Paul Ryan’s lies made him fail his V.P. “job interview”

Lyin' Ryan. Here's a great compilation of truth-telling about the lies Paul Ryan told at the Republican National Convention.  The last link is to a Jezebel post: "Why Lying is Bad: A Primer for Confused Republicans." Nicely done. Hopefully some right-wing commenters on this blog who habitually lie about global warming, Obama's policies, and other stuff will read the post. Excerpt: Yesterday at the Republican National Convention in Florida, vice-presidential nominee Paul Ryan got up and made a rousing speech about democracy and the future and why President Obama is a great big bozo who's pooping in America's mouth and…

Ghastly Clint Eastwood “speech” makes Romney look bad

Cringe-inducing. Creepy. Disturbing. That's how I felt about Clint Eastwood's horrible twelve minutes on stage at the Republican National Convention before Romney spoke.  It's also how I feel about voting for Romney. So I'm glad Eastwood's performance was bad. It reflects poorly on Romney, who is supposed to be such a great manager, on top of all the details. Well, one detail he wasn't on top of was Clint Eastwood. This has to go down as one of the most embarassing prime time appearances at a major party political convention. Eastwood wasn't funny. He wasn't inspiring. He stuttered and stammered.…

Regence of Oregon screws its individual policy-holders again in 2012

Yesterday the dreaded packet arrived from Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon, just as it does almost every year. Regence tries to hide what it's doing, but the truth is apparent: us individual policy-holders are getting screwed over again. OSPIRG lays out why Regence shouldn't get the big rate increases it asks for annually. I heartily agree. But a recent email from OSPIRG contains bad news that could have been even worse. State officials decided to trim Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon’s proposal to raise rates for more than 52,000 Oregonians with individual health insurance plans, according to documents made public…

American Meteorological Society strengthens global warming position

You've got a choice, global warming deniers: scurry further into the shadows of unreality, or come out into the sun of truth. I recommend the latter, because there's less and less room to hide. The previously almost deserted corridors of minority scientific opinion (97% of climate experts agree humans are causing global warming) are steadily becoming even less populated. Now the American Meteorological Society has put more pressure on global warming deniers, strengthening considerably its previous position statement on the subject. Here's excerpts from the August 2012 Information Statement of the American Meteorological Society: The following is an AMS Information…

The Onion’s 2001 jab at Bush fits Romney in 2012

Jim, a friend with progressive proclivities like my own, just sent me a link to a marvelous The Onion piece from January 2001: "Bush: 'Our Long National Nightmare of Peace and Prosperity is Finally Over." The Onion is all about humor. But it was seriously correct about Bush. Reminds me a lot of what Romney wants to do to the country: make the 99% of us poorer and more miserable, while making the 1% richer and happier. Mere days from assuming the presidency and closing the door on eight years of Bill Clinton, president-elect George W. Bush assured the nation…

Tell DirecTV you want the Pac-12 network. Now!

Saturday the OSU Beavers and Oregon Ducks start their football seasons. But us DirecTV subscribers won't be able to watch the Beavers on the Pac-12 network unless DirecTV works out a deal to get the channel. Do it, DirecTV! It wasn't long ago that we lost Comedy Central and other channels because of a corporate pissing match with Viacom. It was a pain in the butt to try to find The Colbert Report, Daily Show, and other necessities of life on Hulu or wherever. Don't screw us DirecTV subscribers again with a Pac-12 Network dispute.  If you're a DirecTV subscriber…

My 5 year old granddaughter has secret agent skills

I probably shouldn't be blogging about my granddaughter's clearly evident (to a proud grandfather, at least) secret agent skills, because this information could compromise her after she joins the CIA.  However, twenty or so years from now Evelyn will look much different, and she'll have changed her name. Plus, how do you know I'm using her real name? (I assure you I am... but can you trust me, since secret agent'ness obviously runs in the family.) Below is a video of my granddaughter using her wiles to completely fool me into engaging in behavior that isn't in my best interest,…

Napoleon’s Crêperie — our new favorite downtown Salem restaurant

I made an excellent choice, though sadly belated."Sadly," because for months I've been walking by the expanded Napoleon's Crêperie & Gelateria in downtown Salem, Oregon (189 Liberty Street NE) and didn't know what I was missing.  Never went in. Never ate there. Until last Thursday, during a visit by my daughter and granddaughter. We'd enjoyed the Riverfront Children's Museum and Carousel. I needed to refuel. "Crepes! We should get crepes!" I announced. I could tell that my eatery suggestion was met with some skepticism. My wife is health conscious. So is my daughter. My granddaughter, like most kids, knows what she likes to…

