Thursday, December 29, 2011

Kim Jong Il's death: North Korea uses 1970s Lincolns

http://content.usatoday.com/communities/driveon/post/2011/12/kim-jong-il-kim-jong-un-north-korea-lincoln-town-car-limousines/1


Kim Jong Il's death: North Korea uses 1970s Lincolns

By Chris Woodyard, USA TODAY
Updated 11h 50m ago
By AP
Updated 5:58 p.m. ET, to reflect the car appears to be a 1976 model. As we were watching coverage of the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, we couldn't help but notice what the elite consider the epitome of luxury one of the world's most isolated countries: Detroit-made 1970s-era Lincolns.
By AP
The body of Dear Leader was strapped to the top of an mid 1970s Lincoln limousine. Jalopnikidentifies it as a 1976, and who are we to disagree. (Apparently, food isn't the only commodity in short supply in the desperate Asian nation: It's hard to find a decent working hearse as well.) Another almost identical car was being used for the Kim Jong Il billboard, lest anyone forget that dictators can indeed smile. We suspect one strong breeze or the rush of air from driving a little too fast could have toppled the sign.
As with most public ceremonies in the isolated nation, it was quite the show. It's interesting to see Kim Jong's successor, son Kim Jong Un, saluting at the the side of the Lincoln bearing his father's casket. Like, when is the last time you saw a car with hideaway headlights?
Seeing wealthy North Korean leaders riding around in 40-year-old, but apparently still serviceable, cars reminded us of that other Communist outpost led by its own despot, Cuba. At least the best cars in North Korea are about 10 years newer than the average car in the island nation 90 miles from Florida.
If you want to see America's presidential limousines that look approximately like the ones they are using today in North Korea, you have to go back six presidents (Obama, Bush, Clinton, Bush, Reagan, Carter) to Gerald Ford.

Failure: Cellulosic Ethanol

REDRANT:  THE GOAL OF CELLULOSIC ETHANOL IS TO GET A "YEAST" THAT DIGESTS WOOD TYPE FIBERS TO MAKE A ALCOHOL WITH IS DISTILLED TO BE USED AS MOTOR FUEL.  CELLULOSE AKA "PLANT AND WOOD FIBER' IS AN EXTREMELY LONG CHAIN "CARBOHYDRATE" AND VERY HARD TO DIGEST.  A TERMITE HAS SOMETHING LIKE 25 DIFFERENT BACTERIA.


WOOD CAN BE USED DIRECTLY AS A FUEL OR AS A GAS OR "WOOD ALCOHOL".  CHEAP NATURAL GAS GREATLY REDUCES THE NON-LIQUID FUEL VALUE.  WOOD CAN BE HEATED IN A RETORT TO CREATE SOMETHING LIKE THE OLD "TOWN GAS" AND THEN A CLEAN BURNING CHARCOAL.  THIS IS USEFUL FOR AREAS AWAY FROM THE NATURAL GAS PIPELINE.  GREG LANG
http://junkscience.com/2011/12/28/failure-cellulosic-ethanol/#more-8410


