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Personal Photography

[360] Of here to there and back again

If life were measured in degree, I would have returned the starting line. I would have returned to the place where it all started, where it all begun.

December is fast approaching and I wish I could delay time, or at least lengthen my road to a bachelor degree till April 2005. What a wishful thinking.

I know what I want to do after graduation, at least temporarily. It will be World Wide Fund for Nature or maybe Greenpeace for real. I’ve been donating some money to them and I will want to donate more than money.

And I am in the final phrase of salvaging my summer plan. With about 2000 bucks in my pocket set aside for this, it will be depressing if this doesn’t go through.

Anyway, Top of the Park, Ann Arbor Summer Festival starts this Friday and will last well into July. This should be my last Festival. I have never missed it since I first got here, and I am not planning on missing this edition.

Let us celebrate summer as if this is the last summer ever!

Categories
Economics Environment Science & technology

[359] Of the third agricultural revolution

http://www1.oecd.org/publications/observer/216/f-toc.htm OECD's L'ObservateurWhat do I think of genetically engineered food?

After more than a year of thinking, I am still undecided on the issue despite being a green. Another green related issue that I am undecided is the usage of nuclear power. James Lovelock’s supportive statement on nuclear power as a short run solution to the problems brought upon by the six greenhouse gases has not helped me form a concrete opinion for or against nuclear power.

Genetically modified food has the capacity to save millions and possibly a few billions from hunger. Technology has helped revolutionized agricultural sector before the Industrial Revolution and now, we are on the eve of another agricultural revolution, apart of a larger ongoing life science revolution.

The only difference between the last two with today’s revolution is the tools that were and are used.

Back in the 18th century, new techniques of growing crop were discovered. The introduction of machineries helped distribute nutrient better throughout farmlands. Soils were more protected by four field crop rotation. More importantly, this revolution jumpstarted the industrial revolution that forever changed mankind’s course of history.

The second agricultural revolution happened in the mid 20th century with the introduction of fertilizers and pesticides. Output increased greatly thanks to the development done during the Second World War. This revolution introduced to us pesticide; one of them is a chemical known as DDT – the one that persuaded Rachel Carson to write Silent Spring. In the book, she familiarized the public with the idea of food chain and that in turn prepared the world for modern environmental movement.

Now in this new revolution, we are playing with the building blocks of life itself – the proteins that create you and me and all living beings. We are playing God and scarily, we excel at it. In fact, we have managed to create new species of plants and animals for better or for worse, for a greater purpose or for our mere amusement. For instance, fluorescence fish is one of the first ever genetically modified pets in the world. This fish, glow in the dark.

The capability to save millions of lives is the key point presented by the people that believe in GE food. This point is particularly attractive when you are dying from hunger in Africa due to drought, war or any unwelcome situation. The people that believe in GE food are confused by the opposition to such technology. One of the proponents of GE food is the giant biotechnology firm Monsanto of which, according to Wikipedia, controls 70 per cent of the world genetically engineered crop supply.

One of the arguments against GE food is safety. Unlike the effect of pesticide, the effect of GE food is still unknown. It would take several years, or even decades before the effect takes place. Furthermore, some assert that GE plants somehow alter soil composition in a negative way, making the soil less fertile and impedes future food output.

Though people may disagree on a lot of things, in my opinion, the benefits could be seen in the short run, almost immediately, if the distribution system is efficient, which I doubt very much. The ugly side of the story would probably be revealed in the future – nobody knows for sure. It all depends on your investment horizon, as few economists that I have the pleasure of knowing would have called it.

For this lack of information, I will always err on GE issue. But for all I know, I may have eaten some of it unknowingly.

However, cases like the Monsanto versus Schmeiser, a multimillions/billions firm against a small Canadian farmer, tend to force me to side with typical greens even if I disagree with some of the greens.

p/s – Akamai, one of the main players in the World Wide Web, is having a problem. As a result, countless sites such as Yahoo!, CNET, Reuters and Greenpeace going at a very slow pace since late Friday. Sometimes, the page loading process even failed.
Suddenly, the world seems to be slowing down.

