26th & 27th June, 2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New concerts announced!
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July autograph signing event.
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Photo by Dan Chapman ©2001 Stanyan Entertainment Group

A Thought for Today

The only thing we own without condition is experience.

 

TO BEGIN WITH

For the third time in five years the house was invaded again last week by marauding bees that built a very healthy hive in the atrium. During the removal of the persistent pests Edward got to talking with Chris, our go to it guy for rounding up the little buzzers, and in the course of the conversation the subject of natural disasters came up. Edward attempted to point out that nature seems to be working overtime these days. Floods, drought, wildfires, earthquakes, hurricanes, out of season typhoons, heat waves, the world is suffering through an unseasonable season of natural catastrophic happenings.

Nearly every day we hear of an earthquake occurring some place where no such thing has happened before and the seas and winds of the world continue to act up in a way that defies logic. The mighty Mississippi is just one of America’s rivers determined to stretch its banks and Southern California has just had nearly a week of triple digit temperatures that in one forty-eight-hour period caused more than 700 wildfires to break out in Nevada and California. The fire season hasn’t officially started here so none of this bodes well to ease an already acute drought that will undoubtedly bring water rationing for many western states before the summer ends.

In a laconic, of no specific origin accent, Chris was having none of this, “My grandparents spoke of many catastrophes that occurred when they were growing up,” he said. Maybe, but I’m pretty sure that despite the tales from Father Time most of us would just as soon slip Mother Nature a tranquilizer.

ADDING TO THE MIX

Given what’s going on without too much help from Mankind should we be accelerating our business as usual reckless disregard for the planet that sustains us? Probably not, or better still, no.

Take drilling for oil in protected reserves for instance; The New York Times based on one end of our continent and The Times of Los Angeles, located at its other end both take up the topic and come to similar conclusions.

RM 6/23/2008

OIL BE SEEING YOU

DRILLER INSTINCT

Blaming environmentalists for high energy prices,
never mind the evidence, has been a hallmark of
the Bush administration.

By Paul Krugman The New York Times: June 20, 2008

Thus, in 2001 Dick Cheney attributed the California electricity crisis to environmental regulations that, he claimed, were blocking power-plant construction. He completely missed the real story, which was that energy companies — probably some of the same companies that participated in his secret task force, which was supposed to be drawing up a national energy strategy — were driving up prices by deliberately withholding electricity from the market.

And the administration has spent the last eight years trying to convince Congress that the key to America’s energy security is opening up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling — even though estimates from the Energy Information Administration suggest that drilling in the refuge would make very little difference to the energy outlook, and the oil companies themselves aren’t especially interested in punching holes in the tundra.

But it still comes as a surprise and a disappointment to see John McCain joining that unfortunate tradition.

I’ve never taken Mr. McCain’s media reputation as a maverick seriously, because on most issues, he’s a thoroughly conventional conservative. On energy policy, however, he has in the past seemed to show some independence. Most notably, he voted against the really terrible, special-interest-driven 2005 energy bill, which was backed by the Bush administration — and by Barack Obama.

But that was then.

In his Monday speech on energy, Mr. McCain tried to touch all the bases. He talked about conservation. He denounced the evils of speculation: “While a few reckless speculators are counting their paper profits, most Americans are coming up on the short end.” A weird aspect of the current energy debate, incidentally, is the fact that many of the same market-worshipping conservatives who first denied that there was a dot-com bubble, then denied that there was a housing bubble, are utterly convinced that nasty speculators are responsible for high oil prices.

The item that made news, however, was Mr. McCain’s call for more offshore drilling. On Tuesday, he made this more explicit, calling for exploration and development of the currently protected outer continental shelf. This was a reversal of his previous position, and it went a long way toward aligning his energy policy with that of the Bush administration.

That’s not a good thing.