Failure: Cellulosic Ethanol

The taxpayer-supported cellulosic ethanol industry has fallen 98% short of its congressionally-mandated goal. Congratulations Vinod Khosla.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Tuesday released its 2012 targets for renewable biofuels, stating that it expects ethanol production to reach 15.2 billion gallons, up about 1.25 billion gallons from this year.
But non-corn ethanol made from crop residue, grasses or wood chips would fall short of the goals set in in the 2007 federal law mandating biofuel use.
In a statement, the EPA said that of that 15.2 billion gallon total, cellulosic ethanol would make up 8.65 million gallons, or 0.006 percent. That is considerably short of the 500 million gallon target for 2012 set by congress in 2007 when it wrote the law mandating that 36 billion gallons of non-petroleum biofuels be used in the nation’s transportation fuel mix by 2022.
Below is a partial history of the cellulosic ethanol taxpayer boondoggle from the Wall Street Journal editorial page.
###
Wall Street Journal
REVIEW & OUTLOOK FEBRUARY 10, 2011
The Range Fuels Fiasco
A case study in the folly of politically directed investment
President Obama’s budget next week is expected to include even more subsidies for renewable energy. Before Congress bellies up to that bar one more time, it ought to dissect the fate of Range Fuels and the wood chips fad.
As taxpayer tragedies go, Broomfield, Colorado-based Range Fuels has all the plot elements—splashy headlines, subsidies and opportunistic venture capitalists. Range got its start in 2006 when George W. Bush used a State of the Union address to extol wood chips as a source for cellulosic ethanol that would break America’s “addiction to oil.” Mr. Bush pledged that with government funding cellulosic ethanol would be “practical and competitive within six years.”
Vinod Khosla stepped in with his hand out. The political venture capitalist founded Range Fuels and in March 2007 it received a $76 million grant from the Department of Energy—one of six cellulosic projects the Bush Administration selected for $385 million in grants. Range said it would build the nation’s first commercial cellulosic plant, near Soperton, Georgia, using wood chips to produce 20 million gallons a year in 2008, with a goal of 100 million gallons. Estimated cost: $150 million.
The media and political class swooned. Bush Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman attended the plant’s groundbreaking in November 2007, hailing Range as a private-sector “pioneer” that would “reduce our dependence on foreign oil.” Range was celebrated in the New York Times and Forbes.
In 2007, Congress doubled down by mandating that the U.S. use 100 million gallons of cellulosic ethanol yearly by 2010, and 250 million gallons by 2011—though not a single commercial facility existed at the time. The Environmental Protection Agency explained in a subsequent report that the bulk of that initial 100 million gallons would come from Range Fuels and another Khosla-funded venture, Cello Energy.
By spring 2008, Range had also attracted $130 million of private funding, the largest venture investment in the nation in the first quarter of that year. Investors included such prominent VC firms as Blue Mountain and Khosla Ventures and California’s state pension fund, Calpers. The state of Georgia kicked in a $6 million grant, and all told Range raised $158 million in VC funding in 2008.
The result has not been another Google. By the end of 2008 with no operational plant in sight, Range installed a new CEO, David Aldous. In early 2009, the company said production was not expected until 2010. Undeterred, President Obama’s Department of Agriculture provided an $80 million loan. In May 2009, Range’s former CEO, Mitch Mandich, explained that the problem was that nobody had figured out how to produce cellulosic ethanol in commercial quantities. Whoops.
In early 2010, the EPA said Range would finally produce some fuel in 2010—but only four million gallons, not 100 million, and of methanol, not cellulosic ethanol. So taxpayers have committed $162 million (along with at least that much in private financing) to produce four million gallons of a biofuel that others have been making in quantity for decades. This politically directed investment might have gone to far more useful purposes.
As a closely held firm, Range Fuels doesn’t disclose financial details. But Range technical adviser Bud Klepper told Georgia Public Broadcasting last month that the company would create only one batch of cellulosic ethanol of unspecified size—then shut the Georgia plant and lay off all but four employees as it seeks to raise still more money and work through some technical issues. A Range Fuels spokesman didn’t return calls seeking more details.
As for current Range CEO Mr. Aldous, he’s blaming this failure on—brace yourself—Washington’s failure to impose a tax on carbon via cap and trade. “The critical issue is really that there’s no mechanism to price carbon today,” he told a Colorado newspaper. He also blamed “public apathy toward green fuels.”
Apathy? How many other products get the Presidential seal of approval, taxpayer subsidies, forced-purchase mandates and glowing media attention?
As for Mr. Khosla’s other great cellulosic hope, Cello Energy filed for bankruptcy last year. The EPA, which had projected that Cello would create 70 million gallons, has dropped Cello from its list of potential suppliers. More broadly, the EPA last year had no choice but to reduce the government’s 100 million gallon target for 2010 to 6.6 million gallons. It is also fiddling with the definition of what qualifies as a “cellulosic” fuel. Perhaps Newt Gingrich will ask EPA to let corn ethanol make the cut.
If there’s a silver lining here, it is that the folly of this exercise in corporate welfare has been exposed so quickly. There is no excuse now for throwing more money after bad, or to listen to more self-serving pleas from superrich investors who want taxpayers to finance their politically correct attempts to get even richer.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Mark Steyn: War on Christmas indicative of the “Western world at twilight”

http://hotair.com/archives/2011/12/26/mark-steyn-war-on-christmas-indicative-of-the-western-world-at-twilight/


Mark Steyn: War on Christmas indicative of the “Western world at twilight”