Romney wants to make Medicare enrollees pay more

Another day, another Romney-Ryan Medicare lie debunked. (Here's some previous lies.) Now we know that if Romney is able to do away with the Affordable Care Act's $716 billion in Medicare savings, Medicare recipients would pay hundreds of dollars more each year. So says "Patients Would Pay More if Romney Restores Medicare Savings, Analysts Say." The 2010 health care law cut Medicare reimbursements to hospitals and insurers, not benefits for older Americans, by that amount over the coming decade. But repealing the savings, policy analysts say, would hasten the insolvency of Medicare by eight years — to 2016, the final year…

Why I cancelled our Newsweek subscription

I don't want to subscribe to a news magazine that isn't interested in facts. This is why I emailed Newsweek today: "Please cancel our subscription. We don't want a refund. We just don't want to see your magazine in our mailbox anymore." Ever since Newsweek became a weird combination of what it was before, and Tina Brown's "Daily Beast" online site, I've been enjoying the magazine less and less.  I can get bizarre stories and opinionated rants for free on the Internet. What I wanted from Newsweek is what I get from TIME: thoughtful analysis and intelligent commentary. But this…

How electric cars compare to gas cars, global warming emissions-wise

Thanks to Climate Progress, I now know how our Chevy Volt stacks up against fully gasoline powered cars when it is running on electric power -- which it does most of the time, since we're getting at least forty miles per charge and we rarely drive further than that. It turns out that even with electricity being partially generated by fossil fuel sources, here in the western part of the United States a gas car would need to get 73 mpg (which none do) to equal the emissions resulting from an electric car powered on the grid. The situation will…

Zakaria gets it right about gun control (even with a little plagiarism)

Unfortunately, Fareed Zakaria's August 20 essay in TIME magazine, "The Case for Gun Control," got more attention for the rather mild plagiarism he indulged in (which led to a one month suspension) than the substance of his piece. I heard Zakaria summarize the essay in a podcast of his GPS program. I was impressed by how he focused on simple facts, which led to virtually irrefutable conclusions. Gun violence in the United States is much higher than in comparable countries not because Americans are crazier and more immoral than people in those other countries. It's higher because we have a…

Romney’s lies about Medicare debunked by PolitiFact

PolitiFact isn't always correct. But it's a heck of a lot more factual than most politicians. Including Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan, who are spreading lies about what they and President Obama want to do with Medicare. Here's some recent PolitiFact rulings which show that Romney and Ryan are lying, while Obama and his campaign are telling the truth. Barack Obama says Paul Ryan's Medicare plan could raise costs for Medicare beneficaries by $6,000 each. Mostly True. The difference between $12,500 (the out-of-pocket costs under the Ryan plan in 2022) and $6,150 (the out-of-pocket costs that year under traditional Medicare)…

Another confused Oregonian editorial against marijuana legalization

So much for balance on the Oregonian's editorial page. Unless I've missed a pro Oregon Cannabis Tax Act (Measure 80) opinion piece, today's confused guest editorial by Young Republican Brendan Monaghan is the third non-sensical "anti-pot" rant in a row.  (My previous demolishings of the Oregonian's reasonings are here and here.) Monaghan's sole justification for voting against legalization of marijuana for consumption by adults is that this would run afoul of federal law. Ridiculous federal law, which classifies marijuana in the same category as heroin and recognizes no medical use for it. However, Monaghan's Facebook page contains a favorite slogan of…

Why I’m not going to wait for a 13 inch Retina MacBook Pro

Rumor has it (isn't Mr/Ms Rumor a reliable source?) that a 13 inch Retina Macbook Pro will be announced by Apple on September 12, along with the long-awaited iPhone 5 and probably other goodies. I've used a 13 inch MacBook Pro for over three years. Love it! At least I did, until the 15 inch Retina MacBook Pro was released. Since, I've bounced back and forth about what Apple laptop should replace my aged current one. On the day of the release I blogged, "New Retina MacBook Pro or MacBook Air? Laptop lust will decide." At that point I was…

Wyden needs to fight Romney-Ryan Medicare plan

Oregon Senator Ron Wyden used to have a sterling reputation for fighting to preserve, and improve, health services for seniors. Now, not so much.  Having partnered with Paul Ryan in 2011 on an approach that would give seniors the option of remaining on traditional Medicare or getting a voucher to buy private insurance, Wyden now is being touted by Mitt Romney as an example of how Ryan reaches across the aisle for bipartisan solutions. “One of the things I like about Paul Ryan is he’s demonstrated ... an ability to work across the aisle, to find people who have a…

