01
06
07

Going Green

The environment is Canada’s most pressing issue, according to a just-released poll of Canadians. The same poll reports that 74 percent of Canadians believe Canada’s Conservative government is doing a poor job on the environment.

Prime Minister Harper knows he is vulnerable on the issue, which spurred him to shuffle his cabinet, booting Rona Ambrose as Minister of the Environment and replacing her with trusted lieutenant John Baird.

Newspaper headlines ran from “PM charts a greener course” (The Globe and Mail) to “Harper goes green” (The National Post).

But if Harper really wants to go green, he should start by legalizing it. Green, that is. Yup, I’m talking about marijuana.

Year of the CFL

Canada’s unique brand of football is increasingly popular. As temperatures continue to rise, football is only going to get more popular: after all, winter sports require winter, which bodes ill for hockey.

But there’s a different CFL on the block, and this is its year. Compact fluorescent lamps have finally hit their stride and they’re illuminating more homes than ever. Even Wal-Mart has stepped into the fray, with the goal of single-handedly doubling sales of the bulbs in one year.

CFLs are popular because they last far longer than regular bulbs, they use far less electricity (the 23-watt CFLs I bought today put out the same amount of light as a 100-watt incandescent bulb), and they no longer produce the harsh light normally associated with fluorescent lamps.

Using them is one of the easiest and most effective ways we can tackle global warming. Every time I stop by Canadian Tire I see somebody in the lights aisle, mulling over which CFL to buy.

Lightin’ Up the Basement

Canadian Tire, however, is not the only store in Hamilton where you can buy lights. The local hydroponics store also has a fine selection, but they’re not selling energy-efficient CFLs.

Instead, you’ll find high pressure sodium and metal halide lamps that range in power from 400 to 1000 watts apiece. Weed growers know that fluorescent lights might be useful for germinating seeds but to grow the fine bud, you need some proper lights.

It’s these lights that make hydroponic grow-ops such massive hydro users. Four 600-watt high pressure sodium lamps – about what’s necessary to grow pot in a large basement room – use as much electricity as it would take to light up 50 living rooms using 100-watt equivalent CFL bulbs.

It’s unknown how many marijuana grow operations there are in Canada, but there at least tens of thousands. The marijuana industry is thought to be worth $7 billion in British Columbia alone.

With all those lights burning to keep the pot growing, we’re talking about vast amounts of electricity and that means vast amounts of greenhouse gas emissions. All to grow a crop that grows even better outside in Canada’s warm summer months.

Mr. Harper, do the planet a favour and go green on the green.

[tags]global warming, marijuana legalization, cfl[/tags]

01
03
07

Human Sacrifice

Keith Olbermann from MSNBC unloads on Bush’s latest “strategy” for Iraq in this video.

In case you haven’t heard, it looks like Bush is going to send more troops to Iraq as part of a “troop surge”. This is even though the Iraq Study Group recommended fewer troops in Iraq, a position supported by two thirds of Americans.

The number of American soldiers dead in Iraq has just surpassed 3000. Far, far more Iraqis have died. The human sacrifice continues unabated.

[tags]Iraq, Olbermann[/tags]

01
01
07

Happy 07

Happy New Year. Here’s hoping 07 is a good one for you and yours.

Some of the things I’m looking forward to in 2007:

  • A new birthday to celebrate.
  • Discovering a new metal band that really rocks, something on the order of System of a Down.
  • A sudden, severe and permanently incapacitating illness that afflicts George Bush, Tony Blair, and the rest of the warmongers that plague this planet.
  • Not worrying about getting put on a watch list for speaking my mind (see previous point).
  • Being able to forgive those who least deserve forgiveness (see previous two points). That one might have to wait for a different New Year – like 2050.
  • The population of all the world’s most prosperous countries suddenly waking up en masse and deciding to do something about poverty, injustice and climate change.
  • Failing that, a Canada-wide awakening.
  • Failing that, I might settle for my neighbourhood getting riled up. Even my family would be a good start.
  • Snow. Please!

There’s more of course – watching the flowers I planted in the fall come up in spring and summer, cold beers on the front porch in hot August, ice cream cones on Locke Street – but I could go on forever.

Except there’s one more thing worth mentioning. In 2007 I’m looking forward to continuing to hear what you have to say: how you feel about what’s happening here in Canada and in the rest of the world, how you feel about your own lives and those of the people around you.

My New Year’s resolution is to keep listening, and to do something about it when I can.

Thanks for reading. It’s going to be a great year!

12
28
06

Gerald Ford, 38th US President, Dies

The New York Times:

After a decade of division over Vietnam and two years of trauma over the Watergate scandals, Jerry Ford, as he called himself, radiated a soothing familiarity.

He might have been the nice guy down the street suddenly put in charge of the nation, and if he seemed a bit predictable, he was also safe, reliable and reassuring. He placed no intolerable intellectual or psychological burdens on a weary land, and he lived out a modest philosophy.

President Bush:

During his time in office, the American people came to know President Ford as a man of complete integrity who led our country with common sense and kind instincts.

Americans will always admire Gerald Ford’s unflinching performance of duty and the honorable conduct of his administration and the great rectitude of the man himself.

We mourn the loss of such a leader.

Elsewhere:

Two newly declassified documents from the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library, released to the National Security Archive, shed light on the Ford administration’s relationship with President Suharto of Indonesia during 1975. Of special importance is the record of Ford’s and Kissinger’s meeting with Suharto in early December 1975. The document shows that Suharto began the invasion [of East Timor] knowing that he had the full approval of the White House.

60,000-100,000 Timorese were killed in the first year of the invasion. Total death toll estimates run as high as 230,000.

Gerald Ford, in an embargoed interview in July 2004:

Rumsfeld and Cheney and the president made a big mistake in justifying going into the war in Iraq.

I can understand the theory of wanting to free people…I just don’t think we should go hellfire damnation around the globe freeing people, unless it is directly related to our own national security.

[tags]gerald ford[/tags]

12
26
06

An Excerpt from “Hiroshima”

This is an excerpt from the BBC documentary Hiroshima.

Terrifying – and terrifyingly relevant, as the world’s nuclear powers, including the United States, refuse to disarm.

The US is even exploring the possibility of building a new generation of nuclear weapons, the so-called “mini” or “bunker busting” nukes. Tony Blair has justified spending up to 20 billion pounds on a new generation of nuclear weapons-carrying submarines because in his mind, it’s uncertain if new nuclear threats will emerge in the future.

Of course, given American support for the two newest nuclear powers on the block, India and Pakistan, the West’s long-standing support for illicitly nuclear-armed Israel, and the threat of American invasion that gives states like Iran a powerful motivation to build nukes, it’s entirely certain that new nuclear threats will indeed emerge over the next few decades.

That means that it is only a matter of time before the horror of Hiroshima and Nagasaki is repeated. Unless we wake up from our slumber one day and depose the leaders who have put us all in such peril.

[tags]wmd, nuclear weapons, Hiroshima[/tags]



Life, politics, code and current events from a Canadian perspective.

Adrian Duyzer
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