Friday, July 02, 2010

Immelt Takes a Whack at Two of My Favorites, Obama and China

I feel Immelt's pain but Obama is hopeless. All we can do with him is neutralize him until we get rid of him. China on the other hand is something else again. Everybody is sick of the way they operate, but how about a strategy?

Immelt suggests something that makes a lot of sense. The US should target countries with resources and establish joint ventures with US firms that add value at the extraction sites. The neocolonialist Chinese have made some very sweet deals for themselves and take raw materials to China for conversion. Why not pursue a policy with value added at the extraction point and create an industrial base that is partially in Latin America and the balance in the US.

Everyone wins with that plan except the Chinese.

____________________


Immelt hits out at China and Obama
By Guy Dinmore in Rome and Geoff Dyer in Beijing
Published: July 1 2010 15:19 | Last updated: July 1 2010 20:33

Jeffrey Immelt, General Electric’s chief executive, has launched a rare broadside against the Chinese government, which he accused of being increasingly hostile to foreign multinationals.

He warned that the world’s largest manufacturing company was exploring better prospects elsewhere in resource-rich countries, which did not want to be “colonised” by Chinese investors. “I really worry about China,” Mr Immelt told an audience of top Italian executives in Rome, accusing the Chinese government of becoming increasingly protectionist. “I am not sure that in the end they want any of us to win, or any of us to be successful.”


Mr Immelt also had harsh words for Barack Obama, US president, lamenting what he called a “terrible” national mood and expressing concern that over-regulation in response to the global financial crisis would damp a “tepid” US economic recovery. Business did not like the US president, and the president did not like business, he said, making a point of praising Angela Merkel, Germany’s chancellor, for her defence of German industry. Financial Times


71 comments:

  1. Uruguay kicked some serious Ghanian ass today.

    We should all be in Montevideo right now.

    Alas.

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  2. Great steakhouses, in Montevideo.

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  3. James Wolcott
    June 27, 2010, 9:36 PM

    I stopped watching the Sunday morning political talk shows several months ago--an act of sanity--but when I turned on the TV today to watch the World Cup, the channel was set to Chris Matthews' weekly show, and the topic was Sarah Palin's political plans for 2012, which is what the Matthews' show was cud-chewing several months ago when I stopped watching, one of the reasons I stopped watching.

    Anyway, there was Dan Rather saying he doubted Palin would run in '12, that she could afford to play a long game and wait until 20016, and I thought, Dan, take a deep hit from the hookah and let your mind dissolve into a better, healthier place.

    Sarah Palin in 2016 will be lucky if she's anything more than feisty sidebar to whatever's happening. Apart from the hardcore knotheads, people are already tired of her shtick and decided that she doesn't have the knowledge or experience to be president, and there's no evidence to support belief that she will educate herself in the interim and dab in the illusion of a little depth.

    [...]




    There is a God.



    You know, Rat, I never did develop a taste for South American beef.

    But I've never been much of a beef eater. The occasional cheeseburger being the exception.

    Fantastic continent for ardent devourers of flesh (um, in any number of ways) but I stuck mostly with sea food and the occasional chicken entree.




    I imagine that the nation of 3.5 million will be up til dawn and everyone calls in sick.

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  4. Yeah, but only Costa Rica had the seething racist Mel Gibson vacationing with the mother of his love-child.
    (Prior to punching her out.)

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  5. Steele screws the pooch.
    AGAIN

    Bill Kristol calls on Michael Steele to resign.

    Your tenure has of course been marked by gaffes and embarrassments, but I for one have never paid much attention to them, and have never thought they would matter much to the success of the causes and principles we share. But now you have said, about the war in Afghanistan, speaking as RNC chairman at an RNC event,

    "Keep in mind again, federal candidates, this was a war of Obama's choosing. This was not something that the United States had actively prosecuted or wanted to engage in." And, "if [Obama] is such a student of history, has he not understood that you know that's the one thing you don't do, is engage in a land war in Afghanistan?"

    Needless to say, the war in Afghanistan was not "a war of Obama’s choosing." It has been prosecuted by the United States under Presidents Bush and Obama. Republicans have consistently supported the effort. Indeed, as the DNC Communications Director (of all people) has said, your statement "puts [you] at odds with about 100 percent of the Republican Party."

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  6. Immelt should quit whining about what's wrong and do something about it.

