Saturday, February 10, 2018

Britain's Dark Skinned Blue Eyed Ancestor Explained?


The article.



https://news.nationalgeographic.com/2018/02/ancient-face-cheddar-man-reconstructed-dna-spd/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Social&utm_content=link_fb20180207news-cheddarman&utm_campaign&sf181539217=1

I suspect that the skin colour would have been more of a light brown colour. The depiction that they are promoting is likely propaganda to encourage the modern multi-cultural agenda. Why do I say this? Because their logic is flawed.
 First of all, there are no soft tissue remains available to examine. So they are working entirely on theory based on DNA patterns.
 Secondly, just because the genes are similar does not suggest a certain gene expresson or outcome. You may have the genes that make you more prone to Crohn's disease, but never actually get the disease. Eye colour is much less complicated in the genome than skin colour or height or body type.
And finally, they claim that the lighter skin made the body more capable of breaking down vitamin D which would make the individual healthier in low light conditions. This is biologically true. However they are limiting their focus on Britain and perhaps Europe, but do not explain how these dark skinned people survived and thrived in places like Siberia, where our ancestors have been roaming around for over 45 thousand years. Would they not have gotten ill and weak and then died off in these harsh conditions? What about Mongolia? What about Japan?
What they should say is that the results are "inconclusive" at best.

What I am extremely curious of is why the model is shown with no facial hair. Was this to make him more pretty by today's standards?

We are truly guessing when trying to fit the puzzle pieces together from our distant past.
Lucy was the first oldest human skeleton fossil found and dated back to around 3.2 million years ago. She was found in Ethiopia, and a theory arose that we all came out of Africa.
Then  even older fossil remains were found in Ethiopia dating about 4 million years ago.

https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2009/10/091001-oldest-human-skeleton-ardi-missing-link-chimps-ardipithecus-ramidus.html

Then 5.6 million year old hominid footprints were found in Greece

http://www.sci-news.com/othersciences/anthropology/trachilos-hominin-like-footprints-05185.html

Then a 7.2 million year old fossil remains were found in both Greece and Bulgaria.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/05/170523083548.htm

Then through DNA science we discovered that nearly all of us have traces of Neaderthal DNA.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neanderthal_genome_project

I am afraid that the "Out of Africa" theory is holding less and less merit as time goes on.
The story of our ancient past appears to be much more complex than anyone could have imagined.

The Current State of Sweden

Ancient Viking Iron Age artifacts destroyed and melted down for scrap.
http://www.ancientworldreview.com/2017/08/sweden-destroying-archaeological-finds.html

Who is in charge of cultural heritage in Sweden? Qaisar Mahmood. Oh, I see. What education or experience does Qaisar Mahmood have to qualify him for this position? Political Science? Oh, I see. So no degree in history or archeology? No. Hmmmm... I see.

Inline image 1
https://www.linkedin.com/in/qaisar-mahmood-18748a4/
Translated:
Education
    University of Stockholm
    Degree Name Philosophy Bachelor's Degree (fil.
    Field of Study Political Science
    Dates attended or expected graduation 1996 - 1998

    School of social Work
        Degree Name Socioecamen
    Field of Study Socionom
    Dates attended or expected graduation 1996 - 1999
    Stockholm University
    Degree Name Pol. May Political Science
    Field of Study Political Science
    Dates attended or expected graduation 1994 - 1999