As many reports have noted, the McCain/Bush policy on offshore drilling doesn’t make sense as a response to $4-a-gallon gas: the White House’s own Energy Information Administration says that exploiting the outer shelf wouldn’t yield noticeable amounts of oil until the 2020s, and even at peak production its impact on oil prices would be “insignificant.”

But what I haven’t seen emphasized is the broader picture: Mr. McCain has now aligned himself with an administration that, even aside from its blame-the-environmental-movement tendencies, has established an extensive track record as the gang that couldn’t think straight about energy policy.

Remember, they didn’t just insist that the Iraqis would welcome us as liberators; on the eve of the Iraq war, administration officials were also adamant that regime change in Iraq would add millions of barrels a day to the world oil supply, driving oil prices way down. (In fact, Iraq’s oil output took five years just to recover to preinvasion levels.)

So why would Mr. McCain associate himself with these characters? The answer, presumably, is that it’s a cynical political calculation.

I’m reasonably sure that Mr. McCain’s advisers realize that offshore drilling would do nothing for current gas prices. But they may believe that the public can be conned. A Rasmussen poll taken before Mr. McCain’s announcement suggests that the public favors expanded offshore drilling, and believes (wrongly) that this would lower gasoline prices.

And Mr. McCain may also hope to shore up his still fragile relations with the Republican base. As anyone who has read what’s in his inbox after publishing an article on oil prices can testify, there are many people on the right who believe that all our energy problems have been caused by sanctimonious tree-huggers. Mr. McCain has just thrown that constituency some red meat.

But I very much doubt that Mr. McCain’s gambit will work. In fact, it’s almost certainly self-destructive.

To have a chance in November, Mr. McCain has to convince voters that he isn’t just Bush, continued. Energy policy is one of the areas where he could best have made that case.

Instead, he has ceded the high ground on energy to Mr. Obama, and linked himself firmly to the most unpopular president on record.

©Copyright 2008 by The New York Times. All Rights Reserved.

McCAIN AND BUSH, OIL OPPORTUNISTS

It's nonsense for them to use the run-up in gas prices as an excuse to advocate offshore drilling.

The Los Angeles Times: June 21, 2008

President Bush and presumptive Republican presidential nominee John McCain both recently proposed an end to the federal moratorium on offshore oil drilling. What's really needed, though, is a moratorium on worthless suggestions from politicians for lowering gas prices.

GOP leaders like Bush and McCain are rolling out their own nonsensical non-solutions to the energy crisis after the Senate this month beat back an equally ridiculous attempt at gas-pump pandering by Democrats. Their bill would have hampered investment in new supply by imposing a shortsighted windfall-profits tax on oil companies, and it might have set off a trade war by allowing the U.S. attorney general to sue OPEC on antitrust grounds. Fortunately for the country, it failed to win enough votes to avoid a filibuster.

Enter Bush, who on Wednesday said he would end his father's 1990 presidential moratorium on most coastal drilling if Congress would lift its own, separate ban. His reasoning was so contradictory that it's a wonder he could finish his news conference without cracking up. While conceding that the long-term solution to high oil prices is to pursue alternative energy sources, he argued that "in the short run, the American economy will continue to rely largely on oil, and that means we need to increase supply." The U.S. Energy Information Administration says that even if oil companies are allowed to tap the 18 billion barrels under coastal waters that are currently off-limits, oil prices wouldn't be expected to fall until 2030. How is that a short-term solution?

Coastal drilling isn't just opposed by a bunch of Prius-driving greenies from Santa Barbara. Existing moratoriums were put in place at the behest of tourism interests, fishermen, small businesses and coastal dwellers. That's because drilling in these waters benefits oil companies but causes direct economic harm to everyone else by trashing beaches, poisoning marine life and ruining views.

