Friday, February 8, 2019
Joe Biden 1975: Thanks to me anti-busing is no longer a racist position
“The pro-busers and the civil rights lobby were dumbstruck … although
I had put them on notice months earlier,” said Biden in the interview.
“I think I’ve made it possible for liberals to come out of the closet …
If [anti-busing] isn’t yet a respectable liberal position, it is no
longer a racist one.”
Read my lips: No second term
Trump Reverses Wage-Boosting Campaign Commitment, Demands More Legal Immigration: ‘We Need People’
The statements are a break from the president’s commitment in 2015, 2016, 2017, when he continuously advocated for reducing overall legal immigration to raise the wages of American workers.
Thursday, February 7, 2019
The Green New Deal aims to expand high speed rail "to a scale where air travel stops becoming necessary"
Air travel stopped being necessary for me in 1996.
Haven't flown since.
Just Say No To Air Travel.
Last week we nearly had no natural gas in Grands Rapids, Michigan, this week an ice storm took out the power
Another one-two punch for us here in western lower Michigan from Mother Nature, where it's now 45F and the ice storm has melted away. Going down to 17F by midnight, though. Been there. Doin' it again.
Wednesday, February 6, 2019
More "peak capitalism" from the Democrat Party's Marxists
The Marxists have been waiting for peak capitalism since Marx himself, just as the Christians have been waiting for the end of the world since Christ himself.
So they're good, then.
Virginia turns into political Chernobyl, now attorney general admits, sort of, to blackface
The governor's med-school yearbook shows somebody in blackface on his page, for which Democrats everywhere have said he must resign.
Next in line is the Lt. Gov., a black man accused of sexual assault by a woman about whom the Lt. Gov. is reported to have recently said, "F*ck that bitch".
Next in line is the Attorney General, who has come out admitting to appearing in "brown make-up" when he was 19, reporting which the NYT is taking flak for underreporting the facts of blackface, nevermind the Attorney General is.
Not sure who is next in line, but from the look of things, this might take a while.
And to think a chink started it all.
Kellyanne Conway baldly lies on The Rush Limbaugh Show, claims over 7 million jobs created
You don't lose control of the US House after creating over 7 million jobs in just over two years.
These people are blind, but the voters are not.
There is NO measure which comes even close to over 7 million new jobs.
Total nonfarm payrolls (Establishment Survey) between Nov 2016 and Jan 2019 are up 5.3 million, seasonally adjusted, 1.7 million not seasonally adjusted.
Civilian employment (Household Survey) is up 4.5 million seasonally adjusted, 2.6 million not seasonally adjusted.
The sum of usually full time and usually part time (Household Survey) is up net 4.5 million seasonally adjusted, 2.6 million not seasonally adjusted (mirrors civilian employment level).
The employment-population ratio is up from 59.8% to 60.7%, an increase of 4.6 million jobs from 152.2 million to 156.8 million.
And 78% of these new jobs have gone to minorities, not to the white majority.
CONWAY: . . . He’s going to talk about the booming economy, and it is the Trump economy. Over seven million jobs created, wages are up, unemployment is down, small business formation is going well. People are just… They’re back to work. We’re a country that works.
Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Did Texas give preferential treatment to American Indian takers of the bar exam in 1986?
Looks like Elizabeth 1/1024 Warren, born white in 1949, thought of herself quite seriously as American Indian at the age of 37 or so.
Rush Limbaugh's Whopper of the Day: Trump more popular than Bill Clinton was at same time in presidency
When news reports boast that Michigan's Consumers Energy has 300-350 billion cubic feet of natural gas in storage, that's not really true either
Working gas available is hardly 49% of the current 308.8 billion cubic feet total storage reported by Consumers Energy, or only 150.9 billion cubic feet.
From all companies in Michigan available working gas in storage is only 671 billion cubic feet, not the much-vaunted 1.1 trillion cubic feet. Still, Michigan has more capacity than any other state. Its stored working gas would supply the needs of 4.3 million average households for one year before needing to be restocked, or about 11 million people for one year. Michigan's population is 10 million. Business users are not included in this math.
But when a mere compressor fire nearly incapacitates one utility's ability to service all of its 2 million customers when they need heat the most, think what an Electro Magnetic Pulse event might do.
That's what keeps me up at night.
The Michigan Public Service Commission clearly states in footnote one to "Michigan Natural Gas Storage Field Summary":
Working gas means the maximum gas that can be cycled in and out of straoge [sic, read "storage"]. Base Gas means gas that is not cycled in and provides pressure support.
