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July 31, 2008

Reading and Writing

We'd not mentioned to the Easter Seals staffers where Jonah is doing day camp that he reads and writes, so they were very fluttered when Jonah picked up a pen and a pad of paper and proceeded to write, and write, and write. All the lyrics of the Arthur theme song. Comments on his wanting to go to one room or home or get in the truck or ...

At home Jonah kept writing. I stopped and picked him up four journals at 50 cents each (wicked cheap) and a nice pen. Later I found him reading a second course French text, page after page, and after an hour of that he was back writing, annotating his Cars coloring book with more words. I'll have a lot of reading to do this evening to see where his mind's been.

House of Saddam

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I left Dublin the morning of the 30th, so I missed the first episode which showed last night. Pity. I'd have liked to have seen the treatment. A saga of kings or the murders of a mafia. The irony of an Israeli playing the lead role of Saddam is pretty rich.

July 30, 2008

Finally Olmert's found the door marked "exit"

September. The grand victor of the the 33 Day War. The Holy Man of the AIPAC. And his war with Iran ...?

July 29, 2008

Three seconds over Tokyo

I'd meetings today, about what to do with the http spec, something to do with dns operations, something more to do with domain names that appear to allow encodings other than ASCII (but really not, its a presentation layer illusion), and one on getting DNSSEC operational for ccTLDs. The last one was a small meeting, and after someone offered to show the cache poisoning attack. Two laptops, one running a recursive server, one running the cache poisoning attack. No external connectivity so no risk of spread, and to make it simple, the server listened on only one port.

Time from start to finish ... three seconds. Non-optimized code. Loops not unrolled, interpreted code, etc. Speeding it up by a factor of 3 trivial.

Update: Its live in the wild.

Just in Ohio (and Nevada)?

Greg Palast writes that the Kennedy-Palast investigation in voter suppression in the current cycle includes

In swing states Ohio and Nevada, new federal law is knocking out tens of thousands of voters who lost their homes to foreclosure.

Now that is really interesting. How does the voluntary or involuntary nature of a change of address affect the right to vote, not merely in a district, but at all?

July 27, 2008

Indian Voting Rights

There's a nice op-ed by Anne T. Denogean in the Tucson Citizen on Indian voting rights. I like the fact she gets the dates right on Maine Indians, yes, 1952 federal, and 1967 state.

Job Flight

Since I'm going to fly today and tomorrow, from the middle of North America to the western edge of Europe, here's something interesting about the North American air transport industry.

In 2002, after the Atta Gang of 19 committed mass-murder via suicide, creating a political judgment vacuum, other than Representative Barbara Lee (D-Berkeley/Oakland), which lead to the current wars in Central Asia, American air transport companies collectively lost 11 billion dollars. According to the ATA, they've lost between 7 and 15 billion in 2008 (which isn't over yet). The five majors -- American Airlines, Continental Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and US Airways have already announced a record loss of 13.4 billion dollars for the first half of the year, compared to a benefit of 1.26 billion in the first half of 2007.

One of the ironies of the US airlines' collective dive to the bottom in pursuit of quarterly profit, is that the current fleet on average burns between 20% and 30% more fuel than fleets that are younger, so one-time profits made in 2007 are recurring losses in 2008 and subsequent.

So prices will go up, and pink slips will go out. About 100,000 world-wide, with most in the North American market, naturally.

July 26, 2008

The Lisbon Treaty for PDs

I'm off to Dublin tomorrow evening, Ireland, from Dublin, Ohio. And I'll be back in time for the Irish Festival in Dublin, Ohio.

75px-Celtic_Nations1.svg.pngIt is just coincidence, but I've a professional interest in Wales, Scotland, Bretagne, Galicia, and also Basque (a non-Indo-European language).

Dublin (Ohio) Irish-Americans may want to know what the Treaty of Lisbon thing was all about. Here's Article 28(3) of the Lisbon Treaty:

Member States shall undertake progressively to improve their military capabilities.

More money for warfare means less for health care, and ignoring the usual loony right nationalisms present in any such campaign (historically the John Birch Society vs, modernly the Bush Regime vs, the UN), the progressive left and working class voted overwhelmingly "No".

Ohio Irish may not be engaged by anti-Europe rhetoric (Anglo-Americans are more likely to identify with anti-Europe sentiment, historically, and anti-Euro sentiment, modernly), but the historical position of the Irish state as neutral in Europe should be something Irish-Americans appreciate. Should the Irish military participate in European projections of military force ... in Central Asia ... in Central Africa ... in Europe? The predicate condition is the growth in member state military capability. And the kicker is that once in the Lisbon system, Irish forces may be deployed by Europe without an act of government, or the vote of the Irish electorate.

The Irish Republic just declined to follow Tony Blair's Brits into whatever adventure the present George, or the next George, stumbles into. That's what the Lisbon vote was really about, and that's why Nicolas Sarkozy is venting self-rightous indignation in the direction of Taoiseach Brian Cowen and the Oireachtas.

But that's not the only thing going on in Erie. The Irish Tiger is a memory. Ireland is, for the first time in a generation, experiencing an economic contraction. Mortgage defaults, failed banks, unemployment, and lurching towards Canton-Massillon.

While the good people do less than nothing

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I've been thinking about this image since it first appeared at Le Soir on Tuesday. Its "away", in Italy, at Torregaveta, near Naples, and the dead girls, Violetta, age 12 and Cristina, age 13, are Roms. The people Silvio Berlusconi is targeting for mass fingerprinting. But thinking about the ADA today I just couldn't pass this silently.

20080726MatinoUne.jpg

A wave took them, but spared their older cousin and sister, and a few minutes later another wave brought them back. For hours some non-Roms were affected, and some were indifferent. The photo shows a couple unaffected by the death of two Rom girls.

Indian girls in the Americas. Rom girls in Europe. Just girls.