    The last statement in the article from the GE spokesman says it all.

    These guys get a few drinks in them at a party and they turn into Rambo, at least, until they wake up in the morning or until their handlers tell them they screwed the pooch.

    They make me want to puke.






    :)




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  7. This is kind of frustrating.

    I always want to argue with Kristol and I usually want to argue with Walcott.

    Both are a couple of dicks.

    Unfortunately, today I can't.


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  8. "These guys get a few drinks in them at a party and they turn into Rambo"

    ---

    Is there any other way for those of us on this side of the keyboard?

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  9. Steele is a Moron, and Kristol is a dumbshit. In this case Steele is, as we all know, telling the truth. A good deed that will be punished vigorously, no doubt.

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  10. Provide us your complete Dick List and maybe we can scare up a recent piece of commentary that you can tear into.

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  11. How much U.S. Income Tax did China pay last year? Evidently, at least as much as GE (Zero.)

    Which one does a lot of business with Iran? Both, of course.

    Why should I care where Immelt moves those jobs, if not to the U.S.?

    F**K little Jeffrey.

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  12. Your computer likely lacks the memory capacity to contain my Dick List.

    Don't worry. I doubt the day will go by without me seeing such an article. The only comfort I take in the two cases posted is that both Kristol and Walcott state the obvious. Little insight required.


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  13. Immelt's a prick.


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  14. Good business strategy idea Deuce. Our first task has to be to get Obama out of the White House. No way he and his Union buddies would go for "exporting" capital to create jobs abroad.

    Second challenge, from a South American perspective, is how to insulate oneself from the risk of "nationalization" (which is of course now a risk in the US as well) given the leftist, dictator wannabes that hold power in all South American countries other than Colombia, Chile and Brasil (Lula is leftist, but not anti-business like the rest). Those three, however, would provide excellent starting points and models to use to attract other countries.

    It never ceases to amaze me how the US willfully ignores the potentially valuable allies of Latin America.

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  15. :)

    Well "maybe" you have the capacity.

    By the way, how much does that laptop weigh?


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  16. I have always liked Dr. Kristol. I also like his mother, Dr. Himmelfarb, and liked his father, the late Irving Kristol.

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  17. We ought to keep this soccer contest going full time. Jihadi attacks have dropped off as everyone is transfixed.

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  18. Important perspective to keep in mind, via Powerline, despite how despicable and maddening it is.

    METHOD TO OBAMA'S MADNESS

    My friend Ray Hartwell agrees with my analysis of President Obama's approach to immigration, and he connects it to a larger point:

    As with what many have called his inept handling of the Gulf oil spill, I think Obama is just fine with the deterioration of the situation on the border, for it may provide him exactly the opportunity you mention: a chance to enact sweeping "amnesty" legislation that will put a few million more Democratic votes in his pocket.

    One thing bothers me about a lot of recent commentary, and that's the repeated assertion that Obama is incompetent. I don't think he is incompetent at all when it comes to the issues that matter to him and his inner circle. He is all about transforming the country and perpetuating the power of his administration and its ideological allies.

    When one considers what he's done and is doing in that light, then it's not too hard to see how he and his allies may think that they are making steady progress and, more often than not, surmounting what they knew would be formidable public opposition.

    They have nationalized two major auto manufacturers in near lawless fashion. They have shut down offshore oil drilling, and closed the Yucca Mountain nuclear fuel storage project, through orders found to be illegal by federal courts. Whatever the ultimate outcome, they've succeeded in killing two industries they don't like.

    They have passed legislation that essentially nationalizes the health care industry, and rolled into that same package a takeover of the student loan business. Their billion or so in assorted "stimulus" spending has really been a pork barrel festival of unprecedented scope, doing a great deal to reward constituencies and create new fiefdoms, and little or nothing to create real jobs. The financial reform legislation promises to do more of the same as it consolidates their control over much of the financial industry.

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  19. At the same time they have created myriad new government jobs, peopled with supporters and prospects for SEIU or other union dues that will fund campaign coffers. Across a broad front they foster dependence on government, and seek to silence opponents and shut down the private sector.

    With respect to major legislation, they've come up with an approach that works very well for them, especially [with regardt] to avoiding actual disclosure and discussion of the particulars of their plans. They meet behind closed doors with allies and favored constituents, to craft massive bills (2000 pages here, 3000 there, 1500 in another case) that contain innumerable provisions that could not pass if exposed to the light of day. These bills are then voted through on an entirely partisan basis, and they are law before anyone has the ability to examine their contents carefully.

