Archive for April, 2008

Feed your Prius, starve a peasant

I love Mark Steyn. Yes, he does take his views to the extreme, but the point I really take from this article, and what I whole-heartedly agree with, is that for every knee-jerk reaction to the crisis-of-the-moment, there are unintended and potentially disastrous consequences.

The biofuels debacle is global warm-mongering in a nutshell: The first victims of poseur environmentalism will always be developing countries. In order for you to put biofuel in your Prius and feel good about yourself for no reason, real actual people in faraway places have to starve to death. –Mark Steyn

Feed your Prius, starve a peasant

Okay, so I know that’s taking it a bit–a large bit–far, but I do wonder what the consequences, both nationally and globally, are for our current hyper-reactivity to the global warming “crisis.” I don’t think there is should be any argument that our climate is changing. It’s always changing. Every year, every century, the Earth’s climate changes. I mean, we had snow yesterday… in late April! What I find very troubling about all the chatter on global warming is that not too long ago–perhaps 30 years–everyone was convinced that the world was headed straight for another ice age. Just exactly how much more advanced is our understanding of how climate change occurs now? The debate on the issue is just not settled. And anyone who is not willing to at least engage in a discussion obviously has some other interests to protect. (At least that’s what it seems like to me.)

Is reducing the amount of pollution we put into our atmosphere a good thing? Yes. Is investing in alternative energy sources a good investment for our future? Absolutely. But we need to be responsible in our approach. To me, responsibility means taking time to analyze new technologies and what impact large-scale utilizations of them will have. Next year at about this time, I imagine the polar ice caps will still be more frozen than not, and the ice on our beloved lakes will have gone out as usual. My point being that we have time to figure it out. This is not a “crisis” that needs to be “solved” in the next decade, especially when the potential solutions could have consequences much more immediately harmful than the problem.

Movie Making 101

So I made my first attempt at a clip compilation video last night. Unfortunately the only tool available to me was Windows Movie Maker. I think it turned out okay, but it definitely was a chore trying to get the audio and video tracks to sync up correctly. And even after all that effort it proved to be impossible to save the file to something other than .WMV without losing all synchronization completely. So I was forced to upload to YouTube without pre-encoding it for better quality. Ahh well.

Still, I’m sorta proud of it, and hey, it was a good night to remember!

Martinis and coaster football

So last night was kinda fun. I managed to go out to three different places and not get home until past midnight. Not bad for a school night! Eric was up for the weekly trip to the office, which naturally was followed by all of us going to the Don’s for margaritas, chips and salsa. Usually we spend a couple hours discussing work and how wonderful it is, but last night was pretty short. No one seemed like talking to much and we didn’t stay long. I think the unpleasantness of our current work environment is getting to us. It’s not good when you can’t even get up the energy to bitch and complain. Not a good sign at all.

After the DP, Cutshy and I chilled at DB for a while before deciding coffee was too stimulating. We determined that to balance things out we required some fancy martinis. So we headed off to the Loop, sending mass txts along the way in the -usually- vain hope that we could persuade a number of friends to join us.

Fortunately we were in luck.  Adam, Pablo, Eric, Amy, Dave B, Aaron S, Viktoria and Chad all swung by (in that order too) .  Had some martinis, talked about random crap and capped the evening by playing coaster football.  All in all a good night.

It’s Saturday, not Thursday!

It is a gorgeous Saturday afternoon in April in Minnesota.  If someone were to ask me what my favorite season is, I would almost surely say Fall, but this Spring (and probably every Spring for that matter) is really making me re-evaluate that choice.  Of course the only think I am doing on this beautiful Spring day is sitting at my computer getting things organized.  But I’m okay with that.  I turn around and look outside and it makes me happy.

So I finally took the time to set up this blog again.  It’s been neglected for a while, but maybe this time I’ll keep at it.  Who knows?  Anyway, I think it’s going to be a good day today.