DPRK Tough Talk: ‘Belated regret will be useless and not a single man will be able to survive to regret for his doing.’

April 11. 2013 Juch 102

CPRK Warns US, S. Korea Not to Make Misjudgment

Pyongyang, April 11 (KCNA) — The Secretariat of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of Korea (CPRK) released information bulletin No. 1029 Thursday. …

The arrows indicating the merciless retaliatory strikes have already been drawn directing at the U.S. mainland, U.S. military bases in the Pacific and all other bases where the U.S. imperialist aggression forces station.

The powerful strike means of the revolutionary armed forces of the DPRK have been put in their places and the coordinates of targets put into the warheads.

Just pressing the button will be enough to turn the strongholds of the enemies into the sea of fire. …

The enemies should know that it is the era of the great Marshal Kim Jong Un, leader of the most powerful country and invincible great Paektusan nation.

The U.S. and south Korean war maniacs are gravely mistaken and misjudged if they think they can have lucky chance.

War can break out any moment and what remains to be done is merciless punishment of the enemies.

Belated regret will be useless and not a single man will be able to survive to regret for his doing.

Copyright (C) KOREA NEWS SERVICE(KNS) All Rights Reserved.

DPRKimage2

And as Tom Bodett says, “We’ll keep a light on for ya.”

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Italian police seize $1.7 b from alleged green energy Mafioso | The Daily Caller #rsrh

http://dailycaller.com/2013/04/03/italian-police-seize-1-7-billion-from-alleged-green-energy-mafioso/

“Vito Nicastri, called the “king of alternative energy” for his extensive holdings in green-energy companies, stands accused of evading taxes by only declaring a fraction of the value of his businesses. He has been placed under surveillance by police and must remain in Alcamo, Italy for three years. …

“The Washington Post reported that the Mafia has been getting involved in the green energy businesses for the past decade as governments began to pour vast sums of money into renewable energy development.

“The mob has been shaking down local land permit holders in order to lease their permits to green-energy developers and get a generous subsidy for doing so. The Italian government has been investigating the “eco-corruption” and has seized about 30 wind farms and several solar power plants on the island of Sicily. Italian officials have also frozen more than $2 billion in assets and arrested alleged Mafia crime bosses, along with corrupt local officials and businessmen.”

Government money is too tempting for corruptocrats to ignore. They throw around such big piles of it that the target is huge. And one need only be a little smarter or more brazen than a salaried government functionary to pull it off. It’s no wonder that green energy projects attract unscrupulous characters like hogs to slop — both the corporate kind and the Cosa Nostra kind.

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Tale of 3 Shale States: PA, OH, NY #rsrh @EnergyTomorrow Blog

http://energytomorrow.org/blog/tale-of-three-states/#/type/all

“Residents of the Empire State remain spectators to the shale energy revolution ongoing in Pennsylvania and getting under way in Ohio. The energy-rich Marcellus shale formation that has spawned so much growth in Pennsylvania reaches up in to New York as well. But the state has had a drilling moratorium in place since 2008 – in effect, a moratorium on shale energy jobs, shale energy economic stimulus and shale energy revenue for government. In February, unemployment was 8.4 percent (compared to 7.7 percent nationally), and unemployment in the state’s non-metro upstate counties was 10.4 percent.”

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Energy Week in Review

Headlines for the week ending March 29, 2013:

Oil Spills Mount on Tracks

Labor Union Blasts Rep. Ed Markey’s Opposition to Keystone XL Pipeline

Eagle Ford Shale provided $61B economic boost to South Texas

E.P.A. Plans Stricter Limit for Sulfur in Gasoline

Israel Faces Geopolitical Tangle with Natural Gas

Shell’s Arctic Woes Continue

Excerpts and commentary below the fold… Continue reading

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Kim Jong Un Inspects Military-Built Playground Equipment #rsrh #DPRK

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2298864/Kim-Jong-Un-gets-grips-latest-toys-Slides-musical-instruments-hit-right-note-North-Korean-leader-bizarre-military-inspection.html

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So When Did The Obama Show Jump the Shark?

Where news and entertainment content in the media were once distinct and exclusive domains, the demarcation have become blurred. Fox News reports American Idol results as hard news, while Saturday night network programming is given over to the Suburban Housewife Murder Mystery of the Week. Maybe the networks are to blame.

