Tag Archives: energy

Tea Party Senate Candidate Mike Lee Tried to Dump 1,600 Tons of European Nuclear Waste on Utah | News & Politics | AlterNet

With an assist from FreedomWorks, Mike Lee grabbed Utah's Senate nomination from incumbent Bob Bennett. Now he shows he's not a states' rights kind of guy. Dick Armey and his political organizing group, FreedomWorks, have been working overtime to convince Tea Party supporters they're invested in the movement's “common sense” approaches on states' rights, strict constitutionalism and protecting Main Street from Wall Street. FreedomWorks' ties to Big Energy run deep, however, and by throwing their weight behind the group's endorsed Utah Senate candidate, Mike Lee, Tea Party adherents are inadvertently backing a candidate who tried to bury 1,600 tons of European nuclear waste in what some call their sovereign state. FreedomWorks and Lee, put simply, are capitalizing on Tea Party anger for their own interests. added by: toyotabedzrock

After Averting Disaster, the Cape Farewell Expedition Grinds On

Image courtesy of Cape Farewell. This guest post was written by David Buckland, resident artist and the director of Cape Farewell, as part of the Cape Farewell project . After the excitement of ice entrapment , polar bears, and nullified rescue our Captain has, under Spitsbergan instructions, been more cautious with regard to ice and weather. We have been dancing with ice maps, weather patterns and plain strong head winds. Four times we have tried to go south … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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After Averting Disaster, the Cape Farewell Expedition Grinds On

Carbon Emissions Reporting Where It Belongs: With Global Financial Accountants

Energy stock performance snapshot. Image credit: Google Finance Pablo recently filled us in on the abrupt end of the Climate Leaders voluntary carbon reporting program . (Eight years with a relatively small group of industries was enough.) In parallel, a group of US states worked up a carbon reporting protocol as well; and, there are several NGO and government-led carbon reporting protoc… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Carbon Emissions Reporting Where It Belongs: With Global Financial Accountants

N.E.R.D. Debut New Music At Times Square Show

Pharrell and Shay play new song ‘Help Me’ from Nothing album. By Mawuse Ziegbe N.E.R.D.’s Pharrell Williams in Times Square on Thursday Photo: Mawuse Ziegbe/ MTV News NEW YORK — Braving the unexpectedly intense heat of a New York City fall day, N.E.R.D. brought even more fire to their Thursday (September 23) Times Square performance. Shay Haley and Pharrell Williams of the hip-hop alterna-rock crew (fellow member Chad Hugo was absent) played to a slew of die-hard N.E.R.D. fans at a day-long event in celebration of Honda’s spankin’ new CR-Z Hybrid Coupe. During a warm-up set from downtown selector DJ Lindsay, featuring sunny tunes from Janelle Mon

More Reaction To The Decision To End The EPA Climate Leaders Program

Last week’s announcement that the EPA is bringing its Climate Leaders program to an end shocked many in the greenhouse gas reporting community. The Environmental Director of a Global Technology Company told me that he was “very disappointed that the EPA would withdraw this program” and Paul Baier with Groom Energy says that the announcement “clearly caught our customers off guard, after they have invest… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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More Reaction To The Decision To End The EPA Climate Leaders Program

CBS Begins Media’s Rehabilitation of ‘Fantastic’ Jimmy Carter, ‘Cursed’ Presidency Actually More Successful Than Reagan’s