Michigan's natural gas debacle last week went misreported because of an opaque, indifferent utility and stupid reporters
Over and over again we heard that the facility where there was a fire last week accounted for 64% of the utility's supply of natural gas to its customers in Michigan. And we're still hearing that today in some reports. Unfortunately, this isn't really true. It's unnecessarily alarming.
The Ray field at Macomb has 41 billion cubic feet of stored natural gas, as only The Detroit News noted at the time, but during a normal winter when Consumers Energy pumps 2.5 billion cubic feet a day, the utility is supplying 150 billion cubic feet in two months' time. It can't all come from Macomb's storage, obviously. It's piped in from all over to be compressed at Macomb and at other stations. The problem isn't the supply, just as the utility indeed kept emphasizing, stating in various reports that Consumers has 300-350 billion cubic feet of stored gas. The problem was too much of the utility's compressor capability (64%) is centralized at Macomb, which they didn't want to emphasize when it suddenly went off-line automatically in the wake of the fire. Examine the news accounts and you will see that the reporters simplistically characterized these details and misled the public.
Critics of Consumers Energy's paltry $3 million in infrastructure spending over the last five years have a point. This utility in Michigan is notorious for spending more dark money than any other to influence politics. Now that they've had this fire, they'll have to spend more on infrastructure, but it remains for Consumers Energy to install more redundancy in its system to prevent against what happened last week. But don't hold your breath. The utility is as unlikely to do what is best for Michigan as reporters are likely suddenly to become more intelligent.
God forbid we have an EMP. I doubt any of this infrastructure would function properly after such an event, redundancy or no.
That's what alarms me.
God forbid we have an EMP. I doubt any of this infrastructure would function properly after such an event, redundancy or no.
That's what alarms me.
On Wednesday night, as temperatures dropped to -43 degrees with the wind chill, Consumers Energy sent an emergency message to Michiganders' cell phones asking them to turn down their thermostats to 65 degrees.
That followed a similar plea from Consumers Energy CEO Patti Poppe, who reported a Wednesday explosion that damaged a Consumers Energy facility that accounts for 64 percent of its supply. In a Facebook message, Poppe urged Michiganders to "protect the system" by turning down the heat.
But many Michiganders responded to Poppe's plea with defiance on social media during the emergency, frustrated with being asked to pay ever-increasing rates to a private company that essentially runs a monopoly.
The facility where there was a fire is a compressor facility tasked with the job of pressurizing natural gas for its pipeline network. The facility accounts for 64% of pressurized supply, not 64% of supply, a key detail still not reported clearly in the media, which at the time unnecessarily alarmed the public during a period of dangerous, bitter cold weather.
The Ray plant contributes a maximum of 64 percent of the company's daily average of 2.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas to customers. Before gas can be put into the pipeline system, however, it needs to be compressed. The Ray station sits above Consumers' largest underground natural gas storage area with a capacity of 41.2 billion cubic feet of storage. Overall, Ray can compress 117 million cubic feet of gas per day, reaching pressures of 1,800 pounds per square inch. ...
"Most of the damage was on plant two. We have plant one flowing and three mostly has heat-related damage. We are working on that now," [VP Garrick Rochow] said. "Plant three will take maybe three weeks to get back online. Plant two is more significant. It was closer to the fire and flames and heat. It looks like it originated there. It is out for the season, but not going to impact ability to deliver to customers."
The layout of the Ray facility, which was built out over time, is three separate buildings and three separate plants on the site at 69338 Omo Road, in Armada Township. Station No. 3, which was built in 2011, is the largest of the three.
"We don't know what activated the fire gate system," Rochow said. "We are looking at that. We do know that in the process of venting the gas that the natural gas caught fire. There was a fireball like in the pictures. As a precautionary measure, plant 1 and 2 were in operation and fire-gated. Personnel fire-gated the entire facility. When that occurred, probably 50 yards separated the buildings .... gas from plants one and two caught fire."
Rochow said it is unclear why automatic controls vented the system and how the gas caught fire. "We can see the sequence of events but still looking at the reasons," he said. ...
But Rochow said one lesson Consumers might have learned is that the plants might still be too close to one another, given the fact that venting of gas of all stations at the same time led to the fireball igniting everything at once.
"We have systems there and the proximity of the systems has eliminated (favorable) redundancy," he said. "We will learn from it and think about how investments can create more redundancy on that particular site."
