I try not to go to the Connecticut State Legislature more than once a year. When I do so, it is only because my frustration with the status quo exceeds my frustration in watching how we struggle to make progress through the legislative process. Nor is Connecticut unique by any means.
But there I was on February 27th, endeavoring to testify on Raised Bill 5600, Section 3, regarding a proposal to study the impacts of Climate Change on Connecticut; a bill similar, but inferior to, Bill 1432, Section 3 of last year which suffered death by calendar at the end of the legislative session.
Continue reading "Reality - The First Speed Bump on the Way to Green" »
The New York Times’
editorial of Feb. 23rd, “Before the Next Bridge Falls”, fell short
of the mark. It focused on one issue,
largely ignoring two other related issues and a fourth which encompasses all
three.
We are facing a convergence
of three paradigms, wrapped in a fourth. Infrastructure, climate change and constrained energy are proceeding
along seemingly parallel lines, but will converge in time, and vary by place. How we deal with them will be a combination
of our perception of their interrelationships, and a fourth paradigm,
demographic-driven economics.
Continue reading "Convergence" »
I have often thought that the most valuable contribution of Al Gore's film, An Inconvenient Truth, was its title. Although it spoke specifically to Climate Change and our unwillingness to face its multifaceted implications, there are many inconvenient truths in our lives, and our unwillingness to address them directly accounts for many of the problems we face.
Take Iraq for example.
Continue reading "Inconvenient Truths, Asymmetric Response and Unintended Consequences" »