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Archive for the 'Rants' Category

Feb 12 2009

Something interesting…

Published by kittey623 under Rants Edit This

Naperville, always winning awards…

Naperville, IL one of top places to live (again)

If you click on the link you can learn more about Naperville.  I like the tagline under the photo:  “Front yards in Naperville are big enough for a mean game of Slip-n-Slide.”  Really?  Cause the houses are so crammed together, and giant, I didn’t think you needed a front yard for that.  You can just put it in your giant basement that is a pool and a tennis court.  It’s kinda sick around here sometimes.

Oh, Happy Birthday Lincoln too!

Something else you guys may be happy to know, so far I know I got into UIC and DePaul, and I am waiting for my packet from Elmhurst.  It should be here within a week, if I am lucky.  They emailed me to say it was going out, and they had some other questions, and by what they were asking I’m guessing I got in there too.  So yay!  I have choices!   Right now, I would really like to go to Depaul, but there is a full tuition scholarship for Elmhurst that I am going for.  If I don’t get it, I will be going to Depaul.  But, if I get the free tuition I’m going to Elmhurst.  UIC was my back up, assuming I didn’t get into any of the other colleges.  SO…. YAY! Chances are high I’m going to be living in the city (Chicago) in August!  Or, in the case of Elmhurst, NEAR the city.

That’s all for now.  Tell your friends and your friends friends about my blog, because my payment plan went down… I don’t get as much.  I get paid only by people visiting my site now!

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Jan 27 2009

favorites

Published by kittey623 under Rants Edit This

I’ve decided to post some of my favorite bands/artists.  Some you will know, others you may not.  If you do not know them, I might suggest checking them out.  Next to them I’ve included a link to one of my favorites by that artist.  By the way, these are in NO particular order.  I could never order them, because they rotate as to who I listen to.

- Our Lady Peace  (here)
- Elton John (here)
- Cartel (here )
- Alkaline Trio (here)
- Counting Crows (here)
- Hanson (here)
- Anberlin (here)
- I Am Ghost (here)
- The Killers (here)

I’m sure there will be more later on.  For now, this is all I can think of.  Today will be a long day so I am pre-posting this one.  Work from 6-10Am,  Yoga 11-11:50, Ancient Philosophy from 2-3:15, then Sign Language from 6:30 - 9:20 pm.  It’s a full day.

Expand your horizons.    “The Road goes ever ever on.” -Bilbo Baggins

Ah yes, probably my all time favorite book: The Hobbit.

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Jan 03 2009

Greenpeace: Too radical and not fighting the right causes (pt. 2)

Published by kittey623 under Rants Edit This

The other, and more absurd, notion that Greenpeace insists on is to cut industry, and have every country the world over use high priced solar, wind, and water energy to power plants, mills, homes, and anything else that uses electricity and power.  Greenpeace has been lobbying for years against the spread of big industry to poor countries, and the lessening of the use of fossil fuels.  While big industry is the second greatest contributor to the theory of global warming, getting rid of big industry, or barring developing countries from using it, comes at a great cost to human life.

I am not talking about the comforts of prepackaged foods, cheap DVDs, or any sort of material goods; No, this is about developing countries that do not have the means to keep up with the western world.  Places like Kenya, Bangladesh, Guatemala, and Haiti.  Places that have little resources and where large amounts of people live on less that one dollar a day.  Places where people are just trying to get through the day they are living in and cannot afford to worry about the next day, they might not make it if they cannot eat.

Greenpeace goes into places like this and instead of helping them, insists they use better means of energy, renewable sources rather than coal, wood, or oil for heating their huts, and often attempts to bar them if they mine for their own natural resources.  This is inexcusable.  People living in poverty have no means to clean water after it has been fouled, have no way to replant trees after they have cut them down for fire, yet they are expected to have solar panels on their straw and mud shacks, or wind turbines to power their hospitals.  Hundreds of millions would die if Greenpeace won this fight.