New Category :: Ohio

While we're in Columbus I'll be blogging about living in Ohio, as well as our other homes -- east of the Hudson and west of the Sierras, as a POA, a 'skin, a hack, and an academic in remission.

The url for the category is ohio.

Ohio Presidential Disability Forum

The AAPD is holding a National Forum on Disability Issues today at the Conference & Technology Center on Refugee Road in Columbus, Ohio today. Senator Tom Harkin (D-OH) will surrogate for Senator Barack Obama (D-IL), and Senator John McCain (D-AZ) will participate "via satellite" from Arizona. [Note: If I were that campaign's CD I'd use land lines and cut out the 1000 millisecond each-way delay on packet latency, but "via satellite" always sounds impressive and newsy.] Judy Woodruff is going to moderate the forum. Obama's in Europe, and McCain did the cancer thing in Columbus this week, so C >> D on his PD's issues-and-blocks tote board.

jonah-and-gobbletsIts been eighteen years since our children's civil rights law, the Americans with Disabilities Act, was passed into law. For the past three years we've been living in Federal, State and County campgrounds, and it is still an every-camp question whether the policy of "accommodation" has made it to the locals, and whether its just some blue lines and a cement pad at the site closest to the toilets, or they "get" that Jonah's elopism is his fundamental risk factor, and that a herding service animal can't be "on leash" and function to herd or maintain station on a non-verbal (until engaged) physically very active autistic child. That disability is more than just a wheel chair.

Then there's the constant problem. Jonah likes to look at the way light reflects off of cars. Some people think that their payment of ten or twenty dollars to government gives them the right to harm children who approach, or touch, their cars, which are not fenced like inherently dangerous animals (small dogs held in Class A rigs are a big bite risk). More likely than not, the LEO that comes out to respond to "Adult menaces or hits child" sides with the property interests. Touch a car, get a smack. The canonical LEO notion of "accommodation" is that "all laws apply equally, literally, to everyone", except the ADA, so Jonah and a blind guy or anyone else who crosses an invisible line is a free hit for the psychopaths needing to act out, but afraid of the consequences. The red, white and blue is always there to wrap themselves up in and screech "property rights" from with the chorus of mortally stupid LEOs doing the baseline kumbaya of "cage your kids, cage your kids ..." Obviously, the ADA is not really "law" any more than the Voting Rights Act of 1968 was law for an awful long time.

So I'm putting up this. My first non-neutral-or-critical post concerning the presumptive nominee. Fraser Robinson was diagnosed with MS at age 30. MB was diagnosed at age 40. Where we camp, where we travel, is between two temperature gradients -- the lower, because we didn't buy the top-end cold weather travel trailer, and the upper, because of MB's MS. More than my need for the VSAT and data access, and Jonah's for video access, we are gated by her need for A/C. When the FD at the campaign she's chosen ordered her, the sober, sharp and busy end of the Field organization stick, to staff an event in 90 degree weather last week, I was not amused, and summer/fall in the Eastern Townships of Quebec still looks wicked good to me, for python coding (the CORE registrar client) with a decent co-worker, and for time-on-target in the Abenaki Reserve at Odenak. Still, candidates who grok disability as a policy issue, and I include Curt Weldon, MD and Dan Burton for their dedication to autism over party, are better than those who mock disability, or simply can't be bothered to think at all.

Senator Obama (D-IL), on disability and autism:

The AADP has an optimistic piece up at YouTube, which is a nice united-flavors-of-disability sequence. It misses autism and severe disability, but its still ADA voters at the not quite accessible or "accommodating" ballot box.

Before we left Portland I'd take Sam to the little two-row plus store at Morrill's Corner. Riverside Elementary, where Grace did well, but where Sam didn't ("accommodation" ment ignoring his IEP and the requirement for an aide to help him mainstream, and demonizing his interest in the rich abundance of doors created by the star-pattern layout of the school's designers (architect and district) optimizing on the open-plan mega-room clusters, with accordion walls that left more ambient noise than solid walls separating linear organized classroom wings, and clusters of adjacent doors that all look alike, and only one of which lead to his 1st grade classroom), is not too far from this little grocery, so we'd walk there often. It was the right sized store to "accommodate" Sam then. Just two rows. I could see him or I could hear him, and the staff knew me and my kids, including the fussy baby (now 6!) in the sling, and tolerance was the norm.

Except I remember discussing Michael Savage to one of the neighborhood women clerking at Morrill's, so last week's rant wasn't his first swing in the dirt.

Today is my last full day before departing for Dublin, and I've got all the kids, so we'll find something else to do today than try and get across Columbus to the Refugee Road event venue.

July 25, 2008

King Lincoln Bronzeville v. Blackwell

Last week something happened. Stephen Spoonamore spoke in the question of the 2004 Ohio ballot tabulation. I'd hoped to get a chance to meet him, but my week was hijacked by post-ICANN work, pre-IETF work, and goD forbid, work-work. Oh! And a birthday!! Kezzie is 6!!! Next week is IETF, so other than secret meetings of the DNS cabal or the arabic script literacy posse, and a meeting I set up this week, next week is toast. Still, what happened is significant. Here are the technorati links to blogs that mention Stephen Spoonamore, including Susie at Suburban Guerrilla, which caught my eye, and TChris at TalkLeft, where Jerelyn's been on Diebold from the beginning.

The story has legs, and BradBlog is doing the leg work the journamalists are only too happy to miss. The kids and I walked past the OSU J-School today on an errand at the Near East and African department offices, by way of the Math Dept., and I actually felt pity for the smug, self-contained children who elect to attend the J-School. Kids for whom the troll in Spoonamore's allegorical box always gives the correct ballot tabulation, and ponies too.

If you want to start reading the case material, start here at the Moritz election law site with King Lincoln Bronzwell v. Blackwell. I am.