Californians have been leery of coastal drilling since a devastating spill from an oil platform off Santa Barbara in 1969. Drilling proponents counter that new technology has greatly decreased the risk of spills, but they nonetheless still happen. And there's more to worry about than spills. Texas is not known for its beaches, which attract the detritus -- such as tar balls and empty oil drums -- from thousands of oil platforms in the Gulf of Mexico. Drilling releases a host of toxic chemicals, creating such problems as dangerously high mercury levels in fish.

The destruction of our coasts is too high a price to pay for a negligible decrease in gas prices that's 20 years down the road. The latest Republican oil strategy deserves the same fate as the Democrats'.

©Copyright 2008 by The Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved.

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ROD McKUEN APPEARANCES

notable birthdays

THURSDAY 26 June

Claudio Abado o Pearl S. Buck o Billy Davis, Jr. o Abner Doubleday o Alex Dreier o Jeanne Eagles o Georgie Fame o Dorothy Fuldheim o Dave Grusin o Sean P. Hayes o Sidney Howard o Laurie Lee o William Knowland o Peter Lorre o Chris O'Donnell o Eleanor Parker o Colonel Tom Parker o Jay Silverheels o Stuart Symington o John Tunney o Colin Wilson o Babe Didrikson Zaharias

FRIDAY 27 June

Isabelle Adjani o Elton Britt o Pam Burns o Audrey Christie o Paul Conrad o Gary Crosby o Julia Duffy o Emma Goldman o W.T. Grant o Bruce Johnston o Bob (Captain Kangaroo) Keeshan o Helen Keller o Laferdio o Lorrie Morgan o Ross Perot o Doc Pomus o Samuel Sanders o James Smithson o Hugh Woo

Rod's random thoughts When in doubt, cross it out.

Impatience is useless; it makes enemies and loses friends.

Contracts are the graffiti of grownups.

SUMMER GAMES

They swoop at you like larks
or quarterbacks in forward runs
of either sex or neither sex
without formation or a plan;
unless the worked-out play
is to make the lonesome cry
                    or cry out,
cause the looker-on to weep
at glimpses and snippets
                of great beauty
in long distance runner
or the smile of loping jogger -
here then gone forever in the crowd.
Headband, headset firm in place,
dodging honking autos and the cursing tourist,
hearing music from some other sphere.

Distant eyes and yet aware, aware
of damage done by muscled leg
                   and thrusting arm.
Such sleek machinery coming from,
moving from such supple trunks.

I tell you just the sight of them
can cause pedestrian heart to pound,
can set off bells in heads
that were not there or never rang before.

If age-old steeples toppled to the ground
                       at their mere passing
I would not feign surprise.
Should traffic stop and drivers die
                     while shifting gears.
As these sprinters sprinted traffic lights
               and bounded corners,
it would not make the papers
                                  or the nightly news.
These runners are the body commonplace
and so uncommon as to melt the sidewalk,
                                    wilt the rose.

I would I were the vendor on the street
dispensing water and refreshment
                                to the sweated brow,
if only just to gain another momentary look
at Venus and Adonis too in colored underwear.

The joy to be stone pony on the carousel
awarding rings to every arm-stretched runner.
Oh, I have seen the future
             running in each retina -
it is brown bodies tumbling in summer games,
and afterward more summer games,
                                      and afterward...

You, runner, coming at me
catch my breath and eat it up.
Wipe your forehead on my chest
with knifelike slash that draws
a cup of blood to prove I have one.
Smother me with arms and legs
                        and piston trunk.
Trample me with toes
that do not touch the ground.
It would be easy death to one
who having trod a dozen blocks on summer days
now returns to unlit rooms
and to such memories that kill a man
with the slowest kind of passion poison.

- from "The Sound of Solitude", 1983

 
    ALMOST THE LAST WORD

Leave it to Kyletta to point out:

“Going to a church doesn't make you a Christian any more than standing in a garage makes you a car.”

AND FINALLY

Don’t forget to join me over the weekend for another session of Ask Rod. Sleep warm.

RM / Holmby Hills, CA 25 June, 2008 2:30PM PDST

 
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