Update, new photos on Las Conchas Fire, NM; No firework ban in Albuquerque despite worst drought in history Reply

City will not ban fireworks due to fear of civil lawsuits

Apparently the city of Albuquerque will not ban fireworks due to a fear of possible civil lawsuits. How asinine is this? New Mexico is in the the worst drought in recorded history… and the city is worried about law suits?

How about this… when we lose numerous homes due to a careless firecracker, those homeowners who lost their homes should sue the city for NOT banning fireworks.

Since the city will not ban fireworks (is there money under the table here???)… then here is my personal plea to all… please, wait until next year. Wait until the monsoons have passed, and hopefully rehydrated the state…. then set your fireworks off.

I am not anti-fireworks… I grew up with a family that had annual firework extravaganzas every Fourth in our rural Indiana fields. Love them! But I favor keeping our Bosque, keeping our National Forests, and keeping our homes over fireworks any day.

The fireworks can wait.

Here is my little video pleading no fireworks. The footage of the Bosque here in Albuquerque I took today. Below the video is an update on the Las Conchas Fire, and new photos from Los Alamos National Lab’s photostream on Flickr.

Las Conchas Fire Update
For Immediate Release: June 30, 2011

Date Started: 1 p.m., 6/26/2011
Number of Personnel: Approximately 752 personnel including seven hotshot crews and 14 handcrews.
Location: Approximately 12 miles southwest of Los Alamos off NM 4 at mile marker 35
Fuels: Mixed Conifer, Ponderosa Pine. Fuel moisture is extremely low.
Cause: Unknown – under investigation
Equipment: Four dozers and 28 engines
Size: approximately 92,735 acres
Aircraft: Five helicopters
Percent Contained: 3%
Residences: 13 destroyed and 3 damaged
Commercial Property: 3 damaged
Other structures: 2 destroyed

Source 

Las Conchas Fire Burns More Than 6,000 acres of Santa Clara Pueblo Land – 6/30

Santa Clara Pueblo, NM – The Las Conchas Fire has charred more than 6,000 acres of the watershed of Santa Clara Pueblo and continues to destroy cultural sites, forest resources, plants and animals that the people of Santa Clara depend upon for their livelihood and culture.

“We are devastated to witness the destruction of our precious homeland,” said Governor Dasheno. “From time immemorial to this day our community has been stewards of this land, have fought to regain portions taken from us and have invested millions of dollars in restoring the forest and resources.”

Nevertheless, after two days of extreme fire behavior, the Las Conchas Fire entered Santa Clara Pueblo lands mid-day on June 29. In the last 24 hours the fire has exploded across the western third of the reservation. This includes the area known as “P’opii Khanu,” the headwaters of the creek, which the Pueblo regained in 2000 after 140 years of struggle.

Source

Chopper engages in the battle to save Los Alamos Canyon

Fire scars Pajarito Ski Hill

Fire in the Jemez

Haze over the Jemez

Smoke floats over a canyon

Helicopter recon, Las Conchas Fire

Helicopter recon, Las Conchas Fire

LANL helicopter recon

Skycrane in action

Below:  Las Conchas Fire progression map June 20, 2011

Larger view of above map click here

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Fires draw near the home of the A-Bomb, Los Alamos National Labs, NM Reply

The wildfire has destroyed 30 structures south and west of Los Alamos, for many stirring memories of a devastating blaze in May 2000 that destroyed hundreds of homes and buildings in town.

Flames were just across the road from the southern edge of the famed lab, where scientists developed the first atomic bomb during World War II. The facility cut natural gas to some areas as a precaution.

The lab, which employs about 15,000 people, covers more than 36 square miles and includes about 2,000 buildings at nearly four dozen sites. They include research facilities, as well as waste disposal sites. Some facilities, including the administration building, are in the community of Los Alamos, while others are several miles away from the town.

The spot fire scorched a section known as Tech Area 49, which was used in the early 1960s for a series of underground tests with high explosives and radioactive materials.

Lab spokesman Kevin Roark said environmental specialists were monitoring air quality, but the main concern was smoke.

The anti-nuclear watchdog group Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety said the fire appeared to be about 3.5 miles from a dumpsite where as many as 30,000 55-gallon drums of plutonium-contaminated waste were stored in fabric tents above ground. The group said the drums were awaiting transport to a dump site in southern New Mexico.

“The concern is that these drums will get so hot that they’ll burst. That would put this toxic material into the plume. It’s a concern for everybody,” said Joni Arends, executive director of the group.

Arends’ group also worried that the fire could stir up nuclear-contaminated soil on lab property where experiments were conducted years ago. Over the years, burrowing animals have brought that contamination to the surface, she said.

Lab officials at first declined to confirm that such drums were on the property but, in a statement early Tuesday, lab spokeswoman Lisa Rosendorf said such drums are stored in a section of the complex known as Area G. She said the drums contain cleanup from Cold War-era waste that the lab sends away in weekly shipments to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant.