Of course, something happened this week too. It may be an interesting weekend, and I'll be at the IETF at the dnsops wg meeting, though not the dnsext wg meeting, and that should be about as educational as anywhere else I could be.


File under: Election Law Litigation

An idle moment in Ohio

A friend drove past the Renaissance on 3rd street yesterday. The "Straight Talk Express" (the McCain bus) was there, but there was no one doing viz. No RNC viz. No DNC counter-viz. Amazing lack of execution competence by both campaigns for a scheduled event in the capital (and largest media market) in a battle ground state.

Mercifully, Senators McCain and Obama are not our problems.

Luciano Benjamín Menéndez

menendez1978.jpg

The photo is from 1978. Then General Menéndez was "jefe del III Cuerpo de Ejército", and in 1977 that unit kidnapped, tortured, and murdered Hilda Palacios, Humberto Brandalisis, Carlos Lajas y Raúl Cardozo, all "militantes del Partido Revolucionario de los Trabajadores (PRT)".

proceso2008.jpg

The photo is from May of this year. Luciano Benjamín Menéndez is at the far right of the frame.

Yesterday the Tribunal Oral Federal Nº1 de Córdoba announced its verdict. While Argentine law permits persons older than 70 to serve out sentences in their homes, Luciano Benjamín Menéndez will spend the rest of his life in prision. The seven other defendants, formerly members of the Intelligence Services, were also sentenced yesterday, from 18 years to life in prison.

July 24, 2008

2011 electoral ballet warmups at the CNO

200807_A5_a5cherokee0724.jpgThe CNO Tribal Council has voted to switch from a nine district model, in which seven send two members to the Council, and two send one each, to a 15 district, one member per model.

We supported Stacy Leeds and Raymond Vann and the reform slate -- District 1 Baker and Walkingstick, District 2 Leach and Crittenden, District 3 Yargee and Thornton, District 4 Igert (only), District 5 O'Leary and Shotpouch, District 6 None, District 7 Boen (alone), District 8 Herman and Earley, District 9 Hoskin (alone), and for the two at-large seats created in the 2003 election, which the BIA has correctly declined to approve due to the unlawful exclusion of a portion of the electorate, Keen and Nordwall.

Having the candidates for the two highest vote accumulating campaigns per district seated does lead to outcomes distinguishable from having the candidate for the highest vote accumulating campaign in each half-district seated. Assuming (again) an incumbent slate and a reform slate fielded by two competitive campaigns, with nearly equal effective strength, but favoring the incumbent slate campaign, in the former model the reform slate picks up some number of seats, one in most two-seat districts, and in the latter model the reform slate picks up no seats, unless it manages to win outright in some district, which it also would have won in the other model.

July 23, 2008

Gigataps at the Exchange Points

In yesterday's conference call someone joked that we should stop using skype "so the Americans couldn't listen in".

After the obligatory "which American" (I'm the only North American on the ExCom calls) and the laughter I said "I hate to break this to you but Verizon's got exchange points in Europe and we know there are gigataps in all the North American Verizon exchanges with black backhaul to parts unknown, so ..."

There was silence, then some "ah shits" and more laughter. But I expect we're going to go crypto soon.

R U Random Enuf?

DNS-OARC is providing a Web-based DNS Randomness Test, which no one in the blogosphere (y! sctp!) is likely to notice, so I've lifted the bits that work.

testmydns.png

See this for details, such as how to interpret POOR, which, as of this morning, is what the TimeWarner/RoadRunner DNS infrastructure is reported as, for source port randomness.

Brain Dead on the Border

In the last cycle there was Gen. Wes Clark thinking out loud that the Saudis could bring lawnorder west of the Pecos. Today more mental fluff is being aired by Senator Barack Obama. He's going to take pot shots at bad guys -- in Pakistan -- from Afghanistan.

Obama is not our problem, but the prospect of artillery duels across a second "line of control" in a second "disputed Kashmir" with Pakistan, like India and Pakistan play out over the first "line of control" in the first "disputed Kashmir", minus the civilizing bits of cricket matches between Pakistan and the US, is amusing.

And why continue the military adventure in Afghanistan anyway? Aren't past military adventures the root of the problem in west central Asia, and isn't development, minus all the patro-jingo that has been tacked on the US AID mission since forever, more likely to produce distinguishable outcomes?

July 22, 2008

Recursive DNS server vulnerability

The cat is out of the bag. Things may be different, depending on what recursive DNS server you use.

Dan Kaminsky's upcoming presentation at Blackhat (in August) has been leaked by someone with a better idea on how to manage really bad things involving lots of vendors and operators.

The CERT cite is "VU#800113 Multiple DNS implementations vulnerable to cache poisioning".

For those not listening,

we can infect a name server in 11 seconds now, which was never true before

July 21, 2008

Safer, at last

The emergency shelters in Greenfield for the via-Arroyo-Seco evacuees and at Carmel Middle School for the via-Carmel-Valley evacuees are being closed today.

The mandatory evacuations along Carmel Valley Road between Martin Road and Piney Creek Road, the Lower Cachagua and Tassajara Road areas -- the full length of Cachagua Road and Tassajara Road down to the Zen Center -- the area of Upper Cachagua, Carmel Valley Road from the intersection of Carmel Valley Road and Arroyo Seco Road to Piney Creek Road and Arroyo Seco Road west of the junction with Carmel Valley Road have all been lifted. The only area still under mandatory evacuation are the cabins in the Santa Lucia Tract.

The Basin Complex fire is now 72% contained.

Firelines were burned out along Blue Rock Ridge and the lower portion of Chew's ridge yesterday. Today crews will continue burning on Hennickson's Ridge and Chews Ridge. I used to camp on Chews Ridge.

Harvest the wind

MontereyCountyWind.005.jpgNearly every day, from Chualar to King City, from mid-day to sunset, over the row crops of spinach, onions, broccoli, cauliflower, lettuce, and over the men and women, in jeans and layers, topped by a hooded sweatshirt, even in July, the heat engine of the Pacific Ocean and the Central California interior pushes cool air at speed over the ground.