POSTED AT 4:10 PM ON DECEMBER 26, 2011 BY TINA KORBE

  
It’s an interesting interpretation of a phenomenon that is often considered exasperating but not necessarily the most important battle to fight. Yes, political correctness anesthetizes the sense of the sacred — but can mere words possibly matter as much or more than unemployment, the high abortion rate, political scandals like Fast and Furious or Solyndra and the regulatory war on capitalism?
Mark Steyn essentially says yes — or, at the very least, that political correctness is part and parcel of the problems we face as a nation. The words we use reflect the attitudes we have, and those attitudes, in turn, are both the outgrowth and the molder of our reality. According to Steyn, objections to Christmas expressions indicate that the West, in some ways, exists in contradiction to itself. The Daily Caller reports:
Steyn went on to note that there is no crusade to generalize other religious holidays and that the West’s budding hatred of itself and its values was at the “heart” of the matter.
“There’s something very odd by the way, as I said about this stilted artificial avoidance of Christmas,” he said.
“We would[n't] have, you know, a day off on December 25 if it wasn’t Christmas. But somehow it has to be a generalized holiday. Nobody does this with Ramadan, for example. I notice when you look at the big Ramadan festivities at the White House that every president conducts now — nobody bothers to pretend that is a kind of general celebration. Nobody says ‘happy holiday’ instead of Ramadan. And I think there’s something sort of slightly — it’s not a small thing in that sense. It gets to the heart of the most disturbing feature of Western world at twilight, which is this kind of institutional self-loathing that’s at the heart of it.”
Then, too, precision of language prevents the obfuscation of truth. December 25 isChristmas, whether it’s acknowledged as such or not. What does it profit any of us to pretend otherwise — whether we join in the celebration or not?

Friday, December 23, 2011

The flea party: MOST PITIFUL OCCUPATION EVER

REDRANT:  COMMENT I POSTED:  "If someone actually feels the need to parody the Occupy movement they could do a mock "Occupy of the Day". I just checked and OccupyOfTheDay.com is available. Like the "Occupy Black Friday" flop you could have an event of the day that is "occupied". For example, around January sixth you have the solar apogee when the sun is closest to the earth. You get the idea! The "mastermind" behind occupy of the day would be F. Lee Bagger. It could also be a catchall for stories, cartoons and U-Tube videos dissing "occupy". It could have a "redux" section where politicians, media people and celebrities were positive about Occupy in the past. My rules on this is that if you make a public statement and don't renounce as publicly it is still your view.".
http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/12/most-pitiful-occupation-ever.php


MOST PITIFUL OCCUPATION EVER

I am pretty sure this is not a parody, but rather a straight news story about an effort to Occupy Darien, Connecticut: First Day of Occupy Darien Draws Small Crowd:
The first day of the Occupy Darien demonstration got off to a slow start at a wet Tilley Park in Darien on Wednesday morning with about 10 protesters coming out for the event.
Cole Stangler of New Canaan was the first to arrive, carrying a sign that said, “End the Wars, Tax the Rich. This is one of the great photos and photo captions of all time:
 Posted comment on guy holding the cardboard sign:  "Cole Stangler is a student at Georgetown Foreign Service School and lives at ___ Weed St. in New Canaaan, CT according to ZABA Search. Zillow says the house he lives in is valued at $1,707,500. It doesn’t identify whether that is in the top 1% or the bottom 99%. I suspect the former.
Trudi Goldberg delivers a speech to Cole Stangler, Richard Duffee and Bennett Weiss at Occupy Darien.
A demonstration where those who attended can be identified individually, by name–hilarious! The Occupation movement is a gift; let’s hope it keeps on giving.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Missing $4,155? It Went Into Your Gas Tank This Year

http://www.cnbc.com/id/45727242


It's been 30 years since gasoline took such a big bite out of the family budget.
When the gifts from Grandma are unloaded and holiday travel is over, the typical American household will have spent $4,155 filling up this year, a record. That is 8.4 percent of what the median family takes in, the highest share since 1981.
Gas averaged more than $3.50 a gallon this year, another unfortunate record. And next year isn't likely to bring relief.
In the past, high gas prices in the United States have gone hand-in-hand with economic good times, making them less damaging to family finances. Now prices are high despite slow economic growth and weak demand.

