Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category

Novelist Kurt Vonnegut dies at age 84

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

– A free thinker who expanded many of our minds. May we be blessed with more like him.

– In 2005, he characterized the Bush administration as, “upper crust C-students who know no history or geography“.   That made me smile. 

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NEW YORK — Kurt Vonnegut, the satirical novelist who captured the absurdity of war and questioned the advances of science in darkly humorous works such as “Slaughterhouse-Five” and “Cat’s Cradle,” died Wednesday. He was 84.

Vonnegut, who often marveled that he had lived so long despite his lifelong smoking habit, had suffered brain injuries after a fall at his Manhattan home weeks ago, said his wife, photographer Jill Krementz.

The author of at least 19 novels, many of them best-sellers, as well as dozens of short stories, essays and plays, Vonnegut relished the role of a social critic. He lectured regularly, exhorting audiences to think for themselves and delighting in barbed commentary against the institutions he felt were dehumanizing people.

“I will say anything to be funny, often in the most horrible situations,” Vonnegut, whose watery, heavy-lidded eyes and unruly hair made him seem to be in existential pain, once told a gathering of psychiatrists.

A self-described religious skeptic and freethinking humanist, Vonnegut used protagonists such as Billy Pilgrim and Eliot Rosewater as transparent vehicles for his points of view. He also filled his novels with satirical commentary and even drawings that were only loosely connected to the plot. In “Slaughterhouse-Five,” he drew a headstone with the epitaph: “Everything was beautiful, and nothing hurt.”

More…

070411 – Wednesday – Surgery day

Wednesday, April 11th, 2007

I’m departing in the next few minutes to have an athroscopy proceedure done on my right knee. I damaged it in November in New Zealand. I’ll be back in a few hours and hobbling about for the next week or so. I had this done on the left knee about ten years ago and it went well.

Wish me luck, dear readers.

Cheers.

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Later.   it all seemed to go well.   I’m sitting here now in a pain reliever induced fog (smiling a lot) and goofing off.   Won’t be much serious intellectual stuff possible until at least tomorrow.   Until then, I’m in Dilbert-land.

Cheers!

070410 – Tuesday – more Kim Stanley Robinson

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

I know I wrote just the other day about the fact that I’m reading a book, Sixty Days and Counting, by Kim Stanley Robinson. It’s a great book and an excellent finish to his trilogy on the global climate change crises.

When I wrote last time, I quoted a section from his book and I said that I hoped he’d forgive me for the transgression. Well, I’m afraid his book is just too good and I’m going to do it again. I expect his book company lawyers will be knocking on my door any day now.

The following is a discussion, from the book, between the newly elected President’s science advisory staff, led by Charlie, people from the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change and people from the World Bank. They are not seeing eye to eye about the world’s problems and it makes for interesting reading. When I was reading this, I just wanted to stand up and shout, “Yes!”

Enjoy:

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This meeting with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a UN organization, might be a good venue for exerting some pressure. The IPCC had spent many years advocating action on the climate front, and all that while they had been flatly ignored by the World Bank. If there was now a face-off, a great reckoning in a little room, then it could get interesting.

But the meeting, held across the street in the World Bank headquarters, was a disappointment. These two groups came from such different world-views that it was only an illusion they were speaking the same language; for the most part they used different vocabularies, and when by chance they used the same words, they meant different things by them. They were aware at some level of this underlying conflict, but could not address it; and so everyone was tense, with old grievances unsayable and yet fully present.

The World Bank guys said something about nothing getting cheaper than oil for the next fifty years, ignoring what the IPCC guys had just finished saying about the devastating effects fifty more years of oil burning would have. They had not heard that, apparently. They defended having invested 94 percent of the World Bank’s energy investments in oil exploration as necessary, given the world’s dependence on oil – apparently unaware of the circular aspect of their argument. And, being economists, they were still exteriorizing costs without even noticing it or acknowledging such exteriorization had been conclusively demonstrated to falsify accounts of profit and loss. It was as if the world was not real – as if the physical world, reported on by scientists and witnessed by all, could be ignored, and because their entirely fictitious numbers therefore added up, no one could complain.

Charlie gritted his teeth as he listened and took notes. This was science verses capitalism, yet again. The IPCC guys spoke for science and said the obvious things, pointing out the physical constraints of the planet, the carbon load now in the atmosphere altering everything, and the resultant need for heavy investment in clean replacement technologies by all concerned, including the World Bank, as one of the great drivers of globalization. But they had said it before to no avail, and so it was happening again. The World Bank guys talked about rates of return and the burden on investors, and the unacceptable doubling of the price of the kilowatt hour. Everyone there had said all of this before, with the same lack of communication and absence of concrete results.