When the land use changed from mixed ranches and farming on large community allotments, the form introduced by the Fransicans using captive Olone and Esselen labor, to farming on small allotments, the kind the late Californios and the early Americans favored, wind breaks were planted. Rows of Eucylyptus run along roadsides. A few are left even now, after most of the allotments have been consolidated and Steinbeck's world replaced by one driven by irrigation -- first sugar beets and and hopper cars to the Spreckels plant, east of Salinas, later leaf crops, lettuce in particular, and refer cars to the east, from Salinas.

Plants tell me who's lived here, they encode the past. A patch of old cactus by the roadside and I know Californios lived here. A redwood and Americans. The occasional palm and the delight of eccentricity.

Vally Ag is in transition again. Vines now run up the slopes on the west side, and on the shelf of the east side, where there were only cattle previously. Land in row crops for a century is being planted in vines on the terraces of the valley floor.

But the wind remains unharvested. About 110,000 acres of 12.5 MPH average wind, one hundred feet above the heads of men, women, cabbages, and the king, lettuce. There are better sites, in average wind speed, but the Salinas Valley north and south of Soledad is there, and its wind field is uncultivated.

So I wish I'd had time with Jerome à Paris when I was there last. He's done the numbers and has a wind field under cultivation ... over rows of shell fish.

July 19, 2008

Africa

I'm watching the first democratically elected woman president in Africa. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, President of Liberia, is a speaker at the Nelson Mandela Annual Lecture, which C-SPAN 2 is carrying.

July 18, 2008

Jerome a Paris comments on Gore's text

conceptual_network_for_400GW_wind.jpg

Its a nice map but there are bits missing. The whole of the coast of Dawnland, whether Ottowa or Washington claims it, is "outstanding" or better. The northern tier windprint doesn't stop at the nothern boundary of the Blackfoot Reservation, it extends well to the north, past the Blackfeet Reserve.

Here's the link to Jerome's piece on Gore's text. I really wish we hadn't missed each other when I was in Paris three weeks ago.

July 17, 2008

Gore :: A Generational Challenge to Repower America

Ladies and gentlemen:

There are times in the history of our nation when our very way of life depends upon dispelling illusions and awakening to the challenge of a present danger. In such moments, we are called upon to move quickly and boldly to shake off complacency, throw aside old habits and rise, clear-eyed and alert, to the necessity of big changes. Those who, for whatever reason, refuse to do their part must either be persuaded to join the effort or asked to step aside. This is such a moment. The survival of the United States of America as we know it is at risk. And even more -- if more should be required -- the future of human civilization is at stake.

I don't remember a time in our country when so many things seemed to be going so wrong simultaneously. Our economy is in terrible shape and getting worse, gasoline prices are increasing dramatically, and so are electricity rates. Jobs are being outsourced. Home mortgages are in trouble. Banks, automobile companies and other institutions we depend upon are under growing pressure. Distinguished senior business leaders are telling us that this is just the beginning unless we find the courage to make some major changes quickly.

The climate crisis, in particular, is getting a lot worse -- much more quickly than predicted. Scientists with access to data from Navy submarines traversing underneath the North polar ice cap have warned that there is now a 75 percent chance that within five years the entire ice cap will completely disappear during the summer months. This will further increase the melting pressure on Greenland. According to experts, the Jakobshavn glacier, one of Greenland's largest, is moving at a faster rate than ever before, losing 20 million tons of ice every day, equivalent to the amount of water used every year by the residents of New York City.

Two major studies from military intelligence experts have warned our leaders about the dangerous national security implications of the climate crisis, including the possibility of hundreds of millions of climate refugees destabilizing nations around the world.

Just two days ago, 27 senior statesmen and retired military leaders warned of the national security threat from an "energy tsunami" that would be triggered by a loss of our access to foreign oil. Meanwhile, the war in Iraq continues, and now the war in Afghanistan appears to be getting worse.

And by the way, our weather sure is getting strange, isn't it? There seem to be more tornadoes than in living memory, longer droughts, bigger downpours and record floods. Unprecedented fires are burning in California and elsewhere in the American West. Higher temperatures lead to drier vegetation that makes kindling for mega-fires of the kind that have been raging in Canada, Greece, Russia, China, South America, Australia and Africa. Scientists in the Department of Geophysics and Planetary Science at Tel Aviv University tell us that for every one degree increase in temperature, lightning strikes will go up another 10 percent. And it is lightning, after all, that is principally responsible for igniting the conflagration in California today.

Like a lot of people, it seems to me that all these problems are bigger than any of the solutions that have thus far been proposed for them, and that's been worrying me.

I'm convinced that one reason we've seemed paralyzed in the face of these crises is our tendency to offer old solutions to each crisis separately -- without taking the others into account. And these outdated proposals have not only been ineffective - they almost always make the other crises even worse.

Yet when we look at all three of these seemingly intractable challenges at the same time, we can see the common thread running through them, deeply ironic in its simplicity: our dangerous over-reliance on carbon-based fuels is at the core of all three of these challenges -- the economic, environmental and national security crises.

We're borrowing money from China to buy oil from the Persian Gulf to burn it in ways that destroy the planet. Every bit of that's got to change.

But if we grab hold of that common thread and pull it hard, all of these complex problems begin to unravel and we will find that we're holding the answer to all of them right in our hand.

The answer is to end our reliance on carbon-based fuels.

In my search for genuinely effective answers to the climate crisis, I have held a series of "solutions summits" with engineers, scientists, and CEOs. In those discussions, one thing has become abundantly clear: when you connect the dots, it turns out that the real solutions to the climate crisis are the very same measures needed to renew our economy and escape the trap of ever-rising energy prices. Moreover, they are also the very same solutions we need to guarantee our national security without having to go to war in the Persian Gulf.

