Showing posts with label ee cummings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ee cummings. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 March 2011

Not a beach.

or Taking care of business.
(inspired by OKEJ, being OK in Swedish, from the subtitles to 'Anywhere But Here' with Susan Sarandon & Natalie Portman)
Up, Down, Appendices, Postscript.

 Otis Redding, Respect, 1965.

what you want
honey you got it
and what you need
baby you've got it
all I'm asking
is for a little respect
when I come home

do me wrong
honey if you want to
you can do me wrong
honey while I'm gone
but all I'm asking
is for a little respect
when I come home

hey little girl
you're so sweeter than honey
and I'm about to give you
all of my money
but all I'm asking
is for a little respect
when I come home

this is what I want
this is what I need
I got to got to have it
give it
everything I need


Aretha FranklinAretha Franklin
 Aretha Franklin, Respect, 1967.

what you want
baby I got
what you need
you know I got it
all I'm asking
is for a little respect
when you come home
hey baby
just a little bit
when you come home

I ain't gonna do you wrong
while you gone
I ain't gonna do you wrong
'cause I don't want to
all I'm asking
is for a little respect
when you come home
just a little bit
baby come on

I'm about to give you
all my money
and all I'm asking
in return honey
is to give me
my propers
when you get home
just a
just a
yeah baby

ooo your kisses
sweeter than honey
and guess what
so is my money
all I want you to do for me
is give it to me
when you get home
yeah baby
whip it to me
when you get home
just a little bit
just a little bit

r e s p e c t
find out what it means to me
r e s p e c t
take care of t c b

sock it to me
all the time
keep on turning
ride it out baby
and I ain't lyin'

ree ree ree ree
stop
please come home
ree ree ree ree
There was a fair bit of water under the bridge between 1965 & 1967. If Otis wasn't as explicit about the sex as Aretha, it was probably well understood (as I remember), making the two stories about equivalent.

So ... respect. How do you show it? With money? Or with sex? Is it both? Or neither? Is it both sex & money plus something else?

All this makes me think of Dylan's Dignity, also ultimately undefined.

Here's something strange ... her sisters Erma & Carolyn were singing backup there and a big part of it, but no-where can I find any picture of the three of them together (?)

Fire Down On The Labrador David BlackwoodI went over to the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) to see the David Blackwood exhibit.

Twenty dollars to get in - Ai Ai Ai! Which was barely compensated by the lovely woman collecting it at the gate and her willing laugh.

But so, there they had some originals ... which I had never seen before; and after more than an hour (but not two, this is telling) ... I was entirely under-whelmed and disappointed. There was a small room devoted to Fire Down On The Labrador and the whale's smile expresses neither sardonic glee nor ... anything. And too many images, of punts & trap-skiffs, of splitting knives, of people's visages; simply did not relate to what I know of these things and the place, not at all. A parody of Newfoundland seems to be all that remains.

Red TrenchAbout the same thing happened with Don Wright's Red Trench when I saw it years ago at The Rooms in St. John's. The whole out-of-scale clump of buildings seems a paean to what can be achieved in the way of distortion with enough passive-agressive angst - Chris Pratt and his brother Philip and the PHB Group Inc..

Icons tumbling all 'round eh?

Just lucky I guess. :-)Just lucky I guess - that some of the vaginas I discovered, welcomed me.

Lol Pomeroy, Harold Ryan, and me; we were jigging one day off Little Paradise in Placentia Bay, when a whale passed just beneath us almost scraping the keel. We saw the bow-wave coming and held our breaths, hearts stopped; a gentle blessing.

When I showed up in St. John's on my Triumph-650 in ... 1968? ... one of the first people I met was an English prof, another CFA, who told me "the space is still open here." He was so right, and if I had been smart I would have gone straight out and bought some. It was more than a decade before I discovered how effectively the bureaucrat numbskulls would cripple & eliminate that openness - simple really - the k-k-Canada Building Code and extended municipal boundaries, done deal. And there it is - gone! Not forever of course.

"I caught this morning morning's minion," and "Generations have trod, have trod, have trod," were mainstays. But I guess this is where I run out from between the lines of Gerard Manley Hopkins' anodyne sentiment; which proves to be indeed a "windpuff-bonnet of fawn-froth." Run right off the end of "O let them be left, wildness and wet; long live the weeds and the wilderness yet," and into the (real) tall grass. Bah humbug.

Still and all, that was sometime before 1918 and this is 2011 ... give the guy a break, cut 'im some slack ... there's been some urbanization gone on in the meantime eh?

Not such a knucklehead as not to know that a park is not a forest. But then last week I went for a walk on the beach - and found that it is not a beach. Ok ok, ok, I already knew. I've known for years. The famous beaches of Ipanema & Copacabana are not beaches either. They regularly bring many many many truckloads of sand to keep them all looking like beaches, old sand dug from pits; build subtle and not so subtle breakwaters & spits to coerce the waves into doing their least. A verisimilitude of a beach then eh? But not a beach.

Walking back (to this place which is not very much like a home) I noticed that most of the seeds were gone from the tufts of pampas grass ... A man sees what he wants to see and disregards the rest. An almost entirely derivative pattern of thought then eh? Eh? Eh? Eh!

So I gathered some of the pampas seeds that were left on the stalks to plant in my garden (which is hardly a garden).

The old CN line to Union Station.The old CN line to Union Station.The old CN line to Union Station.Spring has sprung you know and it looks like one (or maybe two) of the Sumac seeds I planted has decided to grow.

The seeds came from a tree at the side of an abandoned railway track, which is no more a forest than the park is - closer though, definitely closer. And I 'stratified' and buried as many of the seeds as would fit into one of the pots. Sumac seeds are known (and here) to be very difficult to germinate - but at the least they would provide compost.

Sumac sprouts?And now something has sprouted which might be one (or even two) of them. The clue is the tuft in the crotch of it - if you look at the picture you can see it - which is not usual in the weeds I see (weed being a relative term).

Sumac trees in and of themselves are still wild ... as am I.

Doin' what they're supposed to. :-)(If increasingly breathless - the cigarettes are doing their work.)

Miss Jodie posted one of her poems, and I was off like a rabbit after old memories of spring.