Or maybe it’s the low-information voter, who can’t tell the Constitution from the Yellow Pages but sure knows that Barack Obama sings more like Smokey Robinson than that stiff Mormon guy.

Whatever the cause, our government, the one in Washington, D.C. right now, has begun to smell like bad TV. It is part reality show, part game show and part cheesy sitcom, all the while 100% insulting to the intelligence.

Barack Obama acts both as host/producer of Survivor: D.C. and as leader of the Blue Team. It’s his job to orchestrate the contrived challenges by which the Blue Team tries to zap the Red Team’s power and eliminate it from contention. That happens for individual members when they get voted off the island out of office, or when they tweet pictures of their private parts to 38,000 followers, like some some stoner refugee from The Real World.

These contrived challenges have names like The Fiscal Cliff and Sequestration. They are wholly artificial, designed to entertain, titillate and otherwise engage a mostly-disinterested public, while creating the illusion that Something Important Is Happening in D.C. By G_d, we’re playing a game here, and the audience expects winners and losers.

In a nod to the popular reality series The Biggest Loser, Obama regularly trots out a grossly obese fellow named Uncle Sam, and feigns an attempt to grapple with him. Uncle Sam tips the scales at $3.5 trillion dollars per year, has no diet plan and never loses weight. To Obama, Uncle Sam is a lean athletic machine operating at insanely high efficiency; even modest attempts to lose weight would surely cut sinew and bone instead of blubber.

Solyndra and other Green Energy giveaways were Obama’s version of Let’s Make a Deal! Nobody who’s willing to dress up and play the fool goes home a loser. The taxpayer, however, has found a Zonk! in every box and behind every curtain.

Our own party gets suckered into playing along, lest it incur the disdain of the viewing — and voting — public. If they’re willing to play along, who knows? Just like on The Bachelor, the attention-seeking pol may be rewarded with some, *ahem*, alone time with Washington’s Most Desirable Male: “Senator McCain, will you accept this rose?”

But Obama is on thin ice. Nobody tunes into awards shows any more to see who won, we’re more interested in who’s the butt of the most vicious jokes; the more powerful and esteemed the target the better we like it. Thanks to post-modern fare like The Office, the audience sees the artifice behind the production. The real “Biggest Loser” is the last one in the audience to get the joke.

Jumping the Shark

So when will the public in general tire of Obama’s schtick?

Credit: Wikipedia Commons.

Credit: Wikipedia Commons.

For me, the moment came in the 2008 debates with John McCain. Asked whether he’d favor cuts in capital gains taxes, which have always generated windfalls in tax revenues, Candidate Obama answered “no”. It’s not a matter of tax efficiency, he said, it’s a matter of basic fairness. “Uh-oh,” I said.  “We’ve got a guy who sees the tax code less as a necessary means to fund the government and more as a bludgeon to punish ‘the rich’.”

Opinions differ.

At Heritage’s The Foundary blog (April 2012):

Obama Jumps the Shark, Takes One Leap Too Far

This week, President Barack Obama lashed out at the Supreme Court, slamming it as an “unelected group of people” who will have turned to “judicial activism or a lack of judicial restraint” if they strike down Obamacare. In other words, he was implying that the Court does not have the authority to overturn a law that was passed by Congress if they find it unconstitutional.

Also in April 2012, a caller to the Rush Limbaugh Radio Show thought that Obama had jumped the shark when he appeared on The Jimmy Fallon Show to slow-jam the news.

When the president did that, the only thing I could think of… The picture that I saw with Fallon in the foreground and the president in the middle, and then I guess the band was behind him and it was all dark and everything, would have been better if there had been a billowing of smoke and a big cigarette hanging out of his mouth. It was truly, truly nauseating.

Even the Wikipedia page for Jumping the Shark credits an unlikely source for an Obama Jump-the-Shark moment:

In 2008 during the Obama presidential campaign, at a meeting of Democratic governors in Chicago, each governor was identified with a name plate while Senator Obama had a large seal – that looked official but was not. The New York Times op-ed columnist Frank Rich wrote “For me, Mr. Obama showed signs of jumping the shark two weeks back, when he appeared at a podium affixed with his own pompous faux-presidential seal”.

OK, reader, how about you? When do you think Barry jumped the shark?

