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www.lincvolt.com
Saturday, July 26, 2008
Saturday, July 19, 2008
AL GORE: Green Energy by 2018
Notice how Gore always mentions the need to ween ourselves away from "oil and coal" but never mentions nuclear power... That's because he considers nuclear power part of what he calls renewables. Like French President Nicolas Sarkozy, Gore is a thinly veiled nuclear power salesman!
The solutions to the environmental crisis, the depletion of fish in the ocean, mass starvation... have simple solutions, like the re-legalization of hemp agriculture in America... Regional production of cellulose-based ethanol fuels... More efficient means of internal combustion with laser ignition systems... The introduction of high density, solid-state li-ion battery chemistries for solar and wind baseload storage.
Hybrids, hydrogen, nuclear power are no solutions, they're jumping from the frying pan, into the fire. Gore advocates solar and wind, while our military and its black labs are keeping energy conversion technology secrets for matter of national security.
10 years? Yes, if nano-technology, green technologies, hemp, a manhattan project towards genuine energy solutions, opening up the gates of Area 51, letting independent scientists through the door, and sharing what we need to get the job done!
Stop lying to the world about the state of human science!
Labels:
Al Gore
Saturday, July 12, 2008
Friday, July 11, 2008
Monday, July 07, 2008
Sunday, July 06, 2008
Saturday, July 05, 2008
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Design for Rising Sea Levels
by Kristina Hill and Jonathan Barnett
"As far as we can tell, most designers and planners aren’t thinking seriously about climate change in the U.S. unless they work closely with the insurance industry, which is dropping tens of thousands of East Coast customers and raising rates on the rest, in part as a result of climate predictions. Ecologists all over the world also know that it’s a very big deal. The World Bank knows. But building and landscape architects, engineers, and planners don’t seem to have connected the dots."
"As far as we can tell, most designers and planners aren’t thinking seriously about climate change in the U.S. unless they work closely with the insurance industry, which is dropping tens of thousands of East Coast customers and raising rates on the rest, in part as a result of climate predictions. Ecologists all over the world also know that it’s a very big deal. The World Bank knows. But building and landscape architects, engineers, and planners don’t seem to have connected the dots."
Open Mike
10th Anniversary Issue
Number 27, Fall 2007/Winter 2008
10th Anniversary Issue
Number 27, Fall 2007/Winter 2008
Read the article: HERE
Labels:
Dubai,
Harvard Design Review
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