Versions of ee cummings' O sweet spontaneous here and here.

Written sometime around 1920. It was once explained to me that cummings' punctuation represents orgasms & such like related. And he was known for so called 'typographical experiments' so exact placement might have been important to him.

Difficult to know now, at this late date, exactly how it worked itself out.

The dot between 'beauty' and 'how' is sometimes there, sometimes not. And the majority of what propagates around the web is about 'purient' (?) philosophers. Oh well. What's one orgasm more or less?

I am suspicious of the 1976 edition I got from the Toronto Public Library, which claims to be somehow 'original' - I can't quite accept that he would settle for a type-writer font.
 O sweet spontaneous
earth how often have
the
doting

       fingers of
prurient philosophers pinched
and
poked

thee
,has the naughty thumb
of science prodded
thy

    beauty  .  how
often have religions taken
thee upon their scraggy knees
squeezing and

buffeting thee that thou mightest conceive
gods
    (but
true

to the incomparable
couch of death thy
rhythmic
lover

      thou answerest


them only with

               spring)

museRadiation UnitsHere we are, facing important if not ultimate choices and decisions, and the simple facts are nigh on impossible to communicate or understand.

Canada permits 7,000 becquerels of (Tritium) radioactivity per litre of drinking water. Japan permits 100 becquerels of (Iodine-131) radioactivity per litre of drinking water for infants, and 300 becquerels for adults.

I spent the best part of a day trying to figgure it out, and came up with this (shamefully lame, I know):
All numbers except 'one' are approximate.

A becquerel is one radioactive atom decaying per second, a measure of 'activity'.

Both atomic mass and half-life figure into the becquerel equation, so the sizes (relatively small Tritium & relatively large Iodine) and half-lives (12 years for Tritium and 8 hours for Iodine-131) have already been factored in by the time you come up with a number in becquerels.

BUT decay of radioactive Iodine releases gamma (350 keV) & high-energy beta radiation (200-600 keV), and Tritium decay releases only (relatively) low-energy beta radiation (20 keV), and while Iodine tends to concentrate in thyroid tissue, Tritium tends not to stick very long.

KeV is kilo electron volts, a measure of energy and hence a measure of 'penetration' (see Kinsey maybe :-) - 200-600 keV beta particles are good for a millimetere or two. For reference, a thyroid gland (Adam's apple) is a few centimetres; keeping in mind that the Iodine that concentrates there does so throughout.

SO a direct comparison the 7,000 acceptable becquerels per litre of Canadian Tritium with the 100 (for infants) to 300 (for adults) acceptable becquerels per litre of Iodine-131 in Japanese drinking water doesn't wash (pardon the pun) ... when Tritium decays it forms Helium, so a wag might say "drink more Tritium and lighten up."

On the other hand, neither radioactive Iodine nor Tritium is found in nature to speak of. Tiny amounts are created by cosmic rays, but these are truly tiny: 2 becquerels per litre of Tritium; no number that I could find for Iodine but a ratio of stable to radioactive of 10 million to one. So ... very VERY little of this stuff around at all except for what we humans have made.
All of this from obvious sources, Wikipedia and the like. But I still have no idea of what a number in becquerels actually represents in terms of effect. There is exposure time and proximity to consider. I was thinking of trying to correlate with say, a sunburn, or the feeling you get dancing around a bonfire ... and how long would that take I wonder?

Nevermind that there are not just Tritium and Iodine-131 to be concerned about. And aside from radioactivity there are all of the endocrine disruptors and potential disruptors - What about that shit?

Here:

Sharri Sutton"In a new sign of the contamination problem, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said Saturday a sample of seawater taken Friday from a monitoring station at the plant showed the level of iodine 131 at 50 becquerels per cubic centimeter — 1,250 times the legal limit.

Drinking a half liter of that water would be equivalent to getting a 1 millisievert dose, the agency said, roughly the amount a person gets in one year from natural sources."

 

Sony Playstation after testing"The National Institute of Radiological Sciences said that the radioactivity of the water that the three injured workers had stepped into was 10,000 times the level normally seen in coolant water at the plant. It said that the amount of radiation the workers were thought to have been exposed to in the water was two to six sieverts.

Even two sieverts is eight times the new 250-millisievert annual exposure limit set for workers at Daiichi in the days after the disaster; the previous limit was 100. Tokyo Electric officials said that water with an equally high radiation level had been found in the Reactor No. 1 building, The Associated Press reported.

Skin exposures of two to six sieverts will cause severe burns, according to Dr. David J. Brenner, director of the Center for Radiological Research at Columbia University. But if those doses reach the whole body and not just the skin 'you’re at a very high risk of dying,' he said.

At a dose of four sieverts, half of the people exposed will die, Dr. Brenner said."

 

carinho"Michael Friedlander, a former nuclear power plant operator in the United States, said that the presence of radioactive cobalt and molybdenum in water samples taken from the basement of the turbine building raised the possibility of corrosion as a cause.

Both materials typically occur not because of fission, but because of routine corrosion in a reactor and its associated piping over the course of many years of use, he said."

 
So, Cobalt - half-life 5 years, beta and gamma energies in the MeV range, and Molybdenum - half-life a few days, beta energies 100-600 KeV. These numbers are just guesses - it is too complicated for me to understand. And there is another Iodine, 134, and Cesium, Technetium, Barium and Lanthanum (that last one gives me pause, any relation to Laudanum?). What's the acceptable standard for all this then?

With all of these measley shit-head bureaucrats on the case how is it that there is not a clear, understandable, and integrated standard for what is acceptable in drinking water?

 :-)There's my garden, such as it is. If the sprouts turn out to be Sumac? Hallelujah! If not ... oh well. And if the Pampas grass don't grow? ... ok too ... all good.

Sage, Rosemary & Thyme so far ... and if you rub a single leaf between your fingers, arises an enchanting odour neither sweet nor bitter that is ... enough ... (see The Life and Times of Michael K).

(but true to the incomparable couch of death, thy rhythmic lover, thou answerest them only with ... spring)

Be well.

Postscript:

JirauJirauAt first there was nothing in the english press about the situation at Jirau where the workers rioted on the 17th. Jirau and Santo Antonio dams are part of the Madeira River hydroelectric complex being built in Brazil.