Labels:
Consumers Energy,
Detroit News,
Facebook,
natural gas,
temperature,
utilities
Monday, February 4, 2019
Not hiring whitey: 82% of new jobs since Republican tax cuts went to minorities
2.159 million new jobs added, but 1.765 million of them went to minorities, not whites. Hispanics received over 52% of the new jobs.
Thanks Donald Judas Trump! Thanks a lot! Thanks corporate bigots! Thanks a lot!
Sunday, February 3, 2019
Grand Rapids, Michigan, Climate Update for January 2019
Grand Rapids, Michigan, Climate Update for January 2019
Max Temp 51, Mean Max Temp 48
Min Temp -10, Mean Min Temp -3
Av Temp 21.8, Mean Av Temp 23.7
Precip 2.9, Mean Precip 2.06
Snow 30.5, Mean Snow 18.6
Snow Season To Date 48.1, Snow Mean Season To Date 41.4
Heating Degree Days 1333, Mean Heating Degree Days 1272
HDD Season To Date 3805, Mean HDD Season To Date 3758
So after all the drama of the last week, using HDD we are just 1.25% colder than the mean, season to date.
Max Temp 51, Mean Max Temp 48
Min Temp -10, Mean Min Temp -3
Av Temp 21.8, Mean Av Temp 23.7
Precip 2.9, Mean Precip 2.06
Snow 30.5, Mean Snow 18.6
Snow Season To Date 48.1, Snow Mean Season To Date 41.4
Heating Degree Days 1333, Mean Heating Degree Days 1272
HDD Season To Date 3805, Mean HDD Season To Date 3758
So after all the drama of the last week, using HDD we are just 1.25% colder than the mean, season to date.
The alt-right isn't too hot for "victim heirarchy", which is merely the flipside of proportional justice
Without proportional justice, an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, you're back to Draco where every crime is punishable by death because you couldn't think of a more appropriate punishment. Of course, when your entire political party is responsible for the deaths of tens of millions of infants in the womb, the entire party must pay.
Persistent injustice inflames the passions, suspending the thinking function.
Saturday, February 2, 2019
Joe Biden, outed on Friday for opposing desegregation in 1975, says Gov. Northam (D-VA) should resign for racism
Old Joe is pretty confident the furies aren't coming for him. Either that or he doesn't know yet that he's been outed.
Ed Gillespie had a stunning loss to Northam because everyone in Virginia knew who the real friend of white people was
CNBC 11/7/17: Democrat Ralph Northam elected governor of Virginia:
- Northam led Gillespie by nine points late Tuesday, a margin of victory that stunned political analysts and pollsters, who had expected the race to be close.
Northam’s margin of victory stunned political analysts and pollsters, many of whom had predicted that the race would be extremely tight. [Northam +3.3 lol]
Gov. Coonman (D-VA): That's not me in blackface on that page for Ralph Northam
"I think I'll have another beer" is the guy in the hood talkin' then.
Stonewall Coonman is his real name, I think.
Diversity: The Jews and the Muslims are havin' themselves a war . . . in the US House
I still say we give the Muslims Washington State, the Jews Florida, we take over the entire Middle East and let Disney run the Bible Lands concession.
A Jewish Republican accused a Muslim Democrat of anti-Semitism, she accused him of Islamophobia
Labels:
anti-semitism,
Disney,
Ilhan Omar,
Islam,
Jewish,
Lee Zeldin,
Muslim,
Roll Call
Friday, February 1, 2019
A Friday twofer, first the Democrat Governor of Virginia and now Joe Biden outed as racist, all the way back to 1975
Man, that means the Democrat-controlled media have been burying this thing for 44 years. Gotta be a record or sumptin'.
The progressives have been saving up this stuff for this very moment.
In September 1975, Biden supported an anti-busing amendment to a federal bill. It was proposed by Sen. Jesse Helms of North Carolina, a segregationist until at least the 1960s and regarded by most to be a racist. Delighted by Biden's shift, Helms welcomed him "to the ranks of the enlightened."
Biden believed social homogeneity would be to the detriment of black people, but we know what he really meant.
Virginia's elected baby-killer Democrat governor turns out to find blackface and the KKK funny at medical school
Flew under the radar of Democrat-controlled media . . . FOREVER.
The NSC wouldn't be telling us in Michigan to obey our masters if Consumers Energy really had 350 billion cubic feet of stored natural gas
The NSC must know Consumers Energy had more like only 64 billion cubic feet before the Macomb fire, not 350 billion or even 300 billion.
How much was lost of Macomb's 41.2 billion cubic feet?