Charlie saw that the meeting was useless. … The bank guy was going on about differential costs, “and that’s why it’s going to be oil for the next twenty, thirty, maybe even fifty years,” he concluded. “None of the alternatives are competitive.”

Charlie’s pencil tip snapped. “Competitive for what?” he demanded.

He had not spoken until that point, and now the edge in his voice stopped the discussion. Everyone was staring at him. He stared back at the World Bank guys.

“Damage from carbon dioxide emission costs about $35 a ton, but in your model no one pays for it. The carbon that British Petroleum burns per year, by sale and operation, runs up a damage bill of fifty billion dollars. BP reported a profit of twenty billion, so actually it’s thirty billion in the red, every year. Shell reported a profit of twenty-three billion, but if you add the damage cost it would be eight billion in the red. These companies should be bankrupt. You support their exteriorizing of costs, so your accounting is bullshit. You’re helping bring on the biggest catastrophe in human history. If the oil companies burn the five hundred gigatons of carbon that you are describing as inevitable because of your financial shell games, then two-thirds of the species on the planet will be endangered, including humans. But you keep talking about fiscal discipline and competitive edges in profit differentials. It’s the stupidest head-in-the-sand response possible.”

The World Bank guys flinched at this. “Well,” one of them said, “we don’t see it that way.”

Charlie said, “That’s the trouble. You see it the way the banking industry sees it, and they make money by manipulating money irrespective of effects in the real world. You’ve spent a trillion dollars of American taxpayers’ money over the lifetime of the bank, and there’s nothing to show for it. You go into poor countries and force them to sell their assets to foreign investors and to switch from subsistence agriculture to cash crops, then when the prices of these crops collapse you call this nicely competitive on the world market. The local populations starve and you then insist on austerity measures even though your actions have shattered their economy. You order them to cut their social services so they can pay off their debts to you and your financial community investors, and you devalue their real assets and then buy them on the cheap and sell them elsewhere for more. The assets of that country have been strip-mined and now belong to international finance. That’s your idea of development. You were intended to be the Marshall Plan, and you’ve been the United Fruit Company.”

One of the World Bank guys muttered, “But tell us what you really think,” while putting his papers in his briefcase. His companions snickered, and this gave him courage to continue: “I’m not gonna stay and listen to this,” he said.

“That’s fine,” Charlie said. “You can leave now and get a head start on looking for a new job.”

The man blinked hostilely at him. But he did not otherwise move.

Charlie stared at him for a while, working to collect himself. He lowered his voice and spoke as calmly as he could manage. He outlined the basics of the new mission architecture, including the role that the World Bank was now to play; but he couldn’t handle going into detail with people who were now furious at him, and in truth had never been listening. … So Charlie wrapped it up, then gave them a few copies of the mission architecture outline, thick books that had been bound just that week. “Your part of the plan is here in concept. Take it back and talk it over with your people, and come to us with your plan to enact it. We look forward to hearing your ideas. I’ve got you scheduled for a meeting on the sixth of next month, and I’ll expect your report then.” Although, since we will be decapitating your organization, it won’t be you guys doing the reporting, he didn’t add.

And he gathered his papers and left the room.

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Whooooo-ya … if only.

070410 – Tuesday – A great example of local activism

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

I’ve added a new website, G.R.I.T., to the list of websites that I like and support on this Blog. You will find the list of these websites along the right side of your browser screen if you scroll down.

G.R.I.T. stands for Governmental Responsibility, Integrity and Truth. It is a website focused on issues having to do with local government here in the Western Washington Sky Valley area.

For those of you who follow this Blog from a distance, this may seem to be of remote interest but I encourage you to have a look. Local governments in any and all parts of the world could be much improved if their local citizens focused on and tracked the behavior, decisions and rational of their elected representatives with the same fervor and passion that these folks do. I guarantee you that very little happens in the town of Sultan, Washington, that is not closely examined, discussed and debated thanks to these people and the entire area is much the better for it.

070408 – Sunday – Easter

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

The Earth was not given to you by your parents.
It was loaned to you by your children.

– anonymous

070407 – Saturday – Life in the fast lane

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

Things have been extremely busy here at our business for the last week or so and so my posting rate has definitely dipped.

