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Beathe Deep, While You Sleep Breathe Deep

Just another orange sunset in Northern California, 7/31/08 sendoutcards.com/site

Just another orange sunset in Northern California, 7/31/08

Hip hip hooray! I’m breathing the sweetest natural perfume in the free world—unlimited internet access suffused with gardenia. My little potted plant just bloomed today. This courageous life form has elected to flower in spite of all the bad air it’s been breathing lately. Speaking of which, our pollution level for Friday morning is under 100! We’ve got a Beijing Blue Sky Day!

Sad to say, the rest of Siskiyou County is not so lucky. Reported levels are choking in at 176 (Yreka) and 179 (Fort Jones), or, well above Chinese safe.

Yesterday, I asked two people in Mount Shasta how they were coping with all the smoke? The first said nothing could be done, so she was ignoring it. The second said toxic vibrations from psychic sources were of more concern.

I figure both of these answers ring true enough. It’s just that on bad air days I have trouble ignoring what I’m breathing or even noticing the vibrations from psychic sources. When the Siskiyou County Air Pollution people advise me to lay low and quit taking deep breaths, I tend to get depressed. That’s why I’ve decided to go on an internet pilgrimage to collect some hope and enlightenment. See what you think:

Blue sky does not mean clean air. Our friends at Greenify Earth (who also like to breathe) define ozone as a colorless gas that can irritate the respiratory tract, produce impaired lung function and cause throat irritation, chest pain, cough, and lung inflammation. They also say that it is the most injurious pollutant to plant life.

Particulate matter, like that caused by wildfires, industrial processes, smelters, automobiles, woodsmoke, construction, road dust, agricultural ground breaking etc., hangs out in the air a long time. It’s the smaller particles that are more hazardous, because they are easily absorbed into the lungs and into the blood stream where they can cause premature death.

In general, though, any form of toxic air pollution damages our natural environment and jeopardizes public health. Air toxins accumulate in the air we breathe and work their way up the food chain, eventually winding up in the food we eat. Eating contaminated food, like fish, and breathing contaminated air from wildfires, traffic, factories and construction, can cause cancer, birth defects and other serious health problems—or, so says The Sierra Club.

After struggling to find something hopeful about this gloomy information, I have arrived at an uplifting thought: At least we have free access to gloomy information. In China, for example, they don’t. And neither do foreign journalists covering the international Olympics. How can the Chinese government be so irreverent when it comes to promises!

Just like its promise to clean up the Olympic air in time for festivities, China had also promised the IOC (International Olympic Committee) to lift its censorship of the internet, or the Great Firewall. But guess what, Folks–they are going back on that promise, too. I know there are those who do not wish to follow links, so I have lifted information about China’s internet ban from the guardian.co.uk.

Journalists at the press centre for the Beijing Olympics.

Journalists at the press centre for the Beijing Olympics. Photograph: Guang Niu/Getty Images

China has reneged on a pledge to provide journalists covering the Beijing Games with unrestricted internet access, Olympic officials have admitted.

Kevan Gosper, a senior member of the International Olympics Committee (IOC) who is overseeing the games, said yesterday that the only uncensored websites journalists at the event would have access to were those related to “Olympic competitions”.

The admission contradicts China’s promise to grant the international media “complete freedom to report” at the games, which it made seven years ago when bidding to host the Olympics.

The blocks on internet sites in the main press centre, which will house about 5,000 journalists, and other Olympic venues will make it difficult to retrieve information, particularly on political and human rights stories the government dislikes. Journalists at the main press centre yesterday found they were unable to access sites such as Amnesty International or any site with Tibet in the URL.

Speaking of Tibet, if you want to get the People’s Republic of China’s perspective, click on the banner across the top of the People’s Daily Online:

Appropriately enough, this link is provided at the top of an article touting their clean air.

And now we have come full circle— back to the subject of “air” and my delicious smelling gardenia! Here is a picture from Wikipedia, large on the page but brave and small against the pollution. I think it will make an inspiring sendoutgreetingcard.

http://homepage.mac.com/shelobmarian/mypics/gardenia146_4645.jpg


Laura signing off.

p.s. Information about SendOutCards, along with all the opportunities therein, is one click away. It really is easy to design your own sendoutcard, complete with a personal message.

