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Saturday, December 31, 2011

True Freedom - Guest Opinion - the original

True Freedom
The version titled "a Way Forward" is a theft and a fraud. An unknown person took my writing, scrubbed my name from the bottom, put a new title on it and sent it out, giving the impression that s/he had written it. Shame, shame.

Every time you hear your furnace kick on that's money and energy being wasted.  With efficiencies and retrofits, we would not "need" anywhere near the amount of energy projected by those who come up with every reason why renewables will not satisfy our needs.

Renewables absolutely will meet our needs when we stop wasting it. NYSERDA has a Deep Retrofit program that can lower energy costs by at least 70% but it can cost around $70,000 per house, depending on age.  A lot of people can't afford that. Deep Retrofit is not just blowing in insulation into walls and attics but also layering additional panels on external walls, plus moving out old boilers, furnaces and water heaters, replacing with instant-on heaters or solar hot water heaters.  You could end up with not having the need for any heat/cool appliances in the basement and close to zero heating/cooling bills.  That's real freedom.

Deep Retrofits can reduce costs and thus improve the bottom line, can improve the economy with more jobs, reduce carbon emissions, and create energy security.

We must move federal, state and local subsidies and tax breaks from oil, gas, coal and nuclear now and transfer those taxpayer dollars to Deep Retrofit incentives and grants as well as solar on every single and multifamily residence and on all public buildings, thus lowering our taxes.  New York could meet 15% of its power needs and 100% of its electricity needs with rooftop solar.

Every new high rise must first dig a geothermal trench before they start building.  They have to dig a deep hole anyway.  Both geothermal and solar installation companies are in New York State and growing, including in Broome county.  Check out the New York State solar Industries Association. The state and the Southern Tier should be open to business to these companies and others like them, not to giving tax breaks for polluting gas pipelines, noisy compressor stations, puzzled about what to do with fracking waste fluid, taking the chance of illegal dumps of radioactive waste into fields and streams in the middle of the night, etc., etc. 

Hydraulic fracturing's sole purpose is to burn fossil fuel, the greenhouse gas emissions of which have brought us global warming. Methane, i.e. natural gas, is worse than CO2 for heating up the planet. Formerly rare downpours, floods and heat waves are now common across the U.S. and will come to dominate our climate in our grand-children's lifetime.

Let’s stop hiding our heads in the sand and get to work on this.  Call and write your legislator and demand a change.  If he or she refuses to budge or fudges, vote him or her out of office in 2012. Get together with community members and start your own community energy initiative like in Maryland and Washington State. States that have more insulated buildings and solar have lower electricity bills, including cold mid-western states.  New York State is not one of those states. Let's change that. 

Friday, December 23, 2011

My visit to OWS December 2011

The day after I arrived in NYC for a two week visit, I met with Sue M for a late breakfast, then went to the anti-fracking rally and DEC hearing in Tribeca. After that Sue was my guide down to Zuccotti Park where we saw two "OWS grannies" knitting outside the barricades

 per police orders, not a tent in sight,


just a few people inside the crowd control metal barricades and lots of cops.  I would think that trying to sleep there, with not a stick of grass on soil anywhere, would be like trying to sleep on a granite gravestone. But then again, perhaps a "park" in the Wall Street area being more like a graveyard than a true park seems very appropriate.


Sue then led me over the the WS Atrium where a GA was in progress.

On a later day I went down to the area again, this time carrying four shopping bags of books, hard and soft cover, that I had rescued from my sister's building's laundry room where someone had apparently cleaned out their apartment, leaving piles of books on the floor in front of the shelving for books to read while doing laundry. I heard the books were slated for dumping so I thought taking them to OWS Library would be a good idea.  So I did, by foot and subway to the UFT Bldg on Broadway, two blocks up or so from Zuccotti Park. Somewhere in the UFT Building was serving as temporary? site of the OWS Library.  On another day, I took another two bags
full.  It felt good. A woman on the subway looked interested about me carrying the bags so I told her my mission.  She told me that in her building they throw out books all the time.  Wouldn't it be great for those books to all go to OWS or some other similar site instead of to the landfill?
On these later trips, I saw a constant presence of cops, police cars, ambulances, the blue on white police buses for transporting arrested people. The lengths NYC goes to in order to "protect" itself or protect banks etc. impressed me including their inserting these street blockading metal ramps on Wall St. and other side streets like this one, under which trash collects. A metaphor.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Union Square Holiday Market and Green Market Dec. 2011