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Qatari tankers sail to the rescue of Britain’s gas supply crisis #rsrh #ClimateChange

“Britain’s rapidly dwindling gas supplies will be boosted by the arrival of a giant tanker from the Arabian Gulf tomorrow, as the unseasonably severe March weather continues to place increasing demands on the National Grid. …

“The continuing wintry weather had depleted gas reserves to about 10 per cent of capacity – enough to supply the country for just 36 hours. Stored gas is used as a back-up, so low reserves do not mean an imminent blackout. The Government has insisted gas supplies will not run out despite the extended cold snap. The Energy minister, John Hayes, has admitted that storage levels are low and has also told the National Grid to increase the flow of gas from Norway and the North Sea.

“The country is currently working at 40 per cent above its usual gas capacity for this time of year and the price of gas hit record levels of 150p per therm (100 cubic metres) on Friday after a key pipeline between the UK and Belgium temporarily broke down. …

“There will be little respite from freezing temperatures anywhere today, although any snow showers will be mainly light and confined to the eastern and central UK, according to the Met Office. But unsettled conditions are likely to return over the Easter weekend, with rain possibly preceded by heavy snow – cutting the odds on a first white Easter since 2008.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/qatari-tankers-sail-to-the-rescue-of-britains-gas-supply-crisis-8547611.html

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Petroleum Primer: Drilling Technology

TulsaMontage

Most folks’ mental image of oil and gas well drilling owes more to Hollywood than to modern reality. Tinseltown taught us that “gushers” and fiery infernos are commonplace, just as the landscapes are dominated by ruthless swindlers, swaggering he-men and heaving bosoms.

In the world of modern drilling practices, though, There Will Be Blood has been replaced by “There Will Be Mud”. Drilling mud is actually a highly engineered fluid; one of its functions is to maintain pressure in the wellbore. The weight and properties of a properly-designed mud prevents fluids from entering the well and causing a catastrophic blowout or gusher.

Innovations on the drilling side of the industry have turned pipe dreams (excuse the pun) into reality. It is now possible to drill a well to a location nearly eight miles distant from the surface location.

Drilling has also adapted to the reality that oil and gas are where you find them. Sometimes the best prospective locations are in environmentally-sensitive areas or nearby development. In these cases, there is a premium on keeping the physical presence, the “footprint”, as small as possible. The two images following show the modern possibilites:

3-8-2013 6-02-17 PM

This picture shows a drilling rig on its pad just off the campus of the University of Texas at Arlington. Arlington (and much of Ft. Worth) lies within the Newark East Barnett Shale Field, one of the largest gas fields in the country. Below, we see in plan view that eighteen wells (the green lines) have been directionally drilled from this one surface pad, with the developed area extending not just under the campus but under nearby residential neighborhoods as well. Scale is indicated by the bar, but I have added an arrow that indicates a quarter-mile track around a football field:

3-8-2013 6-01-42 PM

Aerial image of Arlington, TX showing 18 wellbores drilled from a single surface location. Click to enlarge.

Imagine a large, contorted letter “J”. Several thousand feet of steel pipe is as limber as a piece of spaghetti. Thus the wellbores extend down several thousand feet, then turn until they are horizontal, or parallel to the surface of the ground. Several square miles can be effectively drained from a surface area which impacts only a handful of acres. That’s why industry insists that development of an area like ANWR would impact only a tiny percentage of the area to be developed underground.

(Before drilling such a well, rights are obtained from all the affected landowners. Trespassing is trespassing, whether at the surface or at 10,000 feet below. Thus are we spared real-life “I drink your milkshake!” moments.)

My company’s drilling engineer has a saying he uses with tongue only slightly in cheek: “Time and money, baby. Time and money.” It’s his way of saying that with modern drilling technology, just about anything is possible.

Cross-posted at RedState.com
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….And he said, without a hint of irony …

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Energy Week in Review

Headlines for the week ending March 22, 2013:

Central Gulf of Mexico lease sale attracts $1.2 billion

North Dakota oil production reaches new high in 2012

Chevron Corporation overtakes Royal Dutch Shell plc

Anadarko Deepwater Well Encounters More Than 1,000 Net Feet of Oil Pay

Major workforce shortage pounding energy industry

Excerpts and commentary below the fold… Continue reading

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