    This approach is working, even though it is of course completely at odds with Obama's campaign rhetoric about reform and transparency. But he cares about what works, not about keeping his word. For this administration, deception of the public is an effective tool that will be used as often as necessary to achieve its goals. Because the mainstream media continue largely to be complicit in all of this, the administration's dishonesty is not exposed the way it should be. (Coming up on the anniversary of his charge that the President lies, Joe Wilson has a very high batting average.)

    So I conclude that Obama and his administration are not incompetent at all. Critics and commentators who conclude they are do so by reference to conventional standards of competence. They do not evaluate what Obama is really about. And by the standards of what he seeks to achieve, one can make a case that he has made tremendous "progress" towards his goals.

    I agree with the thrust of this analysis. Obama has relentlessly pursued his transformative agenda without worrying about the political capital being expended. He assumed, I think, that he would replenish that capital as the economy improved.

    But the improvement has been insufficient for that purpose. Thus, Obama's approach to legislating (described by Ray above) will probably reach its expiration date by the end of the year.

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  20. Joe Biden was eulogizing Robert Byrd today and was tempted to say, "How about a big hand for the longest serving Senator ever! Robert, stand up, let everyone see you!"

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  21. (con't)

    At the same time they have created myriad new government jobs, peopled with supporters and prospects for SEIU or other union dues that will fund campaign coffers. Across a broad front they foster dependence on government, and seek to silence opponents and shut down the private sector.

    With respect to major legislation, they've come up with an approach that works very well for them, especially [with regardt] to avoiding actual disclosure and discussion of the particulars of their plans. They meet behind closed doors with allies and favored constituents, to craft massive bills (2000 pages here, 3000 there, 1500 in another case) that contain innumerable provisions that could not pass if exposed to the light of day. These bills are then voted through on an entirely partisan basis, and they are law before anyone has the ability to examine their contents carefully.

    This approach is working, even though it is of course completely at odds with Obama's campaign rhetoric about reform and transparency. But he cares about what works, not about keeping his word. For this administration, deception of the public is an effective tool that will be used as often as necessary to achieve its goals. Because the mainstream media continue largely to be complicit in all of this, the administration's dishonesty is not exposed the way it should be. (Coming up on the anniversary of his charge that the President lies, Joe Wilson has a very high batting average.)

    So I conclude that Obama and his administration are not incompetent at all. Critics and commentators who conclude they are do so by reference to conventional standards of competence. They do not evaluate what Obama is really about. And by the standards of what he seeks to achieve, one can make a case that he has made tremendous "progress" towards his goals.

    I agree with the thrust of this analysis. Obama has relentlessly pursued his transformative agenda without worrying about the political capital being expended. He assumed, I think, that he would replenish that capital as the economy improved.

    But the improvement has been insufficient for that purpose. Thus, Obama's approach to legislating (described by Ray above) will probably reach its expiration date by the end of the year.

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  22. "By the way, how much does that laptop weigh?"

    Without the external hard drive? Somewhere south of ten pounds.




    TPM:

    Pop quiz: Who was emperor when the United States declared independence from China?

    Give up?

    Perhaps you should ask one of the Americans who, when asked what country the U.S. separated from, named France, Japan, Mexico, Spain or, yes, China.

    A new Marist poll shows that 26% of people in this country don't know that the U.S. declared its independence from Great Britain. That includes 20% who aren't sure -- and another 6% who think it was another country.

    Looking at the numbers more deeply, it appears the closer to 1776 you were born, the more likely you are to know the correct answer. So enjoy the July 4th holiday, everyone, and don't forget to be thankful that we're out from under the yoke of our Mexican colonial oppressors.

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  23. "Without the external hard drive? Somewhere south of ten pounds."


    Does the whole package come with 'Two Men and a Truck' as a standard option.




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  24. "Robert, stand up, let everyone see you!"


    heh, I think it would be funny as hell if he did, as has happened in some of the old near death stories.

    "I must not live as I did formerly", says Robert, "but become monkish, and pure."

    And Robert Byrd gives up his Senate seat goes and joins Carthusian monks.

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  25. "And by the standards of what he seeks to achieve, one can make a case that he has made tremendous 'progress' towards his goals."