She said the drums were on a paved area with few trees nearby and would be safe even if a fire reached the storage area.

Los Alamos National Lab was established during the Second World War as part of the Manhattan Project to develop the first atomic bomb.

“The hair on the back of your neck goes up,” Los Alamos County fire chief Doug Tucker said of first seeing the fire in the Santa Fe National Forest on Sunday. “I saw that plume and I thought, ‘Oh my god here we go again.’”

Source:  MSNBC

 

Update on Las Conchas Fire, Los Alamos NM: Google Earth Active Fire Mapping images Reply


Las Conchas Fire Update – June 28, 2011, 11:30 am
Posted on June 28, 2011 by npsnmfireinfo

Fire Information: 505-428-7735 or 505-216-2685 (Daily from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.)
Website Info: http://www.inciweb.org or http://www.nmfireinfo.com
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/T1SWIMT

Date Started: 1 p.m., 6/26/2011 Number of Personnel: Approximately 315. Resources include two hotshot crews and nine hand crews. An Area Command Team and an additional Type I Incident Management Team have been assigned to the fire.

Location: Approximately 12 miles southwest of Los Alamos off NM 4 at mile marker 35 Fuels: Mixed Conifer, Ponderosa Pine. Fuel moisture is extremely low.
Cause: Unknown – under investigation Equipment: Five dozers and 13 engines
Size: 60,741 acres based on infrared data Aircraft: Seven helicopters
Percent Contained: 0%

 Media should call (505) 428-7739 to coordinate interviews.

 For information regarding evacuations or information regarding the Los Alamos National Laboratory, please call 505-820-1226.

 A public meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m., Wednesday, June 29, at the Madonna Parish Hall in Jemez Springs, off Hwy 4 between mile marker 15 and 16.

Fire Update:

East – Crews are working to protect structures near Bandelier, as well as working to contain the fire along the Frijole Canyon.

West – Crews are building direct lines to prevent fire movement to the west.

Northeast – Crews are working to contain the fire using burnout methods to prevent the fire from spreading north of Pajarito Road and east of Highway 501.

South – North of Cochiti fire progression is being slowed by lighter fuel types. Firefighters are evaluating methods to stop the fire from spreading south.

Current Evacuations:

City of Los Alamos – The acting Los Alamos County Administrator issued an evacuation order for the city of Los Alamos. The Cities of Gold hotel in Pojoaque is offering shelter services for evacuating residents of Los Alamos. Los Alamos evacuees are advised against sheltering in White Rock, although White Rock is not at risk. White Rock is currently under a voluntary evacuation.

Pre-Evacuation Alert

If you live near the fire or near the Forest, you should always be ready for emergencies including evacuations, the three-step process is easy to remember and implement:

• Ready – Take personal responsibility and prepare before the threat of a wildland fire so your home is ready in case of a fire. Create defensible space by clearing brush away from your home. Use fire-resistant landscaping and harden your home with fire-safe construction measures. Assemble emergency supplies and belongings in a safe spot. Plan escapes routes. Make sure all those residing within the home know the plan of action.

• Set – Act immediately. Pack your vehicle with your emergency items. Remember your six P’s: people, personal computers, pets, pills, papers and pictures. Stay aware of the latest news and information on the fire from local media and your local fire department

• Go – Leave early! Follow your personal action plan. Doing so will not only support your safety, but will allow firefighters to best maneuver resources to combat the fire.
Closures

NM 4 is closed at Jemez Falls Campground and at NM 501. NM 502 westbound into Los Alamos is now closed to all motorists. Access is controlled and limited to official traffic until further notification.

Bandelier National Monument: The Bandelier National Monument will be closed indefinitely.

Los Alamos National Labs: The Los Alamos National Laboratory will be closed due to the fire. All laboratory facilities will be closed for all activities, and nonessential employees are directed to remain off site. Employees that are considered nonessential should not report to work unless specifically directed by their line managers. Employees should check local news sources, the LANL Update Hotline (505) 667-6622 and the LANL web page http://www.lanl.gov for updates. All radioactive and hazardous material is appropriately accounted for and protected. LANL staff is coordinating the on-site response and supporting the county and federal fire response.

Safety Message

The wildfire and burnout operations will continue to produce heavy smoke. Residents with respiratory problems in the path of smoke may want to consider relocating temporarily until smoke dissipates. Motorists should exercise caution due to reduced visibility.

(below) Google Earth Active Fire Mapping:  Los Alamos snapshot 062811

(below) Google Earth Active Fire Mapping:  New Mexico snapshot 062811

(below) Geomac.gov

Los Alamos NM evacuated as fire rages near Nuclear labs. Aerial footage. 1

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., June 28 (UPI) — Residents were ordered to evacuate Los Alamos, N.M., as an out-of-control wildfire was at the town’s edge and buffeted the secretive U.S. military nuclear lab.

