Judging by the arrangement of Back To School products in many stores right now, it's clear the American (western?) preoccupation with germs continues unabated.
Anti-bacterial soaps and hand sanitizers can be found alongside school supplies at your finest drugstores, discounters and big boxes.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Monday, August 8, 2011
Smooth Move, Ex-Lax
Includes a dialog with The Offender
With friends like these, who needs enemas?
The Transport Innovators online discussion group is nothing if not a bubbling cauldron of problematica®, so it's good to see it is still capable of eliciting a good-old-fashioned spit take:
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Seattle Times throws bus drivers, riders under the bus
The Seattle Times' editorial position on the $20 car tab tax for King County Metro transit service is really quite shocking.
Here it is, a vital public infrastructure component, just as vital as water, electricity and sewers, but transit is something the Times has decided ought to be starved ( http://bit.ly/pcYZ8X ). The paper:
Here it is, a vital public infrastructure component, just as vital as water, electricity and sewers, but transit is something the Times has decided ought to be starved ( http://bit.ly/pcYZ8X ). The paper:
Monday, July 11, 2011
Baby gets bad welcome gift
The most important regional environmental news of the past week was the arrival of a new Orca baby in Puget Sound, K-44 (http://goo.gl/9S9xs). Welcome baby boy!
However, the good news is balanced by an item from the previous week, concerning the results of last month's tabletop oil spill response drill:
"The drill showed procedures introducing oil dispersants on a spill need improving." (http://goo.gl/Yw1mg)
We ought to be alarmed state and federal authorities are talking about dispersants at all. First, as we now know from the aftermath of the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster, dispersants don't remove the oil, they only make the oil invisible. Second, dispersants kill phytoplankton and bacteria in the food chain.
And third: DISPERSANTS ARE ILLEGAL in Puget Sound (http://goo.gl/G6GMP).
Monday, June 13, 2011
Republican debaters mention the environment
In case any doubts remain, here is the only explicit mention of the environment (that I heard) in tonight's debate among Republican candidates for president:
Rick Santorum inadvertently took an implicitly pro-environment position, in mentioning his opposition to ethanol subsidies. I guess ethanol must not work in lubricants.
"What we need is the mother of all repeal bills," Bachmann said, promising to get rid of Obama's national health-care law and new regulations on the financial industry and to rename the Environmental Protection Agency the "Job Killing Agency of America." (http://goo.gl/o88td)
Rick Santorum inadvertently took an implicitly pro-environment position, in mentioning his opposition to ethanol subsidies. I guess ethanol must not work in lubricants.
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