Inline image 2

Tuesday, August 24, 2010


Cannabis electric car to be made in Canada




Last Updated: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:52 PM ET Comments345Recommend255
By Emily Chung, CBC News
The Kestrel electric car will have room for a driver and three passengers and have a top speed of 90 kilometres an hour. (Motive Industries Inc.)An electric car made of hemp is being developed by a group of Canadian companies in collaboration with an Alberta Crown corporation.
The Kestrel will be prototyped and tested later in August by Calgary-based Motive Industries Inc., a vehicle development firm focused on advanced materials and technologies, the company announced.
The compact car, which will hold a driver and up to three passengers, will have a top speed of 90 kilometres per hour and a range of 40 to 160 kilometres before needing to be recharged, depending on the type of battery, the company said in an email to CBC News Monday.
It will be powered by a motor made by Boucherville, Que.-based TM4 Electrodynamic Systems, said Motive Industries president Nathan Armstrong.
'As a structural material, hemp is about the best.'— Nathan Armstrong, Motive Industries Inc.
The car's body will be made of an impact-resistant composite material produced from mats of hemp, a plant from the cannabis family. The material is being supplied by Alberta Innovates-Technology Futures, a provincial Crown corporation that provides technical services and funding to help commercialize new technologies. The hemp is being grown in Vegreville, Alta.
The Kestrel is one of five electric vehicles being developed by Project Eve, an automotive industry collaboration founded by Motive and Toronto Electric, an Ontario material handling and electric motor company, to boost the production of electric vehicles and electric vehicle components in Canada.
Colleges to help build cars
The Kestrel cars will be built with the help of polytechnic schools in Alberta, Quebec and Toronto, and the first 20 cars are scheduled to be delivered next year to EnMax, a Calgary-based energy distribution, supply and service company that is taking part in Project Eve.
Industrial hemp is bred to produce very little THC, the active compound in marijuana. (Chet Brokaw/Associated Press)
Hemp
Hemp is the common name for the cannabis plant, which has fibrous roots, stalks and stems useful for producing a variety of products and seeds that are edible.
The flowers, buds and leaves of some strains are used to produce drugs such as marijuana and hashish because they contain a psychoactive compound called tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), but industrial hemp is bred to produce very little THC.
Automotive pioneer Henry Ford first built a car made of hemp fibre and resin more than half a century ago.
"It's not an original idea," Armstrong said, but one that wasn't developed much further as car manufacturers favoured other materials, such as steel, in subsequent decades.
However, fibreglass and carbon fibre-based composites have gained popularity as materials for the body of racecars because they are strong, but light. Such composite materials consist of pieces or fibres of a hard reinforcement material, such as glass or carbon fibre, surrounded and supported by a matrix of a material such as plastic.
Producing composites from glass or carbon fibre requires intense heating in furnaces and multiple chemical processes, Armstrong said, making it very energy intensive,
In contrast, plant-based fibres grow in a field using the energy of the sun.
"As a structural material, hemp is about the best," Armstrong said, as it has about twice the strength of other plant fibres. It doesn't require much water or pesticide use, and grows well in Canada, providing a high yield per hectare.
Market advantage
"Plus, it's illegal to grow it in the U.S., so it actually gives Canada a bit of a market advantage," Armstrong added. The U.S. does allow the import of processed hemp.
ATlF had been working for some time on hemp-based composite materials with the hardness of glass and had been seeking a commercial use.
Motive Industries had joined forces with Toronto Electric, a material-handling and electric motor company, to found Project Eve and decided to give the material a try.
The car will take batteries with a capacity ranging from 4.5 to 17.3 kilowatt hours of energy.
The vehicle's full design will be released after the September EV 2010 VÉ Conference and Trade Show in Vancouver.


Read more: http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2010/08/23/cannabis-hemp-electric-car-kestrel-motive.html#ixzz0xaoTV9l4

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Housing crisis reaches full boil in East Point; 62 injured  | ajc.com

The appearance of a "Failed State"

Housing crisis reaches full boil in East Point; 62 injured | ajc.com

Thirty thousand people turned out in East Point on Wednesday seeking applications for government-subsidized housing, and their confusion and frustration, combined with the summer heat, led to a chaotic mob scene that left 62 people injured.

At the Tri-Cities Plaza Shopping Center, emergency vehicles passed each other, transporting 20 people to hospitals. Medical and police command posts were set up on scene. East Point police wore riot gear. Officers from four other agencies supported them. Yet no arrests were made.

All of this resulted from people attempting to obtain Section 8 housing applications and, against long odds, later securing vouchers for affordable residences. Some waited in line for two days for the applications.

Renee Gray, a single mother holding her one-year-old daughter, Marion, came looking for a housing break and nearly got trampled, forcing her to run from the crowd and into the street.

"It could have been better organized," said Gray, a customer service employee. "A lot of adults lost focus.”

Jacquelyn Cuffie, 50, of Duluth, used a walker to cross the parking lot and navigate the huge gathering, determined to improve her living situation. It didn't matter how hot or crowded it got.

“It’s difficult to pay [the rent] with a disability check,” Cuffie said.

Offering applications for the first time since 2002, East Point Housing Authority officials had triple the crowd they anticipated, and one that was three-fourths of the 40,000 population of the south Fulton city. Things got out of hand when people started cutting into lines and authorities attempted to move groups to different areas.

Sgt. Cliff Chandler, East Point Police Department spokesman, said one flash point occurred early on. Authorities originally had lined up people to come into the front entrance of the Central Station Sports Cafe and receive the applications. However, when they saw the sheer number of people, the officials set up kiosks around the parking lot to hand out the applications, Chandler said.