In the documentary The Great Global Warming Swindle (this is the actual video, it’s over 60 minutes, but if you have time, watch it… after you finish my post!) , the camera crew and narrator are in a small village in Kenya, watching a woman make a fire from branches and twigs in her small hut.  She has no fresh water, and the pots she are using are unclean.
The next scene is a UN global warming conference being held near Kenya, and delegates are sitting in a giant, comfortable, well lit auditorium away from the elements.  These campaigners are looking at booths with pictures of Kenyans enjoying looking at wind turbines.  The tables and displays show how happy poor individuals would be with solar and wind energy.
The very next scene, the narrator is talking with a doctor at a hospital (if you could call it that) just outside of Nairobi.  There are two solar panels located on the top of the building.  Inside there are only two devices that use electricity:  the single light bulb, and the refrigerator that holds medicine and blood samples.  With the solar panels, he can only use the light or the refrigerator not both at the same time.  To do so shuts down all power.  This health facility services many towns in the area.

Developing countries cannot expect any time soon that solar, wind, or even nuclear energy will be readily available or cheap enough to use for much needed developing industry or for electricity.  Coal costs about $.05 per kilowatt hour (kWh), while solar energy runs about $.14 per kWh.  This is a big difference, and right now nothing is as efficient as coal burning.

Many African countries have coal and have oil to be mined, but are being told they are not allowed to harvest them, because coal and oil are bad for the environment.  When this can pull a country out of poverty, or provide for citizens, why should they be told they are not allowed to harvest their natural resources?  Poor countries with natural resources are often hurt from the backlash of negativity of fossil fuels, and this in turn contributes more to the poverty of the countries affected.  Unfortunately, if places like the U.S., Great Britain, France, and other major fossil fuel guzzlers were to sharply end consumption then these poor countries would be thrown into an even worse state.

This is a perilous edge for underdeveloped countries that need to find ways to create a steady economy with money for food, and clean water, clothing, and decent shelter.  According to Greenpeace, these nations cannot use their resources to sell and garner money, they cannot use coal electricity to power their hospitals, and they cannot build industry because fossil fuels emit greenhouse gasses.  Greenpeace is actually condemning hundreds of millions, about 1/3 of Earth’s population, to death.

The answer to this riddle, however, is not a pleasant one.  Developing nations must be allowed to utilize the cheap power of coal, natural gas, and oil, and they must be allowed to harvest and sell their natural resources.  This also means there still has to be buyers for it as well.  We cannot just stop the drilling of oil without having some severe consequences, like war and death.  The lives of millions depend on it.  Until ulterior forms of fuel are developed, whether they be cleaner, renewable, or both, developing nations must not be left to suffer due to the prior greed of the U.S. and Europe.  These ulterior forms must be readily available, and cheap enough for even poor countries to be able to use them.  We, as a developed nation, need to help the people who do not have all the comforts that we do, and we should not bar them from having it because they cannot afford it.

Overall, Greenpeace must not be allowed to take such drastic and harmful measures to ensure the reduction of CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions.  Their allegations are not well thought out, and often only benefit a few wealthy nations.  They are sabotaging their own pleas to pay attention to global warming.  Their blatant disregard for clearner nuclear fusl and for the health and well being of millions of impoverished individuals is appalling.  If they truely believed in helping the human race and the Earth they would look at all aspects, not just one.  Stopping the threat of global warming will not help the human race if there is no human race left to help.  Reverting back to pre-industrail times is not the answer.  Then again, they are Greenpeace, maybe they only want to help the whales?

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Jan 02 2009

Greenpeace: Too radical and not fighting the right causes

Published by kittey623 under Rants Edit This

 This is half of a research paper I wrote for my Earth Science class this year.  Enjoy.  I did!

(the next half will come next post)

Greenpeace was founded in 1971 as an environmental movement to promote awareness of the planet and to save it.  It started out as a simple mission of a few people to save whales in Alaska from offshore nuclear testing.  Today it harbors over 5 million members worldwide, with bases in 32 countries.  Greenpeace is considered by many to be one of the main organizers of the global warming movement that is so prevalent all over the globe today.  Known for their radical activist missions, like hanging off anchors of fishing ships, they are one of the many non-governmental organizations lobbying for a cleaner, greener planet.  In fact, one of their key slogans is to “… promote solutions that are essential to a green and peaceful future.”  Peaceful?  Are they really getting their message across when they are lobbying against some of the cleanest, greenest means of energy?  Sure, killing half the world’s population in the process may make the world more peaceful, because their ideas for a better earth require taking away much needed industry from the poorly developed and developing countries.

