Coyote Gulch's 2008 Presidential Election

 












































































Subscribe to "Coyote Gulch's 2008 Presidential Election" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.

 

 

  Tuesday, January 23, 2007


Political Wire: "According to the Washington Post, Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) is the first presidential candidate to declare she will forgo public financing in both the primary and general election 'since the current structure was created in 1974.'"

"2008 pres"
6:38:01 PM    


The Right's Field: "In an exclusive interview with the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) says he is running for president."

"2008 pres"
6:36:16 PM    


Daily Kos: "The current Democratic primary calendar..."

"2008 pres"
6:33:27 PM    


Political Wire: "When Iowa Republicans were polled by Strategic Vision (R) on whom they would support in 2008 for their party's presidential nomination, Rudy Giuliani received 25%, Sen. John McCain received 21%, Newt Gingrich had 13%, and Mitt Romney received 8%. On the Democratic side, John Edwards led with 25%, followed by Sen. Barack Obama at 17%, Tom Vilsack at 16% and Sen. Hillary Clinton at 15%."

"2008 pres"
6:04:13 PM    


Colorado Confidential: "Several journalism students at Metropolitan State College of Denver were asked to weigh in on the following: What topic that should be raised will be left out of the President's State of the Union address? Here are their responses,"...

"2008 pres"
6:02:58 PM    


Now this is cool. The Democrats in the Montana legislature have started a group weblog, Montana Statehouse. Thanks to Left in the West for the link.

"denver 2008"
6:00:44 PM    


We started a long publishing process this morning, in a bit of a panic. If you're reading this some of today's stuff just made it to the web, including categories. Radio Userland is cool software most of the time but we'd like a way to stop some processes.


5:52:48 PM    

Time: "The Democrats' New Western stars." Thanks to SquareState.org for the link.

"2008 pres"
6:58:02 AM    


The Right's Field: "Former Wisconsin Governor Tommy Thompson is in Iowa campaigning for the Republican nomination and said that he has added $1 million raised since his January 5 event that raised $1 million as well."

"2008 pres"
6:56:19 AM    


A picture named arcticseaice905.jpg

Here's a press release dealing with climate change from the Natural Resources Defense Council. They write, "After a year of collaboration and dialogue, our organizations have arrived at a set of principles and policy recommendations to address global warming. Ours is a unique and diverse group, which is united in the belief that we can, and must, take prompt action to establish a coordinated, economy-wide, market-driven approach to climate protection. The members of the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) are committed to action and believe that properly constructed policy can be economically viable, environmentally responsible, and politically achievable. Swift legislative action on our proposal would encourage innovation and provide needed U.S. leadership on this global challenge. Our goal is to help our nation create public policy that would act aggressively and sustainably to slow, stop and reverse the growth of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions."

Thanks to beSpacific for the link.

"2008 pres"
6:54:36 AM    


A picture named coloradohotsprings.jpg

The Cherry Creek News is running a story on the potential for geothermal energy to help satisfy U.S. energy requirements. From the article, "A comprehensive new MIT-led study of the potential for geothermal energy within the United States has found that mining the huge amounts of heat that reside as stored thermal energy in the Earth's hard rock crust could supply a substantial portion of the electricity the United States will need in the future, probably at competitive prices and with minimal environmental impact.

"An 18-member panel led by MIT prepared the 400-plus page study, titled The Future of Geothermal Energy. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, it is the first study in some 30 years to take a new look at geothermal, an energy resource that has been largely ignored. The goal of the study was to assess the feasibility, potential environmental impacts and economic viability of using enhanced geothermal system (EGS) technology to greatly increase the fraction of the U.S. geothermal resource that could be recovered commercially. Although geothermal energy is produced commercially today and the United States is the world's biggest producer, existing U.S. plants have focused on the high-grade geothermal systems primarily located in isolated regions of the west. This new study takes a more ambitious look at this resource and evaluates its potential for much larger-scale deployment."

"2008 pres"
6:44:46 AM    


Captain's Quarters: "In his next-to-last State of the Union speech, George Bush will focus more on his domestic agenda, attempting to find some common ground with the Democrat-controlled Congress. The New York Times reports that global warming and expanded health care will get featured status in a venue where national security has dominated the past five years."

Meanwhile Oliver Willis writes, "Bush is going to push domestic policies in his state of the union, but you almost wonder why the very unpopular president just doesn't cancel the speech and be done with it. We are not going to pass his whack-job ideas in the House or Senate." Ouch.

"2008 pres"
6:31:08 AM    


Ed Morrisey (via the Examiner): "New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson's entry into the 2008 presidential sweepstakes Sunday garnered little notice, overshadowed as it was by the announcement of Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y., the day before.