Categories
Economics Environment Humor Personal Politics & government

[358] Of French Constitution and the word environment

The French Parliament is inserting the word environment into their constitution. And the Green opposes such change.

Very amusing. Of all fractions, it is the Green that opposes (the other lefties abstain) instead of the right.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved
p/s — Safire is a goddamn hilarious man. He hates the French, he hates the democrat and he hates the penny. And yeah, abolish the penny! LOL!
Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved
pp/s — I thought the oil price was stabilizing at the new price. But, the new price is at $42.45 per barrel – no thanks to the newest incident in Saudi Arabia. And hell, air travel is going to be expensive.
Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved
ppp/s — Jeffrey Chen died in a plane crash on Monday. I first read about it in the paper but I was not sure whether it was the same Jeff that I knew. A news through the Solar Car Team’s mailing list later confirmed this, unfortunately.

I don’t really know him because I didn’t really talk to him a lot. But I do remember that he was cheerful in most cases and he gave me rides to and fro Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor. And he did smile to me whenever he bumbed up with me.

May God bless him.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved
p4/s — A joke on Bush for comparing so-called war on terrorism with WWII.

If Bush was alive on December 8, 1941:

“My fellow Americans. Yesterday was a day that will live in infamy. We were the victims of a vicious and unprovoked attack by the Empire of Japan.Therefore, I have decided to attack Spain.”

Categories
Environment Politics & government Pop culture Sci-fi

[357] Of The Day After Tomorrow

I saw The Day After Tomorrow the day before yesterday with two friends. I was shocked to find out that the ticket price has considerably been raised. I guess inflation is everywhere now.

Enough economics.

The movie was entertaining though the effects of global warming were exaggerated. Then again, the director himself has said that this movie is for entertainment, not for some meteorology class. But the best thing is, I now understand how the movie serves as a really good conduit for the green cause. Before I watched the movie, I thought the movie is just some other movie that runs parallel with the green’s concerns. I was wrong as it was more than that.

The reason why The Day After Tomorrow is useful in creating awareness among the masses is how Professor Jack Hall – played by Dennis Quaid – describes that global warming could trigger a colder climate in a fictional UNFCCC (that, err, for United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, the one responsible for meetings of the Parties related to the Kyoto Protocol in the real world) in a snowing New Delhi. This is an irony that has been well-manipulated by the grays to discredit the greens on matters of global warming. In a larger sense, the movie tries to link global warming with a wider problem of accelerated climate change, one of the few things that the grays are trying to disprove.

All other parts of the movie are pure exaggeration. Nevertheless, the movie does provide as glimpse of what humanity will have to endure even when the effects of global warming occur in a very gradual manner. Currently, the frequency and the amplitude of natural disasters related to the climate have been going up but none are as devastating as in the movie of course. Jeremy Legett’s The Carbon War has also implied that we are seeing an increasing thread of climate related natural disasters’ severity.

Another noteworthy scene in the movie, of the most ironic thing considering the current era of Pax-Americana, is the American refugee camps. However, this picture might not be far away and actors will not be the Americans, but the citizens of the Pacific islanders and others small island-nations all around the world. These small pacific island-nations to my knowledge are currently lobbying the Australian government to accept any refugee related to the rising of the sea level. The global warming refugee scene is real as far as these poor islanders are concerned. The Australian government has been only unhelpful in recent negotiations.

All in all, the movie is informative and entertaining if you know to how to filter the information. There are some good jokes too. The special effect is gorgeous. Good for vanity, one of the lead actors, Jake Gyllenhaal, playing as Sam Hall, Jack Hall’s son, wear a Michigan shirt in a scene. This is probably a testimony of Ann Arbor’s political greenness.

Unfortunately, the worst part of the movie is where the word, “To Manchester United” is heard. Thank God by the end of the movie, Old Trafford would probably be under more than 15 meters of snow.

You should go watch the movie. You won’t be disappointed. I dare say it is better than the Matrix’s two pathetic sequels.

And after watching the movie, you should realize, first and foremost, the moral is we need to act now rather than later.

Categories
Liberty Politics & government

[356] Of Memorial Day

Should we remind ourselves of the soldiers and the civilians that fell or the players that played the pawns?