    Yes. And yet many, many of his own, now lukewarm, supporters are unimpressed. When not downright annoyed, antagonized, bitter, chafed, choleric, convulsed, cross, displeased, enraged, exacerbated, exasperated, etc.

    Don't even mention the lack of a Public Option. That really screws them into the ceiling.

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  26. Rufus,
    BHO got us into a land war in Afghanistan?

    News to me.

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  27. The Pelican is the Louisianna State Bird.

    BHO well on his way to wiping most of them out.

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  28. Enviros should be happy about him doing that.

    ReplyDelete
  29. "Does the whole package come with 'Two Men and a Truck' as a standard option."

    : )

    The hell of it is, they require take out from Balducci's every damned day.

    No bargain those two.

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  30. Inouye now number 3.

    Lose Both Barry and Nancy,
    and we'll have our first
    One-armed Japanese Octogenarian President!

    Beat that, mofo'rs

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  31. Gallup says Obama's numbers among Blacks are 91% (same as January.)

    Obama's rating among Whites, 41% (same as January.)

    The only movement has been among Hispanics, and Asians (Down some.)

    ReplyDelete
  32. Speaking of, I have to retrieve dinner.

    Citrus-glazed salmon with grilled asparagus and those little roasted yellow potatoes sound good.

    You kids play nice while I run into town.

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  33. "The only movement has been among Hispanics, and Asians (Down some.)"

    I read liberal blogs with heavy posting activity and while his numbers among Democrats may be largely static, the disappointment, disillusionment and frustration is keen for many.

    Just sayin'.

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  34. 'Course the unrelieved hatred for all things remotely Republican is still Obama's chief asset with those Dems who wouldn't otherwise give him the time of day.

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  35. Gallup's numbers are meaningless.

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  36. now about that land war BHO started, Rufus...

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  37. Where do you get good Salmon, Trish?

    Farm fed taste like orange dogfood.

    ...canned Alaskan good for a sandwich, aka excuse for plenty of pepper sauce.

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  38. Didn't you notice, Doug, that Dubya tried to, more or less, keep Afghanaistan on the back burner. Stupid, of course. How do you ignore, or "not overcommit" to a War. Anyway, it was pretty obvious, I thought, that Bush was looking for a way "out" of the Afghanistan mess.

    Then comes Obullshit, and the Dems "Gonna fight the *Good* War." Gonna "Draw Down" in the Evuul Iraqi Campaign, and "Go after Osamba."

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  39. Cheney Rumsfeld woulda got us out quick-like, just like they would have in Iraq.
    W listened to Condi/Powell, unfortunately.
    Steele statement still poison, politically.

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  40. Yon screamed about Afghanistan, W ignored him.

    General Garner was working on a realistic plan in Iraq.
    W dismantled it.
    The rest is history.

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  41. Listening to Clinton excusing Byrde's "brief fling" with racism.

    "MAYBE did something wrong."

    Amazing

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  42. http://www.realclearpolitics.com/2010/07/02/the_real_reason_we_are_in_afghanistan_236932.html

    That fellow, Rory Stewart, I posted about sometime ago, the guy that walked alone all the way across Afghanistan, is now a Member of Parliament, and gives his views on the realities and what should be done.

    He figures, we ought to hang around for a long while, but at a low level, small footprint.

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  43. "Where do you get good Salmon, Trish?"

    On this occasion? From the take out place.

    But they're closed already.

    So leftover Chinese it is.

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  44. "Anyway, it was pretty obvious, I thought, that Bush was looking for a way 'out' of the Afghanistan mess."

    Looking for a way out?

    Our numbers in Afghanistan steadily increased from 5200 in 02 to 30K in 08.

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  45. I didn't say he was good at it. The "looking around," I mean.


    I would say he slowly "trapped himself." If that makes any sense at all.

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  46. Hell, remember the first year?

    He forgot to put Afghanistan in the budget. It was like a Billion bucks. Compared to $150 B, or so, for Iraq.

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  47. "It was like a Billion bucks."

    Ahhhhh the Good Old Days.

    People would not believe what little there was to be had in Afghanistan in those early years - a whole lotta nothing save the prompt delivery of bomb on target.

    Not as much fun now, certainly. The relatively permissive operating environment, gone.

    Kinda sucks the joy out of it.

