July 2008

  • Rise, clear-eyed and alert

    Al Gore just spoke to a packed Daughters of the American Revolution hall and challenged America to use 100% renewable energy by 2018. It was a good speech (Full speech text here) and it’s an audacious goal.

    Gore argues that a ten year national goal has proven to be the perfect balance of long-term thinking and short-term immediacy. He points to the Marshall Plan, the Interstate Highway System, and of course, the Apollo Project as examples of bold goals that America was able to achieve in a decade or so.

    But there are two rather formidable challenges.

    The first is a combination of extremely powerful vested interests mixed with the legitimately glacial nature of changing our energy infrastructure on such a massive scale.

    The second is that our broken political system allows already-powerful vested interests – we’re talking coal and oil companies here – to run the system. Gore acknowledged this and blamed it for the “baby step policies” that succeed only in not offending special interests, but he fell short of prescribing any political changes that need to happen.

    I’d love to think that a few million people on a grassroots email list could make completely upend our energy sourcing, infrastructure, and consumption habits, but I’m afraid it’s going to take a lot more. That’s why I’m working for publicly funded federal elections. I believe that we need to attack the root of this (and many other problems): an electoral system that lopsidedly favors vested interests.

    So the question is: Can America still be bold? Can we still achieve an ambitious goal if we put ourselves to it? Moving first on this issue is in our own national interest.

    Some fun facts and quotes:

    We send $2 billion every 24 hours to foreign countries for oil.

    One OPEC official noted that “the Stone Age didn’t end because we ran out of stones”

    Gore drew the most applause in ridiculing the notion that drilling for more oil and giving more money to oil companies is going to do anything to alleviate our pain at the pump. He said only a dysfunctional system would suggest such a “solution” and that the best way to bring gas prices down would be to stop using gas. The real driver of energy costs is increased energy use by China, India, and others, and this isn’t going to slow regardless of whether we stop funding our own infrastructure with a $0.14 tax.

    Some related Onion fun:

    We’re Investing So Much In Alternative Fuels, Sometimes We Almost Forget To Pump Oil!

    By Tony Hayward
    CEO, BP

    The National Intelligence Council recently addressed Congress to discuss the security threats that need to be considered in the face of global warming. What risks are expected to be aggravated by global warming?

    Military protection fails when sun-drenched artillery far too hot to handle with bare hands

    Invasion might catch America off guard while it’s cooling down in a movie theater

    Glaciers embittered by the rising temperatures may stage revenge “suicide meltings” on innocent civilians

    Frozen Mongol warriors may be defrosted and angry

    Too muggy to tell if terrorists have attacked

    Heatstroke affecting thousands of security officials, allowing millions of 3-ounce gels to enter aircraft unnoticed

    Increased precipitation will allow terrorists to conduct activity more surreptitiously under large umbrellas

    Natural disaster could occur on 9/11, dividing nation’s patriotic sentiment

    Al Gore becoming even more powerful

  • Did Free Slurpees take down Facebook?

    In yet another sign that Facebook has assimilated much of the MySpace demographic, Facebook is down and I’m putting my money on the free Slurpee gift causing traffic spikes. Facebook has had a number of promotional gifts recently, but this one ties in with an ACTUAL FREE SLURPEE, which is apparently enough to take down some pretty powerful server farms.

  • More firehose please

    My half-hearted attempt at an information diet has been thwarted by Nicco’s latest project, News Junk (http://newsjunk.com). It aggregates the day’s political news from a bewildering variety of sources. But what makes it great is that they eschew the Google News approach and rely on humans to choose which stories get posted. That way the same AP release doesn’t show up 95 times. Prepare to be addicted.

    Also, for syndication they’ve got RSS, Twitter, FriendFeed, and you can embed the headlines on your site.