Saturday, July 12, 2014

Solar Make Big Sky Ball Go Boom

So this is the first piece of BS that flies my way with the new blog look? And it comes out of Wyoming. Not as many people there so I guess the idiots can shout over the nonexistent crowd. The Wyoming Institute of Technology claims that solar panels are sucking away the sun's energy. I am not paraphrasing- this is what a scientist actually said:

“Imagine a waterfall, dumping water.  But you aren’t catching the water in buckets, but rather sucking it in with a vacuum cleaner.  Eventually, you’re going to suck in so much water that you drain the river above that waterfall completely. Currently, solar panels are an energy niche, and do not pose a serious risk to the sun.  But if we converted our grids to solar energy in a big way, with panels on domestic homes and commercial businesses, and paving our parking lots with panels, we’d start seeing very serious problems over time.  If every home in the world had solar panels on their roofs, global temperatures would drop by as much as thirty degrees over twenty years, and the sun could die out within three hundred to four hundred years.”

Let's go back to elementary school science. Better yet, let's just turn to They Might Be Giants-

The sun is hot. It is so hot that everything on it is a gas: iron, copper, aluminum, and many others.

The sun is large. If the sun were hollow, a million Earths could fit inside. And yet, the sun is only a middle-sized star.

The sun is far away. About 93 million miles away, and that's why it looks so small.

Not only that, the sun is old and has the power to create gravitational orbit for four other planets further away than Earth. Much further away, and two of them could fit at least nine or ten Earths in them.

I can't believe I have to say this, but we could not "suck the power from the sun" if we covered Jupiter in solar panels and put it in Mercury's orbit (am I getting to technical for ya'll in the back of the class?)

People actually believe this load of crap.

Be prepared to cry my friends. WIT is calling solar panels the worst man-made thing to happen to climate change and oil and fossil fuels are the way to go. This hurts my head and makes me want to grow claws and fangs.

This was the SECOND picture that came up in the image search for WIT. Seriously.


I have a cousin who lives in Cheyenne. I think I need to give her a call and make sure she hasn't caught the stupid virus that is going around.

WCC Divests in Oil

 This issue is not limited to the United States but it is still something worth mentioning. The World Council of Churches has stated they will divest (un-invest) in fossil fuels and asks members to join them. This is the first step in the right direction for God's people to help restore His Creation to a healthy state. Since religion is a staple in so many people's lives it should motivate them to think about what oil and gas companies do to the environment.

Exactly how this will affect those in the US (we're on a whole other playing field when it comes to Jee-sas) but big oil losing even one investor is a victory for the environment. Hurrah!

Thursday, July 10, 2014

The US Named an Oligarchy


Princeton and Northwestern universities have completed a new study that reclassifies the United States as an oligarchy; the one with the most money has the most power. I was not surprised by this although I thought it would take much more time for someone to say it. Albeit the study does use public opinion to base some of its research and it gets criticism for it by some (I have yet to find a scholarly critique on the study) there are several reasons I believe this study to have merit which I hope to discuss in upcoming posts.

What I want to discuss now is when the news came, I heard very little about the results. My Facebook feed was not blown up by the study's findings. This was more than two months ago and a significant amount of people had no idea. Even if the study is not as accurate as it could be, there should still have been a big outcry from the general public. As I poll those around me, many of them either had never heard of the study or just shrugged it off.

Apathy that someone can suggest we are an oligarchy and everyone quietly agrees is inexcusable. Maybe that is how we got to be so close to the money=power country we are today. Laziness and apathy.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Dominique Christina - "The Period Poem"

I'm not one to spread inspirational videos unless they are really good, but I think every woman AND man need to hear this one. It's NSFW though.




For those of you who cannot watch the video, I will explain: The poet in the video found a post on Twitter about a man bragging about dumping a woman because she started her period while they were having sex. Her prose discusses how a woman's period is strength and if his mother did not bleed, he would not be able to say such things. A woman should be proud to have her period because it means she is physically a woman of childbearing years. I'm downplaying it really since I can't recreate it.

Although the tweet in the video talked about dumping a woman for getting her period during intercourse, I can understand if a man would be grossed out. It is blood after all and it is a situation that partners have to prepare for. Still, what is the big deal of getting into the shower. If you were scared to get her blood on you, why are you not afraid to have her other bodily fluids on you that could also spread any disease she had? She makes a good point in that men seem to make us feel bad for bleeding. I got my period when I was 11 and thin pads were not the technology they are now. I wore HUGE pads and sometimes they crinkled and moved around in my pants. One of my classmates said it was a turd.