Greenpeace is one of the most known organizations who insist the current hypothesis on global warming will doom us all.  And for any of this argument to sound valid, one must accept the current and wide-spread idea that global warming is a direct impact from humans.  This occurs through the burning of fossil fuels and the release of CO2 (carbon dioxide, also lumped into the category “greenhouse gases” that contribute to global warming).  CO2 released into the atmosphere creates a blanket for trapping warmth and pollution.

CO2 is also produced naturally and transmitted into the atmosphere, however the theory is that the amount of CO2 in the atmostphere is significantly greater since the start of the mass burning of fossil fuels.  Humans use fossil fuels like coal, natural gas, and oil to fuel cars, buses, heat homes, for electricty, and for major industry.  In other words fossil fuels warm, stock, wrap, light, and transport goods all over the world.

Fossil fuels not only contribute mass amounts of CO2 into the atmostphere, they also cause some of the worst health problems due to pollution trapped in the air.  Coal is by far the worst with coal burning plants contributing to thousands of cases of asthma, heart attacks, and lung cancer each year.  Coal burning can emit carbon monoxide, heavy metals, sulfur dioxide, and hydrocarbons, all of which are deadly.  Many of the soot particles can be caught in the lungs, or enter into the blood stream and lodge in the brain or other vital organs.  I completely agree that burning of fossil fuels like coal, need to be lessened.  However this is where Greenpeace and I differ.

Sustainable alternative fuels that are good for the environment are needed to create a cleaner, and healthier earth, however Greenpeace refuses to acknowledge and accept one of the cleanest means of energy available to us today:  Nuclear Power .

Uranium, the main element used for nuclear power, was discovered in 1789 by the German chemist Martin Klaproth.  In the early 1900s nuclear fission was discovered leading to the atomic bomb in the 1940s.  By the end of World War II in 1945 and through the 1950s, attention was turned to harnessing nuclear power for commercial use, and the first nuclear reactor plant opened in the U.S. in 1960.  By the 1980s about 16-17% of the world’s electricty was coming from nuclear power, and today it is about 15%.

Electricity is generated either by nuclear fission or radioactive decay, and many of the world’s nuclear power plants use steam from heat generated to produce electricty.  Some military sea vessels use nuclear power to propel them.  While thought of as unstable, many safety regulations are in place to make sure that systems shut off before reactor failure or damage.

For reference, the white puffy clouds that often come off of the top are not CO2, that is steam.  They are producing clean energy, with little by product.  They are more expensive  than our conventional methods, but maybe health care costs would reduce if not so many people had problems due to complications with burning of fossil fuels?

Directly on the Greenpeace website they use words like “dangerous, high-risk, meltdown, catastrophe…” to describe nuclear power.  These are harsh words, but can be expected from a group who uses scare tactics to rally people to fight for causes.  They mention incidents like Three Mile Island and Chernobyl right on the front page.  But let’s take a look at these incidents carefully.

Three Mile Island occured in 1979 in Middletown, Pennsylvania and is the worst nuclear incident to occur on nuclear soil.  The nuclear reactor was partially damaged.  It was considered a Level 5 incident on the Internation Nuclear Event Scale (INES).  The range of events start at Level 0 (no safety significance) and go up to Level 7 (major accident).   Oh, did I mention that no one died as a direct result of Three Mile Island incident?

The Chernobyl incident is the only Level 7 event to occur, and it happened in 1986 in the former Soviet Union.  The incident can be easily considered a product of a failing Soviet Union. where regulations were rarely upheld and safety precautions were often neglected.  The Soviets were doing experiments on the nuclear reactor and had all of the safety devices turned off and the reactor failed.

While nuclear power can be fatal if safety precautions are not taken and proper maintence is not observed, nuclear power is also clean and extremely efficient.  The only problem that arises is the disposal of the used Uranium rods.  This presents a problem.

