Tag Archives: transportation

The aftermath of a car-free experiment

Kurt Hoelting’s The Circumference of Home is less remarkable as a memoir of the author’s radically car-free year than it is as perspective on his return to “civilization.” A conversation with Hoelting as his book hits the shelves reveals that his take-away may be more practical and far less radical than a year of limiting his movement to a 60-mile radius by bicycle, kayak and foot. “I am using my car again, but a lot less than I did before,” he admits. “I certainly better understand the transportation alternatives, and a much greater willingness to use them. I travel now by bicycle or public transportation whenever it is a reasonable alternative, and my definition of what constitutes a ‘reasonable alternative’ is much enlarged. “It is difficult to make use of alternatives when you don’t know they are there, and especially if you are not open to them to begin with.” The commercial fisherman, wilderness guide and meditation teacher has once again resumed travel outside his immediate home region. “I drive a Prius, so using the most efficient technology available also plays into the fomula in an important way,” he notes. “And when I do use a car, I carpool as much as possible.” “… Apart from a family emergency, I have maintained my commitment to not flying on jets, which are the biggest source of personal carbon emissions for people who travel a lot, dwarfing the emissions from the use of our cars,” he continues. “A single flight to Europe from Seattle, for example, is responsible for roughly the equivalent emissions (per passenger) or driving an SUV for six months, or a hybrid car for a full year. When I travel to Alaska now for my summer guiding season with Inside Passages, I take the ferry from Bellingham both ways rather than flying. When I travel east, I take the train and use the time for work en route. It is not a trip I can realistically take very often, so I don’t travel outside the region as much as before, and I try to cluster my engagements when I do.” Ultimately, Hoelting reports the changes to his travel patterns were much easier than he had anticipated. The real benefit, he adds, is an increased sense of engagement and belonging within his own home region —”an extraordinary opportunity to wake up to the richness of what is right on the ground beneath our feet.” Glossary: Hybrid fuel technology , Emissions

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The aftermath of a car-free experiment

Hey, Tea Bagger! Government Can’t Do Anything Right, Eh? Well, Read This

This was written by an anonymous someone at Something Awful and was reproduced a few months ago on Reddit. Here’s the whole wonderful thing: This morning I was awoken by my alarm clock powered by electricity generated by the public power monopoly regulated by the US Department of Energy. I then took a shower in the clean water provided by the municipal water utility. After that, I turned on the TV to one of the FCC regulated channels to see what the National Weather Service of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration determined the weather was going to be like using satellites designed, built, and launched by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. I watched this while eating my breakfast of US Department of Agriculture-inspected food and taking the drugs which have been determined as safe by the Food and Drug Administration. At the appropriate time as regulated by the US Congress and kept accurate by the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the US Naval Observatory, I get into my National Highway Traffic Safety Administration approved automobile and set out to work on the roads build by the local, state, and federal Departments of Transportation, possibly stopping to purchase additional fuel of a quality level determined by the Environmental Protection Agency, using legal tender issed by the Federal Reserve Bank. On the way out the door I deposit any mail I have to be sent out via the US Postal Service and drop the kids off at the public school. After spending another day not being maimed or killed at work thanks to the workplace regulations imposed by the Department of Labor and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, enjoying another two meals which again do not kill me because of the USDA, I drive my NHTSA car back home on the DOT roads, to ny house which has not burned down in my absence because of the state and local building codes and fire marshal’s inspection, and which has not been plundered of all it’s valuables thanks to the local police department. I then log on to the Internet which was developed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Administration and post on freerepublic.com and Fox News forums about how “SOCIALISM in medicine is BAD” because “the government can’t do anything right.” Yes, Virginia. Libertarian = Tea Bagger = Dumb Ass.