Of course that was sixth grade, but even now men are taught to stay away from girls on their periods and blame it for anything that is wrong with their female counterpart. Men, it might be gross and foreign but appreciate the period. It means you have survived one more month without incident and you have a healthy woman by your side. Share a hot cocoa, pretzels, and a night in watching television.

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

A guy's Perspective On Burwell v. Hobby Lobby

I am not a woman, but I know women; as co-workers and superiors, as friends, as acquaintances, and as family and the love of my life and future mother of my children. They are people I know in this rough-tossed world, and that is ultimately what matters; that women are people. They need and want the same things as the other half of the human species.

That's why as a guy, I'm ashamed that a male-majority on the Supreme Court of the United States has effectively ruled against the health and well-being of millions of American women in their most recent decision in the case of Burwell v. Hobby Lobby. The matter at stake is whether a for-profit business must provide no-cost access to contraception for female employees, as per Federal mandate, with Hobby Lobby in opposition based on "religious freedom". A 5-4 split decision from the Supreme Court has upheld this opposition, permitting employers to deny coverage of female contraceptives if they claim objections on religious grounds. A crock and a lie, says I, and I will get to why shortly, but first the more pressing matter.

That this ruling is shameful to anyone who cares about the health and welfare of women should come as no surprise. What is surprising is how widespread the misconception of the various functions and uses of birth control are, particularly among men. Various forms of contraceptives play important roles in daily health, not just strict regulation of reproduction. One need look no further than the condition known as Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), a hormonal imbalance that causes irregular menstrual cycles. This can lead to depression, weight-gain, and most striking, fertility problems due to the uterus line not permitting any fertilized eggs to implant properly. In the case of the latter, proper use of birth control can regulate a woman's cycle, thus improving fertility. Not only does it serve a daily health use, it is also a potential aide to conception, not necessarily a preventative. As with any medicine, it is in how you use it. Also note a key symptom of PCOS; the uterus wall prevents fertilized eggs from implanting. Remember this, as it will be important soon.

The Intrauterine Device (IUD) is another contentious form of birth control that Hobby Lobby and supporters object to. It is a small strip inserted into the uterus that prevents pregnancy by killing sperm and preventing fertilized eggs from implanting on the uterus wall by keeping the lining thin. It also regulates the woman's monthly cycle, similar to the pill form. It's main advantage is long-term protection against pregnancy that is also reversible, simply by having a doctor remove the device.

Remember that symptom of PCOS, where the uterine line prevents fertilized eggs from implanting? That is what happens with the IUD, and as mentioned before, promoting a thicker uterine lining by regulating the cycle is what the birth control pill helps with. Thus any and all objections to the IUD on the grounds that it causes thin uterine linings should thus support treatment of PCOS symptoms; ie., birth control pills.

But now, that complicates the issue, doesn't it? Different forms of birth control affect different aspects of a woman's reproductive system, and vicariously her entire body's health. And it is important that we acknowledge this complexity. Because by acknowledging it, we must then accept one important fact:

A woman's health decisions

are none

of an employer's

business.

It's not their body they're making decisions about, it's not their life they're judging; it's someone else's, who may have vastly different medical needs than them.

Let me offer a basic scenario: a business offers health benefits, but denies their employees any and all prescription drugs, because it is possible to abuse them and become addicted. Shocking proposition? But there is no difference between this hypothetical and the actual position of Hobby Lobby and like-minded businesses; they are forcing a blanket denial to half their workforce because of very specific potential abuses. In so doing they throw the baby out with the bath water and send the message to their female workers that their health is not important, that they do not matter, that they are not people.

If you also happen to believe in a woman's right to choose when and how her body becomes pregnant, that she has the right to choose when to take on that task and that the adult thing to do is to allow people to make their own decisions, then the religious freedom argument is truly indefensible.

Your religious beliefs do not trump the health needs of other people. Never.

But it gets even better when you remember also that at no point in this entire debate, at no previous time did Hobby Lobby have anything to say about male forms of contraceptives. Indeed, their health benefits still cover vasectomies, a notably permanent method of rendering a man infertile. Why do men get to choose when and how they regulate their ability to reproduce, but women do not?

That is why the "religious freedom" argument is a crock and a lie. In the end it all comes back to controlling women. Controlling their bodies, their life choices, and punishing those who dare to choose differently, while men enjoy complete freedom.

As a man, I urge other men to look into the medical needs and concerns of women. You share so many aspects of your life with them, it is only right that you do so. And when you do, take that to heart and consider what you stand for, and what you should stand for. Ultimately, it's your decision. Take that as your first clue.