Tag Archives: problem

James Cameron Says Government Ignored His BP Oil Spill Advice

‘The source of the report was contaminated in their minds because there was a Hollywood guy involved,’ he says. By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Josh Horowitz James Cameron Photo: Jason Merritt/ Getty Images Although he’s known for staging elaborate film productions versus resolving massive environmental crises, James Cameron has been vocal about fixing the BP oil spill that has ravaged the Gulf Coast. The “Avatar” filmmaker even assembled a team of experts in the field to figure out how to fix the largest oil spill in U.S. history. However, Cameron said that when it came to reviewing the strategy developed by his collective of engineers and scientists, government officials failed to take the plan seriously. “We worked [on] the problem for a couple of weeks … and submitted a 25-page report to the Department of Energy and … to the [U.S.] Coast Guard that said what to do,” Cameron told MTV News. “It was promptly ignored by everyone and guess what? At the end of the day, they did exactly what we recommended. I’m not saying they did it because we recommended it. I think they did it because it was the right thing to do. But they basically did exactly what we said should be done.” Cameron said he was motivated to assist the cleanup effort because he felt analysts outside of the oil giant should have a say. “If you’re relying on BP for imagery, you’re basically relying on the criminal’s video of the crime scene,” he asserted. Cameron maintained that officials ignored the report because of his status as an entertainment figure. “I think because BP was giving them a line of sh– every single day and they were believing it. I also think it’s because the source of the report was contaminated in their minds because there was a Hollywood guy involved,” Cameron said. “[Officials] tend to shy away from media if they can’t control it, which completely obviated the valuable contribution of the other 23 people on the team, who are all the cr

A Super Modest Proposal

Pops Logan has a solution to the problem of immigrant children becoming citizens. added by: Progresshiv

How Did This Indiana Hospital End Up Refusing Care to a Woman Because She’s Transgender? / Queerty

Erin Vaught headed for Indiana's Ball Memorial Hospital when she found herself coughing up blood. When she arrived at the emergency room, she was “treated,” all right. With transphobic behavior by the hospital staff, who eventually refused her care. In a disgusting episode of the exact opposite of the Hippocratic Oath, hospital staff laughed and taunted Erin over being transgender. One nurse asked Erin's wife Amanda whether Erin “was a he or a she? Or a he-she?” Others referred to her as “it” and a “transvestite.” And then Erin was told she could not be treated because of her “condition.” No, not her medical condition, of which Erin didn't know what the problem was (hence the visit to the hospital), but her “transvestite condition.” Ball Memorial Hospital, whose Facebook page was flooded with messages after Erin posted about it, says it prides itself on “compassion,” “respect” and “customer care/service.” It does not have a policy including transgender people. added by: toyotabedzrock

DIY Electroluminescent Bike is Perfect Project for Paranoid Pedaler

Photo via QuackMasterDan For anyone who wants to make sure they’re ultra-visible while riding their bike at night, this 10-step DIY project might be the ticket. Using electroluminescent wire — copper cabling coated in reactive paint that emits light when in contact with electricity — and an LED light strip, one crafty maker transformed a bike into a safe vehicle, mainly because everyone stops to stare as it rolls by. Check out more photos after the jump. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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DIY Electroluminescent Bike is Perfect Project for Paranoid Pedaler

Engineers Use Rocket Science for Self-Sufficient Wastewater Treatment

Photo via divemasterking2000 Nitrates are commonly found in groundwater, ending up there after they’re used for fertilizing crops or from storm-water run-off. Typically a contaminate to worry about, a group of engineers from Stanford University have figured out how to turn the problem of nitrates in the water in to a possible solution for energy generation. While their design started out as a nitrous oxide thruster for spacecraft, they figured out how it could also be used at wastewater treatment plants to turn decompose nitrous oxide gas into… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Engineers Use Rocket Science for Self-Sufficient Wastewater Treatment

Chinese Devalues US Treasury Bonds

by Jake Towne If one owes a bank a thousand dollars, he has a problem. But if one owes a bank a billion dollars, then the bank has the problem. From the four years I spent in China, I assure you this truism is not lost on the Chinese, though one must never forget the banks’ ni…. ….China has downgraded our debt and has ceased increasing its Treasury holdings…… http://www.peacefreedomprosperity.com/?p=3693 added by: shanklinmike

Children of Bhopal gas victims

Twenty-five years have passed since the world’s worst man-made disaster – Bhopal gas tragedy – occurred. But despite the passage of time the trauma continues for the survivors of that fateful night of Dec 2-3, 1984, when over 40 tonnes of methyl isocyanate (MIC) spewed out of the now defunct Union Carbide’s pesticide plant. Having borne the brunt of neurological, hormonal and mental health problems – besides the economic hardships – the survivors are now faced with the problem of deformed children being born. Shuriah Niazi reports from Bhopal added by: shuriahn

Fish Market App Connects Fishermen to Buyers, Reduce Catch Waste

Photo by notsogoodphotography For fishermen, it can be a challenge to know just how much of your catch will have buyers when you haul it back to the docks. And for Italian fishermen, the problem is especially difficult in summer as vacationers make the market less predictable. To help fishermen bring in appropriate catches, Italy’s University of Bari has created a “private cloud” application that connects fishermen out on their boats to buyers on shore. They can auction off their catch as they bring it in, and anything they can’t get a g… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Fish Market App Connects Fishermen to Buyers, Reduce Catch Waste

Time: ‘Is Bobby Jindal Making Sense?’