Eventually the Wall Street Journal picked it up - bringing to mind Noam Chomsky's recommendation to keep an eye on the business press (who have to report what is useful to the owners of this damned shebang).

The story is murky: union struggles, bad faith on all sides, government force; the stories here do not begin to tell it, not by any means:

Obras de Jirau estão paralisadas e trabalhadores abandonam o local, 17/03/2011. This article includes more photographs and a video - follow the link to the source below.

 

Trabalhadores de Jirau são alojados no Ginásio do Sesi em Porto Velho, 17/03/2011.

 

O fim da agonia: maior parte de operários de Jirau já seguiu as cidades de origem, 20/03/2011.

 

Brazil Sends Force To Jirau Dam After Riots, Wall Street Journal, Paulo Winterstein, March 18 2011.

 

Construction Resumes At Brazil's Jirau Hydro Dam After Riots, Wall Street Journal, Diana Kinch, March 21 2011.

 
 
I am trying to read Naomi Klein, The Shock Doctrine. Such a bushel and a peck and a BALE of nonsense and yet, a sort of truth too ... trying to paint reality with what amounts to 99% ideology ... This kind of writing seems more like a wedge to sort & separate readers into absolute believers & absolute deniers. And what use is that? Richard Wilkinson & Kate Pickett with their Spirit Level go the same way (if less so) it seems to me.

These people have got their minds around fundamental and essential notions; but they can't seem to write about it without pretending to be seagulls (that shit unpredictably from heights). Must be a failure of public education, is that it? They missed out on How-To-Write-A-Paragraph-101? Sick that day? Off smoking dope?

I hope the royalties deliver them all to comfortable cottages somewhere nice with a view of water.

Human beings live and exist only through contact with others. Right from It-Takes-Two-To-Tango on up through language and culture to the sublime (if you make it there). Maybe I should qualify it as 'fruitful' or 'fecund' contact ... maybe stress that it is not a hierarchy but a way, a story ... whatever. I find myself stopping again and again at this third-hand recounting of the Good Samaritan story. There it is.

Put Illich's notion up beside bourgeois christian forbearance and then do a 'compare & contrast'. The Amish understand this very well - there is simply nothing worse, nothing more full of death and yet not quite dead, than to be shunned. But you don't have to go to the extreme - just pretend neither to see who they are nor hear what they say and always be careful to step (adroitly) around them in the street and you'll be fine. (And never never never send cash in the mail.)

Malvados, André DahmerMalvados, André Dahmer
Comics for the 10's
"The Internet is changing human relations."
I know Rodolpho. You listen to me less and less.
"There are almost two billion people connected."

(Oh yeah?)


Appendices:

1. Obras de Jirau estão paralisadas e trabalhadores abandonam o local, 17/03/2011.

 

2. Trabalhadores de Jirau são alojados no Ginásio do Sesi em Porto Velho, 17/03/2011.

 

3. O fim da agonia: maior parte de operários de Jirau já seguiu as cidades de origem, 20/03/2011.

 

4. Brazil Sends Force To Jirau Dam After Riots, Wall Street Journal, Paulo Winterstein, March 18 2011.

 

5. Construction Resumes At Brazil's Jirau Hydro Dam After Riots, Wall Street Journal, Diana Kinch, March 21 2011.

 

6. Japan Encourages a Wider Evacuation From Reactor Area, Hiroko Tabuchi & Keith Bradsher & David Jolly, March 25 2011.

 

Obras de Jirau estão paralisadas e trabalhadores abandonam o local, 17/03/2011.

 Obras de Jirau estão paralisadas e trabalhadores abandonam o local -

A Polícia confirmou ontem (16) que pelo menos 40 ônibus foram incendiados no canteiro de obras da hidrelétrica de Jirau, no Rio Madeira (RO). A confusão teria começado após uma briga entre dois funcionários das obras.

Os trabalhadores, que aderiram aos atos, alegam que não existem condições mínimas nos alojamentos e que estão insatisfeitos com os salários. A Camargo Côrrea, empresa do consórcio que está construindo a hidrelétrica, afirma que tudo não passou de uma briga entre alguns trabalhadores e desmente as informações.

Hoje (17) aconteceram novos tumultos no canteiro de obras e os trabalhadores marcham, pela BR-364, em direção à cidade mais próxima do canteiro de obras, Jaci Paraná. Eles ameaçaram atear fogo em tudo o que for da empresa. Os comércios de Jaci Paraná foram fechados.

Com as novas manifestações, a empresa que havia emitido uma nota alegando que "tudo estava tranquilo" e que as obras haviam sido "retomadas normalmente", emitiu uma nova nota afirmando que as obras foram paralisadas.

A Camargo Côrrea também afirmou que os funcionários foram retirados "para garantir sua segurança" e que não é verdadeira a informação "de que há qualquer insatisfação ou reivindicação trabalhista no empreendimento". Entretanto, há informações de que os ônibus foram negados aos trabalhadores que queriam sair do local.

Segundo matéria publicada no jornal regional Rondoniaovivo, que entrou em contato telefônico com os trabalhadores, ocorreram pelo menos três mortes. Seriam dois vigias, um da margem esquerda e outro da margem direita, e um motorista, morto a pauladas. Ainda segundo o jornal a assessoria de comunicação do Comando da Polícia Militar informou à reportagem que não existe confirmação de mortes.

O Secretário da Segurança de Rondônia, Marcelo Bessa, entregou um ofício ao governador Confúcio Moura requerendo a presença da Força Nacional no local. De acordo com o presidente da Assembleia Legislativa, Valter Araújo (PTB), o governador já alertou o Ministro das Minas e Energia Edson Lobão sobre essa situação de instabilidade nos canteiros de obras.

O Parlamentar também afirmou que os consórcios não estão cumprindo com os acordos de compensação, feitos antes do início das obras. "Eles [os consórcios] cumpriram com cerca de 30% do que foi acordado, até mesmo a contratação de mão de obra, que deveria ser toda ela local, não cumpriram. Cerca de 70% dos trabalhadores são de outros estados. Pior é que eles querem que a policia expulse os revoltosos de lá, mas para onde esse povo vai? Certamente virão para a cidade, onde estarão desempregados e desesperados. Não podemos mais permitir essa situação".
 Work at Jirau is stopped and workers are leaving the area -

The police confirmed yesterday (the 16th) that about 40 busses were burnt in the yard of the Jirau hydro-electric project in Rio Madeira in the state of Rondônia. The confusion had started after a fight between two workers.