A Los Alamos National Laboratory spokesman said the blaze, at the facility’s southern boundary, remained a few miles from key structures on the 25,600-acre property.

Nuclear and other hazardous materials were in safe storage deep inside vaults within concrete and steel buildings, Kevin Roark told the Alibi newspaper of Albuquerque.

The lab would not comment on a Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety allegation that the wildfire was about 3 miles from a nuclear dumpsite containing tens of thousands of 55-gallon drums of plutonium-contaminated waste.

The anti-nuclear watchdog group’s Web site appeared hacked early Tuesday morning, a United Press International check indicated. Its Facebook page had six messages from people alerting the group of the possible hacking, including a message commenting on the timing of the incident happening “just as the fires started.”

The wildfire, which began Sunday and exceeded 50,000 acres, or 78 square miles, early Tuesday, destroyed at least 30 homes and outbuildings south and west of Los Alamos, fire officials said.

“We don’t have a hard number,” Los Alamos Assistant Fire Chief Mike Thompson told the Albuquerque Journal.

Officials planned a flyover Tuesday morning to assess its scope.

The fire — whose flames and smoke could be seen from Albuquerque, about 80 miles south — caused erosion and runoff, with contaminants threatening the Rio Grande, officials said.

Roark told the Alibi, “There were not appreciable levels of radioactivity in the runoff.”

After the Cerro Grande fire in 2000, which devastated Los Alamos and changed firefighting policies and strategies all across the West, the lab installed structures to prevent heavy runoff, he said.

Some residents evacuating the town were “calm and other people are really frantic,” Sheila Luna told the Santa Fe New Mexican.

“The Conoco gas station ran out of gas last night, and at the next gas station I waited for 15 minutes before I could get the car filled up,” she said. “That part was kind of scary to me.”

Source: UPI

Los Alamos NM evacuated from fires – Labs closed: Boycott fireworks in NM, fires all over the state (photos) 2

Please, everyone in New Mexico… BOYCOTT ALL FIREWORKS THIS YEAR!

Fires are erupting all over the state, no rain in site.

Page on Facebook in support of this boycott (must be logged into FB):  Click here

Los Alamos evacuated as Las Conchas fire grows

A mandatory evacuation for the City of Los Alamos is in effect Monday (June 27) as the Las Conchas wildfire threatens the area.

Eletha Trujillo with the Taos County Office of Emergency Management said the primary health concern for Taos County residents was the smoke from the fire that has settled in the area.

Trujillo said the forecast tonight is for cooler temperatures and calming winds, meaning Taoseños might wake up to especially smoky conditions tomorrow (June 28). She recommended that people with health conditions stay indoors and asked that drivers be especially cautious because of limited visability.

Trujillo said that she did not perceive any risk of radiation in the smoke from Los Alamos. Officials at the labs have insisted that all radioactive materials are safely stored and do not pose a threat. A spokesman from the lab could not immediately be reached for comment.

According to a Monday afternoon incident update on the fire, it had grown to nearly 44,000 acres and was 0 percent contained. The Los Alamos National Labs (LANL) were also closed to nonessential personnel Monday.

According to information from Los Alamos County, the evacuation of three areas was taking place Monday, with the groups being notified by “reverse 911.”

Group one includes Western, Quemazon and Ponderosa; group two includes North Community, Barranca Mesa and North Mesa; and group three includes East of Diamond and the rest of the town. Evacuees were urged not to go to White Rock in case that area is evacuated, as well.

Transportation is available for those who call (505) 661-7433. The Big Rock Santa Claran Event Center was opened as a shelter.

Campgrounds near the fire were evacuated Sunday (June 26).

Las Conchas fire started Sunday afternoon on private land near the Jemez Ranger District in the Santa Fe National Forest, about 3 miles south of Los Alamos. Structures and power lines were threatened, but according to the incident update, “all radioactive material is appropriately accounted for and protected.”

For more information and updates, call (505) 667-6622 or visit www.lanl.gov

Source: Taos News

_________________________________________________

Below:  Los Alamos, Los Conchas Fire

Below:  Jemez Mountains, recently taken

Below:  South of Belen, taken Sunday, June 26, 2011

New stats out: Private prison populations up 120%. Lobbyists paying $6 million+ to state officials. 3

New report in from Dailykos.com, “Private prison companies boost incarceration rates for profit”

A new report from the reformist Justice Policy Institute concludes that private prison companies have not only benefited from increased incarceration, they have also helped fuel it.

According to Gaming the System: How the Political Strategies of Private Prison Companies Promote Ineffective Incarceration Policies, private prisons have increased their “market share” of the overall prison population. While the number of inmates over the past decade has risen 16 percent, the number in private federal facilities has risen 120 percent and the number in state facilities has risen 33 percent. Meanwhile, the two largest private prison operators, Correction Corporations of America and GEO Group (formerly Wackenhut), raked in a combined $2.9 billion in revenue in 2010. More…

Pacheco Fire Time-lapse – 18 June 2011 Reply

Footage by “Tewa.” Footage taken from Santa Clara Pueblo area using a Samsung HMX-U20 video camera. Time-lapse at 1 frame per second and played at 30 frames per second. Video runs for several minutes, this is a short 24 second segment of the mid-afternoon fire as it developed.