In that time, I’ve completely gutted the core of our irrigation system and then replaced it. The good news is that it all works now as intended and just in time as mother nature has seen fit to give us a burst of very strange weather. I discuss the irrigation project (along with pictures) here: .

The weather has, indeed, been odd here in western Washington State in the USA this year. I’ve posted about that as well here: .

Other things have been afoot that I’ve wanted to post about but, thus far, I’ve just been too busy or too tired in the evenings.

For instance, I doubt that anyone on the planet who follows environmental and global climate change issues could fail to be aware that the IPCC has released another report and it’s a doozy. The report was released officially on Friday, April 6th, but news outlets and bloggers have been all over early leaked versions for days. I was sorely tempted to join the fun but I decided to wait for the real document. I’ve posted here: on this subject. There you will find a number of links to various aspects and points-of-view on the new IPCC document. As ever, there is a strong undercurrent of doubt being expressed by various climate skeptics about the substance of the report. And, distressingly, as the report was going from its final draft form to its final release form, some nations weighed in (The US and China – most notably) and pushed to water down, what was the scientific consensus, for blatantly political concerns. But, in spite of this, the scientists who’ve released the final version say it is still a good reflection of the scientific consensus and it is a definite wake-up-call to humanity to recognize that we are all on-board a train-wreck in progress.

And then there are some friends of ours who are moving to Britain. That, in itself, isn’t so amazing. But the back-story behind why they are moving are interesting and should concern all of us if we love this country. I Blog about that here: .

And, finally, a friend heard me make a comment the other day that if one resists change when it comes, then it will, in effect, begin to stalk you and the pressure to change will increase until your hand is forced. She wanted me to say more about this and so I’ve written a philosophy piece on this, here: .

070407 – Saturday – The Irrigration System

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

A week or two ago, I mentioned that I was going to rebuild the core of the irrigration system here at the nursery. Well, I spent most of the last week on this project and it’s all now up and running (yahoo!).

The new system is much cleaner and easier to program and, the best part is, that I know what every wire and every piece of the system is doing. I no longer have to live in fear that something among all those mysterious boxes and wires is going to fail and I won’t know how to fix it and our business will be on the line.

Here are some pictures I took as the rebuild went along:

After the old system components were ripped outThe wall behind is too weak to support muchNow the wall behind is braced up

 

The rain drives my work area insideComplained too soon about the rain…This is your life, mate

 

All the electrical parts are done and testedThe new 2.5 HP one-phase pump replaces the 1 HP three-phase pumpAnd now we’re looking at the final result - water for the plants

So, the old irrigation controller, circa 1980’s, is gone as are the 28VAC transformer, the big relay and the one-phase to three-phase converter. Now we’re running on real one-phase power (which is all we’ve ever really had here) and we’ve got a modern Rainbird irrigration controller and simple circuitry I can understand and repair when necessary. Not unimportant stuff when your livelihood depends on plants and trees and they are all depending on water to thrive. It’s a project I’m glad to have behind me and one that I am very happy to say went quite well.

 

070407 – Saturday – Strange weather – you bet!

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

I write a lot about Global Warming and Global Climate Change here on this Blog. This post will be about weather but on a much smaller scale and much more personal.

On the 2nd of April here, we had snow on the ground.

Snow on April 2nd

And then a few days later, on the 5th and the 7th of April, we had days of record breaking heat here. And I mean record-breaking. Records fell in this area on both days. One record advanced from 68F to 72F.

So, what does this prove? Nothing – in and of itself, not a thing. It could just be a statistical fluke. We know they happen every once in a while. But, the scientists are telling us that one way the weather will change as global climate change gets up and starts to run with our future is that our weather will experience wider and harder swings. More rain when it rains, less rain when it’s dry. Bigger storms when it’s storming.

It’s something to think about long and hard. Are the summers and winters the way you remember them as a kid? Who do the climate skeptics think they are kidding?

070407 – Saturday – Change, the only constant

Saturday, April 7th, 2007

A friend’s family is going through some big changes. And when she and I talked about it the other day, she was feeling mixed about it all. She was wanting , on one hand, to embrace the changes and she was mourning a bit, perhaps, on the other hand, for the things they were going to leave behind.

I told her that I don’t think change can be avoided. In fact, when we try to avoid change, change will end up stalking us.

All life, all existence, is change. And riding over the changes are cycles. We assimilate and then we act. We design and then we build. We save and then we spend. We learn a way of life and then we transcend it. We are born, we live and we die.