Workers who joined in the action say that minimum accomodation standards were not met and that they were not satisfied with wages. Camargo Côrrea, one of the companies in the consortium which is building the plant, affirmed that (not?) everything began with a fight between a few workers and denied the information.

Today (the 17th) there were new struggles in the yard and the workers marched via BR-364 towards the nearest town, Jaci Paraná. They were threatening to set fire to everything belonging to the company. Businesses in Jaci Paraná were closed.

With the latest demonstrations, the company, which had released a note alleging that "everything was tranquil" and that the work had been "recommenced normally", put out a new note admitting that the work was stopped.

Camargo Côrrea also said that their workers had been removed "to guarantee their security" and that the information "that there was some worker insatisfaction or demands in the matter," is not true. However, there is information that busses were refused to workers who wished to leave the area.

According to what was published in the regional newspaper Rondoniaovivo, which was in contact by telephone with the workers, there were at least three deaths. They were two watchmen, one on the left side and one on the right, and a driver, beaten to death with sticks. Also according to the newspaper, the spokesman for the Military Police said that the deaths had not been confirmed.

The Secretary for Security of Rondônia state, Marcelo Bessa, made an official request to Governor Confúcio Moura for troops in the area. With the support of the president of the legislative assembly, Valter Araújo, the Governor had already alerted the Minister of Mines and Energy, Edson Lobão, about the unstable situation at the workplaces.

Bessa also said that the consortium had not fulfilling the agreements on compensation made before the project began. "They (the consortium) gave about 30% of what had been agreed, even contracting manual labour which, it had been agreed, would be entirely local. About 70% of the workers are from other states. Worse, they want the police to remove the demonstrators, but where will these people go? Certainly they will return to the town, where they will be unemployed and desperate. We cannot permit this situation."

Trabalhadores de Jirau são alojados no Ginásio do Sesi em Porto Velho, 17/03/2011.

 Trabalhadores de Jirau são alojados no Ginásio do Sesi em Porto Velho

Centenas de trabalhadores da Usina de Jirau chegaram há poucos instantes no Ginásio do Sesi, em Porto Velho, escoltados por dezenas de policiais militares. Eles permanecerão no local e o Estado e a Camargo Corrêa providenciarão alimentação. Segundo a assessoria de imprensa da PM, pelo menos 3 mil trabalhadores ficarão no ginásio, localizado no Bairro Lagoa, Zona Sul da Capital.
 Jirau workers are housed in the SESI gymnasium in Porto Velho

Hundreds of workers from Jirau have just arrived at the SESI (Serviço Social da Indústria - Social Services for Industry) gymnasium in Porto Velho, escorted by dozens of military police. They will stay in the area and the State (of Rodonia) and Camargo Corrêa will provide food. According to a military police spokesman at least 3 thousand workeers will stay in the gymnasium located in the Bairro Lagoa neighbourhood in the southern part of the capital.

O fim da agonia: maior parte de operários de Jirau já seguiu as cidades de origem, 20/03/2011.

 O fim da agonia: maior parte de operários de Jirau já seguiu as cidades de origem

Depois de três dias amontoados em boates e um ginásio em Porto Velho, a maior parte dos trabalhadores de Jirau já seguiu para suas cidades de origem, seguindo o cronograma ajustado pela Camargo Corrêa com as autoridades locais. A previsão é que até a segunda-feira todos que queriam retornar aos seus estados já tenham embarcado em aviões ou ônibus.

Na manhã deste domingo era grande a movimentação de cerca de 700 trabalhadores no Ginásio do Sesi. Eles formavam longas filas e muitos diziam que estavam há mais de 20 horas aguardando questões burocráticas para embarcarem. Outra reclamação era a limpeza dos banheiros químicos, que gerou um forte odor em toda a região por mais de uma hora. Os trabalhadores estavam organizados em filas e aguardavam a liberação em uma cerca montada pela empresa responsável por Jirau. Por volta das 9h30min apenas duas funcionárias realizavam a triagem e liberavam os ônibus. Dezenas de policiais militares ainda fazem a segurança do local.
 The end of the anguish: most Jirau workers have now returned to their cities of origin

After three days piled up in clubs and a gymnasium in Porto Velho, most Jirau workers have returned to their cities of origin, according to the schedule arranged by Camargo Corrêa with local authorities. It is expected that by Monday all who wish to return to their states willl have left by air and bus.

On Sunday morning there was a lot of movement among the 700 workers in the SESI gymnasium. They formed long lines and many said that they had been waiting more than 20 hours with questions around leaving. Another complaint was the clenliness of the chemical toilets that were producing a strong odour in the area for more than an hour. The workers were organized in lines and waited to pass a fence put up by the company responsible for Jirau. Beginning at 9:30 AM at least two officials were organizing access to the busses. Dozens of military police were still maintaining security in the area.

Brazil Sends Force To Jirau Dam After Riots, Wall Street Journal, Paulo Winterstein, March 18 2011.

SAO PAULO (Dow Jones) -- Brazil's federal government on Friday authorized the presence of national security forces in the Amazon state of Rondonia after riots at the Jirau dam site halted construction on the 3,450-megawatt dam.

The government said in its official publication Friday that it was sending additional police to the region to ensure public order. The additional police presence will last 30 days and can be renewed.

Protesting workers at the Jirau dam have set fire to buses and damaged part of the worker housing at the site, according to press reports. Jirau is being built by Energia Sustentavel do Brasil, a group comprising France's GDF Suez SA (GSZ.FR), Brazilian construction company Camargo Correa and Brazil's state-controlled utility Centrais Eletricas Brasileiras (EBR, ELET6.BR), or Eletrobras.

Workers have complained about wages and abuse by security officials at the site, according to press reports.

