Category Archives: global warming

It’s Friday…

and Obama supporters, this one’s for you!

Please note: If you find yourself behaving this way online and you support Obama, seek professional help immediately.

I give you: The Obamaniac Bloggy Behavior Wheel!

This brilliant graphic comes to you courtesy of Lavender Liberal, whom I just discovered – and heart!

If you support Hillary – here are some things you can do to help her save the Democratic Party from itself. I’m working on a project of my own and will update you when it’s ready. I hope you’ll participate if you are so inclined.

Happy Friday! Take heart, all is not lost…and I hope the weather is not deadly in your part of the world.

Meanwhile…

this has got to be the worst May ever for extreme weather.

In the past ten days, a devastating cyclone hit Myanmar (Burma); tornadoes and floods raged across the United States; and a devastating earthquake hit China.

I can’t help thinking how lucky I am to be living the life I do. I have a job and so does my husband; I have electricity, food and water; and usually, I don’t have to be afraid of the weather.

Still, my relatively blessed state – and that of millions of Americans – will soon evaporate if we don’t do something about the environment, and fast. Should a large enough ice shelf melt and collapse, New York and many other coastal cities could be drowned under water. Should the temperature of the earth rise just a few degrees, heat and thirst could kill millions. And if we continue with our short-sighted ethanol production, a massive food shortage could show us all the true meaning of hunger.

This year, all of us activists are very passionate about who is elected President. I agree that it is of paramount importance that the right person leads our country away from the path of reckless consumption and down the path of conservation, sanity and responsibility. But we must never forget that the true issues we are dealing with are not just American, but global.

We can solve it.

We are all citizens of the world now. It’s time to start acting like it.

In the "All Politics Is Local" Department…

New York Mayor Bloomberg’s “congestion pricing” plan is DOA. Sheldon Silver and the Albany Democrats killed it. Praise Jeebus!

For those that don’t know about this, Bloomberg had proposed that anyone driving on 60th Street and below in Manhattan pay an $8 fee. The idea behind this would be to alleviate congestion in that area and generate millions in revenue to invest in better public transportation. If this plan were put into action, New York City would be eligible for $354 million in federal funding, about $10 million of which would go towards funding the congestion pricing program itself, and the rest being allocated towards improving infrastructure and public transportation options. This money would be most welcome, since, like most major American cities in the Age of Bush, NYC is perpetually low on cash.

All sounds great, right? One thing I do like about Bloomberg is his commitment to the environment, and I certainly agree that improving infrastructure and public transportation would be a good start.

But read the fine print. The congestion pricing option was only one of many that could have been considered.


New York City applied to be part of the United States Department of Transportation’s Urban Partnership Program, which would allocate money to cities that were willing to fight urban traffic congestion through tolling programs, express bus services or bus rapid transit, telecommuting, or technologies designed for the purpose.

Why the focus on congestion pricing, then? I have long felt that telecommuting (which is what I do) is a far, far better option for companies to pursue. It’s a win-win in so many respects: cheaper for the company, which has much less overhead to maintain; cheaper for the employee, who saves thousands in commuting costs; and so much better for the environment! Why couldn’t tax breaks, or other incentives, be given to companies who allow a certain percentage of their employees to telecommute?

Well, because it’s much better for the lowly bridge-and-tunnel folks to be brutally penalized for deigning to enter the Land of The Super-Wealthy, apparently.

Actually, I don’t know the answer to this question: all I know is, in my opinion, it is a simply horrible idea to charge people so much money to come to work. Some are already paying a ridiculous amount, and with the price of gas going up? Oy!

For example, my hairdresser, who commutes from the Poconos, tells me she is already paying about $50/day to come to work. She has to drive AND take the bus in order to coordinate with her husband’s work schedule. Yes, she works below 60th Street. Yes, she would now be paying almost $60/day. Why? What benefit would it be to her?

And there’s the rub. A lot of people who don’t live in New York would be paying a lot of money to (possibly) improve the lives of New Yorkers. It just doesn’t make sense, and the Democrats in the State Assembly knew it. In fact, New Jersey Governor John Corzine hated the idea so much that he was willing to sue the city to stop the plan from taking place.

But that telecommuting option…

Dangerous Weather

As a New York-Maryland girl, I know that I don’t really understand what it feels like to be afraid of the weather. Oh, sure, we might get snowed in every once in a while, but that’s about it.

Until a year and a half ago, Westchester County was not known for its extreme weather. Then, we got hit with a very small tornado less than 20 miles from where I live. Although no one was hurt, you can still see the damage to trees and property.

I shudder and weep to think of what lies ahead for Tennessee, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Alabama.


Tornadoes and storms in the mid-South have killed 55 people since Tuesday evening in the deadliest tornado outbreak in the United States in more than 20 years.

