20 November 2008

A Few Halloweens

So between working trips this fall, I've been trying to lay low and save money. However, there's been quite the run-up to Halloween as well. Some of us went to Busch Gardens' Hallowscream a couple of times. Also, Mark's friend Stephanie (fantastic name!) had a Halloween birthday party, where I debuted my costume as a lumberjack and Mark went as Superman (though I was worried it seemed to normal, but that just might be the Michigan in me, having seen people dress like this on a normal basis). The following weekend on actual Halloween night, we had friends over at our house to watch scary movies (including classics such as "My Bloody Valentine" about a crazed miner angry about Valentines Day parties and Jason 8: Jason Takes Manhattan) and dress in either costume or scary face paint. The day after Halloween, a coworker had a Halloween party at his house with the Lords of Misrule playing. I was pretty excited about my costume for this party, as you'll see below. There were some great costumes, including the second Sarah Palin of the season, a Dark-Knight-esque Joker, a pair of late-18th/early-19th century British military explorers complete with pith helmets, and a dead Alexander Hamilton. Here are some fun photos...

Halloween #1:

Mark taking in some quality literature between birthday party and karaoke (yes, in a Barnes & Noble in costume)

Lumberjack me and Superman Mark

Superman and Sarah Palin #1 (who sang her own version of "Redneck Woman" at karaoke, which a lot of Palin supporters loved and actually began talking politics with her to figure out if her song was a parody or a tribute)



Halloween #2:

Matt (he'd already partially taken off his costume) and Sally (covering up her makeup with her apparently annual tradition of stealing other costumes for photos)



Halloween #3:

Me (as Jack, complete with hedgehog) and Jack (thrilled to have his own tribute)

Scott's sister-in-law as Sarah Palin #2 and Jack

The Captain and Scott

Brian and Loren as Clint Eastwood and one of his movie cohorts



And a tribute to Mark Summers' costume as Alexander Hamilton (I couldn't pick just one):

Mark dueling with Jeff (rather gleefully)

Showing of his on-hand copy of the Federalist Papers

And if you didn't get it yet...

19 November 2008

A Month in Loudoun

So after spending my first weeks this school year out in southwestern Virginia, I spent a lot of time over the next four weeks mostly in Loudoun County (the county in the northern tip of Virginia, west of Fairfax County, east of Harpers Ferry, and south of Maryland) with some day trips to Richmond sprinkled in there. After my time (at the same hotel, even), I became friends with the staff of the hotel, with them even lamenting my leaving since I'd become a friendly and "familiar face."

Over those weeks, I travelled with many different staff members and pretty thoroughly explored Loudoun County and its environs. My first trip was just an overnight trip and I barely had time to do much other than my job. However, during my second week, my friend Jeff and I taught in and around Leesburg. Megan and Dirk were also in the area and came to hang out on one of our first afternoons. We went to Harper's Ferry one day and wandered around quite a bit. It had been a while since I'd been there (ten years, or so?) and I enjoyed wandering the streets and seeing a lot of the little shops. We actually ate dinner in the Secret Six Tavern, named after the secret six Yankee backers of John Brown and his raid. (photos: The John Brown wax statue in the window of the John Brown Wax Museum (sorry, it just brought back memories of the manchild...); the armory building, focal point of John Brown's raid, with Harpers Ferry in the background; Dirk, Megan, and Jeff overlooking the junction of the Shenandoah and Potomac Rivers, with Jeff too busy with his camera to socialize; Megan's face of disappointment when the train didn't come on the track immediately next to her, thus crushing her dream to reenact a scene from "Stand By Me;" and the sun about to set behind Harpers Ferry.)





Later that week, Jeff and I heard rumors that Barack Obama was having a rally in town, though we thought it wasn't until the weekend. Come to find out, the Obama for America campaign staffers that were staying at the hotel were actually there prepping for a rally the very next day. Luckily, we made it out of the school, back to the hotel to change, and to the park where the rally was to be held (via walking, luckily avoiding the standstill traffic!) in time to wait in line to make it in to the rally. We didn't have front-row positions, but the rally was held in a hollow between several small hills, so we had a close and elevated position that gave us a great view. The rally itself was fantastic, though also just what I'd expected based on when I saw him in Virginia Beach and from what I'd seen on television. (photos: Waiting in line for the rally; looking back over the hill at the crowd waiting for the rally to begin; Barack Obama comes on stage (my camera didn't have a great zoom, sorry!); the back part of the crowd with those that didn't make it into the rally watching from beyond the security checkpoint; and a different view from the rally.)