CBS broke into summer re-runs of 60 Minutes to let Lesley Stahl promote Jimmy Carter’s new book, White House Diary , which he maintained delivers “absolute unadulterated frankness” and which she described as an “often harsh critique” of his presidential term. She, however, was far from harsh toward him. Noting an “image of ‘a failed President’ haunts the Carters,” Stahl trumpeted: “Carter argues that despite the image of failure, he actually had a long list of successes, starting with bringing all the hostages home alive,” as if that wasn’t because of Ronald Reagan’s inauguration. Stahl proceeded to tout as a success his installation of “solar panels on the roof of the White House.” Absolving Carter of responsibility, Stahl contended he “was cursed by a dismal economy, poor relations with Congress, and a nightmarish standoff over 52 Americans held hostage by Iran.” Yet, “when all is said and done, and many will be surprised to hear this,” Stahl insisted, “Jimmy Carter got more of his programs passed than Reagan and Nixon, Ford, Bush 1, Clinton or Bush 2.” She empathized with his treatment from an unappreciative public: “And yet, as I say, there’s the sense that you were a failed President.” (Obvious observation: Of all those administrations, only Carter had the luxury of his party in control of both the House and Senate during his entire tenure.) As the two strolled inside Atlanta’s Carter library, Stahl gushed about how a “lot of critics of yours, when you were President, say that you’ve been a fantastic ex-President. You hear that all the time,” leading to a post-presidential “life of good works and good reviews.” This may well have been a start to a media effort to rehabilitate the 85-year-old Carter. NBC is promoting an interview with Brian Williams, an intern in the Carter White House, on Monday’s NBC Nightly News. Williams, though, already got an early start, as detailed in a MRC BiasAlert from about a year ago: “ Williams Prompts Carter: What, In ‘Your Wiring,’ Has ‘Set You Apart’ from Other Presidents? ” Excerpts from Stahl’s story, the only fresh one, on the September 19 edition of 60 Minutes ( CBSNews.com online version with accompanying video of the entire 15-minute segment): LESLEY STAHL: …His tenure, which I covered as the CBS News White House correspondent, was tumultuous. The problems he confronted kept mounting and people wondered if he was cursed by a dismal economy, poor relations with Congress, and a nightmarish standoff over 52 Americans held hostage by Iran. After just one term he was trounced by Ronald Reagan… STAHL: Carter argues that despite the image of failure, he actually had a long list of successes, starting with bringing all the hostages home alive. He normalized relations with China, brokered a peace treaty between Israel and Egypt, deregulated railroads, trucking, airlines and telephones; and his energy conservation programs resulted in a 50 percent cut in imported oil, down to just 4.3 million barrels a day. CARTER: Unfortunately, now we’re probably importing 12 million barrels a day, since part of my energy policies were abandoned. STAHL: Well, and you built solar panels on the roof of the White House. CARTER: That’s right, which were ostentatiously removed as soon as Ronald Reagan became President He wanted to show that America was a great nation. So great that we didn’t have to limit the enjoyment of life. STAHL: And the public seemed to like that better than they liked your message, which was “we have to be limiting.” CARTER: That’s right, America responded to that quite well. STAHL: But when all is said and done, and many will be surprised to hear this: Jimmy Carter got more of his programs passed than Reagan and Nixon, Ford, Bush 1, Clinton or Bush 2. CARTER: I had the best batting average in the Congress in recent history of any President, except Lyndon Johnson. STAHL: And yet, as I say, there’s the sense that you were a failed President. CARTER: I think I was identified as a failed President because I wasn’t re-elected. STAHL: The lesson: getting a lot of legislation passed, even when it’s significant, is not enough. STAHL: A lot of critics of yours, when you were President, say that you’ve been a fantastic ex-President. You hear that all the time. CARTER: I don’t mind that. STAHL: You like that? CARTER: I don’t mind, yes. STAHL: President and Mrs. Carter devote their lives to fighting disease in poor countries and resolving conflicts, as when he recently obtained the release of an American held in North Korea. It’s been a life of good works and good reviews. In 2002 he won the Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts at global diplomacy. But he was called “undiplomatic” when he broke the code that ex-Presidents don’t criticize their successors. STAHL: About Reagan, you said: “If I had been President for four more years, we wouldn’t have had a resurgence of racism and selfishness.” Now that’s pretty pointed. That’s an ouch. CARTER: Yeah, I don’t remember when I said that but I can’t deny that I felt that way. STAHL: But are you suggesting that he stoked racism? CARTER: No, I’m not. STAHL: But that’s what that kind of suggests. CARTER: But there may have been times when I was too outspoken in criticizing an incumbent President. I can’t deny that. …

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CBS Begins Media’s Rehabilitation of ‘Fantastic’ Jimmy Carter, ‘Cursed’ Presidency Actually More Successful Than Reagan’s

Quo vadis, Venezuela?

[Translated from Spanish, by UrbanGypsy] This is an opinion piece, not written by me. BY Oscar Espinosa Chepe The parliamentary elections in Venezuela, scheduled for September 26, could mark a radical departure in its turbulent recent political history, becoming the beginning of the end of Chavez. This time 165 seats of deputies will be in play and, for the first time in several years, the fragmented opposition will present some degree of unity, which suggests that, for the first time, as a result of the disruption caused by the administration of the controversial Hugo Ch

Kate Plus 8 in Her Bikini of the Day

This is heavily photoshopped. I have seen bitches who chronically work out who have 1 kid and they don’t look this tight….This bitch had 8 fucking kids pass through her at what I assume was a few different pregnancies, but still more than fucking damaging to both a stomach but more importantly a vagina. I know this is a combo of photoshop, tummy tucks, working out, diet pills and more photoshop….There is nothing hot, naked or not, about this miserable, annoying, overly fertile for fame and money dyke. I know this picture is alie. I also know this bitch should be focusing her energy on raising her kids instead of nurturing her useless career….otherwise the girls in bikinis on magazines will be her daughters and maybe her sons in half asian fetish porn mags… This whole thing is ridiculous….