"The mainstream media appears to already have its narrative set for the Democratic primaries, pitching Clinton against Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., as establishment vs. the outsider. However, the punditry and the Democrats may just be overlooking the one candidate that the Republicans should fear the most and, perhaps, Clinton should as well.

"Richardson has an impressive resume. He worked in the State Department as a congressional liaison after college, then worked on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as an aide.

"He spent 14 years in Congress representing New Mexico, starting in 1980, mostly focusing on foreign affairs. He moved from Congress to leadership of the Democratic Party's 2004 convention, working with President Bill Clinton on bolstering the party's credibility with centrist voters.

"Bill Clinton appointed Richardson as U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., where he served a year, and then appointed him as Secretary of Energy, where he served from 1998 until Clinton's term ended. In 2002, Richardson was elected to his first term as New Mexico's governor and was re-elected last November.

"This record gives Richardson an incredible amount of applicable experience for the presidency. He has extensive foreign-affairs experience; he has plenty of contacts in Congress and a long history of working between the legislative and executive branches; and most of all, he has solid executive experience that all of the other main candidates for the nomination lack. In fact, compared to Richardson, the rest of the pack look like amateurs playing at national politics."

"2008 pres"
6:29:56 AM    


A picture named bluegreenalgaebloom.jpg

Here's an update on the experiments using algae to produce biodiesel up at CSU from VOA.com. From the article, "Fortunately, [Jim Sears] says, an unconventional crop could produce 100 times more biodiesel per hectare than either canola or soy. It can thrive in places where other crops can't grow at all, and it only requires the equivalent of 5 centimeters of rain a year. It's algae, a small but familiar plant, usually seen as a green scum that forms on ponds or aquarium glass. To demonstrate his crop's potential, Sears leads the way inside a former coal-fired electric power plant, now the Engines and Energy Conversion Laboratory at Colorado State University. CSU and Sears' small company, Solix Biofuels, have teamed up for this research. Sears passes a two-story tall engine that may soon be running on his biodiesel, and heads to a quieter room where test batches of algae grow in glass beakers. The water ranges from pale yellow to soft Irish green, thanks to millions of microscopic algae...

"For industrial production, the researchers are designing enormous growing troughs, wider than two trucks side by side, as long as a football field, and grouped by the thousands around processing plants. In this way, Sears says, algae could supply all the U.S. diesel power on a fraction of the nation's farmland, just one percent of the 400 million hectares now under cultivation. 'Actually we wouldn't have to convert any of our arable land,' he observes. 'We could use desert land to grow this algae. It doesn't require good soil. Just flat land, carbon dioxide and sunlight.' Sears envisions harvesting energy from fields of algae growing troughs Carbon dioxide helps algae grow fast and fat, so the team plans to siphon it from fossil fuel power plant exhaust, which will reduce greenhouse gas emissions. And Sears says there are other ways to get the gas. 'It would actually start with biomass such as switch grass or wood, where in some countries are the only type of fuel that they have anyway. In that case, the grass, the trees, the wood is pulling the carbon dioxide out of the air, then we burn it as fuel and feed the carbon dioxide to the algae.' He stresses that no carbon will be added to the atmosphere during all these energy conversion steps, making biofuel from algae is a truly carbon-neutral technology. 'It's essentially solar powered fuel.' To conserve water, the growing troughs are sealed. The algae grows under a clear plastic lid that allows in plenty of sunlight, but keeps the water the plants are floating in from evaporating. 'It is about 1,000 times more efficient to produce fuel from algae than it is from an irrigated crop,' Sears says. 'There's enough water even in the desert from natural rainfall to support this technology.'"

"2008 pres"
6:06:08 AM    


A picture named coalfiredpowerplant.jpg

Global climate change experts are releasing the first part of a new report next week, according to Ireland online. From the article, "The first phase of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is being released in Paris next week. The segment, written by more than 600 scientists and reviewed by another 600 experts and edited by bureaucrats from 154 countries, includes 'a significantly expanded discussion of observation on the climate', said co-chairman Susan Solomon, a senior scientist for the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. She and other scientists held a telephone briefing on the report yesterday. That report would feature an 'explosion of new data' on observations of current global warming, Solomon said. Solomon and others would not go into specifics about what the report said. They said that the 12-page summary for policymakers would be edited in secret word-by-word by governments' officials for several days next week and released to the public on February 2."

"2008 pres"
5:33:50 AM    



Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2009 John Orr.
Last update: 3/15/09; 12:29:48 PM.

January 2007
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31      
Dec   Feb