Felecia McGhee, who came in search of her own Section 8 assistance, saw two small children trampled when people rushed the building that held the applications. When a group of people who had been waiting hours in a line were told to move to another line, people started pushing, shoving and cursing, witnesses said.

People collapsed in the heat. Emergency personnel drove up in a pickup truck and handed out bottled water. People were carried off on stretchers. A baby went into a seizure and was taken to a hospital.

Thaddeus Brookins of Atlanta dropped off his mother, Betty, a part-time furniture store employee, into the middle of the shopping center mayhem. He didn't like what he saw.

“It was terrible,” Thaddeus Brookins said. “Lot of people. People pushing people, knocking people over. People getting hurt.”

Wednesday's deluge of people seeking low-income vouchers in East Point demonstrated just how desperate the need for affordable housing has become in metro Atlanta, officials said. Some 15,000 Georgians currently are accommodated with Section 8 housing, with thousands more on waiting lists. Housing openings have been difficult to find anywhere, including rural areas.

"East Point, to me, is indicative of the problem," said Dennis Williams, a Georgia Department of Community affairs assistant commissioner. "It just goes to show you the situation is pretty dire."

At the same time the recession has pushed many middle-class families out of their homes, the closure of several large public housing projects -- Grady, Bowen and Capital Homes -- during the last decade has left many lower-income families with few housing options as well, elevating vouchers to something akin to lottery winnings. The demand has overwhelmed many municipalities and public entities that administer the Section 8 programs.

A check of the 16 metro Atlanta housing authorities that administer Section 8 programs found the overwhelming majority had closed their waiting lists. In one instance, the waiting list at Marietta Housing Authority has been closed since September 2008.

"There's more people demanding units at a lower-income level. The demands coming in from people who are losing their jobs and potentially having to leave their homes whether they move all the way to Section 8 or not, it's going to create demand, " said Jim Skinner, a planner in the research division of the Atlanta Regional Commission. "That's just the bottom line and that perhaps explains what happened in East Point."

When the crowd thinned out at the Tri-Cities Plaza Shopping Center, the parking lot was a sprawling mess of discarded water bottles, crushed soda cans and cigarette packs.

At an ensuing news conference, East Point officials tried to describe the day as a success, an assessment that was roundly challenged by those who had witnessed or been involved in the unruly scene.

Kim Lemish, East Point Housing Authority executive director, said the Section 8 housing applications were made available by the city for the first time in eight years because a waiting list had been depleted.

There was concern a similar overcrowded scene could occur Thursday morning when East Point began accepting the completed applications.

No one, however, was lining up at the housing authority in advance, by design. Late Wednesday, police had barricaded the housing authority and erected signs that declared "no loitering."

Staff writers Marcus K. Garner, Rhonda Cook and Mike Morriss contributed to this article.


==================================================================


Foreclosure Crisis Spreads Across U.S.; Idaho Defaults Mount




Foreclosure Crisis Spreads Across U.S.

Nan Holmes, a title officer who reviews real estate documents, at her home in Boise, Idaho. Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg

Foreclosure Crisis Deepens Across U.S.

Nan Holmes, a title officer who reviews real estate documents at her home in Boise, Idaho. Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg

Foreclosure Crisis Deepens Across U.S.

A sign stands outside a foreclosed home that is for sale in the Charter Pointe subdivision of Boise, Idaho. Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg

Foreclosure Crisis Spreads Across U.S.

A notice sits above the lock of a home that is under foreclosure and for sale in the Charter Pointe subdivision of Boise, Idaho. Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg

Foreclosure Crisis Spreads Across U.S.

Michael Ferguson, chief economist for the state of Idaho, speaks during an interview in Boise, Idaho Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg

Foreclosure Crisis Spreads Across U.S.

Cows from a nearby dairy farm sit in pens near homes in Charter Pointe, a development where more than half ot the homes listed for sale are bank-owned or are worth less than their mortgage, in Boise, Idaho. Photographer: Matthew Staver/Bloomberg

Nan Holmes, a senior escrow officer at a title insurer, says her insider’s view of the local market gave her the confidence three years ago to pay $370,000 for a new home in Boise, Idaho. She got a price she liked from the builder and 100 percent bank financing.

That was before the bottom fell out of the housing market in California, Nevada and Florida as borrowers with bad credit began defaulting in record numbers, setting off a recession. Holmes, who had earned $150,000 a year when real estate was booming, saw her compensation shrink by half when business cooled, forcing her to dip into savings and sell jewelry. She stopped paying the mortgage in April and has put the house on the market for $145,000 less than she owes the bank.