While the media have apparently given up — if they ever seriously attempted — on holding the Obama administration to account for its handling of the Gulf oil spill cleanup, Republican governors in the Gulf are a different story, particularly Louisiana’s Bobby Jindal, a potential 2012 presidential hopeful. In a short post at Time.com entitled “Battlefield General: Is Bobby Jindal Making Sense?” , writer Alex Altman cast doubt on Jindal’s handling of the oil spill cleanup while suggesting the conservative governor is hypocritical for his complaints about Obama’s handling of the disaster at the federal level: The notion that Washington should lead is not the only puzzling position taken by Jindal, a small-government conservative. An advocate of offshore oil exploration, he points to environmental devastation as a consequence of the government’s “lack of urgency” but opposes a moratorium on deepwater drilling. More important, in the throes of a crisis, a governor admired for his grasp of policy has sometimes sacrificed caution for speed. For weeks, Jindal blistered the government for dithering over his signature initiative, a plan to build sand berms to safeguard the state’s marshland. The proposal was finally okayed despite objections raised by scientists who questioned the $360 million project’s efficacy. When the Interior Department later halted the sand dredging to protect the existing barrier-island system, Jindal fumed at the “red tape and bureaucracy.” On July 6, the governor railed at the Army Corps of Engineers for denying a local parish’s request to protect coastal waters by constructing rock dikes. (A Corps commander said the measure might do more harm than good.) Of course it’s perfectly legitimate for journalists to raise questions about how Gulf state governors have handled their share of the BP oil spill cleanup, but Altman’s piece assumes the federal government’s response is virtually flawless and Jindal’s disagreements with its strategy and tactics are suspect. What’s more, Altman’s swipe at Jindal’s conservatism distorts the true conservative position that Jindal is staking out. Jindals complaints have largely been that the Obama administration’s regulatory micromanagement has gummed up cleanup efforts. It’s not so much that Jindal wants the federal government to solve the problem as he wants the feds to quit hampering private industry and local governments from solving the problem due to mindless red tape. Time is not alone in setting its sights on bashing Jindal. Last month, Newsweek’s Sharon Begley took a much more stringent tone in her criticism of Louisiana’s Republican governor: Scientists are such spoilsports, always insisting on gathering data on the likely effects of a strategy before implementing it. Politicians are more inclined to just go for it, especially when they’re desperate. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is desperate: millions of gallons of BP’s crude are launching an amphibious assault on his beaches and wetlands. So let’s do the math: desperation + a pol’s “do something” mentality = a loony decision to build 14-foot sand berms to protect the state’s coastline—a decision that bodes ill for the many others the state will face as BP’s oil gushes at least until August. Before this, Jindal was known to scientists as the governor who in 2008 signed a law allowing the state’s public schools to teach creationism (excuse me! “intelligent design”) in their classrooms. The difficulty he has distinguishing science from faith reared its ugly head again when he cast about for a way to hold back BP’s oil. Emissaries from Jindal’s office have made regular pilgrimages to the Netherlands to consult with engineers about protecting the state’s coasts from the next Katrina. Van Oord, a marine engineering and dredging company that is constructing the artificial Palm Islands for Dubai, proposed building what amounts to artificial sandbars. “If you ask a Dutch company that builds artificial islands in Dubai how to protect marshlands and barrier islands,” says coastal geologist Rob Young of Western Carolina University, “of course they’ll say, ‘Let’s make an offshore island!—and shall we put a palm tree on it for you?’ When a politician is faced with an economic or social mess, the “just try something” mentality can be justified. Policies on these fronts cannot be accurately predicted for the simple reason that human behavior is involved. No amount of science can reliably forecast the effects of, say, financial or health-care reform, so a reasonable case can be made for “do something.” Not so when we’re talking about the laws of physics and chemistry rather than human behavior. In these cases, ignoring the science makes politicians seem like petulant children.

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Time: ‘Is Bobby Jindal Making Sense?’

Quan Yi Feng profile filmography

Profile for Quan Yi Feng Race : Chinese Height : 1.63m Weight : 48kg Birthday : Mar 1 Hair : Black Eyes : Dark Brown Languages Spoken : Mandarin, Hokkien Talents : Hosting, Acting, Singing Portfolio * TV SERIAL 2005 Oh Mother 哎哟我的妈 2000-2004 Ad-War 完美把戏 2000-2004 Back to Basics 重进森林 2000-2004 Wonderful Life – Fantasy 奇妙人生之幻想 2000-2004 Tastefully Yours 味之道 2000-2004 Happy Family 元氏一家人 2000-2004 OK No Problem! OK没问题 2000-2004 Never Say Bye Bye 病非末日II 1997 D

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Quan Yi Feng profile filmography