Thursday, October 26, 2006

Nov 7th



If 60 to 75 dollar a barrel oil has created labour shortages and a rise in the price of construction and manufacturing the likes of which we have seen in Alberta within the last year, what is 150 or 200 a dollar a barrel going to do when peak oil hits?

On November the 7th, at the Ponoka Legion, there will be a screening of "The End of Suburbia" followed by a lecture and question session headed by Ricardo Acuna, executive Director of the Parkland Institute.

The purpose of the screening, aside from raising awarness about Peak Oil, will be an attempt at predicting what is ahead for local Albertan communities in an energy constrained future. Admission is free and the event itself starts at 7:00 PM.

Tuesday, October 24, 2006

Whatever

I skipped math today. Woke up at about 7:30, had breakfast and did some other things, of which included watching an old 9 minute documentary of the making of Blink 182's last album before they broke up on you tube. I don't think I've ever talked about blink on here have I? I'll have to remind myself to do that one of these days since the last album they created is one of the most inspirational cds I've ever heard. But that's for another time.

Watching the documentary made me start thinking about how much I really hate driving to classes, especially math. I'm never going to use the bloody stuff yet I have to waste 500 dollars and copious amounts of time on it so I can get into the U of C so more math teachers can be supplied with jobs. It also made me start thinking about how much I would really rather be recording music for a living. Well, of course there is no way that would pay the bills, but you know, it'd be nice to have it be a part time thing that I'd work on while I wasn't working at a grocery store or wherever. I'd certainly be a happier person. You know why? Because when doing this- classes and paying attention to everything around you- I find it just about impossible to be care free. That's why I loved Blink's last album, it had this fresh kind of uplifting sound to it that I can't explain. I'm able to put myself into this mindframe where I can't be touched and I sometimes think if I was writing music I could feel like that more often. I know I do when I give myself the time to write. With music there is nothing but what you choose to accept in there. I can't explain how blissful that type of simplicity is. With classes and issues you're working towards an end, but you're never there; with music the work is just as important as the end. The fact that you're writing, purging and creating at the same time is its own reward. There is no uncertainty and I can honestly say uncertainty is one of the most unpleasent things I would imagine human beings can live with.

Other random things:

-I want to live in what the Chinese would prefer I don't refer to as Tibet for a while. Why was it that the one religion that got it right in this godforsaken world had to be situated in marching distance of the Chinese?

-I want to build a house made out of renewable energies or have the the grid provide me energy made from renewables.

-I seem to have developed a slight obsession with Tim Hortens coffee and bagels.

-Angels and Airwaves had great potential but fell far short of it, with the exception of the first single, and Tom Delonge needs to stop pulling this Axel Rose shit with his videos.

-Speaking of olf Blink members, despite it not being very uplifting, Plus 44's new album sounds like it's going to be quite interesting.

-The Jolly Farmer, in Ponoka, is the greatest pub in Alberta (well, that I've been to anyways). Alberta pubs suck.

-I'm president of Political Science Society, despite giving a speech that would have kicked my own ass, because no one was running against me.

-We held a PC Q and A forum for some of the candidates looking to replace Klein yesterday. Of the two I had a chance to talk to after (Oberg and Doerksen) neither new anything about peak oil. Nice guys though I guess.

-Harry Potter is the greatest book series my generation will probably see for the next 50 years.

-I seem to be watching a lot of chick flicks lately.

That is all.

Tuesday, October 17, 2006

With a smile...




The Military Commisions Act

The bill forbids treatment of detainees that would constitute war crimes - such as torture, rape and biological experiments - but gives the president the authority to decide which other techniques interrogators can use.


But as they say, the devil is in the details

The acts of torture now made legal and wholesome include the burning of flesh, the breaking of bones, the placing of needles under fingernails, the tearing of limbs, the disfiguring of faces, and the infliction of general bodily injury that may or may not entail – the fine print of the law isn't clear, making it all the more nefarious, as fine print always is – the loss of a finger or a toe or a testicle.


If this is true I really don't know what to say. If it is it will be perversely ironic considering The Onion was joking around a couple weeks ago about congress debating what voltage of electricity was too extreme to use on male or female genitalia during interrogation.

Sunday, October 15, 2006

Purgatory is a means to an end, nothing more. Because make no mistake, while this is not hell, this is most certainly not heaven. If it were everyone would be with those they love.

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Taking a punch to save a bullet (clean coal?)

It's ten days before the Alberta Youth Environmental Summit in Kannanaskis and in a couple hours I'm going to be heading out to the legislature in Edmonton to meet some NDP'ers who are going to be attending as well.