Nuclear power, also, is not renewable.  But maybe giving the Earth a few years to disssipate the CO2 naturally by not burning  mass amounts of fossil fuels would lessen the threat of global warming.

Greenpeace has insisted from the beginning of nuclear testing that nuclear power is bad and should be abolished.   However, early November 2008, Greenpeace released a statement about that French reactors that are being created, the EPRs that are being constructed in France and Finland.  In this statment they claim that “… nuclear power could only make a negligible contribution to CO2 reduction, coming years too late…”  Really Greenpeace?  You’ve been rallying forces to stop the production of nuclear reactors since their inception.  They are they reason it may be too little too late.

Next post:  Why Greenpeace intends to harm half of the world’s population in one fell swoop.

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Dec 29 2008

I should do this more often

Published by kittey623 under Rants Edit This

In the evenings I always think, I should post a blog.  Then I end up doing something else, or being too tired to think of anything worth while to post.  Like last night, Greg and I played Zelda, the original game for NES.  I’ve never played it before, and it was definitely fun.  NES games are still some of the best.  Simple to understand, fun, and challenging.  Between us we have lots of good games for NES, and I should play them more often.  I was also thinking of breaking out Donkey Kong 64, for the N64.  I haven’t  played it in so long, I think I’ve forgotten how to play.   I do remember that you needed the expansion cartridge for the console.  Maybe I’ll pick it up when I’m finished here.

On other news, the Christmas Holiday is over, and despite having drove probably 13 or 14 hours (over 650 miles) in 3 days (the 24th, 25th, 26th) it was a good holiday.  One of the best in the past few years.  I haven’t seen my family on Christmas in about 3 years.  This would have been the 4th year.  Last year, the weather was bad and I couldn’t make it in.  The last two before that I was working for Disney World (Pecos and Innoventions respectively) and was not able to make it home for Christmas.  Trying to get off on any holiday is a nightmare, because as you may well know, Disney is open on all holidays.  Infact they are open 365 days a year.  It was generally unpleasant to think about that, but if you’re a guest it’s wonderful.  I’ll do a post in the future highlighting some of my Disney escapades.

I would  like to comment today on working for a bookstore.  I’ve been compiling this list in my head for a while, and I am going to attempt to put it to screen:

My Pros and Cons of working in a bookstore:
(I still love my co-workers, so no offense in my list, okay?)

Pro: You get to know all the great books out there
Con: You want to buy all the great books out there

Pro: You sometimes get to deal with customers who are thoughtful and intelligent
Con:  Those same customers often lack common sense

Pro: You get to work with great co-workers in an intellectual atmosphere
Con: Often some of those co-workers lack common sense (I can think of one former manager…) or cleaning ability…

Pro: I am extremely fast at organizing and shelving (and love doing it)
Con: Often I am completely isolated in the Cafe for days and days of work and not allowed to do bookwork.

Pro:  Working in the Cafe I can take tips
Con:  The amount of work necessary in the Cafe sometimes is not worth the tips.

Pro:  Helping a customer find the one book they’ve been searching for and seeing how excited they are to start reading it.
Con:  “I’m looking for a book, it’s this thick and I think it is blue or green”

Pro:  The festive Holiday season
Con:  The busy Holiday season

Pro: Opening the store
Con:  Closing the store

Pro:  Getting promotional books, CDS, and posters
Con:  No con to this really.

Con:  Stupid rules and timers in the Cafe.  Things that make no sense like, “must greet the customer within 30 seconds and have their drink  ready by 3 minutes”  Have you ever tried to fill just 5 orders of food and drinks in allowing only 3 minutes each?
Pro:  No pro

Pro:  Get to taste new promotional items before they hit the display case
Con:  Cannot drink or eat for free anything.  (But we sample food to customers)

Alright, I’m sure that list will grow.  Borders employees, hit me up with any other good ones you can think of.  I think I fixed my comment thing.  Let me know if it is still acting up and refusing to let you post a comment.  If it says “will go to poster for review”  that’s okay, if it says something like “cannot post”  let me know!

Tentive next posts:
-review of The Pursuit of Glory by Tim Blanning
-Pros and Cons of working at Disney
-General life wiles

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