If we are here for anything, we are here to experience, learn and grow. As life happens to us, we are offered choices. We can choose to try to hang onto what we have and to consolidate our gains but sooner or later, the cycle will turn and we will be called upon to strike out again and grow and learn and accumulate more experience. Those who resist are denying that change is a deep law of existence and they will come into conflict with it inevitably. Those who listen to the gentle urgings calling them out to transcendence are honoring how existence works. Those who try to stand still in the river of time, will feel the gathering press of the rising river of change.

Look around. You will see the evidence of this everywhere. People trying to hang on to their youth while time moves past them. People trying to hang onto their job, just as it is, while the corporation and its requirements evolves around them. People of a conservative bent, trying to keep their lives and their societies just as they were in an earlier day – and over the long run losing the battle as the historical dialectic unavoidably derives the present from the past and the future from the present.

See the middle-aged men who, when they were younger in their twenties, dominated the young women they were with because those ingénues were still trying to work out their places and their roles in a male dominated culture deeply infused with the iconic deceptions of the suggestive sexual role advertising blitz we all live under. Now older, these women have found their feet and their centers and they know much better who they are and what’s important. The balance of power between the sexes shifts as we age and the macho men who thrived on compliant women now find themselves playing to an unappreciative audience. A deep reevaluation or a fall into the bottle are often the only two choices faced by men who’ve never developed the art of introspection and a willingness to change and grow.

Desperado, why don’t you come to your senses?
You been out ridin’ fences for so long now.
Oh you’re a hard one, I know that you got your reasons,
These things that are pleasin’ you can hurt you somehow.

Don’t you draw the queen of diamonds, boy,
she’ll beat you if she’s able,
you know the queen of hearts is always your best bet.
Now it seems to me some fine things
have been laid upon your table
but you only want the ones that you can’t get.

Desperado, oh you ain’t gettin’ no younger,
Your pain and your hunger they’re drivin’ you home.
And freedom, oh freedom, well that’s just some people talkin’,
Your prison is walkin’ through this world all alone.

Don’t your feet get cold in the wintertime?
The sky won’t snow and the sun won’t shine,
it’s hard to tell the night time from the day.
You’re losin’ all your highs and lows,
ain’t it funny how the feelin’ goes away?

– Desperado by The Eagles

I remember my mother and the sad habits she fell into towards the end of her life. Rather than embracing life and walking into it as one might walk into a warm caressing wind, she decided to draw lines in the shifting sand and then fought to hold them. She was an alcoholic and her life settled into a repeating cycle. When she’d just emerged from a binge and she was gathering up the pieces, she would decide that if everything in her house was as neat as a pin, if she had the right job, if her finances were organized just so and if the place she lived in was quiet so that the neighbors didn’t stress her, then everything would be alright. She would fight to make it all just as she wanted it – and she would achieve it. But, always, something was missing. Politics would arise at work, the apartment, which was so quiet when she moved in, would seem to get noisier the longer she stayed. The finances she worked out so nicely would be upset when her car needed a repair. In short, the perfect world she tried to create always faltered against the chaos of reality. Today’s quiet apartment, which was so much better than the last place she’d lived, would slowly become the new status quo – and the noise levels would ‘seem’ to increase. And the only answer was to move to a quieter place again – but the problem would repeat. Further and further she painted herself into corners of her own making – resisting and denying and refusing to accept life and existence as it was and trying to make it fit her plan. And then one day, she’d have a drink, slip over the edge, lose her job, blow her finances, make her neighbors crazy, and a week later call me to come over and save her from the spiders on the wall. She’d be deep into delirium tremens and I’d spend hours assuring her she was sane and that it would all pass. Then, we would begin again.

Change is good. It’s what’s on the menu here. Enjoy what you have and remember that it all may, and probably will, change at some point. Your children grow, the face you look at in the mirror ages, the people you are competing with get smarter, everyone dies. It’s the plan, it’s the way and we can grok and embrace it and make the very best of it and ride the waves of change to maximize our growth and experience before we’re called away – or we can resist the impossible and waste the time that’s given to us.

– for Katy –

070403 – Tuesday – Our web cam is up

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2007

We’ve got a web cam here in the Woods Creek Valley outside of Monroe, Washington in the USA. The view is east towards Stevens Pass. This is a static picture but you can access the camera yourself, below.

Woods Creek Valley looking east towards Stevens Pass

There’s some new snow on the mountains. Check it out.

Click on the following link and then when you are asked for an ID and Password, enter myguest and galron

Feel free to play with the controls – you can’t really hurt anything.

Cheers!