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Lunar Eclipse coming!

August 22, 2007

The longest lunar eclipse for the past 7 years will be visible this August 28. Here’s the article from UPI:

WASHINGTON, Aug. 21 (UPI) — People across the western United States will have the best opportunity early Aug. 28 to witness the longest lunar eclipse in seven years.

During the early morning hours of Aug. 28, astronomers say sky watchers around much of the world will be able to watch as the moon crosses the Earth’s shadow, becoming completely immersed for nearly 90 minutes — a much longer period of time than occurs during most lunar eclipses.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the event will begin 3:54 a.m. EDT, Aug. 28.

The eclipse will be visible from Australia, parts of Asia and most of the Americas but not from Africa or Europe, NASA astronomers said.

The view is different from each location. In the United States, Pacific observers, including people in Hawaii, are favored with the entire event visible in the post-midnight sky. However, along the East Coast and in the Great Lakes area, totality will be cut off early by sunrise.

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Most Useful Page on the Web?

July 27, 2007

Okay so maybe not, but I give it 8/10. :)

How to use a bidet.

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Don’t mess with Texas … it’s not nice to pick on retards.

July 26, 2007

Just as I was starting to enjoy Texas:

I was notified today that the governor of Texas has appointed an ultra-conservative, non-scientist, creationist as head of the board of education. I bitched a lot when Kansas omitted evolution from their curriculum but didn’t think much of it because, come on, it’s Kansas. Now it’s pseudo-personal, I live here. I’m referring to Dr. Don McElroy who is from Bryan (that’s College Station’s next door neighbor) and his pension for teaching religious myth over scientific fact. I find it asinine that in today’s society we still promote teaching ignorance over conscious thought and factual debate. I’m aware that leading a society of gullible idiots is easier than a society of free-thinking individuals (key word there), but leading is inherently not easy … not to mention: what ever happened to the separation of church and state?

The following is an excerpt from a letter Dr. McElroy wrote to his fellow board members. You can read the full letter here

Evolution science is predominantly historical science; it is not observable or testable empirically, it must be inferred. For example, even the empirical research on embryology and the sequences of proteins and DNA only give rise to historical speculations. Thus, the argument for evolution is not deductive, but inductive; in an inductive argument, scientists weigh evidence to see what is most probable to have occurred. On this basis, most scientists hypothesize that Nothing made a spider out of a rock and that we share a common ancestor with a tree. However, other scientists find serious flaws with those hypotheses.

This is the guy Texans want in charge of their children’s education? I know most Texans are generally religious but shouldn’t their children be able to decide for themselves if they want to follow that path?

As for the title of this post, no I don’t think all Texans are retards. Just those that try to force religious dogma on others by hiding scientific fact. As an educator Dr. McElroy should be dedicated to one thing: EDUCATION; not brainwashing.

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The Death of Johnny … a moment of silence …

June 26, 2007

Ok… the moment is over.

Last Thursday, Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-Nev) killed Yucca Mountain Johnny. I’ll admit, I didn’t even know who Johnny was until I heard of his death (kind of sad since I’m a nuclear engineer working with nuclear waste issues). But it turns out that Johnny is was a hard-hat wearing cartoon whose sole purpose on Earth (read the Internet) was to educate young people about nuclear waste. I know what you’re thinking … ‘What a bastard, how dare he!’ It’s preposterous that the federal government (by way of the Department of Energy) would waste our tax dollars on something so asinine as education about nuclear waste. Who even knows what nuclear waste is, save the few handfuls of nuclear engineers out there who make the stuff and the residents of Nevada who are unfortunate enough to be “educated” on the matter by Rep. Berkley?

“No single issue unites Nevadans more than our opposition to becoming the nation’s nuclear waste dump.”

Rep. Berkley (D-Nev)

The Yucca Mountain Repository is hardly a “dump”.This piece of land is the most studied and well-understood geologic feature on the face of our planet. Decades of scientific study, billions of dollars of research, and thousands of man-hours have gone into making sure the location is well-understood and capable of the task. To call it a dump is akin to calling Las Vegas a mole hill. My personal feelings on our country’s course of action concerning nuclear waste aside … the point is, this woman, a representative for the people of Nevada, has deemed it more important to stop educating children about a problem that will outlive all of them than to deal with say … I don’t know … health care. Here is a list of some of the things Rep. Berkley deems worthwhile.

Our children deserve to know the truth about the dangers of nuclear waste, but all they get from Yucca Mountain Johnny is a one-sided tale designed to convince them that it’s OK to turn Nevada into a radioactive garbage dump. While I am sure the Department of Energy will be sad to say goodbye to their nuclear version of Joe Camel, pulling the plug on this website will be a victory for truth and for America’s children. I will be glad when the day comes that we can finally say good riddance to Yucca Mountain Johnny and his pro-nuke waste siren song once and for all. … quoted from Rep. Berkley’s website.

So we’re to believe that because the scientists – the ones working to make Yucca Mountain a real and viable option for our country’s spent nuclear fuel (it’s not all waste) storage – have created a website to educate the populace, that it’s going to be a “one-sided tale”. I’ll agree with that. I should think that it will present nothing more than the science behind Yucca Mountain and spent nuclear fuel so the reader can make an informed personal choice [after looking at the site, I'm convinced that's what they were doing]. There are plenty of anti-nuclear groups out there who do nothing but perpetuate misguided falsehoods about the entire nuclear industry, but there are very few websites touting the benefits and accomplishments of the industry … let alone facts. To suggest that by promoting informed decision-making based on scientific fact is somehow polluting our children’s minds … well that’s just plain idiotic (unless you want all children to grow up to be uninformed congressional representatives from Nevada).

Visit the Office of Civilian Radioactive Waste Management and the Nuclear Engergy Institute and get yourself informed before someone else decides you can’t. Also check out the NEI Nuclear Notes blog.

You can read the full press release from Rep. Berkley’s website here.

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Rattletree at Revolution

June 9, 2007

Beto and I saw the band Rattletree last night at Revolution. They are a 6 piece percussion band (though I only counted 5) with a heavy focus on several homemade marimbas which they use to play Zimbabwean dance music. The show was an excellent mix of high energy grooves and mellow interludes from the matepe (small hand-plucked instrument inside a large gourd). You can hear some of their music at the band’s website and if you get a chance to see them, don’t miss it. Oh … and if you happen to be at one of their shows and you’re not dancing/grooving in some way … there’s no hope for you, you’re already dead!

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Buy Back Alaska!

May 30, 2007

This is a pretty good idea and it could actually work.  Watch the short video here.

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The True Story of X-Mas!

May 27, 2007

Two hilarious videos about the origins of father christmas are available online from Rare Exports Inc.  The production value is excellent for the type of video, I’m hoping there’s a feature-length film in the making.  If you’re a big fan of christmas these videos may disturb you … you pansy!

Watch the first video.

And the second, even funnier video:

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Round two!

May 21, 2007

I went riding again yesterday, this time solo.  I added a few miles to the trek (starting from home instead of the Bush Library.  You can see my route here.  I’m planning to go again tomorrow and take some photos.

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First Ride!!!

May 18, 2007

I went on my first ride with the new bike today. It’s not new new, but new to me. After spending several hours cleaning and tuning the bike I was ready to go. Special thanks to Dr. Maslowski for showing me one of her local bike paths. First time out: 16.5 miles, 1′:20″. I can’t wait for more, my legs on the other hand are ready for a break.

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… Go Nuclear

May 18, 2007

realdre has posted an excellent article answering some fairly common nuclear questions using non-nuke speak. If you have questions about nuclear energy I recommend you read his post