I've been trying to gather issues to bring up when I'm there between the 11-13 but of course one issue will dominate whatever time I have for my agenda and that will be peak oil. This week I was talking to my poli sci teacher about what I was going to miss while I was away and during the course of the discussion we ended up talking about Alberta and clean coal. At first I was asking Dave if he could think of a retort to the argument that individual communities should be taking initiatives to become less dependant on fossil fuels because when global oil and gas production peak, other than rising inflation, a by product will be a switch to coal as a primary energy source which will of course worsen global warming. I figured I might as well throw this to Dave to get an idea of how others at the summit might respond to it. However, from this question Dave pointed out, apparently based on an opinion peice written by Red Deer MP Bob Mills (one of the few environmental conservative MPs in this country) that within the next 5-10 years China is planning to bring online over 500 coal fired plants to provide electricity to their citizens who are becoming less poor as time goes on. What does any of this have to do with Alberta's environment you ask? Well, because Alberta has vast coal reserves and obviously vast amounts of unconventional oil in the tar sands, we're going to reap a lot of money as hydrocarbon prices begin to rise, leaving us with the task of where to divert this cash flow too. Dave thinks that because the federal conservatives know they are vaunrable on the environment, they're going to announce a plan to invest in clean coal technology, with numerous research grants going to the U of A to research the technology. The onus being if we could actually create the technology we could make up for failing to meet our Kyoto targets by migitating the effect China's 500 coal fired plants are going to have on the environment and perhaps even dampen inflation when it rears its ugly head again.

Of course the question then remains though, what happens if we spend all of this money on trying to develop the technology and we fail?

Not really a black and white issue. Then again what is these days?

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Other food for thought:

Back in the summer, provincial NDP energy critic David Eggan commented on Micheal Ignatieff's campaign pledge to create a carbon tax for consumers saying it was a horrible idea because Albertan's are alrady taxed enough on fuel consumption as it is. Given that Mr Eggan had come to speak almost a year earlier at a screening of "The End Of Suburbia" in the Red Deer College I was suprised to hear such a statement coming from him; not to mention since he represents the NDP in Alberta here. A couple weeks ago Jeff Sloychuck, former president of The Red Deer College Political Science Society, and a current assistant to provincial NDP leader Brian Mason, contacted me through e-mail inquiring as to whether or not I was aware of the youth environmental summit coming up and whether or not I had contacted my local MLA to see if I could participate . I replied back informing him that I was already going as a delegate for my riding of Ponoka-Lacombe. I also however took the time to bring up the Eggan's comment and to ask him whether it was representative of the NDP is general. This is what he replied back with:


Hello again Daniel, sorry for the delay.

I just got off the phone with Mr. Eggen, and here's the short answer to your query:

A carbon tax is unpalatable to the NDP because it puts a disproportionate amount of onus on the consumer, rather than the producer of the industrial waste. Ignatieff, as well as Al Gore, would like nothing more than to leave the question of environmental change up to each isolated individual. After all, that's the church of liberalism
(good ol' political science, eh?). While there is no question that each individual has a role to play, in the vast sea of production, it is a drop in the bucket. The real producers are Celanese Canada, Syncrude,Suncor, etc., etc., the list goes on!

In social democracy's continued emphasis on 'working people', the 'working class', or whatever the rhetoric of the day is, a carbon tax based directly on whatever means they use to get to work to pay their steadily increasing bills and cost of living with the steadily declining purchasing power and the provisions of the welfare state is unfair, and unrealistic.

The regulatory onus must be put square on the polluters who contribute to the lion's share of global warming. In the meantime, more emphasis should be put on urban planning and public transportation by policy makers who want to ease a person's reliance upon the automobile. Cities should receive a larger portion of the federal gas tax in order to achieve their goals in expanded bus routes and extended light rail transit (a federal issue). Tax incentives are helpful in a bid to lessen
the middle classes' reliance upon their vehicles in getting to work, but increasing the tax burden on working families by the means of a flat, regressive carbon tax is ignoring the real environmental enemies - the world's largest polluters are corporations!

Of course, Mr. Eggen could have never explained that in two lines of newspaper text. I have an opinion piece of his that he wrote for the Journal not too long ago, but it is in paper form and I need to track down an electronic source (online Journal costs money). We also have several substantial position papers ranging from Kyoto to the Green Fund to creating Green jobs, also in paper form, as well as a mountain of party policy that would have to be requested from ericab@shaw.ca...


Like I said, just somethings to think about.