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  48. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  49. An aside:

    In re the "downright annoyed, antagonized, bitter, chafed, choleric, convulsed, cross, displeased, enraged, exacerbated, exasperated, etc." in certain Democratic camps wrt to this administration, John Cole refers to them as WATB.

    Whiny-Ass Tittie Babies.

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  50. A slick overruns a fragile island rookery

    Reporting from Queen Bess Island Pelican Rookery — The rocky island off Grand Isle was intended as a haven for brown pelicans, a centerpiece of environmentalists' efforts to rescue Louisiana's state bird from the federal endangered species list.

    On Monday, wildlife rescue workers came to the Queen Bess Island Pelican Rookery to capture the giant birds as oil from BP's blown-out well in the Gulf of Mexico despoiled the state's largest pelican sanctuary.

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  51. WATB.

    Whiny-Ass Tittie Babies.

    RDDBs

    Red Diaper Doper Babies

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  52. Trish always did love acronyms.

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  53. It's sad all right. I got my money on Red Adair's old group to get it done. If they can't do it, as they say, nobody can.

    If they fail, turn to the nukes, as the head of the Russian nuclear forces advised today.

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  54. Did you notice, bob, that the Gulf oil leak is not the daily news obsession it was?

    We seem to have adjusted and moved on.

    "Trish always did love acronyms."

    I've got another: AMORC.

    And they seem to be cultivating the unsuspecting in order to serve some hidden purpose.

    How many of them are out there, on hundreds, perhaps thousands of blogs?

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  55. That's because we as a nation have the attention span of rabbits. And, there's nothing anyone can do about it anyway, other than wait for Red Adair's group. If they fail, everyone will be glued to the tube again, a deep sea nuke to stop an oil leak--what could be more fun than that!


    Heh, AMORC, had to look it up, but now I'll remember it, as I've become one, have finally found my spiritual home, the mystical wing of the Lutheran Church, so to speak, and, boy, have we needed one.

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  56. http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_sQbEdYp9w50/SSB2Jxw36KI/AAAAAAAAAf8/5UmwZi3K2sE/s400/amorc4.jpg


    The Stairway to Heaven

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  57. http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6611RF20100702

    His face wracked by age and his voice rasping after decades of chain-smoking coarse tobacco, the former long-time Russian Minister of nuclear energy and veteran Soviet physicist Viktor Mikhailov knows just how to fix BP's oil leak in the Gulf of Mexico.

    "A nuclear explosion over the leak," he says nonchalantly puffing a cigarette as he sits in a conference room at the Institute of Strategic Stability, where he is a director. "I don't know what BP is waiting for, they are wasting their time. Only about 10 kilotons of nuclear explosion capacity and the problem is solved."

    A nuclear fix to the leaking well has been touted online and in the occasional newspaper op-ed for weeks now. Washington has repeatedly dismissed the idea and BP execs say they are not considering an explosion -- nuclear or otherwise. But as a series of efforts to plug the 60,000 barrels of oil a day gushing from the sea floor have failed, talk of an extreme solution refuses to die.

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  58. On the other hand, Peter Ward of the University of Washington said the other night on Coast to Coast, we might cause a huge methane bubble to arise, like happened, they think, long ago, on the Black Sea, wiping out life for hundreds of miles all around.

    Maybe those damned Russians know something, and are duplicitous.

    The good news is it would probably finally get the Castro brothers too.

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  59. Peter Ward (paleontologist)
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    Jump to: navigation, search
    For other people named Peter Ward, see Peter Ward (disambiguation).
    Peter Douglas Ward
    Born Seattle, United States of America
    Residence U.S.
    Citizenship American
    Nationality American
    Fields paleontology
    Institutions University of Washington
    Known for work on the K-T Extinction

    Peter Douglas Ward is a paleontologist and professor of Biology and of Earth and Space Sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle, and has written popular science works for a general audience.
    Contents




    [edit] Life and work

    Ward's academic career has included teaching posts and professional connections with Ohio State University, the NASA Astrobiology Institute, the University of Calgary, McMaster University, and the California Institute of Technology. He was elected as a Fellow of the California Academy of Sciences in 1984.

    Peter Ward specializes in the Cretaceous–Tertiary extinction event and mass extinctions generally. He has published books on biodiversity and the fossil record. His 1992 book On Methuselah's Trail received a "Golden Trilobite Award" from the Paleontological Society as the best popular science book of the year. Ward also serves as an adjunct professor of zoology and astronomy.