Lines grow around Pacheco Canyon fires, Santa Fe NM. Photos. Wallow Fire AZ update. Reply

Sat. June 25, 2011

The forest fires burning above Santa Fe and on the Arizona-New Mexico state line grew slightly Friday as firefighters continued to lengthen their containment lines.

The Pacheco Fire reported a week ago in the Santa Fe National Forest is now estimated at 6,800 acres and 18 percent contained. The fire not two miles north of the Santa Fe ski basin is burning in mixed conifer and ponderosa pine in steep and rugged terrain.

Much of the increase in fire size since Friday is due to a successful overnight burnout operation, a statement released by the Central West Zone Incident Management Team Saturday morning said.

The fire was described as less active on Friday than on Thursday with most of the activity on the north side in the drainage south of Rancho Viejo. Minimal movement was seen on the south side of the fire.

Winds pushed the smoke plume eastward, and the fire continues to threaten the Santa Fe watershed and ski area, the Tesuque Peak communications site and tribal lands of Nambé and Tesuque pueblos. The fire is largely within the Pecos Wilderness.

Large sections of the Santa Fe National Forest are now closed to public access with the imposition of State Three fire restrictions. Open fires and smoking outside buildings and vehicles are banned in the areas that remain open.

Click on image below to enlarge.  Clicking again will then scroll through pictures.

Wallow Fire update, AZ

Fire bosses in Arizona say most of the activity on the Wallow Fire Friday was on the south side. There favorable conditions allowed firefighters to begin working on ground lines on the fire perimeter as they try to keep the blaze from crossing the Blue River.

The Wallow Fire, which started May 29, has now grown to near 535,000 acres and ranks as the largest in Arizona history.

Winds on Saturday were forecast to reach 17-20 mph with gusts to 30 mph, enough for torching and short-range spotting on the east side of the fire, segments of which are now in New Mexico.

“These conditions are similar to those that existed when the fire has made large runs,” an update from incident commanders said.

Pig Paper: Canada Issue No.04, correspondence from Gary Pig Gold to Doug “Rock Serling” Pelton Reply

Publication date unknown.  This is a photocopy of August 1975 correspondence from Gary Pig Gold to Doug “Rock Serling” Pelton. More…

Pig Paper: Canada Apr 1977 Issue No.03, a Kinks appreciation issue Reply

This issue of the Pig Paper came out in April 1977 and was a Kinks appreciation issue. This issue sees Edgar Breau expressing his love for the Kinks.  The “True Kink Konfessions” of Simply Saucer’s Edgar Breau, distributed free-of-charge to concert-goers when The Kinks played Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto on April 29, 1977. This was also the first Pig Paper made available outside of Canada (at the Kinks’ show in Buffalo, NY, the following evening, as well as during their in-store appearance at Buffalo’s Record Theatre the day after that). More…

Pig Paper: Canada Oct 1976 Issue No.02, Follow-up to the Who issue Reply

This was a follow up to the Who issue and came out in October 1976 almost a year later.  A small literary “coda” and update on The Who, inserted into reprints of Pig Paper 1 and again sold outside Toronto’s Maple Leaf Gardens when the band returned there on October 21, 1976 (coincidentally, Keith Moon’s final public performance with the band). More…

Disneyland Paris – as seen with Tilt Shift technique Reply

What a better way to catch a glimpse of Disneyland Paris but through Tilt Shift???  “Tilt-shift photography” refers to the use of camera movements on small- and medium-format cameras, and sometimes specifically refers to the use of tilt for selective focus, often for simulating a miniature scene. Sometimes the term is used when the shallow depth of field is simulated with digital post processing; the name may derive from the tilt-shift lens normally required when the effect is produced optically.

Disneyland Paris – Tilt Shift from Céranne Gantzer on Vimeo.

Official Disneyland Paris Link : youtube.com/​watch?v=WhieInBgTq8

Could there is a better way to illustrate the tilt-shift technique but by photographing a theme park ?

With its various settings, numerous parades and constant excitement, Disneyland Paris was only waiting for the Audiovisual Service to meet a team willing to apply the tilt-shift technique and reduce the park to its original model look.

Director, Céranne Gantzer

Director of photography , Daniel Meyer and Christian Van Hanja

—————————————————————–

Quel sujet pouvait aussi bien se prêter à la technique du tilt-shift qu’un parc d’attractions?

Avec sa variété de décors, ses nombreuses parades et sa constante animation, Disneyland Paris n’attendait plus qu’une envie commune entre le service Audiovisuel du parc et une équipe désireuse d’exploiter la technique du tilt-shift pour être réduit à l’échelle d’une maquette.