According to the Estado news agency, the riots led the companies to remove remaining workers from the site and halt construction on the dam. The Jirau dam was set to begin operations in March 2012. The halt in construction could push back that date, Energia Sustentavel President Victor Paranhos told Estado.

GDF Suez, which coordinates press requests for the group, didn't immediately return calls seeking comment.

Camargo Correa' press official said that the company is still evaluating damages at the site and will continue to pay workers until they return to work.


Construction Resumes At Brazil's Jirau Hydro Dam After Riots, Wall Street Journal, Diana Kinch, March 21 2011.

RIO DE JANEIRO (Dow Jones)--Construction work resumed Monday at the Jirau hydroelectric dam in Rondonia state in the Brazilian Amazon after workers' riots, local Estado newswire said in a report. A new timetable will be announced for the plant's development after delays caused by the unrest, the agency said.

Work is also set to restart Tuesday on the construction of the neighboring Santo Antonio dam, also on the Rio Madeira river, Estado said.

Protesting workers at the Jirau dam last week set fire to buses and damaged part of workers' housing at the site, in a protest over wages and abuses by security officials at the site, according to press reports. Jirau is being built by Energia Sustentavel do Brasil, a group comprising France's GDF Suez SA, Brazilian construction company Camargo Correa and Brazil's state-controlled utility Centrais Eletricas Brasileiras, or Eletrobras.

Jirau, designed with a 3,450 megawatt capacity, may now start generating and selling energy in 2013, instead of recent expectations that this would occur in March 2012, Energia Sustentavel President Victor Paranhos told Estado.


Japan Encourages a Wider Evacuation From Reactor Area, Hiroko Tabuchi & Keith Bradsher & David Jolly, March 25 2011.

TOKYO — New signs emerged Friday that parts of the crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant were so damaged and contaminated that it would be even harder to bring the plant under control soon.

At the same time, Japanese officials began encouraging people to evacuate a larger band of territory around the complex.

Speaking to a national audience at a news conference on Friday night, two weeks after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and the devastating tsunami that followed it, Prime Minister Naoto Kan dodged a reporter’s question about whether the government was ordering a full evacuation, saying officials were simply following the recommendation of the Japan Nuclear Safety Commission.

“The situation still requires caution,” Mr. Kan, grave and tired-looking, told the nation. “Our measures are aimed at preventing the circumstances from getting worse.” The authorities said that they would now assist people who wanted to leave the area from 12 to 19 miles outside the plant, and that they were now encouraging “voluntary evacuation” from the area.

Those people had been advised March 15 to remain indoors, while those within a 12-mile radius of the plant had been ordered to evacuate. The United States has recommended that its citizens stay at least 50 miles away.

“The state of the plant is still quite precarious,” Mr. Kan said. “We’re working hard to make sure it doesn’t get worse. We have to ensure there’s no further deterioration.”

In a new sign of the contamination problem, the Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency said Saturday a sample of seawater taken Friday from a monitoring station at the plant showed the level of iodine 131 at 50 becquerels per cubic centimeter — 1,250 times the legal limit.

Drinking a half liter of that water would be equivalent to getting a 1 millisievert dose, the agency said, roughly the amount a person gets in one year from natural sources.

Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy-director general at the safety agency, said that he expected the iodine to dilute rapidly, minimizing the effect on wildlife, and pointed out that fishing had been suspended in the area after the quake and tsunami.

One sign of possible deterioration in the plant itself came at Reactor No. 3. Workers who were trying to connect an electrical cable to a pump in a turbine building next to the reactor were injured when they stepped into water that was found to be significantly more radioactive than normal. On Friday, officials and experts offered conflicting explanations of what had gone wrong — but all pointed to greater damage to the reactor’s systems and more contamination there than officials had indicated earlier.

Two workers were exposed to radiation and burned when water poured over their boots and down around their feet and ankles, officials said. A third worker was wearing higher boots and did not suffer the same exposure.

Like the injured workers, many of those risking their lives are subcontractors of Tokyo Electric Power, who are paid a small daily wage for hours of work in dangerous conditions. In some cases they are poorly equipped and trained for their task.

On Saturday, workers were focused on trying to restore the lighting to Reactor No. 2’s central control room, an important step toward restoring the unit’s cooling system. They were also preparing to pump fresh water on the No. 1, No. 2 and No. 3 units, after days of spraying with saltwater.

The National Institute of Radiological Sciences said that the radioactivity of the water that the three injured workers had stepped into was 10,000 times the level normally seen in coolant water at the plant. It said that the amount of radiation the workers were thought to have been exposed to in the water was two to six sieverts.

Even two sieverts is eight times the new 250-millisievert annual exposure limit set for workers at Daiichi in the days after the disaster; the previous limit was 100. Tokyo Electric officials said that water with an equally high radiation level had been found in the Reactor No. 1 building, The Associated Press reported.

Skin exposures of two to six sieverts will cause severe burns, according to Dr. David J. Brenner, director of the Center for Radiological Research at Columbia University. But if those doses reach the whole body and not just the skin “you’re at a very high risk of dying,” he said.

At a dose of four sieverts, half of the people exposed will die, Dr. Brenner said. But he said that from the information that had been provided, it was not clear whether the dose to the workers reached their skin only, or penetrated their bodies.

Concerns about Reactor No. 3 have surfaced before. Japanese officials said nine days ago that the reactor vessel might have been damaged.

Hidehiko Nishiyama, deputy director general of the Japan Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, mentioned damage to the reactor vessel on Friday as a possible explanation of how water in the adjacent containment building had become so radioactive.

Michael Friedlander, a former nuclear power plant operator in the United States, said that the presence of radioactive cobalt and molybdenum in water samples taken from the basement of the turbine building raised the possibility of corrosion as a cause.

Both materials typically occur not because of fission, but because of routine corrosion in a reactor and its associated piping over the course of many years of use, he said.

The aggressive use of salt water to cool the reactor and its storage pool for spent fuel may mean that more of these highly radioactive corrosion materials will be dislodged and contaminate the area in the days to come, posing further hazards to repair workers, Mr. Friedlander added.

The contamination of the water in the basement of the turbine building poses a real challenge for efforts to bring crucial cooling pumps and other equipment back into use.