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Hey, Tea Bagger! Government Can’t Do Anything Right, Eh? Well, Read This

Six Other Beverage-Based Political Parties That Should Exist [Listicle]

Have you heard about this Coffee Party? It’s basically a Facebook page , but has been somehow featured in the Times and the Post . The party stands for “cooperation in government.” Whatever! Here are six other beverage-based parties that should exist. The Long Island Iced Tea Party Slogan: “Throw off the shackles of the Federal government… but chill out first, K?” Key Issues: fighting taxes in an affable manner; genially advancing Obama conspiracy theories; abolishing the government… and having fun while doing it! Mission Statement: Like the Tea Party, the Iced Tea Party is born from a mixture of populist anger, xenophobia and anti-government sentiment. Unlike the Tea Party, these angry white people want to enjoy their time raging against the Feds. Weekly meetings are organized in local TGI Fridays, where Long Island Iced Tea party members gather round oversized margaritas and take turns at an Obama pinata in the special party room. The Monster Energy Drink Party Slogan: “Go America! Go! Go! Go! Go! Go!” Key Issues: Energy; Transportation; Communications; Go! Go! Go! Mission Statement: Many Americans complain that our hyperconnected, hypermediated world is drowning our ability to think critically in a flood of information. These Americans’ brains are not sufficiently augmented with the correct mixture of caffeine, sugar, anti-oxidants and bull hormones. Through improvements in infrastructure and investments in high technology, The Monster Energy Drink Party secure our right not only to browse the Internet on an airplane, but to shoot, edit and upload your latest video blog entry while piloting a personal jet-pack. Weekly meetings held remotely, as many Monster Energy Drink Party members will be trapped at the bottom a manhole they fell into while texting and walking at the same time. The Chocolate Milk Party Slogan: “Chocolate and milk are better together” Key Issues: Race-relations; affirmative action; the achievement gap; prejudice Mission Statement: Like a gay-straight alliance except between black and white people! Together, this bi-racial mob will sweep the country, striking down racism of all types and fostering improved race relations via distributing Sapphire books to whites and Mad Men box sets to blacks. Meetings will be held weekly over a beer on the White House’s South Lawn. Asians, Latinos and “others” welcome. The Whiskey Party Slogan: “Our Country is Fucked up—You should be too.” Key Issues: Legalized gambling; legalized prostitution; legalized marijuana; legalized everything; abolishing the speed limit. Mission Statement: With so much of America gone to shit, we need a strong voice supporting the right of citizens to drink/fuck/smoke their pain away. Rising like a great cloud of hash smoke to blanket the land, the Whiskey Party will be found wherever a laid-off steelworker is slumped over his seventh beer in a bar; wherever a divorcee chokes her loneliness in a massive bong hit; wherever a man trades a woman $40 in food stamps to step on his back in stilettos; the Whiskey Party will be there. The Rubbing Alcohol Party Slogan: “The Whiskey Party is a bunch of rich snobs.” Key Issues: Same as the Whiskey Party, but a lot gnarlier. Mission Statement: BLAAAAAARRGGGHHH The Cherry Coke Party Slogan: “Why the hell doesn’t every store in America carry Cherry Coke?” Key Issues: Ensuring the security and efficiency of America’s Cherry Coke supply Mission Statement: Cherry Coke is the most underrated soft drink. We must pass a constitutional amendment which requires every store and restaurant in the land that carries Coke products to carry Cherry Coke as well. Seriously, America, when are you going to realize this is a civil rights issue?

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Six Other Beverage-Based Political Parties That Should Exist [Listicle]

Cap and Trade no more? What does it mean that ConocoPhillips, BP and Caterpillar pulled out of lobby group?