Réalisateur, Céranne Gantzer

Directeurs photo, Daniel Meyer et Christian Van Hanja

Stunning electron microscope photos 2

These photos are taken from Brandon Brill’s book, “Microcosmos.”  London England.  Book includes SEM images (Scanning Electron Microscope) of items most of which are too small for the naked eye to see.

Utterly amazing.


A human head louse clinging to a hair


An ant, Formica fusca, holding a microchip


Bacteria on the surface of a human tongue


Cigarette paper


A clutch of unidentified butterfly eggs on a raspberry plant


A daisy bud


Calcium phosphate crystal


Cut hairs and shaving foam between two razor blades


Eyelash hairs growing from the surface of human skin


Fimbriae of a Fallopian tube


Household dust which includes long hairs such as cat fur, twisted synthetic and woolen fibers, serrated insect scales, a pollen grain, plant and insect remains


Human sperm (spermatozoa), the male sex cells


Mushrooms spores


The corroded surface of a rusty metal nail


The eight eyes (two groups of four) on the head of a Mexican red-kneed tarantula


The end of the tongue (proboscis) of a hummingbird hawkmoth


The fungus Aspergillus fumigatus


The head of a mosquito


The head of a Romanesco cauliflower


The nylon hooks and loops of velcro


The shell of a Foraminiferan


The surface of a strawberry


The surface of an Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory silicon microchip


The weave of a nylon stocking

“Million Dollar Courtroom” Theodore Levin United State Courthouse, Detroit Federal Bldg (photos) Reply

Courtroom is from the previous building built in 1896. It was disassembled and reassembled in the new building in 1932. It contains over 30 types of marble. Behind the bench is a frieze of 10 female figures depicting the purity of justice.

On April 22, 1930, the federal budget bureau recommended that Detroit get a new federal building and customs house at a price of nearly $5 million (about $63.9 million today). Robert O. Derrick (best known for designing the Henry Ford Museum) and Bronson V. Gander were selected as the architects of the new building.

Among the more opulent rooms in the old Federal Building was the so-called Million-Dollar Courtroom. Federal Judge Arthur J. Tuttle arranged to have his courtroom dismantled piece by piece and replaced exactly as it was in the 1897 building.

Credit line: Photographs by Carol M. Highsmith (click on picture for larger image)

World War I posters – A journey through American history Reply

Vintage and historical America has always fascinated me.  Here are some of the more interesting of the thousands available of posters issued during WWI.  I saw some sites which called these “propoganda.”  Perhaps in today’s society, some posters may be considered that, but during this era in US history, that is just the way it was.

We have all seen the “Join now…” posters, what women can do, join the Red Cross, etc., but what I did not realize were the number of posters in regards to the disable soldiers and sailors.  Interesting, though, I did not see the term “veteran” anywhere… I wonder when “Disabled Veteran” become the normal terminology….

Enlisting during WWI was also targeted unemployed – which was many – as well as a way to be paid to earn an education – which many could not afford on their own.


Learning to walk for the second time c1919


At work again Back to the farm c1919


What can the blinded men do in world of commerce and industry c1919


Reading and writing are not lost arts to the blinded men c1919


Facts of interest to the disable soldier or sailor c1919


India restores her war cripples to self-support c1919


First steps to usefulness c1919


The lure of movies c1919


Future shipworkers one-armed men c1919


The disabled man who is profitably employed is no longer handicapped c1919


With compass and tsquare c1919


Back home, Gave both arms in service c1919


Refugees in Russia poster c1917 1918


Refugees in Russia text c1917 1918


Here is your chance to see France and the Rhine enlist c1917 or 1918


How would you like to be with Uncle Sams priviledged tourists c1918


Urgent the President has issued an urgent call c1917 to 1919


US Army wants you enlist c1917 to 1919


You are wanted by the US Army 660 Market San Fran btwn c1915 1918


For action enlist in the air service c1917 to 1920, Cushing, Otho


Come on boys Do your duty by enlisting c1917


Men wanted for the army btwn c1910 and 1915, Whelan, Michael P


General Pershing says A chance for you to enlist c1917 or 1919


Lighten his load c 1918


Twenty sheep to clothe c1917 1918


Women girls rest info go to YWCA c1917 or 1918


The men know home fols know c1918


Earn while you learn c1919


Engineers blaze the trail for education c1919


Know him by this sign the Medical Caduceus c1919


The signal corps c1919


Why not meet us in hero land c1917


Territory of Hawaii registration day c1917 or 1918


If you only knew c1917 1918


Be a trained nurse c1917 1918


Join the red cross candle in window c1917 1918


Amer Red Cross clothes overseas c1914 to 1918


Jr Red Cross comrades c1919


Your money or his life btwn c1914 to 1918


What can you do Join our Red Cross


What are you doing to help Join Amer Red Cross c1919, Grant, Gordon 1875-1962


The Red Cross sees a man through c1919


Red Cross first aid c1919


Many peoples One Nation poster c1917


Many peoples One Nation text c1917


Dawn after darkness c1918  Levy, Alexander Oscar 1881-1934


Liberty claims her own c1917 1918  Levy, Alexander Oscar 1881-1934


Liberty, freed, humanity’s need c1918  Levy, Alexander Oscar 1881-1934


The cross and the crusaders c 1917 Levy, Alexander Oscar 1881-1934


You in her thoughts poster c1917 1918.  This poster is a poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox extolling male virginity before marriage to prevent health problems related to sexually transmitted diseases.  Below is a zoom of the text.