One other major worry about Reactor No. 3 is the mox, or mixed oxide, fuel it uses. It is an especially dangerous blend of reprocessed fuel and can be more radioactive when melted than the pure uranium fuel used in other reactors, experts say.

The news on Friday and the discovery this week of a radioactive isotope in the water supplies of Tokyo and neighboring prefectures punctured the mood of optimism with which the week began, leaving a sense that the battle to fix the damaged plant will be a long one.

No one is being ordered to evacuate the second zone around the plant, officials said, and people may choose to remain, but many have already left of their own accord, tiring of the anxiety and tedium of remaining cooped up as the nuclear crisis simmers just a few miles away. Many are said to be virtual prisoners, with no access to shopping and immobilized by a lack of gasoline.

“What we’ve been finding is that in that area life has become quite difficult,” Noriyuki Shikata, deputy cabinet secretary for Mr. Kan, said in a telephone interview. “People don’t want to go into the zone to make deliveries.”

Mr. Shikata said the question of where those who chose to leave would go was still under consideration. The effort to move people comes at a time when there are already hundreds of thousands of Japanese displaced by the quake and tsunami.

The National Police Agency said Friday that the official death toll from the March 11 quake and tsunami had passed 10,000, with nearly 17,500 listed as missing.

There was some good news. Levels of the radioactive isotope found in Tokyo’s water supply fell Friday for a second day, officials said, dropping to 51 becquerels per liter, well below the country’s stringent maximum for infants.


Down

Sunday, 29 August 2010

let it go

Bam be lam!
Up, Down, Appendices, Postscript.

I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.
I do not think that they will sing to me.
   Whoa Black Betty
Bam be lam



let it go ‐ the
smashed word broken
open vow or
the oath cracked length
wise - let it go it
was sworn to
go

let them go ‐ the
truthful liars and
the false fair friends
and the boths and
neithers ‐ you must let them go they
were born
to go

let all go ‐ the
big small middling
tall bigger really
the biggest and all
things ‐ let all go
dear

so comes love


   The cat’s in the well
The wolf is looking down
The cat’s in the well
The wolf is looking down
He got a big bushy tail
Dragging all over the ground

The cat’s in the well
The gentle lady is asleep
The cat’s in the well
The gentle lady is asleep
She ain’t hearing a thing
The silence is stickin’ her deep

The cat’s in the well
And grief is showing its face
The world’s being slaughtered
It’s such a bloody disgrace

The cat’s in the well
The horse is going bumpety bump
The cat’s in the well
And the horse is going bumpety bump
Back Alley Sally
Is doing the American jump

The cat’s in the well
And Papa is reading the news
His hair’s falling out
And all of his daughters need shoes

The cat’s in the well
And the barn is full of the bull
The cat’s in the well
And the barn is full of the bull
The night is so long
And the table is oh so full

The cat’s in the well
And the servant is at the door
The drinks are ready
And the dogs are going to war

The cat’s in the well
The leaves are starting to fall
The cat’s in the well
Leaves are starting to fall
Goodnight my love
May the Lord have mercy on us all

My necktie rich and modest, but asserted by a simple
      pin—
[They will say: 'But how his arms and legs are thin!']
   Black Betty had a baby
Bam be lam
Damn thing gone blind

Adoration of the Magi, Balthazar detail, Hieronymus BoschAll this was a long time ago, I remember,
And I would do it again, but set down
This set down
This: were we led all that way for
Birth or Death? There was a Birth, certainly,
We had evidence and no doubt. I had seen birth and death,
But had thought they were different; this Birth was
Hard and bitter agony for us, like Death, our death.



[
I do not like this cummings' poem, it is lame, unpoetic, stupid even (I mean, 'so comes love' ? give me a break, puh-leeze), and I considered leaving off the last two lines which would about half fix it, but I didn't, respect for the dead I suppose,

and you know, they make Eliot out to be such an intellectual (and he was certainly) but there are touches ... the pause you see here before 'pin' and twice before 'This' are in the typography of the 1940/1968 Faber & Faber edition I hold in my hands tonight though they are not always shown on Internet versions, so, not 'entirely' intellectual then ...
]

dawn is coming, the racoons are hissing and scrapping in the parking lot, rabid I wonder? the first gull sits on his lamp-post shouting out so shrilly, "It's all about ME!"

ok, just for the Halibut, here's another bit of bum-boy comic relief from Paul Krugman ... and Johnny Cash with the Orange Blossom Special to take us right on outta here.

And I ain't comin' back 'till I don't have to. I don't care if I do die do die do die do die do. :-)how long can I do without this Internet shit I wonder? probably not long ... have to find out the hard way I guess ... be well gentle reader.


The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.

   The fog comes
on little cat feet.

It sits looking
over harbor and city
on silent haunches
and then moves on.

Lord, it's a bourgeois town
Uh, the bourgeois town
I got the bourgeois blues
Gonna spread the news all around
  Oh the baby had blue eyes
Well it must have been the captain's
Whoa Black Betty
Bam be lam
 





Postscript:

[
nothing I have seen on the Internet, however, not the porn certainly, is as daemonic as HTML, a syntax so arbitrary & arcane has to be the work of the Devil doesn't it? and can anyone who knows it really think properly about anything else? the revenge of the know-nothing self-serving nerds, and just when you have learned enough to survive comes another wrinkle, another layer, CSS? one has to laugh]

SockeyeSpencer Tunick, Big ChillMyfi BaronMyfi Baron
Spencer Tunick's latest at the Big Chill festival in England is apparently on a global warming theme, and the first image I saw of it was the one above, black two shades of blue & white, and I thought, "oh, colour! he's branching out," and then when it seemed the black arms & hands were somehow beseeching, "ahh that's it, he's getting at the racial aspect," (which is central to me f'rinstance), but if you Google for more images you will see pink & yellow as well ... so, I have no idea what he's on about, (and neither, I think, does he) ...
Tuira Kayapo 2009Get Out of Belo Monte - Altamira 2010The last rays of sunset shining on my tree.Sockeye

Theo Colborn's admin flunky, Chris Ribbens, don't take no shit from the hoi polloi, Nosiree Bob! ... maybe they are just getting old and cranky, I can't say ... ask a simple question and get stonewall incomprehension & bafflegab, whatever ... fuck 'em then!