The next week, it was Megan and I up in Loudoun. We had a few things up our sleeves, though also trying to lay low and save as much money as possible. One day we went to Harper's Ferry again to finish visiting what we'd missed the last time. We also visited a place just west of Leesburg called "Dinosaur Land." It's an amazingly tacking and enjoyable tourist trap (dubbing itself as an "educational prehistoric forrest") of lots of cement-ish dinosaurs in a wooded area, though complete with a giant shark, octopus, praying mantis, king cobra, and King Kong. Genius. (photos: More fall colors in the return trip to Harpers Ferry; the octopus (from behind) that strangely lives by a cactus; me and my new friend the pteranodon; and a very frog-like protoceratops.)




(photos: Some dinosaurs in their habitat, including some battling in the background; more battling dinos, though we think that the big one was just broken and they added blood to the carnivore to make the "battle;" yup, it's pretty epic; and me with the King Kong, terrified, of course.)




Megan and I finished out the week with pie and dinner with her parents. The following week, I was back traveling by myself for the first part of the week, including on election night (though I enjoyed myself by being able to watch it all and keep tabs on friends and family all over the country). I also found a little British tea shop after teaching one day, complete with British proprietors, delicious British tea, and wonderfully authentic bangers and mash. Once some of my coworkers arrived for a different teaching assignment, Mark S. gave us a tour of Leesburg from his former tour-guiding days at the Loudoun County Museum. Like anything he does, the tour included tales of duels, Revolutionary rebels, and Civil War anecdotes. I didn't go with Mark S. and Jeff to Dinosaur Land the next day (the stories of my and Megan's visit spread pretty quickly), and instead explored Middleburg, a small (and very wealthy) town in southwestern Loudoun with a distinctly British feel. However, despite how much I enjoyed my time in Loudoun, I was very ready to travel someplace else and to get a bit more variety by the end of my final week in the county. (photos: Jeff and Mark S. outside the courthouse in Leesburg on our walking tour of town; downtown Middleburg; I had fun taking pictures of leaves around Middleburg; and more leaves.)




(photos: Famous Americans from Loudoun County (in some way); Oak Hill, James Monroe's house designed by Thomas Jefferson and the place where Monroe conceived of the Monroe Doctrine; and another scene of leaves.)


12 November 2008

The Climate for Change

From the New York Times...

OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
The Climate for Change

By AL GORE
Published: November 9, 2008

THE inspiring and transformative choice by the American people to elect Barack Obama as our 44th president lays the foundation for another fateful choice that he — and we — must make this January to begin an emergency rescue of human civilization from the imminent and rapidly growing threat posed by the climate crisis.

The electrifying redemption of America’s revolutionary declaration that all human beings are born equal sets the stage for the renewal of United States leadership in a world that desperately needs to protect its primary endowment: the integrity and livability of the planet.

The world authority on the climate crisis, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, after 20 years of detailed study and four unanimous reports, now says that the evidence is “unequivocal.” To those who are still tempted to dismiss the increasingly urgent alarms from scientists around the world, ignore the melting of the north polar ice cap and all of the other apocalyptic warnings from the planet itself, and who roll their eyes at the very mention of this existential threat to the future of the human species, please wake up. Our children and grandchildren need you to hear and recognize the truth of our situation, before it is too late.

Here is the good news: the bold steps that are needed to solve the climate crisis are exactly the same steps that ought to be taken in order to solve the economic crisis and the energy security crisis.

Economists across the spectrum — including Martin Feldstein and Lawrence Summers — agree that large and rapid investments in a jobs-intensive infrastructure initiative is the best way to revive our economy in a quick and sustainable way. Many also agree that our economy will fall behind if we continue spending hundreds of billions of dollars on foreign oil every year. Moreover, national security experts in both parties agree that we face a dangerous strategic vulnerability if the world suddenly loses access to Middle Eastern oil.

As Abraham Lincoln said during America’s darkest hour, “The occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, so we must think anew, and act anew.” In our present case, thinking anew requires discarding an outdated and fatally flawed definition of the problem we face.

Thirty-five years ago this past week, President Richard Nixon created Project Independence, which set a national goal that, within seven years, the United States would develop “the potential to meet our own energy needs without depending on any foreign energy sources.” His statement came three weeks after the Arab oil embargo had sent prices skyrocketing and woke America to the dangers of dependence on foreign oil. And — not coincidentally — it came only three years after United States domestic oil production had peaked.

At the time, the United States imported less than a third of its oil from foreign countries. Yet today, after all six of the presidents succeeding Nixon repeated some version of his goal, our dependence has doubled from one-third to nearly two-thirds — and many feel that global oil production is at or near its peak.