Before we explore any deep thoughts about why ConocoPhillips, BP and Caterpillar the U.S. Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) (a coalition of environmental organizations and leading corporations pushing for a cap-and-trade bill to curb emissions of carbon dioxide) we might as well drill down to the basics and remind ourselves about what is Cap and Trade. Amy Goodman explains it as the issue that splits the environmental movement in half. While some say it is a way to tax polluters, generate accountability, and raise money for new technologies, other argue that it gives free permits to big polluters, fake offsets and distraction from what’s really required to tackle the climate crisis. If you want Annie Leonard's explainer video on Cap and Trade, look no further. So here is the break down: The Washington Post reports the reason as: The oil giants also want to do more to promote natural gas, which has become more abundant because of recent developments in the exploitation of shale gas and emits half as much greenhouse gas as coal does. The legislation adopted by the House included benefits for coal producers and coal-fired power plants in an effort to secure the votes of key lawmakers. Many natural gas producers think that more should be done for them. In other words, these companies are turning towards an industry that is under regulated and somehow perceived as “natural” or “environmentally friendly”. However, ask the residents who live near this form of mining natural resources about the state of cancer rates, houses blowing up, and lighting their water on fire, and you will be initiated into the world of Fracking. BP's statement alludes to that they are pulling out in part because of their deep care for the well being of their customers: BP spokesman Ronnie Chappell said, “We think the organization has accomplished what it was intended to do. It has established a broad, principle-based framework for climate-change legislation. With the completion of that blueprint, that work was done.” “We don't think legislation pending in the House or Senate conforms with the blueprint,” he added. “A disproportionate share of the cost burden falls on the transportation sector and consumers. As a result, we're going to miss out on the most cost-effective measures, and misallocation of resources could occur.” ConocaPhilips provided the following insight in their press release: “House climate legislation and Senate proposals to date have disadvantaged the transportation sector and its consumers, left domestic refineries unfairly penalized versus international competition, and ignored the critical role that natural gas can play in reducing GHG emissions,” [CEO Jim] Mulva continued. “We believe greater attention and resources need to be dedicated to reversing these missed opportunities, and our actions today are part of that effort. Addressing these issues will save thousands of American jobs, as well as create new ones.” Kate Kenny, a Caterpillar spokeswoman, said the company wants to focus on carbon capture and storage projects, such as FutureGen, an Illinois plant that is partly financed by the federal government. “We have decided to direct our resources toward the commercialization of technologies that will promote and provide sustainable development and reduce carbon emissions,” she said in an e-mail. After reading several articles on BP's website, major news sources, and conservative energy blogs, I've come to the conclusion that if you aren't on the inside track of this issue you are out of luck if you actually want to understand this manuver. So I asked one of my favorite bloggers on energy, David Roberts of Grist, to put this into context and explain what it isn't being said in the press releases.

Meet Mikey Hicks, 8, on US Terror Watch List

“The Transportation Security Administration, under scrutiny after last month’s bombing attempt, has on its Web site a “mythbuster” that tries to reassure the public. “Meet Mikey Hicks,” said Najlah Feanny Hicks, introducing her 8-year-old son, a New Jersey Cub Scout and frequent traveler who has seldom boarded a plane without a hassle because he shares the name of a suspicious person. “It’s not a myth.” Michael Winston Hicks’s mother initially sensed trouble when he was a baby and she could not get a seat for him on their flight to Florida at an airport kiosk; airline officials explained that his name “was on the list,” she recalled.

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Meet Mikey Hicks, 8, on US Terror Watch List

Sword Canes: The Next Great Airport Security Challenge

Is airport security just a massive prank played on us by our reptilian overlords? The biggest threats to America’s airports recently: underpants bombs , wrong-way smoochers and bottles of honey . And now: sword canes

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Sword Canes: The Next Great Airport Security Challenge

Airline passengers see tighter security

Extra pat-downs before boarding. No getting up for the last hour of the flight. More bomb-sniffing dogs.

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Airline passengers see tighter security

A Hitchhiker's Guide To Murder

According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, 99.9% of hitchhikers are murderers

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A Hitchhiker's Guide To Murder

Dope Of The Day: Op-Ed Writer Says Pot ‘Saps Initiative And Ambition’