What if we could use fuels that are not expensive, don't cause pollution and are abundantly available right here at home?

We have such fuels. Scientists have confirmed that enough solar energy falls on the surface of the earth every 40 minutes to meet 100 percent of the entire world's energy needs for a full year. Tapping just a small portion of this solar energy could provide all of the electricity America uses.

And enough wind power blows through the Midwest corridor every day to also meet 100 percent of US electricity demand. Geothermal energy, similarly, is capable of providing enormous supplies of electricity for America.

The quickest, cheapest and best way to start using all this renewable energy is in the production of electricity. In fact, we can start right now using solar power, wind power and geothermal power to make electricity for our homes and businesses.

But to make this exciting potential a reality, and truly solve our nation's problems, we need a new start.

That's why I'm proposing today a strategic initiative designed to free us from the crises that are holding us down and to regain control of our own destiny. It's not the only thing we need to do. But this strategic challenge is the lynchpin of a bold new strategy needed to re-power America.

Today I challenge our nation to commit to producing 100 percent of our electricity from renewable energy and truly clean carbon-free sources within 10 years.

This goal is achievable, affordable and transformative. It represents a challenge to all Americans -- in every walk of life: to our political leaders, entrepreneurs, innovators, engineers, and to every citizen.

A few years ago, it would not have been possible to issue such a challenge. But here's what's changed: the sharp cost reductions now beginning to take place in solar, wind, and geothermal power - coupled with the recent dramatic price increases for oil and coal -- have radically changed the economics of energy.

When I first went to Congress 32 years ago, I listened to experts testify that if oil ever got to $35 a barrel, then renewable sources of energy would become competitive. Well, today, the price of oil is over $135 per barrel. And sure enough, billions of dollars of new investment are flowing into the development of concentrated solar thermal, photovoltaics, windmills, geothermal plants, and a variety of ingenious new ways to improve our efficiency and conserve presently wasted energy.

And as the demand for renewable energy grows, the costs will continue to fall. Let me give you one revealing example: the price of the specialized silicon used to make solar cells was recently as high as $300 per kilogram. But the newest contracts have prices as low as $50 a kilogram.

You know, the same thing happened with computer chips -- also made out of silicon. The price paid for the same performance came down by 50 percent every 18 months -- year after year, and that's what's happened for 40 years in a row.

To those who argue that we do not yet have the technology to accomplish these results with renewable energy: I ask them to come with me to meet the entrepreneurs who will drive this revolution. I've seen what they are doing and I have no doubt that we can meet this challenge.

To those who say the costs are still too high: I ask them to consider whether the costs of oil and coal will ever stop increasing if we keep relying on quickly depleting energy sources to feed a rapidly growing demand all around the world. When demand for oil and coal increases, their price goes up. When demand for solar cells increases, the price often comes down.

When we send money to foreign countries to buy nearly 70 percent of the oil we use every day, they build new skyscrapers and we lose jobs. When we spend that money building solar arrays and windmills, we build competitive industries and gain jobs here at home.

Of course there are those who will tell us this can't be done. Some of the voices we hear are the defenders of the status quo -- the ones with a vested interest in perpetuating the current system, no matter how high a price the rest of us will have to pay. But even those who reap the profits of the carbon age have to recognize the inevitability of its demise. As one OPEC oil minister observed, "The Stone Age didn't end because of a shortage of stones."

To those who say 10 years is not enough time, I respectfully ask them to consider what the world's scientists are telling us about the risks we face if we don't act in 10 years. The leading experts predict that we have less than 10 years to make dramatic changes in our global warming pollution lest we lose our ability to ever recover from this environmental crisis. When the use of oil and coal goes up, pollution goes up. When the use of solar, wind and geothermal increases, pollution comes down.

To those who say the challenge is not politically viable: I suggest they go before the American people and try to defend the status quo. Then bear witness to the people's appetite for change.

I for one do not believe our country can withstand 10 more years of the status quo. Our families cannot stand 10 more years of gas price increases. Our workers cannot stand 10 more years of job losses and outsourcing of factories. Our economy cannot stand 10 more years of sending $2 billion every 24 hours to foreign countries for oil. And our soldiers and their families cannot take another 10 years of repeated troop deployments to dangerous regions that just happen to have large oil supplies.

What could we do instead for the next 10 years? What should we do during the next 10 years? Some of our greatest accomplishments as a nation have resulted from commitments to reach a goal that fell well beyond the next election: the Marshall Plan, Social Security, the interstate highway system. But a political promise to do something 40 years from now is universally ignored because everyone knows that it's meaningless. Ten years is about the maximum time that we as a nation can hold a steady aim and hit our target.

When President John F. Kennedy challenged our nation to land a man on the moon and bring him back safely in 10 years, many people doubted we could accomplish that goal. But 8 years and 2 months later, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the surface of the moon.

To be sure, reaching the goal of 100 percent renewable and truly clean electricity within 10 years will require us to overcome many obstacles. At present, for example, we do not have a unified national grid that is sufficiently advanced to link the areas where the sun shines and the wind blows to the cities in the East and the West that need the electricity. Our national electric grid is critical infrastructure, as vital to the health and security of our economy as our highways and telecommunication networks. Today, our grids are antiquated, fragile, and vulnerable to cascading failure. Power outages and defects in the current grid system cost US businesses more than $120 billion dollars a year. It has to be upgraded anyway.

We could further increase the value and efficiency of a Unified National Grid by helping our struggling auto giants switch to the manufacture of plug-in electric cars. An electric vehicle fleet would sharply reduce the cost of driving a car, reduce pollution, and increase the flexibility of our electricity grid.

At the same time, of course, we need to greatly improve our commitment to efficiency and conservation. That's the best investment we can make.