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Kate Plus 8 in Her Bikini of the Day

Trey Songz Talks ‘Building’ ‘Bottoms Up’ With Nicki Minaj

‘She came to the studio for three hours and listened to my whole album,’ Songz says of their meeting. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Sway Calloway Trey Songz Photo: MTV News A week before this year’s BET Awards, as Trey Songz was working on his new album, Passion, Pleasure & Pain , the singer thought to himself that Nicki Minaj would make for a good guest on the project. A week later, however, as he watched the awards show, he realized he wasn’t the only fan of the Lil Wayne prot

WaPo Buries Story with Obvious Palin Point: Tuesday Results Show Emerging Year of the GOP Woman

While most media outlets obsessed over the liberal theme that Republicans keep “suicidally” nominating “ultra-conservatives,” Washington Post reporter Anne Kornblut, who authored a book earlier this year called Notes from the Cracked Ceiling, noticed a different trend. Her story was headlined “GOP gains the lead in female politicians’ steps forward.” Tuesday’s victories of Palin-endorsed GOP women Christine O’Donnell and Kelly Ayotte underline an emerging Year of the Republican Woman. Too bad the Post buried it on Page A-6 of the paper, and it hasn’t been linked on the Post’s homepage today, either. Kornblut began: Democrats used to own the field of women running for higher office. Not anymore. Nearly two years after an anticipated gender bounce – with predictions that women in both parties would rush into politics inspired by Hillary Rodham Clinton and Sarah Palin — it turns out that the momentum is on the Republican side. If there is a Palin effect, it is not being matched by any Clinton effect at the other end of the ideological spectrum. Since this is the liberal Washington Post, Kornblut then turned to a cast of liberals and Democrats to assess whether this can be verified:  Democratic pollster Celinda Lake said it is “very fair” to argue that the energy for female candidates is trending Republican, a view several other Democratic strategists shared. “I’ve been struck by it,” said Dee Dee Myers, a former White House press secretary and author of “Why Women Should Rule the World.” “All the momentum is on the tea party side, so why wouldn’t it also be with the women on the tea party side?” Other Democrats dispute the notion of a conservative “year of the woman,” saying that the numerical advantage is slight, if it exists at all. They also note that some of the Republican nominees, including Christine O’Donnell of Delaware, are seen as fringe candidates unlikely to win their general elections. Stephanie Schriock, the head of Emily’s List, which is dedicated to electing [ahem, Democrat] pro-choice women, said the “candidates that are making it through these primaries are more and more extreme, radical right-wing folks” who, even though they are female, do not appeal to independent and moderate women. A Republican expert wasn’t quoted until the story’s final paragraph, although Kornblut credited Palin: Palin has unquestionably played an outsize role in upping the Republican numbers, endorsing several women, including Haley and O’Donnell, who might never have gained sufficient attention otherwise. She has brought to the Republican Party what some members had once complained did not exist: a concerted effort to tap female candidates for promotion and lift them out of obscurity. And then there is this: The woman most capable of counteracting a Palin bounce for Democrats – Secretary of State Clinton- is not available to campaign. Add to that a general sense of malaise among Democrats, a volatile electorate angry at the status quo and a growing acceptance of female politicians in both parties, and the trend is hardly a surprise, strategists said. “Who better to say, ‘I’m not part of the establishment’ than a Republican woman?” said Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway. “If you want to convey you are not of the firmament of Washington, D.C., and ergo of all the problems and out-of-control spending and corruption, you have to say, ‘I’m a Republican woman,’ because so few of them have ever been involved at that level.” You can see why the rest of the Post would want to bury this story. But the rest of the media ought to acknowledge it. They can’t say it’s not The Year of the Republican Woman because they’ll probably lose: several primary winners (the “Year of the Woman” when liberals ascended with an “Anita Hill effect”) lost in November. 

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WaPo Buries Story with Obvious Palin Point: Tuesday Results Show Emerging Year of the GOP Woman