May 26th, 2009
The thing that really ticks me off about Obama is that he’ll say or do one thing that will make liberals really happy (like announcing better fuel standards for cars) and then when you’re not paying as close attention, try to swindle some piece of crap under your nose. In an extremely egregious example, last week the EPA approved 42 our of 48 mountaintop removal permits, more than in the entire history of two terms of G.W. Bush! These mountaintop removals are extreme forms of strip-mining as a means of accessing coal. Coal? Why coal? Where’s our solar power? Where’s our wind power?
From the Huffington Post:
Have 42 out of 48 permits for mountaintop removal — the process of blowing up our nation’s oldest and most diverse mountains, razing historic communities, poisoning watersheds, and causing massive erosion and flooding, which Vice President Al Gore has termed “a crime, and ought to be treated as a crime” — cleared as “environmentally responsible” by the Obama administration’s EPA?
Since President Barack Obama has taken office, an estimated 300 million pounds of ammonium nitrate/fuel oil explosives have been detonated across our American mountains.
In effect: Residents in the mountaintop removal areas have been subjected to a kind of waterboarding environmental policies.
Here is another article on the subject:
‘Appalachian Apocalypse’: Obama Permits Mountaintop Removal Mining
All I have to say is, environmentalists need to keep a strict eye on the Obama administration. Environmental platitudes sent out in the form of headline-making press releases do not equate to a real commitment to the environment or solving our energy problems as cleanly as possible. Shame on them for actually making Bush look better when it comes to this issue.
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May 24th, 2009
I’ve avoided bleach for sometime, but there are certain things that it’s just best for, such as whitening a stained white shirt, or cleaning up dirty grout in the bathtub. Was I bad for wanting a bottle of bleach? There’s a lot of massive anti-bleach hype on the Internet, but is it really that bad? I found an article that explains that bleach is not as bad as you might think. (Note: The first paragraph of this article has a typo in it. It should say, “household bleach does NOT pose a significant threat to the environment.”)
Small volume isn’t the only reason scientists are unconcerned about household bleach. Conditions in your laundry room are vastly different from conditions in a paper-bleaching plant, and as a result the household bleach behaves differently. “I am not aware of chlorine in washing machines causing significant hazards,” says Vern Snoeyink, Ph.D., a professor of environmental engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “We’re not aware of any significant problems with the bleach used in laundry, even at some of the bigger facilities,” says the IJC’s Bevaquah. “It’s just not a problem.”
Why isn’t it a problem? Scientists say that at least two major conditions are necessary to produce a long-chain organochlorine like dioxin, and they aren’t present in a household situation. To produce dioxin, the chlorine must have a low pH, and it must have a precursor (a set of carboncontaining molecules) to react with. The pH of household bleach is too high, says de Fur, and there are few, if any precursors available in the average load of dirty socks. In contrast, a paper-bleaching plant is packed with carbon-containing substances, and has a low pH. “I suppose you could throw a bunch of sawdust in the laundry,” speculates McCabe, “but even then you still couldn’t make dioxin.”
Now, this article is from 1995, but basic science does not change in 10 years. Household bleach breaks down to salt and water after being thrown down the drain. It is not the same thing as the bleach used to bleach toilet paper.
The problem with householdĀ bleach is that making it can be harmful to the environment, but that can go for just about any product you buy these days. And of course, breathing in the fumes for a long period time isn’t good for you. But rather than being overly concerned with an occasional use of bleach, you are better off buying products that don’t use commercial bleaching, because that’s what really hurts the environment and pollutes. Buying recycled toilet paper that does not use chlorine bleach would be a good place to start.
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