so tonight I am thankful for the press, a 2007 Guardian article eventually led me to an international organization, AMAP - Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme, and to a US government one, NIEHS - National Institute of Environmental Health Science, and their journal, EHP - Environmental Health Perspectives, and a substantive update on the subject since Theo Colborn's Our Stolen Future in 1995/6:

Declines in Sex Ratio at Birth and Fetal Deaths in Japan, and in U.S. Whites but Not African Americans, EHP, July 2006.

and some direct downloads from AMAP (you have to download 'em to read 'em): 2009 Human Health Report & Arctic Pollution 2009, and there are others of interest on the Assessment Results sidebar at their site.

this looked interesting too - especially since it is so recent, the abstract says that the excess of girls in the North, or Greenland at least, has now swung to an excess of boys - but this Arctic Institute of North America is a k-k-Canadian outfit and they keep their articles well locked up ... at least they are more-or-less apologetic about it.

and last thing of all, and the best thing of all, here's a bright ray of hope coming from Christine, a 15 minute video, Coalition of the Willing from a group of UK filmmakers that sums things up very well indeed.

(they have hosted it on Vimeo which is not the best, pause it while it loads, or, if that doesn't work - use KeepVid under IE, right-click and 'Save Target As' for a local copy you can view on whatever you use)





Appendices:
1. Man-made chemicals blamed as many more girls than boys are born in Arctic, Paul Brown, September 12 2007.
2. Population, Sex Ratios and Development in Greenland, Hamilton & Rasmussen, March 2010.
3. This Is Not a Recovery, Paul Krugman, August 26 2010.



Man-made chemicals blamed as many more girls than boys are born in Arctic, Paul Brown, September 12 2007.

· High levels can change sex of child during pregnancy
· Survey of Greenland and east Russia puts ratio at 2:1

Twice as many girls as boys are being born in some Arctic villages because of high levels of man-made chemicals in the blood of pregnant women, according to scientists from the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (Amap).

The scientists, who say the findings could explain the recent excess of girl babies across much of the northern hemisphere, are widening their investigation across the most acutely affected communities in Russia, Greenland and Canada to try to discover the size of the imbalance in Inuit communities of the far north.

In the communities of Greenland and eastern Russia monitored so far, the ratio was found to be two girls to one boy. In one village in Greenland only girls have been born.

The scientists measured the man-made chemicals in women's blood that mimic human hormones and concluded that they were capable of triggering changes in the sex of unborn children in the first three weeks of gestation. The chemicals are carried in the mother's bloodstream through the placenta to the foetus, switching hormones to create girl children.

Lars-Otto Reierson, executive secretary for Amap, said: "We knew that the levels of man-made chemicals were accumulating in the food chain, and that seals, whales and particularly polar bears were getting a dose a million times higher than that existing in plankton, and that this could be toxic to humans who ate these higher animals. What was shocking was that they were also able to change the sex of children before birth."

The sex balance of the human race - historically a slight excess of boys over girls - has recently begun to change. A paper published in the US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences earlier this year said that in Japan and the US there were 250,000 boys fewer than would have been expected had the sex ratio existing in 1970 remained unchanged. The paper was unable to pin down a cause for the new excess of girls over boys.

The Arctic scientists have discovered that many of the babies born in Russia are premature and the boys are far smaller than girls. Possible links between the pollutants and high infant mortality in the first year of life is also being investigated.

Scientists believe a number of man-made chemicals used in electrical equipment from generators, televisions and computers that mimic human hormones are implicated. They are carried by winds and rivers to the Arctic where they accumulate in the food chain and in the bloodstreams of the largely meat- and fish-eating Inuit communities.

The first results of the survey were disclosed at a symposium of religious, scientific and environmental leaders in Greenland's capital, Nuuk, yesterday, organised by the Patriarch of the Orthodox Church, Bartholomew I, which is looking at the effects of environmental pollution on the Arctic.

Dr Reierson said the accumulation of DDT, PCBs, flame-retardants and other endocrine disrupters has been known for some time and young women had been advised to avoid eating some Arctic animals to avoid excess contamination and possible damage to their unborn children.

Dr Reierson, said blood samples from pregnant women were subsequently matched with the sex of their baby. Women with elevated levels of PCBs in their blood above two to four micrograms per litre and upwards were checked in three northern peninsula's in Russia's far east - the Kola, Taimyr and Chukotka - plus the Pechora River Basin.

To check the results the survey was widened and further communities, including those on Commodore Island, were investigated. The results were now in for 480 families and the ratio remained the same.

He said full results for the widening of the survey would not be published until next year but preliminary results for Greenland showed the same 2:1 ratio in the north.

Aqqaluk Lynge, the former chairman of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference who hails from Greenland, said: "This is a disaster, especially for some 1,500 people who make up the Inuit nations in the far north east of Russia.

"Here in the north of Greenland, in the villages near the Thule American base, only girl babies are being born to Inuit families.

"The problem is acute in the north and east of Greenland where people still have the traditional diet.

"This has become a critical question of people's survival but few governments want to talk about the problem of hormone mimickers because it means thinking about the chemicals you use.

"I think they need to be tested much more stringently before they are allowed on the market."

Backstory

The Inuit are nomadic in nature, having survived for thousands of years using formidable hunting skills to seek out the bowhead whale, seal, caribou and walrus. The Inuit Circumpolar Conference (ICC), an international body, was founded in 1977 to represent the rights of the approximately 150,000 Inuit of Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and Chukotka (Russia). With relatively low levels of educational attainment and few opportunities, violence, alcohol and drug dependency are a growing problem as the Inuit try to safeguard its traditions.




Population, Sex Ratios and Development in Greenland, Hamilton & Rasmussen, March 2010.

Abstract

During the 20th century, Greenland society experienced a dramatic transformation from scattered settlements based on hunting, with mostly turf dwellings, to an urbanizing post-industrial economy. This transformation compressed socioeconomic development that took centuries to millennia elsewhere into a few generations. The incomplete demographic transition that accompanied this development broadly followed the classical pattern, but with distinctive variations relating to Greenland’s Arctic environment, sparse population, and historical interactions between two cultures: an indigenous Inuit majority and an influential Danish minority. One heritage from Danish colonial administration, and continued more recently under Greenland Home Rule, has been the maintenance of population statistics. Time series of demographic indicators, some going back into the 18th century, provide a uniquely detailed view of the rapid hunting-to-post-industrial transition. Changing sex ratios—an early excess of females, shifting more recently to an excess of males—reflect differential impacts of social, economic, and technological developments.




