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Aide-Memoire

Les Filles de Illighadad

November 12, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

New Yorker Magazine Culture Desk The Heavy, Meditative, and Tender Music of Les Filles de Illighadad By Amanda Petrusich November 11, 2019 If you listen long enough, and make yourself open enough, it is possible to reach a kind of holy place while experiencing the music of Les Filles de Illighadad. Les Filles de Illighadad … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Sea Stories, Thinking about Tagged: Christopher Kirkley, Filles de Illighadad, Niger, Sahel, Sahel Sounds, Tuareg, Tuareg guitar

The Observer: Climate change deniers’ new battle front attacked

November 10, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

The Observer: Climate change deniers’ new battle front attacked Robin McKie Science editor Sat 9 Nov 2019 ‘Pernicious’ campaign is unfair on well-meaning people who want to help – expert: The battle between climate change deniers and the environment movement has entered a new, pernicious phase. That is the stark warning of one of the … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Faits Divers, Politics, Science Tagged: atmospheric carbon dioxide, climate change, climate change deniers, environment movement, fossil fuel emissions, fossil fuel industry, Global Warming, Michael Mann

Opinion: How Scientists Got Climate Change So Wrong

November 9, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

Few thought it would arrive so quickly. Now we’re facing consequences once viewed as fringe scenarios. New York Times By Eugene Linden Nov. 8, 2019 So far, the costs of underestimation have been enormous. New York City’s subway system did not flood in its first 108 years, but Hurricane Sandy’s 2012 storm surge caused nearly … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Politics, Science, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: climate change, climate science, glaciers, Hurricanes, permafrost, Wallace Broecker, Younger Dryas

The Slave Ship Wildfire

November 2, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

In a series of articles found on the California Digital Newspaper Archive from U.C. Riverside, here is some of the story of the capture of the American Slaver Wildfire as reported in May, 1860, well before the Civil War. Sacramento Daily Union – 19 June 1860 Capture of a Slaver off the Coast of Africa.— … [Read more…]

Posted in: California Newspaper Archive, Faits Divers, Politics, Racism, Sea Stories, Slavery Tagged: American Slavery, Cuba, Florida Keys, James Buchanan, Liberia, slave ship, Slave Ship Wildfire, slave trade, Slaver, Slavery

Telecommunications: Switzerland calls time on phone booths

October 31, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From SwissInfo: Telecommunications: Switzerland calls time on phone booths On the move The first box was installed in 1881 in the Fraumünster post office in Zurich. Peak booth was reached in 1995, when more than 58,000 could be found dotted around Swiss villages and cities. However, the success of mobile phones at the end of … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Obituaries, Thinking about Tagged: swiss, Swisscom, SwissInfo, telephone booths

Paul Barrere, guitarist and singer-songwriter for Little Feat, dies at 71

October 31, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

From the Washington Post, 10/31/19 – Paul Barrere, guitarist and singer-songwriter for Little Feat, dies at 71. His band confirmed the death in a statement and said he was being treated for liver disease, which forced him to miss a 50th anniversary tour that ended the day after his death. Mr. Barrere, who had battled … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Obituaries, Thinking about Tagged: guitarist, Little Feat, Lowell George, Obituary, Paul Barrere

The Stubble Metric

October 28, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

We all know how Baseball newscasters love statistics. There are stats on most everything in the game and they make an otherwise ordinary event more colorful. One stat which they have not exploited is the stubble metric. Simply defined, the metric shows the player’s performance in contrast to the stubble on their faces, 1 day, … [Read more…]

Posted in: Faits Divers, Science, Sea Stories, Thinking about Tagged: Baseball, dander, double plays, homers, MLB, poop, shaving, shower, STATISTICS, stubble

Guardian: 20 firms behind a third of all carbon emissions

October 22, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

October 9. 2019 Revealed: the 20 firms behind a third of all carbon emissions New data shows how fossil fuel companies have driven climate crisis despite industry knowing dangers by Matthew Taylor and Jonathan Watts “The great tragedy of the climate crisis is that seven and a half billion people must pay the price – … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Finanace, Politics, Science, Thinking about Tagged: Abu Dhabi National Oil, BHP Billiton, BP, carbon dioxide, Chevron, climate crisis, Coal India, ConocoPhillips, Exxon, Gazprom, Iraq National Oil, Kuwait Petroleum, methane, National Iranian Oil Co, Peabody Energy, Pemex, Petrobras, PetroChina, Petróleos de Venezuela, Richard Heede, Royal Dutch Shell, Saudi Aramco, Shell, Sonatrach, Total

Attribution Science

October 22, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

An in-depth article in the Oct 22, 2019 Politico magazine on the emerging science of attribution: The new science fossil fuel companies fear – Researchers can now link weather events to emissions – and to the companies responsible. A string of lawsuits is about to give “attribution science” a real-life test – by ZACK COLMAN … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, Politics, Science, Thinking about Tagged: American Metereological Society, attribution science, climate change, emissions, Exxon Mobil, fossil fuel industry, fossil fuels, Hurricane Harvey, Hurricane Sandy, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, National Academy of Sciences, post-Industrial Revolution, Richard Heede, World Weather Attribution group

The White House didn’t like my agency’s research. So it sent us to Missouri.

October 22, 2019 by sergneri Leave a Comment

By Andrew Crane-Droesch – Washington Post – 10/21/19 … Out of the blue, in August 2018, agriculture secretary George “Sonny” Perdue announced that my agency and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture would relocate from Washington, D.C., to some yet-to-be-determined location. He claimed that this would lower costs and bring us closer to “stakeholders.” … [Read more…]

Posted in: Climate Change, Ethical and green living, IT Failures, Politics, Racism, Science, Thinking about, Trump Tagged: Economic Research Service, George “Sonny” Perdue, Politicals, USDA
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