Motley Moose – Archive

Since 2008 – Progress Through Politics

Archive for June 2010

BP Failed Long Before the BOP* Failed

*BOP = Blow out Preventor

I do not often recommend that folks head over to the WSJ for anything, but today I make an exception. As BP continues to spin this disaster as a failure of technology – the BOP’s failure. Someone from the oil and gas industry has finally come along and declared Bull Shit!

Terry Barr, the writer of this letter to the editor in response to Hayward’s WSJ Op Ed on June 4th, is President of Samson Oil and Gas Limited  which is a Australian based oil & gas company holding extensive development and exploration acreage in the USA. So I think the man knows of which he speaks.  He clearly lays the blame on BP and the failure of it’s people to follow standard industry practices that could have prevented this disaster BOP failure or not.



image courtesy the Young Turks

Republicans are making repeal of the Health Care Bill their Number 1 Priority in the House…

“They got everything else in the entire bureaucracy that they need to control our healthcare system … with the signing of this bill. … That’s why repealing this bill has to be our No. 1 priority.”

– Republican Minority Leader John Boehner on a live radio show announcing his intention.

Repubs are pulling this out on the week that the first b$250.00 Medicare supplement checks are going out to seniors. Tim Kaine, head of the Democratic National Committee is daring the Repubs to make this destructive repeal move the focus of their fall campaign to win back Congress and has challenged Boehner and Company to reveal the things they’d take away from Americans and give back to Insurance Companies.

Not So Super Tuesday

Yesterday, voters in 12 states cast ballots on a number of issues and a number of races. The chattering class has focused mostly on the Arkansas battle royale between Senate incumbent Blanche Lincoln and her only-slightly-more-left-leaning challenger, Bill Halter. We’ve also seen lots of gossip on the sex scandal-laden gubernatorial primary in South Carolina, and pondered the matchups for high-stakes races in both Nevada and California.

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Turnout was expected to be low in the Golden State, largely due to the lack of competition in Democratic races and the absence of off-the-chart controversial ballot measures. My polling place was hopping last night however, and I didn't see any people in the crowd wearing tricorn hats and breeches, so that’s encouraging. Should be interesting to see what the turnout gap was, or if there was much of one at all. Lately, I'm having a hard time buying the 'Dems are doomed' meme that the TradMed has been pushing. Anyhoo, some California result highlights, and a few thoughts on some of the other state/national contests are below the fold.

Traditional Food Crops Provide Community Resilience in Face of Climate Change

Thanks to Dr. Soul Shava, Training Manager at the Aurecon Training Academy, in Pretoria, South Africa for sharing a recent study, by researchers from Rhodes and Cornell Universities and the Sebakwe Black Rhino Conservation Trust, on indigenous crops with the Nourishing the Planet project. We encourage everyone to continue to send in suggestions for examples of, and writing about, environmentally sustainable agriculture innovations to dnierenberg@worldwatch.org. Your input is helping to shape our research! Written by Ronit Ridberg and cross posted from Nourishing the Planet.

A recent study by researchers from Rhodes and Cornell Universities and the Sebakwe Black Rhino Conservation Trust found that traditional food crops, such as mubovora (pumpkin) and ipwa (sweet reed), are an important source of community resilience in Zimbabwe-including resilience to climate change and economic turbulence.

Unlike traditional crops, the majority of commercial crops that have been introduced to the region “are not adapted to local conditions and require high inputs of agrochemical inputs such as fertilizers, mechanization, and water supply,” according to the study. These crops tend to be more vulnerable to climatic changes, such as the drought and subsequent flooding that occurred in Zimbabwe’s Sebakwe area in 2007-08.

To avoid some of these challenges, many communities and farmers turned-and returned-to growing traditional and indigenous crops. By incorporating indigenous vegetables and increasing crop diversity, farmers improved their diets and increased agricultural resilience to pest, diseases, and changes in weather. Planting different varieties of maize and millet also enabled farmers to match specific crops to their own microclimates.

Additional benefits of growing more diverse crops include seed saving and the processing of traditional foods. With dried and other preserved traditional foods, communities have a more secure and reliable food source during the off-seasons. And seed saving and sharing enable communities to remain independent from commercial agricultural companies, helping to ensure future food security.

For more on the benefits of growing indigenous vegetables as crops, see Innovation of the Week: Homegrown Solutions to Alleviating Hunger and Poverty, Keeping Weeds for Nutrition and Taste, and Creating a Well-Rounded Food Revolution.

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Catch More Oil With A Better Mousetrap? An Openly Minded Thread

BP is now collecting

In a comment to this Reuters article, user “Alkan” – a 70-something former oil and gas engineer – provides a

thoughtful comment
on the application of common sense to the problem, and a specific solution.  Is it the right one?  Sounds intelligent and practical to me, and certainly more common sense could be applied across the board to this disaster.

I repeat the comment in full below the fold. What thoughts do you have?

My Mom and Helen Thomas

My mother died eight years ago at the ripe old age of 92. She had a vibrant and exciting life. Over her lifetime she mingled with both the rich and powerful. She knew a wide range of people from Bing Crosby to D. K. Ludwig. She had met Presidents and Prime Ministers. She personally knew both poverty and wealth. She had lived through both war and peace. She was well educated and well read.

Yet, for all her worldliness, for all the people she knew and counted as friends both black, white, Christian and Jew she was a both a racist and a anti-Semite. When she was young and raising us she kept these beliefs very much to herself. I think down deep inside somewhere she knew she was wrong and made a very conscious not to pass these ideas onto her children.