REST OF STORY AT LINK: http://www.cnbc.com/id/45727242

Monday, December 19, 2011

Time to Tell the Alternative Energy Industry to Grow Up

http://junkscience.com/2011/12/16/time-to-tell-the-alternative-energy-industry-to-grow-up/#more-7851


Time to Tell the Alternative Energy Industry to Grow Up

The Senate Finance Committee gathered this week to discuss whether the time has finally come to cut the umbilical cord of tax incentives from the mollycoddled alternative energy industry.
The Senate Finance Committee gathered this week to discuss whether the time has finally come to cut the umbilical cord of tax incentives from the mollycoddled alternative energy industry. This may sound childish, but many of the witnesses pushing for an extension of expiring tax incentives for renewable energy characterized their allegedly up-and-coming market in such terms. Venture capitalist Will Coleman for Mohr Davidow Ventures maintained that despite alternative energy’s “rapid growth,” such as in wind, “it is still in its infancy.” Paul Soanes, President and CEO of Renewable Biofuels, testified: “The industry is like a child that needs some nurturing.” The question then becomes: will a renewed tax extension fund a future pride-and-joy of profit or a prodigal embarrassment (I.e. Solyndra). (Cooler Heads)

Friday, December 16, 2011

Ford Ranger Twin Cites assembly plant closed today.

REDRANT:  THE FORD RANGER DATES BACK TO 1980 OR POSSIBLY BEFORE AND MANY PARTS ARE STILL INTERCHANGEABLE.  THREE DECADES OF PRODUCTION FOR THE BASIC VEHICLE.  WE COULD TAKE THIS AS A SIGN OF MANUFACTURING DECAY BUT I BOUGHT MY RANGER NEW IN 2005 BECAUSE THE CLOSING OF THE PLANT WAS IMMINENT.  THEY KEPT IT GOING SIX YEARS MORE.


MY 2005 RANGER HAS A BASE FOUR CYLINDER, TWO WHEEL DRIVE AND A MANUAL TRANSMISSION.  THE MAIN ACCESSORY IS AIR-CONDITIONING WITH IS AMPLE.  ZERO PROBLEMS AND DEFECTS.  IT HAS 35,000 MILES NOW.  I FIGURE I CAN GO ANOTHER FIVE YEARS BEFORE NEEDING ANOTHER NEW VEHICLE.  FOR MILEAGE IT GETS A SOLID 20 MPG IN THE MIDDLE OF WINTER OR THE MIDLE OF SUMMER (ac).  LATELY IT HAS BEEN GETTING 22MPG.  IF I GO UP NORTH WITH SOMETHING LIKE A LAWN TRACTOR AND OTHER STUFF IT GETS 28 TO 30 MPG.  AFTER SIX YEARS I DECIDED NOT TO PRESS MY LUCK AND GOT A REPLACEMENT BATTERY.  I HAD  TOTALLY DEAD BATTERY IN THE GARAGE THAT I COULD USE AS AN EXCHANGE.  THE OLD BATTERY WORKS FINE FOR WORK SHED LIGHTING AND JUMP STARTING. ONLY OTHER NAN-MAINTENANCE PARTS COST WERE AGGRESSIVE WINTER SNOW TIRES. GREAT VEHICLE!  GREG LANG
http://www.startribune.com/local/stpaul/135705873.html?page=all&prepage=1&c=y#continue

Dallas Theis has worked at the TCAP for 53 years. He will drive the final Ranger pickup truck off the assembly line when the plant shuts down

My Time at Walmart: Why We Need Serious Welfare Reform

http://thecollegeconservative.com/2011/12/13/my-time-at-walmart-why-we-need-serious-welfare-reform/