“How long will it take for the market to turn so I can just break even?” Holmes, 55, said as she sat in her house in Boise’s tree-lined Collister neighborhood, four miles (6.4 kilometers) from the state capitol.

Home foreclosures are climbing in the Northwest and Midwest, areas that had earlier dodged the worst of the mortgage crisis, according to real estate data firm RealtyTrac Inc. With 14.6 million Americans out of work and consumer spending declining, further weakness in housing could push the economy back into recession, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said Aug. 1.

Foreclosure rates in Utah, Idaho, Illinois and Colorado rose in the second quarter compared with a year earlier, and rank among the 10 highest in the country. The number of homes seized by lenders at least doubled in 19 states and more than tripled in seven of them, according to Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac.

Later in Cycle

“The housing downturn started late in the Northwest and now it’s ending late,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Idaho, Oregon and Washington lagged behind the national cycle and will suffer declines after other areas stabilize, he said.

New defaults are declining and appear to have bottomed in states where the crisis began, falling 43 percent in California, 37 percent in Florida and 27 percent in Nevada in the second quarter from a year earlier, RealtyTrac’s data show.

“The worst is over, but it’s going to be a long road ahead,” said economist Steven Frable at IHS Global Insight Inc. in Lexington, Massachusetts.

July Data

Last month, 325,229 U.S. properties got a notice of default, auction or bank repossession, RealtyTrac said today in a report. While that’s an increase of 4 percent from June, the number was down almost 10 percent from a year earlier. One in 397 households received a filing. Lenders seized 92,858 properties in July, the second-highest monthly tally since RealtyTrac began records in January 2005.

“The numbers are exploding due to unemployment and economic displacement,” said Rick Sharga, senior vice president of marketing at RealtyTrac. “We will see them get a lot worse unless we see some job creation.”

Initial jobless claims rose last week by 2,000 to 484,000, the highest in six months, Labor Department figures showed today. Unemployment is near a 27-year high at 9.5 percent. More than 4.4 million people are collecting unemployment benefits and almost 5.3 million are getting emergency and extended payments. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told Congress on July 21 the outlook is “unusually uncertain.”

Chicago Jobs Disappear

Chicago lost 76,000 jobs in the year through June, the most in any metropolitan area tracked by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Denver lost 18,900, Detroit 18,700. Employment dropped 4.1 percent in Grand Junction, Colorado, and 2.7 percent in Bend, Oregon, the data show.

Home seizures soared 822 percent in Idaho in the second quarter, and the state had the seventh-highest foreclosure rate, according to RealtyTrac. Boise’s median house price was $140,100 in the quarter, down 34 percent from the peak $212,800 in 2007, the National Association of Realtors said yesterday.

The metropolitan area, home to a third of Idaho’s 1.54 million residents, has been pummeled by housing-related construction and retail job losses, as well as layoffs at chipmaker Micron Technology Inc. and grocer Albertsons, said Michael Ferguson, the state’s chief economist.

Idaho’s jobless rate was 8.8 percent in July, up from 8.2 percent a year earlier and 2.9 percent in July 2007.

“This is an off-the-chart, extreme financial event,” Ferguson said. “I wasn’t around for the Depression, but in the last half century there has been nothing like this.”

Cows and Corn

In Charter Pointe, a development built on corn fields 11 miles from downtown, more than half of the homes listed for sale are bank-owned or “underwater,” meaning the property is worth less than the mortgage. Dairy cows wander in a nearby pen, and baling machines grind into the night.

“The neighbors aren’t used to living next to farming operations with manure and flies,” said Richard Murgoitio, who sold 70 acres to Hubble Homes Inc. in 2001 and would like to sell his remaining land to builders. “We’re hoping they take us all out, if the economy ever turns around.”

Micron, founded in Boise in 1978 with early investors including the late potato mogul J.R. Simplot, cut local production and 1,500 jobs last year as chip prices fell. The company has more than 5,000 full-time workers in the area, said Daniel Francisco, a Micron spokesman. It employed twice that number as recently as 2001, Ferguson said.

Budget Cuts

Albertsons cut its local payroll following a 2006 buyout by companies including Eden Prairie, Minnesota-based Supervalu Inc. and private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management LP of New York. The acquisition ended seven decades of Boise ownership for the grocery chain and its plans for as many as 1,000 new hires, the state economist said.

Idaho lost 6.9 percent of its jobs from 2008 through 2009, compared with the 4.9 percent U.S. average, and its timber industry payrolls fell 38 percent, according to IHS Global.