Source:  Government Archives

New York passes same-sex marriage bill Reply

Striking what advocates believe is a historic victory for gay rights, the New York state senate Friday approved same-sex marriage, bringing New York a promised governor’s signature away from being the sixth and largest state to allow gays and lesbians to marry.

The 33-29 vote is an enormous victory for first-year Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat who pledged during last fall’s campaign to push for gay marriage. It comes after an intense public and private lobbying campaign from a wide cast of politicians, celebrities and athletes, including New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and former President Bill Clinton.

Cuomo, whose two daughters attended the vote in the senate gallery, is expected to sign the bill. The bill will become law 30 days after Cuomo signs it, and when it does, it will double the population of Americans to whom same-sex marriage is legal.

After weeks of suspense, Stephen Saland, a Poughkeepsie Republican announced himself on the senate floor as the 32nd senator to back the legislation, tipping the balance in favor of it passing. Saland defined his vote as a matter of conscience during a stirring legal defense of an amendment exempting religious organizations from the law.

“I have defined doing the right thing as treating all persons with equality,” Saland said. “And that equality includes the definition of marriage. I fear that to do otherwise would fly in the face of my upbringing.”

Saland, who voted against gay marriage in 2009, was joined in announcing his newfound support for gay marriage on the senate floor by Mark Grisanti, a first-term Buffalo Republican who did not declare how he would vote until his floor speech Friday night. Grisanti, who said he struggled with the vote because he is Catholic, had been against same-sex marriage when he was elected last year, but changed his mind after an intense lobbying campaign, which included a call from Lady Gaga to her fans to contact him.

“I cannot legally come up with an argument against same-sex marriage,” Grisanti said.

Of the 33 senators to vote for the bill, 29 are Democrats and four are Republicans. Of the 29 who voted against it, all but one are Republicans.

Source:  Politico
Photo above from AP

Civil rights march

A nostalgic Black & White photo journey through America’s past 9

Nostalgia…. What a flood of memories many of these pictures bring to most adults and baby-boomers.  A little journey through our childhood via some incredible black and white photos gathered from the internet.  A brief description provided when available.  Sadly, I am unable to locate the source of these photos.

More…

Stuxnet: Anatomy of a computer virus Reply

An infographic dissecting the nature and ramifications of Stuxnet, the first weapon made entirely out of code. This was produced for Australian TV program HungryBeast on Australia’s ABC1.

According to fastcodesign.com:

There’s a powerful, under-reported takeaway here: The Stuxnet virus, having already done its job, now enjoys a scary afterlife. Its code is available online for anyone to look at and play with — and keep in mind, this is a virus capable of shutting down entire power grids. Could hackers re-engineer the virus to other ends, posing far greater threats to the international economy?

It’s hard to know, as the hacking still continues apace (and the video seems a bit all too invested in scaring the bejesus out of you). Certainly, you’d have to have a deep knowledge of a specific target to make it work again, in another setting. But it’s worth wondering whether the tool, while successful, has ended up spreading dangerous knowledge worldwide. Once its complexity and ambition becomes absorbed by the hacker community — and governments such as China — who knows what will emerge as a result.

In 100 years, historians will probably look back at Stuxnet’s emergence as the Trinity Test for a new age of warfare — a harbinger of danger in an uncertain era.

 

Stuxnet: Anatomy of a Computer Virus from Patrick Clair on Vimeo.

Direction and Motion Graphics: Patrick Clair patrickclair.com
Written by: Scott Mitchell

Production Company: Zapruder’s Other Films

Pacheco Canyon fire near Santa Fe NM. Photos. Reply

Apparently, Monday’s winds – which were gusting over 40 mph – actually assisted the forest fire near Santa Fe NM. The winds blew back in the direction of land that was already burned, thus aiding in lowering the spread to fresh forest land.

At noon Tuesday, June 21st (today) incident commanders said the fire had grown to 4,883 acres since it ignited below Ski Santa Fe Saturday and spready into the Pecos Wilderness.  It is zero percent contained.

With the winds dropping today, over the Pacheco Fire, fire behavior was low. A large smoke plume like that observed Sunday will not occur today.

Below are photos taken of the large smoke cloud taken on Sunday, June 19th.  Also included are photos of a helicopter getting water from Nambe Lake for the Pacheco Canyon fire.