NYC allows vendors to "occupy" Union Square almost all year round, albeit not overnight.  Greenmarket comes on site MWFS, with farmers coming in from NJ, CT and lower and upper upstate NY, including Norwich. To the right is a fine display of fresh Korean greens and root veggies.
This vendor had samples of the veggies fresh stir-fried.
On Greenmarket days you
can enjoy samples of
fresh cooked food, like soup
here with Grandma at the main tent.
In another post, check out the grannies knitting for OWS at Zuccotti/Liberty park.
In the Holiday market section of Union square, the variety is amazing and is different every year, it seems.  Here we have a lovely arrangement of spices and teas. While the open piles make for a beautiful scene, I have concern about the open access.  Personally, I would not purchase for consumption.
Lest you not know what's going on and which elected politician takes credit for making the Green Market happen, the big van informs.

The bigger aspect of the small business occupation of Union Square is that of the Holiday Market. The booths are vibrant and diverse. Technically, the spices and teas booth is part of the
Holiday Market, not the Green Market which is all fresh foods from farmers, including cheeses, breads, frozen meats.

The Holiday Market booths are packed
closely in, almost medieval in aspect.
It's easy to become bewildered.
An existential moment.
Where am I? Who am I?
But, not to worry, there's a map.  However, do you have time to read all this?
Again, not to worry, if you decide it's time to leave, down the steps nearby into the subway, there's free entertainment which changes daily.

Green is the new Red

I went to this event, took notes and a few photos.  A packed room. Lots of energy and age, ethnic, race diversity.
From left to right - Rachel Meerpol, Robert Meerpol, Will Potter, Jenny Synan. 
Red to Green: Political Panic from McCarthyism to ‘Eco-Terrorism’
A panel discussion on past and present political persecution the United States
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
6:30pm – 8:00 pm
Community Church of New York
40 East 35th Street, New York, NY,
Co-Sponsored by:
The Center for Constitutional Rights
The Rosenberg Fund for Children
Green is the new Red
Family and Friends of Daniel McGowan

We are excited to welcome Robert Meeropol, Executive Director of The Rosenberg Fund for Children, Will Potter, Author “Green is the New Red: An Insider’s Account of a Social Movement Under Siege”, and Jenny Synan, activist and partner of jailed environmental activist Daniel McGowan. With an introduction from Rachel Meeropol, Staff Attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights. From the “Red Scare” of the 1950s to the present day “Green Scare”, our panel will examine the fear of communism in the 20th century, the contemporary treatment of environmental and animal activism as so called “eco-terrorism” and the U.S. government’s persistent persecution of individuals deemed a political threat.
Raffle and Book Sale:
Friends and Family of Daniel McGowan will be hosting a raffle during the event featuring some exciting and unique prizes.
For more information about the raffle and Friends and Family of Daniel McGowan please visit their website at http://supportdaniel.org/blog/?p=41
Will Potter will also be selling copies of his book “Green is the New Red: An Insider’s Account of a Social Movement under Siege.”
For more information please visit http://www.greenisthenewred.com/blog/

For more information about The Rosenberg Fund for Children and Robert Meeropol please visit http://www.rfc.org/

When is a spill not a spill?

When it's a disgorge.  The intentional or supposedly accidental but really inevitable discharge of toxic fluid into a stream, creek, river, spring, watershed or land must no longer be labeled a "spill."  A spill is what comes from your coffee cup or glass of beverage.  I prefer to use the word "disgorge" for the polluting event.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Andrew's NYC rooftop beehive honey

Searching for the Farmers Rally and march to OWS on Dec. 4th, 2011 in NYC on the lower East Side, I saw some sad little "gardens,"                                   street art,
a funky bike,
a nice old building,
but no rally, even though I could hear someone giving a speech somewhere.

But then I found Andrew, his gorgeous honey and gorgeous smile at the GreenMarket on the sidewalk at Tompkins Square park. I bought one jar of the dark.  It's like molasses! Later, researching, I found out that Andrew puts his hives on the roof of a private school that overlooks Central Park. So that's where the bees feast!  True New Yorkers!
You can find Andrew also at the Union Square GreenMarket in Manhattan.