    Ward is co-author, along with astronomer Donald Brownlee, of the best-selling Rare Earth: Why Complex Life Is Uncommon in the Universe, published in 2000. In that work, the authors suggest that the universe is fundamentally hostile to advanced life, and that, while simple life might be abundant, the likelihood of widespread lifeforms as advanced as those on Earth is marginal.

    According to Ward's April 2007 book, Under a Green Sky, all but one of the major extinction events in history have been brought on by climate change — the same global warming that occurs today. The author argues that events in the past can give valuable information about the future of our planet. Reviewer Doug Brown goes further, stating "this is how the world ends".[1] Scientists at the Universities of York and Leeds also warn that the fossil record supports evidence of impending mass extinction.[2]
    [edit] Medea Hypothesis
    Main article: Medea Hypothesis

    The Medea Hypothesis is a term coined by Ward for the anti-Gaian hypothesis that multicellular life, understood as a superorganism, is suicidal

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  60. Speaking of ROE

    SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — More prisoners at Guantanamo Bay are sharing meals and recreation time with fellow inmates — an easing of conditions that has led to fewer assaults against guards at the US base in Cuba, the new commander said Friday.
    Nearly 160 prisoners have been shifted into a communal living setting instead of spending most of the day confined alone in solid-wall cells, Navy Rear Adm. Jeffrey Harbeson told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

    As a result, there have been only about 60 cases of prisoners assaulting guards in the first seven months of the year, compared to more than 1,000 for all of 2009, added Harbeson, who is completing his first week as head of the military task force that runs the prison.


    The military brass allowed 1000 assaults against the guards at Guantanamo? Please tell me it ain't so.

    When it happened( the taking of prisoners from Afghanistan) and till this day I never understood why one AQ or Taliban prisoner ever got off his knees in the Afghan sand.

    1000 assaults by the jihadis against US troops in Guantanamo, and we have a so called Commander in Chief? How many Officers have resigned over that?

    Excuse me for spitting.

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  61. You can be a Rosicrucian and a Lutheran? On the same day?

    Surely there's something in the by-laws to prevent this.

    ReplyDelete
  62. "When it happened( the taking of prisoners from Afghanistan) and till this day I never understood why one AQ or Taliban prisoner ever got off his knees in the Afghan sand."

    Ideally, all detainees are kept in theater, their location at various facilities determined by their intelligence value.

    Not the way the admin wanted it, though.

    Prisoner assaults are the stuff of prison culture generally, however. Whether kept at Bagram, for instance, or Guantanamo, they happen.

    It's an unpleasant job.

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  63. I've never read my church's by-laws. I'm sure that if strictly adhered to, I'd be excommunicated. I don't plan on telling them I'm a rosy, after all we're kinda secretive group.

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  64. "after all we're kinda secretive group."

    No, really?

    I read that I can arrange to attend up to three meetings without an obligation to become a member.

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  65. Bob, Bob, Bob.

    The Invisible College accepts all new members but at your age all you can ever hope to achieve is the "secret knowledge".

    You would have had to have started decades ago to be granted and have the insight to understand what the Adepts and Masters call "the good stuff".

    If you are truly serious about this path you must understand that in your next life you will have to start at a much younger age if you really quest for the "really really secret knowledge".

    "As above, so below" brother.



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  66. I'll check with one of our exalted adepts and get back, I'm kinda new here.

    Mark Levin discusses, would Obumble's efforts as regards the spill have been different if it had been Hugo Chavez' group that caused it?

    Good question, he certainly hates the British. Hates us too.

    bedtime

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  67. You would have had to have started decades ago to be granted and have the insight to understand what the Adepts and Masters call "the good stuff".

    O b.s., I did start decades ago, on my own. I'm sure I can teach the Adepts and Masters a thing or two.




    Did you notice, Quirk, Algore wanted a little relief from the masseuse on his chakra two area? I thought that showed quite good breeding.

    Now to the dormatorio.

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  68. "I'm sure I can teach the Adepts and Masters a thing or two."

    Pride goeth before the fall.

    Besides, as we like to say here at the temple,

    "You have to pay your dues."


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  69. "...Algore wanted a little relief from the masseuse on his chakra two area?"


    "As above, so below" brother.



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