repercussions

Total Spin Failure On Nuclear Energy And Safer Alternatives

Posted 3/12/11 at 9:49am by jamie

With the world waiting to see if any of the four nuclear reactors go into meltdown phase, the right is using this as a reason to stress the importance and safety of nuclear energy. Over at Right Wing News, we see this:

Obviously, as one cruises around the Liberal-o-sphere, this means that all nuclear power is bad and that is should all be stopped, and, instead, we can go with wind and solar for all our power. If they left those methods get beyond the planning/implementation stages.

We hear constantly that nuclear energy is the “safest”. In most senses that is true, but one accident at a plant can have greater catastrophic repercussions than accidents at 1,000 coal or oil plants.

Another thing, which  I mentioned yesterday, is the very high safety standards Japan enforces. Those standards are probably a big reason why we didn’t see a meltdown occur when the quake hit yesterday. Here in the United States, where one of the biggest agendas of the Republican Party is doing away with government regulation, you got to wonder if we would have seen the same outcome? I can hear the arguments now; “let’s build a reactor in Ohio. They only get minor earthquakes, so we don’t have to be as safe”. Of course that is until a big one hits.

Then in the same post at Right Wing News, we get to this example of pure rubbish:

Of course, I wonder how those methods would have stood up with an earthquake and tsunami knocking them down, breaking the wind turbines and solar panels, covering them with water, and flooding the storage batteries.

What Has Lead Us To ‘Pay For Spray’ And The Upcoming Repercussions

Posted 10/6/10 at 8:44am by jamie

103957694 There’s been a lot of talk about the South Fulton, Tennessee fire department standing around while Gene Cranick’s house burned to the ground all because Cranick didn’t pay a $75 subscription fee to the fire department, but I think there is one key point being missed here; what’s to come.

First off, as a former fire fighter, this story enrages me like there’s no tomorrow. It really is America at its worst and if we continue down this path then this country is lost. From all the reading I have done, the fire fighters are not to blame on this, but rather the city of South Fulton. The Cranick’s home was outside of the actual city limits, which is what prompted this “subscription fee”. When I was a firefighter we covered a lot of unincorporated areas and never did anything like this. It fell under a system that has been around since the start of this nation and has worked wonders; a system called “mutual aid'”.

But what has lead us to the point where the basic premise of governments responsibility to protect its people and property is overshadowed by the mighty dollar? The biggest contributor is Republican economics. As our economic disparity continues to rise, cities are seeing the coffers dry up. Less income for the residents means less taxes collected. It’s economics 101 and it’s ugly. Let’s take a quick look at the demographics of South Fulton:

As of the census[1] of 2000, there were 2,517 people, 1,081 households, and 729 families residing in the city.

[SNIP]

The median income for a household in the city was $27,462, and the median income for a family was $35,608. Males had a median income of $27,458 versus $20,212 for females. The per capita income for the city was $15,983. About 15.0% of families and 16.0% of the population were below the poverty line, including 22.2% of those under age 18 and 18.1% of those age 65 or over.

Glad I Didn’t Buy A Kindle

Posted 7/18/09 at 8:26am by jamie

When Amazon first started selling their Kindles I started thinking of all kinds of problems this could present. Being in the tech field, I tend to do that a lot. Some of my thoughts were things like not being able to share a book with a friend, or losing the chance to float in the pool on a hot summer day and get lost in a book (dropping a $3.00 paperback is a hell of a lot better than dropping a $300 electronic device). Another thing I thought about was giving control of my own library to someone else, and those repercussions are now being felt:

In a move that angered customers and generated waves of online pique, Amazon remotely deleted some digital editions of the books from the Kindle devices of readers who had bought them.

An Amazon spokesman, Drew Herdener, said in an e-mail message that the books were added to the Kindle store by a company that did not have rights to them, using a self-service function. “When we were notified of this by the rights holder, we removed the illegal copies from our systems and from customers’ devices, and refunded customers,” he said.

And in the biggest irony of them all the books deleted were 1984 and Animal Farm. Funny how Orwell talks about “big brother” in 1984, then his book falls victim to that very same nemesis.

Tragedy in London

Posted 7/23/05 at 11:11pm by jamie

Yesterday, London police chased, caught then shot a
suspected bomber on the London Subway. Eyewitness accounts of this ordeal have
painted a kind of brutal, but almost necessary end to this young mans life. It
seems necessary when dealing with terrorists. After all, they could have trigger
devices on them and quickly detonate a bomb if the action is not handled
properly.

Unfortunately today, we hear that this person was not
linked to terrorists and was not carrying a bomb. Its sad enough that this young
mans life was taken because of a mistake in identity, but even worse is the
certain repercussions it will have on the war on terror.

You can almost hear the voices of Islamic Extremists in
your head. They will be telling potential recruits how the west treats Muslims
and how they must fight them. It is also an almost certainty to help recruit
other Muslims that were not before thinking of joining the fight.

A story like this almost makes you with that the
authorities would of lied about what happened. It was alright to lie about our
reasoning for war. If they would have done so in regards to this individual then
it might have kept Al Qaeda recruiting levels a little lower. Sadly though lying
about the situation would not be right either.

This just goes to show everyone around the world that it is
changing. We are all on edge a little more, though many won’t admit it, and we
have that small thought in the back of our head about where the next strike
could be. Times like these do make you wonder what the world would be like with
someone different in the Oval Office.

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