Warning should come with 2012 Portland Street of Dreams

Last Friday my wife and I, along with two south Salem neighbors, ventured up I-5 to experience the 2012 version of Northwest Natural's Portland-area Street of Dreams.  We enjoyed ourselves, but after gawking at seven houses in the $950,000 to $1,300,000 price range I felt like every admission ticket should come with a warning: Visitors to the Street of Dreams are hereby warned that after viewing these houses, you will find your own home disgusting and unlivable. Everything you like about your current home will seem shabby and horribly out of date. Unless you're a 1%'er, what you lust for…

Progressive me is happy with Romney’s Paul Ryan pick

Thank you, Mitt Romney. You've eased my anxieties about Obama being re-elected. I've been worried that you'd choose a running mate who would have a Wow! factor, someone charismatic moderates and independents would gravitate toward, who could juice up your campaign with a jolt of energy. But Paul Ryan is an excellent choice... to us progressives. I suspect Obama's advisors engaged in some high-fiving when it became apparent yesterday that Ryan would be the vice-presidential pick.  It didn't take long for a "The Go Back Team" website to pop up on www.barackobama.com, complete with horrifying facts about the Ryan/Romney embrace…

Global warming science shows why shipping coal to China is stupid

Plans are afoot to ship vast quantities of coal to China through ports in Oregon and Washington. Coal trains over a mile long would chug through the Columbia Gorge. Likely they'd spew polluting coal dust.

Coaltopia
Certainly all that coal, after being burned in China, would markedly further pollute the Earth's atmosphere with carbon dioxide. This is the best reason for not allowing the northwest to be China's coal shovel.

Science is solidly on the side of those who oppose the export terminals, such as the Sierra Club.

Today I listened to a podcast of Fareed Zakaria's GPS program where he interviewed Richard Muller, a physicist at the University of California who used to be a global warming skeptic, but now embraces the scientific facts.

Muller said that natural gas emits one-third of the carbon dioxide that coal does. So even though "fracking" is decried by many environmentalists, the plus side of unlocking new supplies of natural gas is the reduced greenhouse gas emissions if less coal is used.

Muller emphasized how important it is that China, India, and other developing nations cut down on their coal consumption. (I've added boldface emphasis to the transcript.)

ZAKARIA: And what do you think, you know, when you look at the issue of what to do about it, there are people who say, look, the only thing we can do is — what's called adaptation. We should rotate crops, we should build dikes, we should do those kinds of things, and then there are people who say, no, the problem is so serious, you have to actually get at the root cause and slow down the emission of CO2.

MULLER: I believe in the latter. And you — adaptation, we're very adaptable species. But adaptation is always disruptive, and it hurts. Let's see what we can do. And the biggest thing we have to do — we have to recognize that the reason the carbon dioxide is shooting up is not because of the U.S. Ours have actually been going down over the last few years as we switch from coal to natural gas.

Natural gas emits only one third the carbon dioxide that does coal. If we are going to do something about this, there are two things we have to do. One is energy conservation efficiency, that's really important. A huge amount we can do there.

Number two is we've got to switch the world, China, India, and particularly the developing world away from coal and on to natural gas. But that's a solution that a lot of my environmentalist friends don't like because they have decided they have to oppose hydraulic fracturing known as fracking. But in fact that is one of the two biggest things we can do. Energy conservation and the switch to natural gas from coal.

The rest of the interview also is well worth reading. I'll copy it in as a continuation to this post. Muller describes how he overcame his skepticism about both the accuracy of temperature measurements showing global warming, and the role of humans in causing it.

ZAKARIA: So when you look at the historical data now, is it fair to characterize the situation thus, that ever since the industrial revolution human beings have been pumping more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and that that increase in CO2 has been having the effect that we call global warming?

MULLER: That is my viewpoint on this. You can't prove it. It's always possible that something random is happening that just happens to match the carbon dioxide data. But it leads me to conclude that essentially all of this warming over the last 250, 260 years has been caused by greenhouse gases emitted by humans.

Here's the entire interview with Muller:

 

My dog and I are dead last in the WillaMutt Strut. As planned.

We did it! Serena and I finished just where we wanted to in the Willamette Humane Society's 1.5K (.9 mile) WillaMutt Strut Fun Walk last Saturday in Salem's Riverfront Park.  Last.  Serena is twelve and a half years old. That's something like 87 in dog years. So Serena has slowed down. A lot. My wife took our younger dog, Zu Zu, on the 5K walk. I was pretty sure Serena couldn't handle three-plus miles in August heat.  Hence, my plan was to let Serena do her usual walking thing -- which should guarantee that we'd end up in a distinctive…