America's transition to renewable energy sources must also include adequate provisions to assist those Americans who would unfairly face hardship. For example, we must recognize those who have toiled in dangerous conditions to bring us our present energy supply. We should guarantee good jobs in the fresh air and sunshine for any coal miner displaced by impacts on the coal industry. Every single one of them.

Of course, we could and should speed up this transition by insisting that the price of carbon-based energy include the costs of the environmental damage it causes. I have long supported a sharp reduction in payroll taxes with the difference made up in CO2 taxes. We should tax what we burn, not what we earn. This is the single most important policy change we can make.

In order to foster international cooperation, it is also essential that the United States rejoin the global community and lead efforts to secure an international treaty at Copenhagen in December of next year that includes a cap on CO2 emissions and a global partnership that recognizes the necessity of addressing the threats of extreme poverty and disease as part of the world's agenda for solving the climate crisis.

Of course the greatest obstacle to meeting the challenge of 100 percent renewable electricity in 10 years may be the deep dysfunction of our politics and our self-governing system as it exists today. In recent years, our politics has tended toward incremental proposals made up of small policies designed to avoid offending special interests, alternating with occasional baby steps in the right direction. Our democracy has become sclerotic at a time when these crises require boldness.

It is only a truly dysfunctional system that would buy into the perverse logic that the short-term answer to high gasoline prices is drilling for more oil ten years from now.

Am I the only one who finds it strange that our government so often adopts a so-called solution that has absolutely nothing to do with the problem it is supposed to address? When people rightly complain about higher gasoline prices, we propose to give more money to the oil companies and pretend that they're going to bring gasoline prices down. It will do nothing of the sort, and everyone knows it. If we keep going back to the same policies that have never ever worked in the past and have served only to produce the highest gasoline prices in history alongside the greatest oil company profits in history, nobody should be surprised if we get the same result over and over again. But the Congress may be poised to move in that direction anyway because some of them are being stampeded by lobbyists for special interests that know how to make the system work for them instead of the American people.

If you want to know the truth about gasoline prices, here it is: the exploding demand for oil, especially in places like China, is overwhelming the rate of new discoveries by so much that oil prices are almost certain to continue upward over time no matter what the oil companies promise. And politicians cannot bring gasoline prices down in the short term.

However, there actually is one extremely effective way to bring the costs of driving a car way down within a few short years. The way to bring gas prices down is to end our dependence on oil and use the renewable sources that can give us the equivalent of $1 per gallon gasoline.

Many Americans have begun to wonder whether or not we've simply lost our appetite for bold policy solutions. And folks who claim to know how our system works these days have told us we might as well forget about our political system doing anything bold, especially if it is contrary to the wishes of special interests. And I've got to admit, that sure seems to be the way things have been going. But I've begun to hear different voices in this country from people who are not only tired of baby steps and special interest politics, but are hungry for a new, different and bold approach.

We are on the eve of a presidential election. We are in the midst of an international climate treaty process that will conclude its work before the end of the first year of the new president's term. It is a great error to say that the United States must wait for others to join us in this matter. In fact, we must move first, because that is the key to getting others to follow; and because moving first is in our own national interest.

So I ask you to join with me to call on every candidate, at every level, to accept this challenge -- for America to be running on 100 percent zero-carbon electricity in 10 years. It's time for us to move beyond empty rhetoric. We need to act now.

This is a generational moment. A moment when we decide our own path and our collective fate. I'm asking you - each of you - to join me and build this future. Please join the WE campaign at wecansolveit.org. We need you. And we need you now. We're committed to changing not just light bulbs, but laws. And laws will only change with leadership.

On July 16, 1969, the United States of America was finally ready to meet President Kennedy's challenge of landing Americans on the moon. I will never forget standing beside my father a few miles from the launch site, waiting for the giant Saturn 5 rocket to lift Apollo 11 into the sky. I was a young man, 21 years old, who had graduated from college a month before and was enlisting in the United States Army three weeks later.

I will never forget the inspiration of those minutes. The power and the vibration of the giant rocket's engines shook my entire body. As I watched the rocket rise, slowly at first and then with great speed, the sound was deafening. We craned our necks to follow its path until we were looking straight up into the air. And then four days later, I watched along with hundreds of millions of others around the world as Neil Armstrong took one small step to the surface of the moon and changed the history of the human race.

We must now lift our nation to reach another goal that will change history. Our entire civilization depends upon us now embarking on a new journey of exploration and discovery. Our success depends on our willingness as a people to undertake this journey and to complete it within 10 years. Once again, we have an opportunity to take a giant leap for humankind.

July 16, 2008

Hassan Nasrallah wins the war that didn't happen, and the war that did

Samir al-Kuntar just walked out of Israel and into Lebanon.

July 15, 2008

A day at the museum

basePhotoCopyrightPaulShambroom.gif

Sunday I took the kids and the dog to the Columbus Museum of Art, where I happened to come across the original, and un-tagged, version of Paul Shambroom's art, including this particular image.

I'm glad Jeff and his posse blog at Arms Control Wonk. They are a joy to read.

July 14, 2008

Technical Coordination

In an exchange of notes in the past 48 hours, in response to a query by the Asia-Pacific Top-Level Domain manager (in New Zealand) for additions to his list of Arabic Script Languages (languages that use the arabic script, which includes Arabic, Persian (Farsi), Urdu, Sindhi, Kurdish, Baloochi, Pashtoo, Jewi (also "Jawi"), Azarbaijani, Swahili, Dari and Tadjik), the IT manager for Office of the National Security Council (NSC) Presidential Palace, Kabul, Afghanistan wrote to point out that Dari and Pashtoo use some extra characters to be added beside the Arabic Scripts. In response, the Arabic Script IDN Working Group chair, in Pakistan, using the idna-arabicscript at invalid.irnic.ir (address slightly modified to prevent spam), hosted in Iran, asked for details, which promptly came from Afghanistan Computer Science Association (ACSA), in the Ministry of Communications, Floor #: 13, Kabul, Afghanistan.

Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, easily coordinating. Don't tell Fox and Friends.

My part of this is African languages (about which I know only enough to ask African language users) that use Arabic script, such as Wolof in Senegal.

Its an interesting list, I'm forced to actually read Arabic (ranges 0600-06FF), Arabic Supplement (range 0750-077F), Arabic Presentation Forms-A (range FB50-FDFF) and Arabic Presentation Forms-B (range FE70-FEFF), and recognize characters, in Arabic language, and in languages other than Arabic that use Arabic script (particularly those that have extensions not correctly characterized in Unicode 5.1 / ISO 10646 mumble, or not present (yet).

Next after is the hiddeous wreckage inflicted by Xtain missionaries in Africa, a whole bunch of International Phonetics symbolic rubbish added onto the Xtain-familiar Latin character set. Every Xtian had his or her own idea of the perfect notational form ...

... Non-Consolidated Media in the News in the Non-Consolidated ...

OBAMA-NEW-YORKER.jpgA (still) working journalist writes:

Also, listening to Clemente's speech [on CSPAN], I realized that she is the first candidate since John Edwards to bring up the issue of media mergers and consolidation and the impact of same on the political process. I wonder if this will present an opening to shed some broader public attention onto issues of journalism and what's happening to our industry (the mass layoffs so many JAWS members have been hit hard by, either because of their own job losses or because of having to do more work with fewer resources and less time).

Food for thought.

Of course, this cartoon is more serious than a line on a ballot. It has over 1k media cites in under 8 hours, and the McKinney/Clemente story has less than 1/10th of that accumulated in 72 hours.

So much "outrage", and so little irony. I suppose next Atrios will start getting 1k media slams for describing US politics as "so dumb" ... because it just couldn't be true that media is consolidated, and so amazingly dumb, that the snobs at the New Yorker could actually look down their noses at the Broadcast News Rubes.

Something worth reading.

July 13, 2008

Atoms for Peace

At the Paris ICANN meeting two weeks ago the policy body responsible for the generic namespaces, that is, for governing (or the reverse) Verisign's .COM and .NET franchises, and the rest of the competitive commercial registries, and the registrars, voted to "form a Working Group of interested stakeholders and Constituency representatives, to collaborate broadly with knowledgeable individuals and organizations, in order to develop potential policy options to curtail the criminal use of fast flux hosting."

The authoritarian principle is simple -- all "fast flux" is illegitimate, unless it is done by Akami or some other miscreant that uses the DNS to reduce the cost of operating a wicked big raised floor facility, or by the military trying to do "agile hosting".

Except that there are other users of the DNS than criminals, corporations, and crowns.

I'm mulling over the claim that the technique allows evasion from authoritarian regimes. That there is a significant civil society requirement for persistent names which are resistant to attempts to modify or delete them -- names like "burma-needs-a-change.mm" or "iraq-for-the-iraqis.iq" or ... "we-blame-rehnquist.us".

As absurd as it may seem, what I do about this matters, and I've already written a "restatement of sorts" (pun intentional) to point out that the problem scope is poorly stated, because the problem isn't "agile hosting" by guys, good, bad, or simply ugly.

July 12, 2008

Pseudo-blogging the Green Convention, III

Only C-SPAN spent cycle content seconds. A reasonable choice by the political show producers, assuming that (a) Al Gore was at the top of the ticket in some other party, a party committed to stopping wiretap and the destruction of the Constitution, or (b) Al Gore was at the top of the ticket in some other party, a party committed to stopping Global Warming and the pouncing Nuclear Nutmen, or (c) ... since it would be non-news that yet-another-party was running on the Gore issue set.

Well, you know the drill.

I've forgotten what Dwight and Deb's issues with Representative Cynthia McKinney were -- they lived in the GA-04, but they were specific, not the kind of rants on Fox or (oddly enough) the Huffington Post, or the too sensible to be caught in plaid stuff from the people who were dealing similar wisdom only weeks ago why Senator Clinton should cease and desist.

I imagine that having someone who's run loosing, and winning campaigns, three times for a state seat, and eight times for a federal seat, could lead to some improvement in Green Party electoral political art. If future Green candidates for federal office make compliance their first hire, if Green campaigns become more ... competent, then this is more important than the outcome at the top of the ticket. It may be one of those rarest of things -- a transformative campaign.

July 11, 2008

Pseudo-blogging the Green Convention, II

Yesterday former Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney offered, and Rosa Clemente accepted, the second slot on the Green Party ticket.

Ms. Clemente's statement follows:

I am honored and excited to accept this invitation to run with Cynthia McKinney. Cynthia McKinney is a hero to me and many others across this country and around the world for her courage in standing up to George Bush while the Democratic Party establishment caved.

"This campaign is the opportunity the Hip-Hop generation has been working for. This is our time to address the issues affecting our communities – rising unemployment, the high cost of food and housing, a lack of quality public education and access to higher education, the prison-industrial complex, and unaccountable corporate media. These issues are not being addressed by either the Republican or Democratic nominee.

"I choose to do this, not for me, but for my generation, my community and my daughter. I don't see the Green Party as an alternative; I see it as an imperative. I trust that my Vice Presidential run will inspire all people, but especially young people of color, to recognize that we have more then two choices. Together, we can build the future we've been dreaming of.

In the MSM, the Green Convention rates two articles in the AJC1, two in the LA Times, and one in the WAPO. The day's dose of dual dumbness between Senators Obama and McCain is running in the multi-thousand "earned media" placements.

1 Cynthia McKinney was candidate three times for the Georgia General Assembly (in 1986, 1988 and 1990), winning election to the 40th District, representing Fulton County Georgia in 1988 and 1990. She's been a candidate eight times for the U.S. Congress, winning election to the 11th Congressional District of Georgia in 1992 and 1994, and to the redistricted 4th Congressional District in 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2004 (in an historic comeback). She also ran unsuccessfully in 2002 and 2006 for the 4th Congressional seat.