Government workers and services haven’t been spared. The state budget, which peaked at $3 billion in 2008, dropped by a fifth to $2.38 billion in the fiscal 2011 year that began July 1. More than 200 positions were cut and furloughs imposed in agencies including health and welfare, tax collection and the attorney general’s office, Ferguson said.

The value of residential transactions in Ada County, which includes Boise, declined 62 percent in June from the peak four years earlier, multiple listings data show. Boise had the highest metro foreclosure rate outside California, Florida, Nevada or Arizona in the first six months of the year, RealtyTrac said.

Short Sale Sought

Holmes said her company, TitleOne Corp., is down to 80 employees from a high of 175 in 2007. Her lender, Bank of America Corp. of Charlotte, North Carolina, took the first step toward foreclosure in July.

Holmes, a divorced mother of two, put her house on the market in June and has applied for a federal program that offers incentives to loan servicers, investors and homeowners to complete short sales, in which the bank accepts less than what it is owed on the mortgage.

She’s asking $225,000 and hasn’t had an offer. A third of real estate listings in her area are distressed properties, with seven months of inventory on the market in Boise at her price.

“I was never raised to be in this position,” Holmes said, showing pictures of her 6-year-old granddaughter, as well as the oversize tub in her master bathroom. “I’ve tried everything I can think of.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Dan Levy in San Francisco at dlevy13@bloomberg.net


==================================================================

Philadelphia housing director facing foreclosure

PHILADELPHIA — A bank has foreclosed on a $615,000 condominium owned by the head of the Philadelphia Housing Authority, who earned $350,000 last year leading the nation's fourth-largest public-housing agency.

Carl R. Greene, PHA's executive director, bought the three-bedroom, 2,100-square-foot condo in the upscale Naval Square development in 2007. He put down $215,000 in cash and took out a $400,000 mortgage, city records show.

Greene, 53, stopped making payments on or around April 1, and three months later owed more than $7,500 in missed payments and late fees, according to the bank's July 27 lawsuit.




Friday, April 23, 2010

Medical Miracles - Science fiction is now science fact

What amazing times we live in. Just imagine what the next 100 years may bring.

Here is an article from SkyNews in England July 2009

A blinded man has seen his wife for the first time after surgeons gave him back his sight using one of his teeth.



Martin Jones sees for the first time having used a tooth to restore his sight

Martin Jones can see for the first time in 12 years. Pic: Ross Parry Syndication


Martin Jones' canine was pulled out so a tiny optical lens could be fitted to it.

Then, amazingly, the tooth was inserted in his eye socket.

The 42-year-old lost his left eye and was totally blinded in the right 12 years ago when a tub of molten aluminium exploded in his face at the scrapyard where he worked.

He had all but given up hope of ever seeing again until hearing about operations performed by surgeon Christopher Lui and his team in Brighton, East Sussex.

Martin Jones can see again after an operation to use a tooth to restore his sight

Martin Jones

Mr Jones had his tooth was implanted in his cheek for three months to grow blood vessels and new tissue.

Once it was moved into his eye it was around two weeks until he could see.

He said when the bandages came off the first person he wanted to see was his 50-year-old wife Gill.

The pair had married four years ago and settled down in Rotherham, South Yorkshire - but Jones had never seen his bride.

"The doctors took the bandages off and it was like looking through water," he explained to the Sun newspaper.

"Then I saw this figure and it was her, it was unbelieveable."

He added: "When I tell friends I see through my tooth they don't believe me."

"But then I take off my glasses - and my eye looks like something from a sci-fi movie."

===================================================================

Growing your own

Whoever is afraid of stem cell research, come on buddy, grow a pair.
Can you imagine a time when we will be able to "grow" new eyes, a heart, limbs, organs.
Bye bye Alzheimer's, so long diabetes, toodle-loo dialysis...




===================================================================

Today's technology is promising...
But then again, sometimes you just get lucky.

Paraplegic Man Suffers Spider Bite, Walks Again

MANTECA, Calif. (CBS13) ― He has been confined to a wheelchair for 20 years. Now a paraplegic man is walking again, and his doctors call it a miracle. CBS13 went to Manteca to find out how a spider bite helped get him back on his feet.

"I closed my eyes and then I was spinning like a flying saucer," explains David Blancarte.

A motorcycle accident almost killed David 21 years ago. At the time he might have wished he was dead.

"I asked my doctor, 'Sir what happened? I can't feel my legs'," said David.