Where Has All the Water Gone? Long Time Passing………. Long Time Ago

drought image
Ethan Miller/Getty Images
Living with a waning drinking supply has long been a fact of life for many countries. In the Western world, it’s a new, yet serious problem.

I’ve been really harping on our smoky air lately. Now I think I’ll go back to water—for the simple reason that one out of five people on this planet don’t have one drop of clean drinking water. We of the Western World have taken our water for granted, until recently that is. But there’s nothing like watching a bunch of water-grabbing foreigners make deals with small town officials to wake us up a little.

Speaking of water, I got a very timely email from my friend Larry today: “Why Can’t We Manufacture Water?”. In this article, Joshua Clark poses some interesting questions: Water is mostly there for the taking, just hanging out in fluffy accumulations of water vapor (clouds) up in the skies. Why can’t we just harvest our clouds instead of waiting for it to rain? Or better yet, in this day of high tech particle smashing, why can’t we ram two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom together to make some water?

Three reasons: It’s dangerous to fool with Mother Nature; it requires expensive outputs of energy; and, oh yea, did I mention it’s dangerous? To drive these points home, all we have to remember is the Hindenburg Disaster of 1937. No one actually knows the actual cause of this explosion. Most theories are grounded in the extreme volatility of Hydrogen. Life wouldn’t be complete without another viewpoint on the subject, however.

That’s why I’m offering the opinion of hydrogen-lover Greg Vinson—a man who roasts his marshmallows with Hydrogen, a man who is dedicated to debunking the myth of this misplaced element, a man who says Hydrogen is Magic !!! The truth is, Vinson is but one of the many who believes that our most common element (Hydrogen) is the clean replacement answer to fossil fuels. More on this subject at a later date. Right now I’m pursuing the idea of water mining for the masses.

With this in mind, let’s get back to the Hindenburg and Hydrogen. No one argues the fact that one of the side-effects of this explosion was pure, sweet “warm rain” falling down on shocked bystanders. In other words, the ill-fated blimp carried over seven million cubic feet of hydrogen and wound up as half a million liters of water, give or take a couple hundred. This doesn’t sound like much water for my money, though; which brings me to an obvious conclusion: The creation of enough water to make a difference would require a complex, possibly dangerous, large-scale explosion of Hydrogen, much like the Big Bang.

Wait a minute, now. Did I say dangerous again? Isn’t that exactly what the internal combustion engine is all about, folks? Barely controlled, dangerous repeated explosions of gasoline to make your car, truck, motor boat, lawn mower, chain saw, etcetera have a little git up and go? Oh well, no one can deny that yesterday’s ridiculous sounding ideas are today’s widely accepted practices. Perhaps when water becomes scarcer, and multi-national corporations own most of the sources, exploding Hydrogen to make clean water will be just old-hat.

Until that day, what about good old fashioned cloud-seeding? China’s sure having a field day making it rain over their arid crop lands. The fact is, Beijing Weather Controllers plan to blast storm clouds with silver iodides–the idea being to milk them of all their moisture before Olympic Opening Day; that way there will be a perfect blue sky day on 8/8/08, eight being the auspicious number for prosperity in Chinese Numerology.

China had better be careful, though. A ‘hand of god” deluge would not make for an auspicious Olympic memory. The Chinese have more success at all forms of control, but I’m sure they are aware of the British Air Force’s horrendous attempt gone awry. During a secret cloud seeding experiment of 1952, RAF pilots dropped payloads of dry ice, salt and silver iodide into the clouds. The side-effect was a deluge of 90 million tons of water coursing through the village of Lynmouth in just one day. Uprooted trees formed dams; two rivers combined; boulders destroyed buildings and Brits were carried out to sea at the speed of 40 mph. This peculiar man-made disaster was dubbed ‘the hand of God” until 2001, when the BBC uncovered first person accounts from RAF pilots who implemented “Operation Cumulus”. Oh well. No use crying over spilt milk/ water/ hydrogen.. etc..

How about safer methods of making water from thin air?

Happy to say, people are on it, folks! Max Whisson uses the power of the wind to collect water—as much as 2600 gallons per day, the only problem being enough capital to back his project and the need for refrigerant coolant. Jonathan Wright and David Richards have similar ideas, but their windmill uses wind power exclusively.