Why can we not walk straight? Reply

Very interesting video (and loved how he created it). The question, apparently, still remains well… unanswered. To sum up this video, when a person is blindfolded, or unable to orientate themselves properly – such as in a thick fog – then when they think they are walking straight, they are actually walking in circles.

Notice, the direction of path always seems to circle clock-wise – except for the automobile example, which I will touch on in a moment.  My first thought is what is always in constant motion on our planet?  Well, our planet itself.  Always rotating around our axis, and revolving around the sun.  Although we cannot feel this movement, our human balance is very delicate and subconsciously, our body “feels” this rotation.  Would this not have an effect on our path as given in these experiments?

Now, with the man driving the car, he actually circles counter-clockwise.  Could this be because, sub-consciously, his body is thinking it is moving to the right more than it actually is simply due to the higher speed than when on foot, therefore, the person unknowingly over-compensates when driving, thus turning the wheel more left?

Just some thoughts…..  Enjoy the video.

A Mystery: Why Can’t We Walk Straight? from NPR on Vimeo.

It’s a dogs day at work 2

Just a fun, feel-good video I compiled of footage I took on the day my dogs went to work with me.  The dog in the red coat is what is known as a “lethal white.”  He was born completely deaf and blind in one eye, which is a typical result of merle-to-merle breedings in Australian Shepherds.  The other dog is his mother.  I rescued them as a pair.  You will see me use several hand signals and touch commands with him, many are subtle.  The most common is a tap on the nose is his command to sit.

More…

Energy and Politics — It’s Time For The Plan by Mean Mesa Reply

This article was written by a personal friend of mine, Chad Hall. 
For more of his postings and articles, please visit his website, MeanMesa.com

Stopping All Progress

If you are a Texas petrogarch who has inherited a bunch of oil wells, production contracts, and, oh yes, a mansion, from your daddy, large investments in the Congress to paralyze any possible advances in modernizing or rationalizing  the energy industry are quite understandable.  Interestingly, taking this approach places you — quietly perhaps — in the chair next to the Wahabist King of Muslim Saudi Arabia.

So much for your good old Texan spiritual piety.

However, just as long as you remain the Bible Study somewhere near Dallas, all the other righteous men sitting in the circle of bliss will, most likely, have a similar outlook.  Add a few drawling Southerners in the Congress and a well fed clutch of futures commodities speculators and we have what we have now.

A hostage situation.

And, all this blather is not just a hostage situation, it’s a well heeled extortion scheme replete with every commercial media — including otherwise occasionally credible participants such as PBS — scrambling to repeat, as often as possible, every kind of carefully manufactured lie about the utter, stark raving mad possibilities of doing anything even slightly different than what we are doing now.

King Saud, seldom much of a news maker, consolidated the attitude with remarkable clarity in one of his most recent declarations.  His agent was in the midst of OPEC representatives who were considering whether or not to increase oil production.  The King’s position?

It’s nice to have oil prices high because we get even more revenue, however, we don’t want them too high because it will cause the development of petroleum alternatives and put us out of business.

OPEC wasn’t any more interested in the King’s wisdom than they were concerned about wrecking the developed world’s economies.  The point here is that the Texas petrogarch and the Saudi King share this self-protective outlook.  Further, both the little petrogarchs and the King, along with the grisly clutch of other players in the scheme, are quite willing to pay the US Congress whatever it takes to make sure they continue to control the oil spigot and the gas pump prices.

Obsfucations, Tangled Statistics and Outright Lies

It’s important to remember that all of this hanky panky is not occurring in the wide open fields of a free economy.  In fact, the price of oil, generally, has almost no connection to its intrinsic value, its utility or any remaining ghostly presence of the  traditional (and now, practically imaginary) supply and demand economic price carburator.

Instead, a media campaign has conveniently replaced all the historically valid mechanisms for price determination — along with public ideas about the prospect of developing alternatives — especially the impossible obstacles the brave industry is facing with each one.

The advent of cars such as the hybrid Prius literally drove a splintered wooden stake through the hearts of these oil producers, oil sellers and oil pricers.  But, even this brave new technology amounted to little more than holding a flickering candle to the tip of the petroleum scheme’s iceberg.

Fact one:”  Gasoline prices would go down if more domestic drilling were to be allowed by the over regulating socialists in the Obama administration.

Fact two:”  Alternative energy sources — notably solar and wind energy — are clever trinkets which can never serve as a serious national energy source.

Fact three:”  The charlatans who have “tricked” huge research money out of the Green Energy coffers of the stimulus package will never develop anything close to a scale solution to the problem.

Fact four:”  Any sort of credible energy solution remains decades away, and it is actually too early to start experimenting with any of the stuff currently available.

Fact five:”  If the US is ever going to have any workable alternative to its current fossil fuel addiction, the existing energy companies will be the ones with the commercial expertise to finally create it.

Fact six:”  The Arabs and the crusty petrogarch’s are not the only ones getting sickeningly rich from the high prices.  If you have a 401K or mutual fund stocks, petroleum profits help support the returns you are receiving on your investment.  (Oooops.)

