Friday, July 11, 2014

Stop, you're killing us (As Salem lusts to spend 100s of Millions on more car infrastructure)

Brooks, Cohen and Krugman | Marion in Savannah
Same in Salem as in elsewhere in America as in the UK -- we shape our environment and then it shapes us. We are busily turning Salem into a place impossible to get around without a 2000+# appendage, burning fossil fuel calories instead of food calories.
The causes are scarcely different from elsewhere in a fattening world: cheap availability of calorie-dense food (burgers, fries, chips, sodas); "food deserts" in poor areas where healthy fare is hard to find and expensive; sedentary lives spent seated in front of the computer or sprawled on the couch with "Game of Thrones" blaring; too much sugar, fat and fructose; broken or weakened families where children forage in the fridge for prepared meals and snack all day rather than gathering for a family meal; speeded-up societies that breed bored, stressed, impulsive and compulsive behavior, including binge eating and constant eating.
As Tony Goldstone, a consultant endocrinologist at London's Hammersmith Hospital put it to me: "In the developed world we don't eat because we are hungry." We eat because everywhere we look there's a superabundance of food and we're hardwired through evolution to keep our body weight up.
...
The new social divide sees the skinny affluent at their Knightsbridge gym raving about their personal trainer and favorite farmers' market, and the pot-bellied poor guzzling kebabs and fries. The counterintuitive association of poverty and obesity is an indicator of how much the world has changed. Survival is still an instinct but it is no longer an issue. More people today are overweight than malnourished.

Goldstone said he comes away from obesity conferences feeling gloomy. Telling fat people to get thin through dieting is, he suggests, like "telling an asthmatic to breathe more." Cognitive control cedes to the force of instinct. "Who says that the will can overcome biology when biology trained us to get food when scarce?" Goldstone said. "We evolved to prefer foods high in fat and sugar because they contain the calories we need to reproduce."

Our urges are out of sync with our environment. The environment has changed. Urges have not. Our instinct is to eat and rest. We have no instinct to stop eating and be active. We eat to survive and then want to rest because we may need energy to flee some wild beast. Once we've found our lunch, our instinct is to avoid being someone else's.
It may not seem like lying on a couch is part of our survival gene but it is. David Haslam, the chairman of Britain's National Obesity Forum, told me: "It is in our interest to eat and be lazy. Put people in an environment like the current one that promotes eating and laziness and they will oblige." It's their genetic inclination.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Keeping climate catastrophe at bay is affordable

The findings, published in Climate Change Economics, suggest that $1.1 trillion would need to be invested every year, on average, in clean energy between 2010 and 2050 to meet the goal. Already some $300 billion is being spent annually, meaning there is presently a “clean-energy investment gap” of about $800 billion a year.

That’s obviously a ton of money. But about $1 trillion is already being invested on energy projects every year worldwide. And compare the size of the investment gap with the $500 billion or more being doled out every year in the form of government subsidies that help support fossil fuel operations. . . .

To meet the two-degree goal, around 900 gigatons less global carbon dioxide and equivalent pollution would need to be released this century than would have been the case if no action were taken. In this graph from the new paper, gray shading shows pollution levels forecast by different models if there were no clean-energy investment. The red shows projected emissions under the current $200 to $250 billion a year in clean-energy investments, rising to a planned $400 billion. Blue shows how emissions would fall to needed levels if the investment gap closed.fight-climate-change
“Technologically, there’s no reason we can’t rise to the challenge,” McCollum says. “It’s more a question of politics, and that appears to present a major challenge in every country, even in the more progressive countries of the world.”

Double your Power--Matching Grant Fundraiser for Straub Environmental Center

What your donation will provide

1) Help to send children to summer camp, and
2) Support for our all of our environmental educational programs.

Your money donated to either or both of these initiatives will directly impact the lives of children in the Mid-Willamette Valley.  Every dollar you donate to one of these vital and unique programs will be matched 1:1.

Straub Environmental Center creates awareness and understanding of our relationship to the environment, working in partnership with our community. Our environmental education programs teach and motivate people to become active stewards of our environment. To see more about our programs, visit our website at: www.straubenvironmentalcenter.org

Support Environmental Education and your donation will be DOUBLED!

Straub Environmental Center, the Mid-Willamette Valley's premier environmental education center, has been given a
 
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Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Cheese Futures Gathering!

Greetings, Cheezy Friends!

I'm so excited to invite you to our Cheese Futures Gathering on Sunday, July 27th!

12pm to 1pm: Cheese Futures Club Members Exclusive Tasting
We will break into the following cheeses:
  • Raw Cheddar Batch 95 crafted in March of 2012
  • Raw Cheddar Batch 103 crafted in May of 2012
  • Smoked Raw Cheddar Batch 150 crafted in March of 2013
  • The Secret Chive Raw Cheddar
  • The NEW Limited Release Raw Herb Cheddar
1pm to 3:30pm: Everyone can join us for more tasting and fun!