As kooky as all these methods sound, we still have to do something. There’s not enough clean water to go around and water, like oil, will not last forever. There’s no water hailing from outer space, at least not that I’ve heard of.

Speaking of space. I’m supposed to be using this space to tell you more about SendOutCards: how easy it is, how fun it is, how inexpensive etc. But I’ll just say this––people sure are happy when they get one of my personal sendoutcards, but they are even happier making their own.

Laura, signing off.

p.s. want to see our sunset?


Nothing But Blue Skies Headed My Way

There is so much smoke in the air around Mount Shasta, Mount Eddy and the Shasta Valley that I’m feeling listless and quarrelsome. Maybe its oxygen deprivation.

The particulate matter is back in full force, obscuring everything in view. We might as well be in Beijing. There could easily be a (Bird’s Nest) Chinese National Stadium where our mountain is supposed to be.

At least Beijing has a plan: Get rid of city traffic, cut factory emissions, halt construction and cheat on the API (Air Pollution Index) readings. For the latest Olympic “smog watch video” click here. Behind that gray wall of Chinese smog is probably a burning mountain range.

All of a sudden, folks, I don’t feel so bad. I’ve just found out that our afternoon pollution reading of 86 would be a blue sky day in China. Sad to say, Beijing’s July24th API reading measured between 115 and 135–not a blue sky day, by any stretch of the imagination.

Anything under 100 is classified as grade 2 or “comparatively good” in the Chinese system and does count as a blue sky day. For those unfamiliar with blue sky talk, Beijing officials say it helps residents understand the differences in air quality. I think I’m understanding just fine. If it quacks like propaganda and waddles like propaganda then guess what, folks…

Waddling on. Ten years ago, China set annual targets for more blue sky days, and despite increases in many pollution causing devices and practices, these inscrutable government officials have attained their goals. Blue Sky Days have more than doubled in less than ten years, going from 100 in 1998 to 246 in 2007. The good news was widely touted inside and outside of China.

And the number of blue sky days is still magically climbing, according to People’s Daily Online (English version May 2, 2008). Ironically enough, this good news on the subject of air quality can be found residing under a colorful click-banner entitled “Tell You A True Tibet”:

Beijing saw 86 “blue sky” days, or days with fairly good air quality, in the first four months of this year, a sign that years of anti-pollution efforts made by the Olympic host city continue to pay off. The number of “blue sky” days was 11 more than the same period of last year, according to the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Environmental Protection.

Just a doggone minute, you cute little Chinese Officials. We’re not slurping up that stuff. Any country in the world can have more blue sky days if it changes what goes into the data mix. Unlike the separate readings we get here in Siskiyou County, Beijing officials provide an average daily reading of multiple air monitoring stations. When the talk of Olympic air(2006) became a sore subject, Beijing officials conveniently dropped the readings from two of the seven city-center monitoring stations and added three readings from less polluted ones. Ain’t statistics grand!

The truth is, Beijing’s air is worse than it was in 1998. Bye-Bye 38 blue sky days of 2006. Bye-Bye 55 blue sky days of 2007. Some say this casts “grave doubt on China’s reported five straight years of continuous air quality improvement”. Golly Gee, Batman, could that be possible?

Sad to say, altering the collection data wasn’t enough to suit the Chinese Government. In the year 2006, officials changed which air contaminants they measured. According to environmental consultant Stephen Q. Andrews(“Beijing’s Sky Blues”), the Chinese substituted measurements of nitrogen dioxide for nitrogen oxides, the latter being much more offensive when it comes to measuring pollution standards. “Since then, not a single day has exceeded the standard… thanks to the new, more easily attainable criteria”.

It really doesn’t matter how you measure it, folks—air is a resource and Chinese officials don’t particularly value it, especially when national progress is at stake. They don’t value their athletes much either, not to mention any other countries’. Sad to say, men and women of the outdoor events are definitely putting themselves at risk

Not sprinters, though. They barely breathe, so I’m told; but “marathon runners take about 40 to 50 breaths per minute and there is a real need for oxygen to be transported to the muscles. Some, like Gebrselassie, are refusing to attend, for fear of life-time lung damage.

Let’s see now, that’s a hard one…Life-time lung damage or Olympic Gilded Gold.

Laura, petulantly signing off.

p.s. Oops, I almost forgot my mission. Information on SendOutCards is one click away.