One third? All of it?
The NSC wouldn't get involved over the loss of just 11.77% of a utility's supply, now would it?
It reads as if Consumers Energy both vented-off gas into the atmosphere without burning and burned off gas in Macomb compressor incident
On the coldest day of this winter, an equipment malfunction at the utility's Ray Natural Gas Compressor Station on Omo Road near of 32 Mile in Armada Township apparently resulted in the fire that burned for about five hours, according to fire and utility officials. ...
Wednesday's fire at the compressor station -- one of three stations at the Armada Township site -- was reported about 10:30 a.m. after personnel at the facility first saw flames, utility officials said.
Residents reported hearing an explosion, followed by flames that burned into the air and were visible for miles.
Consumers Energy officials said automatic equipment known as a fire gate shut off the flow of gas to the fire, which limited damage to the site and vent out the gas.
The utility's onsite incident management team determined the fire was contained and allowed a controlled burn to exhaust natural gas product remaining in the pipes.
Armada Township Fire Chief Dan Reynolds said a team of firefighters arrived at the scene and consulted with utility officials, but were advised to let the fire burn itself off.
"The fire looks dramatic but there is no risk to the general public," the chief said.
"I just saw some video on (WXYZ-TV) Channel 7 and it looks like Armada is burning down. But the reality is, this is out in a field and is contained at this point."
The fire eventually burned out by 3:30 p.m. ...
The Armada Township facility accounts for about 64 percent of the utility's supply, officials added.
News reports don't add up about how much natural gas Michigan's Consumers Energy lost in the 4.5 hour compressor fire
News on the day of the blast had indicated total supply at 350 billion cubic feet, but a day later down to 300 billion cubic feet, without making a single reference to the discrepancy in the light of the explosion and 4.5 hour fire at the Macomb compressor station.
The Detroit News, below, repeats as others have that the site of the fire is where Consumers Energy has 64% of its supply, which would be, theoretically, 224 billion cubic feet of 350 billion cubic feet, if that's truly how much they have. Yet the story below says the Ray Compressor Station, Consumers' largest storage field, has only 41.2 billion cubic feet of natural gas storage. If that's really true, Consumers Energy total supply was never 350 billion cubic feet, let alone 300 billion cubic feet, but barely 64.4 billion cubic feet.
Do you know how far that would go? It certainly wouldn't supply the natural gas needs of Consumers' customer base of 1.8 million. In fact, it would supply just 413,000 average single family households for one year, that's it.
None of these stories add up.
Someone is not telling the truth, either about the real quantity of total available natural gas stored by Consumers Energy for its customers, or about how much gas was lost in the controlled burn, or both.
The unprecedented and repeated appeals by Consumers Energy and Michigan Governor Whitmer to residents of Michigan to dial back their thermostats to 65F during a massive below-zero blizzard which shut down hundreds of schools and businesses for almost a week suggest that Consumers Energy never had the massive supply it claimed and that Michigan's population was at real risk of disaster.
Consumers said the Ray Compressor Station, where the fire occurred, accounts for roughly 64 percent of its supply. ...
The fire erupted at 10:33 a.m. at Consumers Energy's Ray Natural Gas Compressor Station on the 69300 block of Omo Road, north of 32 Mile. ...
Consumers said despite the blast and burn-off of natural gas, the utility had filled 15 large storage facilities with extra supply for their 1.8 million natural gas customers across the state in preparation for winter fuel usage.
Personnel on hand who handle emergencies at the Ray station contacted emergency responders, who contained the fire while letting it burn until 3 p.m., said Garrick Rochow, the company's senior vice president of operations.
" ... It's the best way to make sure all of the gas is used up," Rochow said of the contained burned [sic, read "contained burn"]. "Next, we'll do a root-cause evaluation ... It's too early to know what caused this." ...
Consumers Energy's Ray Compressor Station on Omo Road, just north of 32 Mile in Armada Township, has 41.2 billion cubic feet of storage. It is the company's largest underground natural gas storage and compressor facility. (Photo: Todd McInturf, The Detroit News) ...
The blast that accompanied the fire was felt miles away. Sherry Ventimiglia lives about two miles from the Ray station, said she thought something had happened to her home.
"It felt like something fell against the house, like a tree or something like that," Ventimiglia said. "It shook the whole house. ... I literally went running through my whole house to make sure nothing had exploded or fallen. It was very intense."
Labels:
Consumers Energy,
Detroit News,
Gretchen Whitmer,
natural gas,
utilities
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