This Is Not a Recovery, Paul Krugman, August 26 2010.

What will Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, say in his big speech Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyo.? Will he hint at new steps to boost the economy? Stay tuned.

But we can safely predict what he and other officials will say about where we are right now: that the economy is continuing to recover, albeit more slowly than they would like. Unfortunately, that’s not true: this isn’t a recovery, in any sense that matters. And policy makers should be doing everything they can to change that fact.

The small sliver of truth in claims of continuing recovery is the fact that G.D.P. is still rising: we’re not in a classic recession, in which everything goes down. But so what?

The important question is whether growth is fast enough to bring down sky-high unemployment. We need about 2.5 percent growth just to keep unemployment from rising, and much faster growth to bring it significantly down. Yet growth is currently running somewhere between 1 and 2 percent, with a good chance that it will slow even further in the months ahead. Will the economy actually enter a double dip, with G.D.P. shrinking? Who cares? If unemployment rises for the rest of this year, which seems likely, it won’t matter whether the G.D.P. numbers are slightly positive or slightly negative.

All of this is obvious. Yet policy makers are in denial.

After its last monetary policy meeting, the Fed released a statement declaring that it “anticipates a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization” — Fedspeak for falling unemployment. Nothing in the data supports that kind of optimism. Meanwhile, Tim Geithner, the Treasury secretary, says that “we’re on the road to recovery.” No, we aren’t.

Why are people who know better sugar-coating economic reality? The answer, I’m sorry to say, is that it’s all about evading responsibility.

In the case of the Fed, admitting that the economy isn’t recovering would put the institution under pressure to do more. And so far, at least, the Fed seems more afraid of the possible loss of face if it tries to help the economy and fails than it is of the costs to the American people if it does nothing, and settles for a recovery that isn’t.

In the case of the Obama administration, officials seem loath to admit that the original stimulus was too small. True, it was enough to limit the depth of the slump — a recent analysis by the Congressional Budget Office says unemployment would probably be well into double digits now without the stimulus — but it wasn’t big enough to bring unemployment down significantly.

Now, it’s arguable that even in early 2009, when President Obama was at the peak of his popularity, he couldn’t have gotten a bigger plan through the Senate. And he certainly couldn’t pass a supplemental stimulus now. So officials could, with considerable justification, place the onus for the non-recovery on Republican obstructionism. But they’ve chosen, instead, to draw smiley faces on a grim picture, convincing nobody. And the likely result in November — big gains for the obstructionists — will paralyze policy for years to come.

So what should officials be doing, aside from telling the truth about the economy?

The Fed has a number of options. It can buy more long-term and private debt; it can push down long-term interest rates by announcing its intention to keep short-term rates low; it can raise its medium-term target for inflation, making it less attractive for businesses to simply sit on their cash. Nobody can be sure how well these measures would work, but it’s better to try something that might not work than to make excuses while workers suffer.

The administration has less freedom of action, since it can’t get legislation past the Republican blockade. But it still has options. It can revamp its deeply unsuccessful attempt to aid troubled homeowners. It can use Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored lenders, to engineer mortgage refinancing that puts money in the hands of American families — yes, Republicans will howl, but they’re doing that anyway. It can finally get serious about confronting China over its currency manipulation: how many times do the Chinese have to promise to change their policies, then renege, before the administration decides that it’s time to act?

Which of these options should policy makers pursue? If I had my way, all of them.

I know what some players both at the Fed and in the administration will say: they’ll warn about the risks of doing anything unconventional. But we’ve already seen the consequences of playing it safe, and waiting for recovery to happen all by itself: it’s landed us in what looks increasingly like a permanent state of stagnation and high unemployment. It’s time to admit that what we have now isn’t a recovery, and do whatever we can to change that situation.


Thursday, 5 February 2009

Knuckleheads!

Up, Down.

"i will not kiss your fucking flag"
"there is some shit i will not eat"


Jornal do Brasil, Crise Financeira

trillions to be spent on this trumped up financial 'crisis' - though everyone knows the economy from top to bottom is as corrupt as can be, good riddance to bad rubbish, we should be cheering - I am cheering, Hurrah!

the real crisis is global climate change ... if it were properly addressed then the financial 'crisis' would disappear since the roots are the same, secularism and objective physics, but the contrary proposition does not hold

A Secular Age, Charles Taylor.
The Nature of Order, Christopher Alexander.

Irma la Douce, Shirley MacLainei sing of olaf glad and big, E. E. Cummings

i sing of olaf glad and big
whose warmest heart recoiled at war:
a conscientious object-or

his wellbelovéd colonel (trig
westpointer most succinctly bred)
took erring olaf soon in hand;
but -- though an host of overjoyed
noncoms (first knocking on the head
him) do through icy waters roll
Rachel Weiszthat helplessness which others stroke
with brushes recently employed
anent this muddy toiletbowl,
while kindred intellects evoke
allegiance per blunt instruments --
olaf (being to all intents
a corpse and wanting any rag
upon what God unto him gave)
responds,without getting annoyed
"i will not kiss your fucking flag"

straightway the silver bird looked grave
(departing hurriedly to shave)

but -- though all kinds of officers
Juliette Lewis, Natural Born Killers(a yearning nation's blueeyed pride)
their passive prey did kick and curse
until for wear their clarion
voices and boots were much the worse,
and egged the firstclassprivates on
his rectum wickedly to tease
by means of skilfully applied
bayonets roasted hot with heat --
olaf (upon what were once knees)
does almost ceaselessly repeat
"there is some shit i will not eat"

our president, being of which
Halle Berryassertions duly notified
threw the yellowsonofabitch
into a dungeon,where he died

christ (of his mercy infinite)
i pray to see; and Olaf too

preponderatingly because
unless statistics lie he was
more brave than me: more blond than you



Down.