The storms ripped apart homes and trapped residents of university dorms and a retirement home in debris.

The trail of death stretched across four states, with four people killed in Alabama, 13 in Arkansas, seven in Kentucky and 31 in Tennessee.

In some cases, there was almost no warning before the severe weather hit.

I am so sorry for the people of the South, whose suffering seems to grow and grow while the brain-damaged Chimp in the Oval Office shrugs and pretends that “prayer” will fix everything. I am so sorry for Americans, whose expectations of getting emergency services in return for their tax dollars seem to shrink and shrink, while the Vice President sneers and stacks more millions inside his man-sized safe. And I am so, so sorry that Congress is still saddled with heartless Republics, who block and water down every Congressional effort to make government work, while they pocket lobbyist money and insist on drowning government in the bathtub.

This Administration has managed to create seven years of dangerous weather. We are quickly turning into a third-world country, with poverty and joblessness on the rise, millions losing their homes, a dysfunctional educational system, and an economy that is consistently being bailed out by countries like Saudi Arabia and China.

The Bush Administration’s tornadoes have been bad enough already. It’s adding suffering to suffering when Nature’s hurricanes and tornadoes come with them.

Blog About the Environment Day!

Most Americans, excepting brainwashed Rushbots, now realize that global warming is real and a crisis. Even the Deciderer has recently dropped his once hard-line stance on the issue. Of course, his idea of taking action comes down to prayer and privatization, as usual. (Heh-heh. Wouldn’t wanna offend Exxon-Mobil!)

Love or hate Al Gore (Run, Al, Run!!!), you have to give him credit for his tireless, decades-long efforts to bring this issue to the forefront of the American mind. But why is it only now, when people can actually see the effects of global warming for themselves – stronger hurricanes, more extreme weather like flooding, early snowfall and tornadoes, hotter average temperatures – that we are finally willing to do something about it?

I’m a little bitter on this subject, because I remember Jimmy Carter’s presidency very well. I was in eighth grade, and my teacher was explaining why the President was putting solar panels on the White House, why there were suddenly lines at the gas station, why we had to turn our thermostats down and use less paper in our homes. This was 1978. 1978! Almost 30 years ago, around the same time Al Gore was beginning his long crusade, Jimmy Carter was trying to lead our country away from endless wars over oil, and towards a more responsible energy policy.

Did Americans listen? No, we did not. We fell for the con game of one of the worst Presidents in history, Ronald Reagan, who told us “Hey, everybody, I know it looks bad now, but if you all just go shopping with these shiny credit cards – like I’ll do! – everything will be fine! You can still have the American dream, and you won’t have to sacrifice a darn thing!” And don’t we just love to think the impossible is true in this country? Don’t we just love to pretend everything is fine and dandy, as Frank Rich wrote so memorably yesterday?

So here we are, after almost 30 years of environmental ostriching, and waddaya know? Jimmy Carter was right! And of course, there’s this guy named Al Gore who just won’t go away, and so sorry, but they don’t usually give out the Nobel Peace Prize to cranks and crackpots (okay, Kissinger was an exception).

As much as the general short-sightedness and laziness of Murkins makes me crazy, we are no different from the rest of the human race. We are simply not built for long-range planning. Most of us feel we shouldn’t act until a crisis is upon us, at which point we go into a flurry of panicked activity. Said activity can be effective – we did, after all, stop using aerosols and DDT – but not nearly as effective as prevention.

We humans have the same tendencies in every area of our lives. One example is our health. We don’t fix our diet and exercise habits until we have heart attacks or strokes; even then, we’d rather be on 14 different prescription medications than change our way of life.

If we are to advance out of our current childlike state, I believe the human race needs to create a new Enlightenment. We need to start looking ahead 30, 50, 200 years and planning for a future we will never see. We need to make peace and global responsibility our new mantras and leave bumper stickers and flag pins behind. We need to give up our selfish short-sightedness and start becoming true stewards of this beautiful Earth we have inherited. Otherwise, we may not survive into the 22nd century – and really, would it be such a great loss?

October 15th – Blog About the Environment Day

Can’t post much today, but there’s a movement afoot (sponsored by The Great Orange Satan) to make Blogistan shout “Pay Attention to Global Warming!” on October 15th.

Of course, those of us wishin’ and hopin’ for Al Gore might include a few words about him on that day as well…especially if he wins the Nobel on October 12th.

This bloggista is in.

My Tinfoil Hat Moment of the Evening…

My husband was reading Harper’s Index to me this evening, and one of the very interesting facts was:

Estimated portion of the world’s undiscovered petroleum that is buried under Arctic ice: 1/5

Ya know, if that ice melts, the way it is predicted to due to global warming…the oil companies would benefit quite a bit, wouldn’t they?

Just sayin’.