end. The growing economic downturn will indeed have a cancerous effect on many of the nation's 50 states.
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http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/news/articles/0509biz-recession0509.html
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*****

08 May 2008

Obama Nears Nomination

Illinois US Senator Barack Obama scored a relatively easy victory earlier this week outright in the North Carolina Democratic Primary and would have done the same in Indiana had not tens of thousands of Republicans crossed over to vote for Hillary Clinton and give her a narrow victory. This recent trend, strongly encouraged and led by rightwing radio iconoclast Rush Limbaugh, has been virtually the only reason why the Clinton campaign remains alive although it is on life support and teetering on financial collapse. Obama now has approximately 1,850 delegates which puts him within around 175 delegates of clinching the nomination. The remaining six primaries will not give him enough to clinch the nomination outright, so Obama will be lobbying the Democratic Party superdelegates to put him over the top. Thankfully, the end of this seemingly endless campaign that has been going on for well over a year already now is in sight with the completion of the Montana and South Dakota primaries on Tuesday 3 June.
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Next up is West Virginia on Tuesday 13 June followed by Oregon and Kentucky on Tuesday 20 June. Puerto Rico holds its Democratic primary on Sunday 1 June as the penultimate primary day. Obama also is even with Clinton in the area of superdelegate support with his recent successes.
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West Virginia Primary: 28 pledged. 11 super, 39 total delegates to determined
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Kentucky Primary: 51 pledged, 9 super, 60 total delegates to be determined
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Oregon Primary: 52 pledged, 13 super, 65 total delegates to be determined
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Puerto Rico: 55 pledged, 8 super, 63 total delegates to be determined
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Montana: 16 pledged, 9 super, 25 total delegates to be determined
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South Dakota: 15 pledged, 8 super, 23 total delegates to be determined
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At this time, approximately 240 to 250 superdelegates remain either uncommitted or unassigned. This group of supporters will be the key element to be followed in the coming month and beyond.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic_Party_%28United_States%29_presidential_primaries%2C_2008
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Democratic_Party_%28United_States%29_superdelegates%2C_2008
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******