Fact seven:”  Any kind of a possible energy policy which even so much as implies the slightest accountability on the industry itself is just the next Obama attempt to nationalize another vital part of the economy.

Fact Eight:“  All possible technological developments are so shaky and far off and current  economic conditions are so grave that we cannot possibly even think about doing anything at all about CO2 saturation and climate change.

Where Do We Go From Here?
Just stand there at the pump and keep paying whatever is asked.

It would be something of a feather in the hat of MeanMesa if, at this depressing point, a credible, comprehensive solution could be announced.  Sorry.  That kind of miracle is “above MeanMesa’s pay grade.”

Wait.  “Beyond MeanMesa’s pay grade?”

In terms of technology, no question.  In terms of management, maybe not.  This little blog refuses to accept the premise that the petrogarch/media induced paralysis is so implacable that absolutely no possible constructive course of action can be reasonably undertaken at the moment.  Nonsense.

Here’s the plan.

Someone important, probably the President himself, instructs the Nobel Prize winning Secretary of Energy, Mr. Chu, to put together a detailed plan, a step by step outline, of absolutely everything that we as a nation could possibly do to solve the energy and climate crisis.  Further, the eight “facts”

These do not represent anything more than a crippling, gaseous public relations campaign, a very, very dirty data set to adopt as a beginning.  Biden would be a good choice to “chat it up” with the petrograch owned Congress with the mission of “softening up” the inevitable counter attacks.

The plan is going to list — and, list in detail — what action can be taken to solve the problem.

MeanMesa sees the challenge, at least at the outset, to be two huge collections of obstacles.  Electrical generation is one, and transport energy is the other.  In the end, we will see that transport energy will gradually become electrical energy, consolidating the two.

Electrical and Transport Energy

The President has already announced that the country will have to have both renewable generation capacity and a modernized energy distribution capacity to actually use the generation capacity.  So, let’s get busy.

How many windmills and solar panels will it take?  How can we use the government to pay for them?  Where will we have to put them?  Who owns the land that we will need?  How much will it cost to buy the equipment?  How much will it cost to buy the land?

What is the “end game” – that is, what will the country look like after we have solved the energy crisis?  How do we get the government to prioritize energy conservation in every house and building the country?  How much does that cost?  How do we begin?  How will we know when we are finished?

What sources of energy have we decided to be using in 2015, 2020?  (We should be finished by then.  Yes, finished.)

How will we convert all the cars and trucks to hybrid or electrical drive systems?  How much will it cost?  How long will it take?  How efficient can we get?  What sources and distribution systems will we need to build?  When will we have to have them complete?

What do we need to do to the railroads and road systems?  When do we start?  How much will it cost?  How efficient will it be?  What roads and tracks will we begin to modify immediately?  What is the schedule to complete all of this work?  How much will each project cost?  How will the government get this done?

There are plenty more questions where these came from — each one will be framed as a fiscal impossibility as we go along.  We will be able to hear the Southern drawl of the ”old America” bellowing all the way through this process.  We will hear all the “facts” about why it didn’t work after we have finished.

Raise your hand if you want to stay where we are.

The Politics

We can call this a “stimulus” if we absolutely have to, and, there will plenty of legislative “firepower” demanding that we do exactly that.  Screw them.   It’s been so long since the United States flexed its problem solving muscles that most Americans believe it is no longer possible for the nation to solve any problem, at all regardless of the size or complexity of it.

The bad guys have done their work well.  It has always served to their advantage to make us feel hopeless.

This program can break that spell.  It won’t be easy, but the President has demonstrated over and over that he doesn’t intend to shy away from what may have been presented as overwhelming, intractable difficulties.  Further, Obama will not be walking into this as a blindfolded Pollyanna waiting for a ride to the prom.

That’s not his style.

Emboldened by his re-election and, most likely, equipped with a Congress interested in something besides four more anti-abortion bills, this plan can actually unfold into exactly the kind of national success that will break the suffocating malaise the GOPCons have spent so much cash promoting.

So, President Obama, although MeanMesa realizes that you’re rather busy fighting the Bush Wars, saving Medicare, balancing the budget and fighting off the bigots who call themselves conservatives, put the plan together.  At least, give the order to make the plan.

Then you’ll be ready to announce the path forward in December of 2012.

For more articles by Chad Hall, please visit his website:  Mean Mesa

Carlsbad Caverns fire over 30,000 acres now, 25% contained. Photos. Reply

A 30,500-acre wildfire sparked Monday afternoon, forcing the evacuation and closure of Carlsbad Caverns National Park.

Twenty-two structures, including the visitors’ center, are threatened. Park housing and White City, N.M., are also threatened at this time.

What started as a 40-acres fire had grown to 25,000 in less than 24 hours as officials said 35-mph winds continue to fuel the wildfire.

The Caverns are currently closed and will not open until the fires have been contained.  The cause of the fire is not yet known.