"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Algae Power

Following up on something I noted before, here's another hot Algae Biodesil Plan:

Bolted onto the exhaust stacks of a brick-and-glass 20-megawatt power plant behind MIT's campus are rows of fat, clear tubes, each with green algae soup simmering inside.

Fed a generous helping of CO2-laden emissions, courtesy of the power plant's exhaust stack, the algae grow quickly even in the wan rays of a New England sun. The cleansed exhaust bubbles skyward, but with 40% less CO2 (a larger cut than the Kyoto treaty mandates) and another bonus: 86% less nitrous oxide.

After the CO2 is soaked up like a sponge, the algae is harvested daily. From that harvest, a combustible vegetable oil is squeezed out: biodiesel for automobiles. Berzin hands a visitor two vials — one with algal biodiesel, a clear, slightly yellowish liquid, the other with the dried green flakes that remained. Even that dried remnant can be further reprocessed to create ethanol, also used for transportation.

This will work, people. Algae and other photoplankton are what handle 90% of our C02 as it is, not trees. I love trees and soybeans and all, but if we're looking to do some biodynamic power stuff, Algae's a more likely winner:

One key is selecting an algae with a high oil density — about 50% of its weight. Because this kind of algae also grows so fast, it can produce 15,000 gallons of biodiesel per acre. Just 60 gallons are produced from soybeans, which along with corn are the major biodiesel crops today.

Fuck fuel cells, let's go single-cell. I dunno what it will take to get corporate America on board. Probably a genetically-engineered (2% more efficient, but more importantly: patented) strain, but whatever. I'm still planning for that outhouse to cesspool to biodeisel set up in my mountain fortress, but I think an ambitious public-works program to get this ball rolling would but just what the doctor ordered.

In 1990, Sheehan's NREL program calculated that just 15,000 square miles of desert (the Sonoran desert in California and Arizona is more than eight times that size) could grow enough algae to replace nearly all of the nation's current diesel requirements.

"I've had quite a few phone calls recently about it," says Mr. Sheehan. "This is not an outlandish idea at all."

Maybe not, but I'm gonna keep pimping it.

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FTBSITTD

I find all the hating on James Frey and his A Million Little Pieces tedious. Read the book. I did, quite a while back. It's really good. You can't write a book like that. As for the "truthfullness," and Random House offering refunds and Operah breaking down in tears over it all, I mean grow the fuck up, people. These folks have it right:

Doubleday suggested on Tuesday it was unconcerned about the book's accuracy. "Memoir is a personal history," the publisher said in a statement. "By definition, it is highly personal.

"He represented to us that his version of events was true to his recollections," Doubleday said.

Holla! Memoirs are sensationalized. People fudge the details when they tell their own stories. Drug addicts get stupid tatoos. There's nothing surprising about any of this, and none of it detracts from the literary value of the book. This however, is horseshit:

Central to Frey's book, published in 2003, is his assertion that he was charged with assaulting an Ohio police officer with his car, with inciting a riot, with possession of crack cocaine and felony drunk driving -- charges that he wrote resulted in a three-month prison term.

Actually, those things are not at all central to the book. In fact, I don't even remember run ins with the law as being mildly important. As I recall, they're rather mentioned in passing, boastfully even. Part of the point being that rich daddy can get you out of these sorts of scrapes, I believe.

Personally it doesn't matter to me whether or not the book (or any book, really) is true to life. The process of making any art always involves the heart of the creator; whether or not events described actually transpired is less important than whether or not they come alive in the mind of the reader. Unless you're writing history, which this book ain't. I can see how maybe if you were yourself a recovering addict it might matter to you, but no one is disputing Frey's battles with drugs and alcohol.

I fail to see what the fuss is about. Seems like a whole lotta player-hating.

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Note to Dotster

Note to Dotster and any other site that has "live chat" as part of their customer service operation:

If your "customer care" system crashes your customer's browser, you're not taking very good care of them.

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High School Press Corps

Sociologists have speculated endlessly on the adolescense of US culture, the way in which the teen market drives so many consumer product and entertainment choices. It's not really all that weird, then, to notice how politics follows that pattern as well, as Mr. Duncan elocutes here:

Watching the bobblehead coverage of the Alito hearings - and, frankly, just about everything else they cover - one comes away think that to them it just doesn't really matter. Court decisions don't matter. Policy doesn't matter. None of this stuff matters. It's just a game played between rival high school football teams and they're just happy to go to the homecoming dance.

Except, I would add, when something does happen, like fanatics blowing up buildings, at which point the highschoolers freak out and run to the Daddy State to tell them what to do and keep them safe.

And then toss in a Daddy State that's willing to manipulate their fear -- the DC craze for survival kits, anyone? -- and voila!

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