Posts regarding ‘Your Basic Wierdness’

Copenhagen- Pusillanimous Pundits and Politicos play-for-profit with our Planet

December 16th, 2009 by garnet

Once again, Democracy Now! brings us the news corporate media won’t. Amy Goodman and her team have been covering the COP 15 climate summit in Copenhagen. I am not proud to say that the U.S.A. has been identified  (by essentially the rest of the world )  as “obstructionist” on issues of climate change. The 100,000 (!) people that showed up to have their voices heard as citizens of this earth have been “pre-emptively detained” (habeus corpus is such a quaint idea, don’t you think?) and it appears that the men and women behind the curtain have no wish to hear the concerns of the people. Oh, woe unto them.   more at :

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2009/12/16-0

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If not Nau, when?

December 14th, 2009 by garnet

The following article was published on on the website www.commondreams.org. It looks like something’s happening there, Mr. Jones. “There” being Copenhagen, where the attention of the world is turned right now. This may indeed be a tipping point, in several ways.

Published on Sunday, December 13, 2009 by IPS/TerraViva
December 12th Was a Tipping Point

by Saleemul Huq

COPENHAGEN – I have been working on climate change for many years, first as a researcher in my native Bangladesh and later as head of the climate change group at the International Institute for Environment and Development, and as a member of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.I have seen first-hand the threats climate change poses in places such as the drylands of Africa, the mountains of the Himalayas and the vast low-lying deltas of Asia. I have observed years of inaction at UN climate change summits that have failed to deliver the response needed because negotiators have chosen to protect narrow national and economic interests instead of rising to the challenge of protecting future generations.

I have jousted verbally with climate-change deniers who have strong links to polluting industries and who have never set foot in the vulnerable villages and urban communities where climate change is already having impacts. If they did they would realise the damage their ideology does to the people who have contributed least to this global threat.

And now, in Copenhagen in December 2009, I believe we have reached a tipping point. I truly believe that Copenhagen will be remembered in years to come, not for what happens on 18 December when world leaders meet here, but for what just happened on 12 December.

This marked the day that people from all walks of life all over the world seized the initiative from our so-called leaders. Regardless of the words these presidents and prime ministers decide in a “protocol” or “agreement” next week, it is the people of the world who have put the writing on the wall!

The leaders who choose to read those words will take us forward. Those who ignore them will be swept away by the tide of history.

Yesterday marked the point when a large part of the world rose up as one to tackle a truly global challenge. Although there may be temporary setbacks (like a less-than-ambitious deal next week) the tide has already turned. It cannot be turned back.

Regardless of how much we achieve next week – and I remain optimistic in spite of the political manoeuvrings last week – we are set on a new and inexorable path. The leaders who understand that may come from the most unexpected of quarters. Keep your eye, for instance, on President Mohamed Nasheed of tiny Maldives.

In a few months I shall be moving back to Bangladesh to fight real climate change, as opposed to fighting against bad (or inadequate) climate change policies. My ambition over the coming years is to help the people of one of the poorest and most vulnerable – and yet resilient and innovative – countries transform itself from being the world’s iconic “vulnerable” country to being recognised as perhaps its most “adaptive” country.

I am going home to set up a new International Centre for Climate Change and Development (ICCCAD) where we aim to ramp up the capacity of governments, civil society organisations, researchers, academics, journalists and many others from developing countries to respond to the challenges that climate change poses.

The new centre will provide training and share knowledge on how to survive (and indeed even thrive) in a globally warmed world. It will focus primarily on adaptation to climate change in the least developed nations but will not stop there.

Indeed we are planning to provide capacity building for industrialised countries on how to face adverse climatic impacts. Ironically, unlike most of the world’s poorest countries, the rich world that has caused this problem has not done detailed planning on how to adapt.

I am returning to the front line of climate change where the real fight is already underway. I go there knowing that millions of people around the world share my hopes and my optimism that humanity can unite to tackle the challenge that now defines our life on Earth.
© 2009 IPS/TerraViva
Saleemul Huq, Senior fellow, International Institute for Environment and Development.

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Attention, People of Earth

November 1st, 2009 by Clarke

435px-Alien…and now for something completely different. I’ve been getting the New Yorker magazine since I was 15 years old as a present from my parents. That’s a lot of damn New Yorkers, baby. Anyway, they have this sort of comedy column every week, Shout and Murmurs, which over the years has probably shaped my humor, along with George Carlin, more than anything. Anyways, I just wanted to share this recent column that I thought was right on, hitting the sweet spot of human folly, so to speak. Okay, no more analysis, here it is:

Attention, People of Earth

Okay, now back to the typical Nauhaus building science geek-out…. god how I love it!

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Wine Opening 101

July 10th, 2009 by Seldom

I recommend a deep threaded screw such as a #7 x 1-5/8″ trim head auger point. For longevity, 316 stainless steel is ideal for highly acidic wines such as a late harvest Johannisberg Riesling. For a higher pH premium California Chardonnay you may be able to get by with less expensive 305 stainless if you are careful to rinse and dry your equipment thoroughly after every use. However, 316 stainless is also highly resistant to salt water corrosion, an important consideration if you attend seminars near the ocean. Any variable speed drill with a 300 rpm low speed setting should be do the job. Finally, as always, be sure to wear your safety glasses, be careful, and have fun. IMG_0423 IMG_0421

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The Discipline of DE

April 8th, 2009 by snugganut

This short film by Gus van Sant, based upon an essay by William S. Burroughs, hilariously presents a more satisfying and pleasant way to live.  Last night, a few Nauhaus comrades and friends tried the method of simply re-doing anything that gets clumsily screwed-up, and it was very successful.  The well-executed delivery of the ice cream made it even more delicious.  Thanks, Joe!

DE is a way of doing. It is a way of doing everything you do. DE simply means doing whatever you do in the easiest most relaxed way you can manage, which is also the quickest and most efficient way, as you will find as you advance in DE.

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TGB Music Night

February 17th, 2009 by admin

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Womb Shark!

January 15th, 2009 by Seldom

Have a nice day.

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A Serious Discussion About Chipmunks & Peak Oil

November 25th, 2008 by admin

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