Old World Deli
341 SW 2nd St, Corvallis

To find out how to join the Cheese Futures Club, e-mail Kate@fullcirclecreamery.com

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Buddhist Economics: How to Stop Prioritizing Goods Over People and Consumption Over Creative Activity

Taking the train to Seattle for some business (hers) and relaxation (mine), it occurred to me that one of the tests we could use for social health is how many young people per thousand are so disconnected from meaningful relationships and empowering work that they are reduced to seeking status and demanding recognition with a can of spray paint.

Buddhist Economics: How to Stop Prioritizing Goods Over People and Consumption Over Creative Activity
http://feedly.com/e/jXacZEu-

Find out who owns your "representative"

16 yo kid has just changed the game
Until we make them wear logos like in NASCAR, this will do. . . . 

16 yo kid has just changed the game

A 16 y.o. kid has created a plug-in for browsers that, when you hover over the name of a member of congress mentioned on any webpage, popups to give you a list of donations made to that congressperson from lobbyists, corporations, etc.  Right now it has numbers for 2012 but he's working on getting it to 2014.   Yeah, it's a drop in the bucket compared to all of pac money and other shenanigans but if we could just get this kind of transparency started it could have a huge impact on our politics, and one that would be good for all.  Too cool.

Oh yeah.  The kid's motto?  "Some are red, some are blue, ALL are green"!  I love this kid!

Story:

http://www.vice.com/...

Get the plug-in:

http://allaregreen.us/

Doh: Colorado teen pregnancies plummet thanks to contraceptives

Undernews: Colorado teen pregnancies plummet thanks to contraceptives

Colorado teen pregnancies plummet thanks to contraceptives

Daily Kos - Colorado's teen birth rate dropped 40 percent in five years—years during which a donor-funded initiative provided 30,000 free or low-cost contraceptive devices to low-income women:

The decline in births among girls 15 to 19 years old served by the program accounted for three-quarters of the overall decline in the Colorado teen birth rate, the state said in a news release.

That rate has fallen from 37 births per 1,000 girls in 2009 to 22 in 2013, officials said.

The teen abortion rate dropped 35 percent from 2009 to 2012 in those counties where the initiative is in place, Hickenlooper said.

Colorado is saving money thanks to the drop in teen pregnancy: Medicaid costs are lowered by $5.68 for every dollar spent on the contraception program. Because pregnancy, childbirth, and pediatric care are more expensive than IUDs.

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Play along at home as they peddle the Bridgasaurus Boondogglus

Thou shalt not commit logical fallacies
https://yourlogicalfallacyis.com/
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Shared via my feedly reader

The boosters pushing this boondoggle all seem to be pushing to make sure every single one of these techniques gets a thorough workout.

Don't let the Philistines tear down more Salem history

Salem Hospital, one of the big players behind the scenes and a major source of what ails Salem's public governance, plans to do more of the same vandalism to Salem that led us to tear down the old City Hall and put in a ugly surface parking lot in its place.


Dear Active Citizen:

Please mark your calendar and plan to attend the Salem City Council meeting on Monday, July 14th at 6:30 p.m.where the demolition of a designated Local Salem Landmark is on the agenda for a public hearing and Council action.

Salem Community Vision opposes the demolition of Howard Hall on the former Oregon School for the Blind property now owned by Salem Hospital. We agree with the Salem Historic Landmarks Commission (HLC) that voted 6 - 0 with one abstention in June to deny Salem Hospital's application to tear down Howard Hall.

The HLC found that the application from Salem Hospital did not meet three of the four requirements necessary for them to approve the application. 

Salem Hospital did not show that ...

* The value to the community of the proposed use of the property outweighs the value of retaining the designated historic resource on the present site.

* The designated historic resource is not capable of generating a reasonable economic return and the demolition is economically necessary.

* No prudent and feasible alternative exists to rehabilitate and reuse the designated resource in its present location.

Salem Community Vision will ask the City Council to uphold the decision of the HLC, and we will suggest that Salem Hospital needs to reissue a Request for Proposals to re-purpose Howard Hall in a way that will benefit the Hospital and the community.

Howard Hall is the the last building left on the Oregon School for the Blind campus. It has stood on the campus since 1923 and is the only building in Salem designed by famed Oregon architect John Bennes. It has been deemed eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. It served as a dormitory at the School and thus is precious to the memory of generations of blind and visually-impaired Oregonians. There is no reason to tear down a historic building that can still be put to good use. But this is what may happen if citizens do not come to the July 14th City Council meeting with a simple message: "SAVE HOWARD HALL."

You can read more about this in the Salem Weekly:<http://www.willamettelive.com/2014/news/historic-howard-hall-fate-undetermined-hands/>.

I hope you will plan to come and to speak up.

Sincerely,

Susann Kaltwasser, Chair
Salem Community Vision