By Steve Elliott in Toke of the Town loopylettuce.wordpress.com Here’s what pot does to you. Just ask Jill Wellock! ​Freelance writer Jill Wellock has a problem. She really, really dislikes marijuana and, apparently, those who use it. Wellock generously shares this extreme distaste with us in a guest op-ed piece in today’s edition of The Olympian , the newspaper of Olympia, Washington, the state’s capitol. Jill gets right down to business with a real winner of a headline: ‘Marijuana saps initiative, ambition and responsibility’ Headline aside, we know right off the bat we’re in for a bumpy ride when Jill’s piece starts off by confiding in us that she attended a “rough junior high.” Apparently not really one for nostalgia, Wellock recalls “the stoner girls” carving “Joe Elliot” [sic] “into their forearms with wood screws to prove Def Leppard allegiance.” Oh, Jill. First of all, if they carved “Joe Elliot,” they aren’t done carving, because the rock star’s named is spelled “Elliott.” Maybe you should give those “stoner girls” a call and tell them they need to get back out the wood screws. Secondly, if these had been real “stoner girls” during the time period mentioned, they wouldn’t have been carving freakin’ Def Leppard tributes on their arms; it would have been Marilyn Manson. Or maybe Jerry Garcia. Pitcher Smokes Pot, Misses Practice, Gains Weight, Gets Greasy Hair And Makes Bad Grades Photo: The Olympian Jill Wellock thought we’d be too lazy and unmotivated to write this. ​Jill then mournfully remembers her promising, athletic friend who was the school’s star softball pitcher. This poor girl started hanging out with the stoners, and before you knew it she was missing practice, “which didn’t matter once her grades failed and she couldn’t play softball.” “My friend and I attended different high schools, but I saw her at the end of freshman year at the mall, about 20 pounds heavier, with greasy hair and dirty clothes,” Wellock recalls. “I asked a guy from her school what had happened, and he just said, ‘Burn out.'” Whoa. So in one year’s time, from eighth grade to freshman year, she smoked some pot and went from a promising softball star to an overweight, greasy haired, dirty burnout. I’ve been smoking pot 32 years, and observing others who smoke it, and the stuff we smoke doesn’t do any of that shit. Could you maybe, like, hook us up with your friend’s dealer? All kidding aside, if your friend had weight, hygiene, and dependability issues, then she had something going on besides smoking a little weed. You’re not going to scare anyone with ridiculous-ass stories like that — at least not anyone who’s ever smoked weed, or even known anyone who has. ‘Gateway Drug’? onelargeprawn.co.za ​Jill apparently built up a pretty good head of steam thinking about her unfortunate, unwashed, overweight pothead buddy who coulda been a contender, because five paragraphs in, she’s foaming at the mouth. “Gateway drug marijuana is now legal, used medicinally in Washington and 12 other states, with 15 states pending legislation for its medicinal use,” she tells us. Gateway drug? Please. If you are going to try to do a scare piece on marijuana, you think you could at least show us the respect of citing some research that hasn’t been disproven ? “In the United States, the claim that marijuana acts as a gateway to the use of other drugs serves mainly as a rhetorical tool for frightening Americans into believing that winning the war against heroin and cocaine requires waging a battle against the casual use of marijuana,” wrote John P. Morgan, M.D., and Lynn Zimmer, Ph.D., two of the foremost researchers in the field, who call the gateway claim “intellectually indefensible.” A 2002 Canadian Senate Committee report states that the gateway theory “has not been validated by empirical research and is considered outdated.” Jill, next time, I’d suggest maybe you get your facts straight before making a public spectacle of yourself. Meet Our Old Friend, The ‘Amotivational Syndrome’ marijuanahempworld.com ​Not only does cannabis make you carve rock stars’ names on your arms, wear dirty clothes, have greasy hair, and gain weight (OK, maybe I can believe that last one, especially since trying Snow Cap), but it also steals your ambition, folks! Or, at least, that’s what Jill would have us believe. How does she know? Well, apparently she used to live next door to a woman of whose housekeeping Jill disapproved, and the lady smoked pot. So there you have it! Proof! Or not… But since Wellock says, flat-out: “Marijuana saps initiative, ambition and responsibility from its smokers,” that demands some sort response, at least if you’re into responding to idiotic statements. For well more than quarter-century, government-funded and private researchers have searched and searched for a pot-induced amotivational syndrome — and they’ve failed to find it . But it’s certainly not for lack of trying! Laboratory studies, in fact, have