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2010 August 01 — Why Now?
On-line Opinion Magazine…OK, it's a blog
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The Good News And The Bad News

California can breathe a little easier because the West Fire, the Crown Fire, and the Bull Run Creek Fire are well under control and on their way to 100% containment tonight.

Alas, that is not the case in the rest of the world, as reported by the CBC –

In British Columbia an additional tragedy as a Water bomber crew confirmed killed

The company that owns a water bomber that crashed while battling wildfires in B.C.’s Fraser Canyon confirmed Sunday that the pilot and co-pilot of the plane are dead.

Crews can see the crash site, south of Lytton, but conditions are still too dangerous to reach the wreckage. They got within 500 metres of the scene Saturday night, Conair said.

There are reports the crash of the Convair 580, based in Abbotsford, sparked a new wildfire.

The water bomber went down just before 9 p.m. local time Saturday, about 15 kilometres south of Lytton, said Capt. Marguerite Dodds-Lepinski, the public affairs officer for the Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre in Victoria.

About 1,000 firefighters are on the front lines across B.C., supported by air tankers, helicopters and heavy machinery, to battle more than 300 forest fires.

One fire in particular has forced 30 people from their homes in Cariboo Creek.

Evacuation orders or alerts have been issued for people living in a number of locations in the Kamloops area and Cariboo region as high temperatures and tinder-dry conditions continue.

In a summer that saw the highest temperatures ever recorded for Russia, the Russian army battles wildfires

Russian authorities have mobilized almost 240,000 people to battle deadly wildfires that have been burning across the country, killing at least 30 people in the last few days.

Army units, including elite paratroops, joined the firefighting effort Saturday.

Tens of thousands of hectares of parched forests and peat bog are either on fire or at risk of burning.

More than 700 wildfires have destroyed or damaged homes in nearly 80 towns or villages. Dozens of other communities are threatened by the fires, which have forced thousands of people to evacuate areas in the path of encroaching flames.

Russians are coping with the hottest summer temperatures since records were first kept 130 years ago.

The record heat wave and severe drought have dried up fields, ruining about a fifth of this year’s wheat harvest.

For those unfamiliar with peat bogs, they are normally like marshes, i.e. wetlands, which makes the situation similar to the fires in the Okefenokee Swamp during the drought in the Southeastern US.

August 1, 2010   4 Comments

When Does It End?

McClatchy asks the most important question on Gulf Coast: When will the oil spill be cleaned up? Maybe never

After more than three months, BP appears finally to have gotten a firm grasp on its runaway Deepwater Horizon well. Now the big question in the Gulf of Mexico is how, and if, an environmental mess of unprecedented scope can be cleaned up.

Only last week did federal spill managers begin discussing with state and parish leaders in Louisiana, the hardest hit state, how to set the standards for declaring the nation’s largest offshore oil spill officially mopped up.

“How do we get to the inevitable question of how clean is clean?” said retired Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the Obama administration’s point man on the spill.

Many scientists and environmentalists believe there won’t be a quick or easy answer.

“We’ve never dealt with this before, the complication of this much oil coming from the deep sea and being hit heavily with chemical dispersants,” said Ron Kendall, director of the Institute of Environmental and Human Health at Texas Tech University. “We have conducted the largest environmental toxicology experiment in the history of this country in the Gulf of Mexico.”

Those of us who live and work on the Gulf Coast have been treated like lab rats by a multinational corporation that is only concerned with its profits, and then, only in the short-term. This wasn’t an accident caused by one bad choice, it required multiple bad choices over an extended period. The one defining thread in this collection of choices was that the decision made was cheaper than the alternative. This pattern is too consistent not to be corporate policy.

August 1, 2010   Comments Off on When Does It End?

How Stupid Are Florida Voters?

The Miami Herald is beginning to wonder. I wrote about these two guys Buying a Job and now the Herald is getting a bit more pointed.

Jim Morin, the paper’s political cartoonist, does it with a drawing, but Fred Grimm just says it: Two rich guys betting on our mass stupidity

Poor Jeff Greene. His candidacy suffers constant association with that other super-rich political dilettante come from nowhere.

Stories about monied neophytes out-spending and out-polling the pros in 2010 tend to lump the two together — Florida’s pecunious twins.

More than a few voters probably confuse Greene, the wildly wealthy Florida Democratic candidate from California, with Rick Scott, the wildly wealthy Florida Republican candidate from Texas.

But it’s the Texan, not the Californian, who was CEO of a hospital chain that paid $1.7 billion in civil and criminal fines in the biggest Medicare fraud case ever.

Greene (currently outpolling Kendrick Meek for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination) has not been affiliated with a known criminal enterprise — though he does suffer an affinity for B-list celebrities with criminal records. The former “Hollywood Madam,” Heidi Fleiss, once lived in Greene’s guest house. Ex-con Mike Tyson was best man in Greene’s 2007 wedding. Drug-addled movie star Lindsay Lohan, currently doing a stretch in a Los Angeles County lock-up, was photographed in alluring beachwear on the Summerwind, Greene’s 145-foot yacht, off St. Barth’s in January.

I have no idea how you get through to people that these guys are part of the problems of the absurd health care costs and the meltdown of the economy, not part of the solution. They have so much money to spend on TV ads that their opponents can’t possibly respond. We have the best elections that money can currently buy.

August 1, 2010   5 Comments

The AC’s Pumping

From Weather Underground

Cinco Bayou – Pocahontas Dr., Fort Walton Beach, Florida (PWS)
Updated: 11:07 AM CDT on August 1, 2010
Clear
95.3 °F [35.2 °C]
Clear
Humidity: 69%
Dew Point: 84 °F
Wind: 1.0 mph
Wind Gust: 1.0 mph
Pressure: 29.85 in (Steady)
Heat Index: 124 °F [51.1 °C]
Visibility: 10.0 miles
UV: 11 out of 16
Pollen: 3.90 out of 12
Clouds:
Clear –
(Above Ground Level)
Elevation: 16 ft

Excessive heat warning remains in effect from noon today to 6 PM CDT this evening…

August 1, 2010   Comments Off on The AC’s Pumping