Some still see this as a problem of domestic production. If we could only increase oil and coal production at home, they argue, then we wouldn’t have to rely on imports from the Middle East. Some have come up with even dirtier and more expensive new ways to extract the same old fuels, like coal liquids, oil shale, tar sands and “clean coal” technology.

But in every case, the resources in question are much too expensive or polluting, or, in the case of “clean coal,” too imaginary to make a difference in protecting either our national security or the global climate. Indeed, those who spend hundreds of millions promoting “clean coal” technology consistently omit the fact that there is little investment and not a single large-scale demonstration project in the United States for capturing and safely burying all of this pollution. If the coal industry can make good on this promise, then I’m all for it. But until that day comes, we simply cannot any longer base the strategy for human survival on a cynical and self-interested illusion.

Here’s what we can do — now: we can make an immediate and large strategic investment to put people to work replacing 19th-century energy technologies that depend on dangerous and expensive carbon-based fuels with 21st-century technologies that use fuel that is free forever: the sun, the wind and the natural heat of the earth.

What follows is a five-part plan to repower America with a commitment to producing 100 percent of our electricity from carbon-free sources within 10 years. It is a plan that would simultaneously move us toward solutions to the climate crisis and the economic crisis — and create millions of new jobs that cannot be outsourced.

First, the new president and the new Congress should offer large-scale investment in incentives for the construction of concentrated solar thermal plants in the Southwestern deserts, wind farms in the corridor stretching from Texas to the Dakotas and advanced plants in geothermal hot spots that could produce large amounts of electricity.

Second, we should begin the planning and construction of a unified national smart grid for the transport of renewable electricity from the rural places where it is mostly generated to the cities where it is mostly used. New high-voltage, low-loss underground lines can be designed with “smart” features that provide consumers with sophisticated information and easy-to-use tools for conserving electricity, eliminating inefficiency and reducing their energy bills. The cost of this modern grid — $400 billion over 10 years — pales in comparison with the annual loss to American business of $120 billion due to the cascading failures that are endemic to our current balkanized and antiquated electricity lines.

Third, we should help America’s automobile industry (not only the Big Three but the innovative new startup companies as well) to convert quickly to plug-in hybrids that can run on the renewable electricity that will be available as the rest of this plan matures. In combination with the unified grid, a nationwide fleet of plug-in hybrids would also help to solve the problem of electricity storage. Think about it: with this sort of grid, cars could be charged during off-peak energy-use hours; during peak hours, when fewer cars are on the road, they could contribute their electricity back into the national grid.

Fourth, we should embark on a nationwide effort to retrofit buildings with better insulation and energy-efficient windows and lighting. Approximately 40 percent of carbon dioxide emissions in the United States come from buildings — and stopping that pollution saves money for homeowners and businesses. This initiative should be coupled with the proposal in Congress to help Americans who are burdened by mortgages that exceed the value of their homes.

Fifth, the United States should lead the way by putting a price on carbon here at home, and by leading the world’s efforts to replace the Kyoto treaty next year in Copenhagen with a more effective treaty that caps global carbon dioxide emissions and encourages nations to invest together in efficient ways to reduce global warming pollution quickly, including by sharply reducing deforestation.

Of course, the best way — indeed the only way — to secure a global agreement to safeguard our future is by re-establishing the United States as the country with the moral and political authority to lead the world toward a solution.

Looking ahead, I have great hope that we will have the courage to embrace the changes necessary to save our economy, our planet and ultimately ourselves.

In an earlier transformative era in American history, President John F. Kennedy challenged our nation to land a man on the moon within 10 years. Eight years and two months later, Neil Armstrong set foot on the lunar surface. The average age of the systems engineers cheering on Apollo 11 from the Houston control room that day was 26, which means that their average age when President Kennedy announced the challenge was 18.

This year similarly saw the rise of young Americans, whose enthusiasm electrified Barack Obama’s campaign. There is little doubt that this same group of energized youth will play an essential role in this project to secure our national future, once again turning seemingly impossible goals into inspiring success.

--------
Al Gore, the vice president from 1993 to 2001, was the co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. He founded the Alliance for Climate Protection and, as a businessman, invests in alternative energy companies.

09 November 2008

Sea Venture Podcast

Here's the sea venture podcast that we made at work, what I think is our best effort thus far. Enjoy!



If you want to see more of our videos, like our other podcast or passionality videos, click on this to see the video (also available in higher quality) on YouTube and check out the Foundation's channel. This will also soon be available for download as a podcast on iTunes!