Pseudo-blogging the Green Convention, I

Since I can't be at the Green Party's 2008 National Nominating Convention in Chicago, which started yesterday and runs through Sunday, I'm doing the next best thing. I sat down and read the Presidential Candidate Questionnaires of:

Having formed Draft Gore 2008 PAC, I was impressed in particular by one line in Cynthia's questionaire response:

Q: How would you describe your fundraising ability?
A: We are building a staff of fundraisers to support this campaign. My past campaigns have raised and spent millions of dollars.

Q: Will you agree not to accept contributions from corporations?
A: Of course! Such contributions are prohibited by Federal law.

Q: What campaign finance policies will your campaign follow?
A: Our campaign's first hires were for our FEC Compliance Team. We intend to comply fully with the limits imposed by the Fededal Campaign Finance laws.


I simply broke out laughing at the up-front professionalism of "first hires were for our FEC Compliance Team". That is so spot-on. They are last-fires too, as every campaign closes its FEC books long after the ballot.

McKinney's is clearly the better candidate and I hope she comes away from Palmer House with 419 delegates and the nomination.

Here's the link to the schedule.

SPAM and ICANN

Spamunet.gifWhile Lambert asks Whither Progressive Blogosphere 2.0?, I'm oddly interested in the relationship of spam to the federal executive service. Neil Suryakant Patel interests me.

Last March the former assistant general counsel at UUNET Technologies was nominated for the position of Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information at the Department of Commerce. In ICANN-speak that means head of the NTIA. In FCC-speak that means head of the digital TV roll-out. Plus some other stuff, like wiretap.

Knowing as we do, now (and then) that post-USENIX, the UUNET trajectory (acquired by MFS, acquired by WorldCom, merged with MCI, acquired by Verizon) was fueled by dotBomb finance and spam (until well after the Verizon acquisition), just what is the point in handing over the DoC's Communications and Information AS job to the guy who did e-commerce, internet taxation, and internet security and abuse for UUNET, particularly when we know UUNET's policy during his tenure as the goto person was to ignore abuse reports?

Seriously. Just what part of "e-commerce, internet taxation, and internet security and abuse" is useful or relevant to the political, policy or operational aspects of domestic and international telecommunications and information policy activities?

What part of lobbying for "e-com" and "no taxes" (ignoring the "no security or abuse rules" bits) is useful or relevant to the Federal use of the electromagnetic spectrum or the performance of telecommunications research and engineering or the resolution of technical telecommunications issues for the Federal government and private sector or the administration of infrastructure and public telecommunications facilities grants?

Less than a quarter of all SMTP traffic is something other than spam, and the nominee to head the NTIA is one of the many who made his way in business as an Environmental Polluter -- one who's business model is designed to benefit by gathering revenue for management and the shareholders while imposing on others the economic losses arising from polluting operations.

Then there's the minor problem that the nominee is one of Dick Cheney's staffers. First as staff secretary then as a domestic and economic policy adviser.

With all the abuse models currently operational, phishing, fast-flux networks, botnets on a vast scale, spam over mail, spam injected into blogs, ... just what do you imagine is the future Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information at the Department of Commerce's instruction, via the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), pursuant to the Joint Project Agreement (JPA) between the United States Department of Commerce and ICANN, if UUNET's abuse guy is confirmed?

Its wierd that just about everyone I know professionally appears to be more qualified than the current nominee.

Stacy Leeds Named Fletcher Fellow

Stacy L. Leeds, professor of law and director of KU' Tribal Law and Government Center, is among four academics in the country to receive the honor this year. The Fletcher Fellowship program, a charitable initiative created in 2004 and named for Alphonse Fletcher Sr., commemorates the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board. This year' selection committee chose the four recipients from a pool of more than 80 applicants.

“Receiving the fellowship is a tremendous honor, and I am humbled by the generosity of the Fletcher Foundation," Leeds said. "The fellowship will support research and scholarship on tribal sovereignty and the unique legal history of freedmen citizenship within the Cherokee Nation."

The award comes with a $50,000 stipend for work that contributes to improving racial equality in American society and furthers the broad social goals of the U.S. Supreme Court' landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education.

Leeds joined the KU law faculty in 2003 after serving as assistant professor and director of the Northern Plains Indian Law Center at the University of North Dakota School of Law. Her law teaching career began at the University of Wisconsin School of Law, where she received her LL.M. as a William H. Hastie Fellow. She earned her bachelor' degree from Washington University in St. Louis and her law degree from the University of Tulsa.

Leeds is a former justice on the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court, the only woman and youngest person ever to serve in that capacity. During that time, Leeds authored the majority opinion in Allen v. Cherokee Nation, a judicial decision that upheld the tribal citizenship rights of the "freedmen" and is considered a decision parallel to Brown v. Board.

Leeds is chair of the American Bar Association' Judicial Division' Tribal Courts Council and a member of the Advisory Board for the National Judicial College' Tribal Judicial Center. She is chief judge of the Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation District Court, chief justice of the Supreme Court for the Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma and associate justice on the Kaw Nation Supreme Court.

The other 2008 Fletcher Fellows are:

Clayborne Carson, history professor at Stanford University and founding director of the Martin Luther King Jr. Research and Education Institute

Kellie Jones, associate professor of art history and archaeology at Columbia University

Kimberle Crenshaw, law professor at the University of California-Los Angeles and Columbia University law schools.


Stacy also ran a good race against Chad Smith for Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. We're happy with this recognition of her work, which I think we and everyone who worked in the June, 2007 CNO election, for Stacy Leeds, Raymond Vann and any of the Reform Slate, shares in.

July 10, 2008

Tom Allen and FISA (viewed from Santa Monica)

Digby wrote about Tom today while going over FISA. Her original is