Ever since, David's been relying on his wheelchair to get around. Then the spider bite. A Brown Recluse sent him to the hospital, then to rehab for eight months.

"I'm here for a spider bite. I didn't know I would end up walking," says David.

A nurse noticed David's leg spasm and ran a test on him.

"When they zapped my legs, I felt the current, I was like 'whoa' and I yelled," he says.

He felt the current and the rush of a renewed sense of hope.

"She says,'your nerves are alive. They're just asleep'," explained David.

Five days later David was walking.

"I was walking on the bar back and forth," he said.

Now David is out of the hospital and on his feet and walking.

David basks in his glory and gives a ray of hope to other hoping to walk again. The 48-year-old former boxer and dancer is taking it in stride, knowing his best days are still ahead.

David's dream is to see his 14-year-old twin daughters grow up and get married so he can walk them down the aisle and have that first dance.

Blancarte's dreams may have to wait. He was arrested Friday (3/13) on an outstanding warrant stemming from a domestic abuse case.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Dollars and Nonsense





Now, I've never attended university to study economics, and I've never operated a retail business, but I do know how to add and I have a bit of dollar sense.
Case in point: I wanted to buy a cordless drill and an extra battery (because we all know how frustrating it is to have to stop your work because the battery just died). So I went to a local big name retail outlet and shopped around a bit. I noticed a brand name cordless drill with a carrying case, a battery, a battery charger and a fine assortment of attachments such as extra drill bits, sockets, screw driver ends and a hand operated ratchet.
Now the regular suggested retail price for this little kit was $99, but it was on sale at 1/2 price ($49.50). The extra battery that I had hoped to purchase was on sale for $59. So using the last half dozen or so active brain cells that I still have, I did some quick mental math.
If I buy the drill kit along with a spare battery, I would be paying $109.
But if I buy 2 drill kits (so that's two sets of carrying cases, batteries, battery chargers and fine assortments of attachments such as extra drill bits, sockets, screw driver ends and two hand operated ratchets.), I would be paying $99.
Hmmmm... what should I do?
Yup. I bought two.



How do these people stay in business?
(Of course I know that they most likely bought these drill sets from China for $10 a piece. That's how they stay in business)

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Bio-Fuels a Novel Idea. Or is it?

At the turn of the last century, the petroleum industry, namely the Rockerfellers of Standard Oil set the world on a path of petroleum addiction. Today, we could not imagine what modern society would be like without oil. (I shudder to think). All this talk of alternative energy. Perhaps in the future. Perhaps someday we will find some way to get off of this petroleum dependency. Until then, we will have to continue to drill and shovel the oil from beneath the ground, send it by pipeline, truck and ship around the world. Secure the areas where oil is present so that the life-line to oil is not broken. Could you imagine a world without oil? (I again shudder to think about it). No more tailing ponds, toxic spills on land and sea. No more refineries pumping gases from million year old hydrocarbons into the atmosphere. No more bombing of brown people. Oh what a world. (I shudder to think). But someday, some way, some time, we will find a way. We are a pretty smart animal and we will use science to figure this out....someday.
But wait a minute, before 1905 there were more electric cars on the road than gasoline powered cars. Every major city had an electric trolley transportation system. What happened? Enter Standard Oil along with General Motors. In the early 20th century they began a campaign to dominate the transportation market with their cars with internal combustion engines that ran on gasoline that came from, you guessed it, Standard Oil. They bought out virtually all of the trolley rail systems in all of the major US cities and systematically disassembled them all. And everone got a car. Or two. (or more)
But now they are leading the way to bring us a "New" technology that will save us and the planet. "Alternative fuels" Yay! Our heroes!
But how "New" is this technology?
Watch this video and see what old Henry Ford and company were up to back in the 1930s-40s.




Benefits of using hemp:
Grows virtually everywhere in places that can support grasses.
In more arid climates, it holds the soil together, retaining the moisture in the ground, reducing drastic weather fluctuations and desertification.
Removes toxins from the soil.
You can use the entire plant. Seeds pressed for oil, seeds dried for flour, leaves for compost, stalk for fibers to make paper, building material, plastics, clothing, rope, twine and thread.
The CO2 that is released by burning the oil will be consumed by next years crop (closed loop system).
Reduces global warming/climate change.
Puts Al Gore out of work.


Oh, and by the way. an accidental spill of hemp oil is called "Fertilization"
And if you accidentally spilled hemp oil on a body of fresh water, you most likely would have killed the mosquito population for that year. (Again... shudder)