shown that subjects given high doses of potent marijuana for several days — or even several weeks — exhibit no decrease in work motivation or productivity. Sorry to burst your bubble, Jill. I know you must have enjoyed looking down on those “lazy potheads” and feeling such a delicious shiver of superiority to them — but it just ain’t so. Among working adults, marijuana users tend to earn higher wages than non-users! College students who use marijuana have the same grades as non-users. The biggest study ever done on marijuana use and its effect on worker productivity was performed by Dr. Vera Rubin back in the 1970s, in Jamaica. The results were published with co-author Lambros Comitas in 1975 as Ganja In Jamaica: A Medical Anthropological Study of Chronic Marijuana Use . And what did those results show? The marijuana smokers studied by Dr. Rubin had no differences in work records, adjustment, or productivity than non-users. In fact, Dr. Rubin found : “Ganja, in the cultural setting of rural Jamaica, rather than hindering, permits its users to face, start and carry through the most difficult and distasteful manual labor.” Impaired Drivers? SSDP.org Hey, watch where you’re going! ​Jill also claims that we should all be frightened to death of the specter of stoned drivers hurtling around the highways high as hell. There is in fact ” no compelling evidence that marijuana contributes substantially to traffic accidents and fatalities.” Now, I’m not recommending you take a few bong rips and then hit the freeway. In fact, it’d probably be best for everyone if you’d stay your stoned ass home on the couch. There’s a reason God invented pizza delivery. But you can bet that if marijuana really did cause automobile accidents like, say alcohol, that it would be obvious as hell. With estimates of current marijuana users in the United States varying between 40 and 100 million , you can bet that if weed really caused wrecks, it’d be a national tragedy on the level of drunk driving. It’s not. It doesn’t. “The overall rate of highway accidents appears not be significantly affected by marijuana’s widespread use in society,” according to the Drug Policy Foundation . According to the federal Department of Transportation (DOT), ” THC is not a profoundly impairing drug … It apparently affects controlled information processing in a variety of laboratory tests, but not to the extent which is beyond the individual’s ability to control when he is motivated and permitted to do so in driving.” That’s from the report “Marijuana and Actual Performance,” DOT-HS-808-078 . In layman’s terms, when you know you’re high and you have to drive, you compensate by driving like a little old lady. You know it’s true. In fact, two lawyers in California are arguing that the state’s DUI laws shouldn’t even apply at all to marijuana. By Damn, She’s An Award Winner! For her stellar accomplishment into packing an incredible amount of misinformation, ugly prejudice, and outright ignorance into her woefully misguided op-ed piece, Toke of the Town enthusiastically awards Jill Wellock of Olympia, Washington, our coveted Dope of the Day Award. Hey, Jill, you’re on notice: When you tell lies and repeat myths about marijuana, there are some of us weed-addled reprobates out here who have somehow miraculously retained enough initiative to call you out on your bullshit. Carve that in your arm with a wood screw, you. Read the original article at Village Voice Media’s new pot blog, Toke of the Town : Dope Of The Day: Op-Ed Writer Says Pot ‘Saps Initiative And Ambition’ Digg Original Story

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Dope Of The Day: Op-Ed Writer Says Pot ‘Saps Initiative And Ambition’

Congress Ends Ban On Medical Marijuana In D.C.

By Steve Elliott in Toke of the Town theskunk.org Congress respecting the will of the people? What’s next, democracy? ​ Eleven years later, it’s about time: The U.S. Senate today passed historic legislation to end the decade long ban on implementation of the medical marijuana law Washington, D.C., voters passed with 69 percent of the vote in 1998. “This marks the first time in history that Congress has changed a marijuana law for the better,” said Aaron Houston, director of government relations for the Marijuana Policy Project (MPP), based in D.C. The “Barr Amendment,” a rider attached to appropriations for the District of Columbia, has forbidden D.C. from extending the legal protection of Initiative 59, the “Legalization of Marijuana for Medical Treatment Initiative of 1998,” to qualified medical marijuana patients. The amendment has long been derided as an unconscionable intrusion by the federal government into the District’s affairs, according to MPP. Read the rest at the new Village Voice Media cannabis blog, Toke of the Town : Congress Ends Ban On Medical Marijuana In D.C.

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Congress Ends Ban On Medical Marijuana In D.C.