My Time at Walmart: Why We Need Serious Welfare Reform

During the 2010 and 2011 summers, I was a cashier at Wal-Mart #1788 in Scarborough, Maine. I spent hours upon hours toiling away at a register, scanning, bagging, and dealing with questionable clientele. These were all expected parts of the job, and I was okay with it. What I didn’t expect to be part of my job at Wal-Mart was to witness massive amounts of welfare fraud and abuse.
I understand that sometimes, people are destitute. They need help, and they accept help from the state in order to feed their families. This is fine. It happens. I’m not against temporary aid helping those who truly need it. What I saw at Wal-Mart, however, was not temporary aid. I witnessed generations of families all relying on the state to buy food and other items.  I literally witnessed small children asking their mothers if they could borrow their EBT cards. I once had a man show me his welfare card for an ID to buy alcohol. The man was from Massachusetts. Governor Michael Dukakis’ signature was on his welfare card. Dukakis’ last gubernatorial term ended in January of 1991. I was born in June of 1991. The man had been on welfare my entire life. That’s not how welfare was intended, but sadly, it is what it has become.
Other things witnessed while working as a cashier included:
a) People ignoring me on their iPhones while the state paid for their food. (For those of you keeping score at home, an iPhone is at least $200, and requires a data package of at least $25 a month. If a person can spend $25+ a month so they can watch YouTube 24/7, I don’t see why they can’t spend that money on food.)
b) People using TANF (EBT Cash) money to buy such necessities such as earrings, kitkat bars, beer, WWE figurines, and, my personal favorite, a slip n’ slide. TANF money does not have restrictions like food stamps on what can be bought with it.
c) Extravagant purchases made with food stamps; including, but not limited to: steaks, lobsters, and giant birthday cakes.
d) A man who ran a hotdog stand on the pier in Portland, Maine used to come through my line. He would always discuss his hotdog stand and encourage me to “come visit him for lunch some day.” What would he buy? Hotdogs, buns, mustard, ketchup, etc. How would he pay for it? Food stamps. Either that man really likes hotdogs, or the state is paying for his business. Not okay.
The thing that disturbed me more than simple cases of fraud/abuse was the entitled nature of many of my customers. One time, a package of bell peppers did not ring up as food in the computer. After the woman swiped her EBT card, it showed a balance that equaled the cost of the peppers. The woman asked what the charge was, and a quick glance at the register screen showed that the peppers did not ring up as food. (Food items had the letter ‘F’ next to their description.) The woman immediately began yelling at me, saying that, “It’s food! You eat it!”
This wasn’t the only time things like this happened: if a person’s EBT balance was less than they thought it would be, or if their cards were declined, it was somehow my fault. I understand the situation is stressful, but a person should be knowledgeable about how much money is in their account prior to going grocery shopping. EBT totals are printed on receipts, and every cell phone has a calculator function. There’s no excuse, and there’s no reason to yell at the cashier for it.
The worst thing I ever saw at Wal-Mart Scarborough was two women and their children. These women each had multiple carts full of items, and each began loading them at the same time (this should have been a tip-off to their intelligence levels). The first woman, henceforth known as Welfare Queen #1, paid for about $400 worth of food with food stamps. The majority of her food was void of any nutritional value. She then pulled out an entire month’s worth of WIC (Women, Infants, and Children program) checks. I do not mind people paying with WIC, but the woman had virtually none of the correct items. WIC gives each participating mother a book containing actual images of items for which a person can and cannot redeem the voucher. This woman literally failed at image comprehension.
After redeeming 10+ WIC checks, Welfare Queen #1 had me adjust the prices of several items she was buying (Wal-Mart’s policy is to just adjust the price of the item without question if it’s within a dollar or two). She then pulled out a vacuum cleaner, and informed me that the cost of the vacuum was $3.48 because, “that’s what it’s labeled as.” The vacuum cleaner was next to a stack of crates that were $3.48. Somehow, every other customer was able to discern that the vacuum cleaner was not $3.48, but Welfare Queen #1 and her friend Welfare Queen #2 were fooled. Welfare Queen #2 informed me that she used to work for Wal-Mart, and that the “laws of Wal-Mart legally said” that I would have to sell her the vacuum for $3.48. After contacting my manager, who went off to find the proper vacuum price, Welfare Queen #1 remarked that it must be tough to stand on a mat all day and be a cashier. I looked at her, smiled, shrugged, and said, “Well, it’s a job.” She was speechless. After they finally admitted defeat, (not before Welfare Queen #2 realizing she didn’t have enough money to buy all of the food she had picked out, resulting in the waste of about $200 worth of products) the two women left about an hour and a half after they arrived at my register. The next man in line said that the two women reminded him of buying steel drums and cement. I said I was reminded why I vote Republican.
Maine has a problem with welfare spending. Maine has some of the highest rates in the nation for food stamp enrollment, Medicaid, and TANF. Nearly 30% of the state is on some form of welfare. Maine is the only state in the nation to rank in the top two for all three categories. This is peculiar, as Maine’s poverty rate isn’t even close to being the highest in the nation. The system in Maine is far easier to get into than in other states, and it encourages dependency. When a person makes over the limit for benefits, they lose all benefits completely. There is no time limit and no motivation to actually get back to work. Furthermore, spending on welfare has increased dramatically, but there has been no reduction of the poverty rate. Something is going terribly wrong, and the things I saw at work were indicators of a much larger problem. Something must change before the state runs out of money funding welfare programs.
Christine Rousselle // Providence College // @Crousselle