The Abounding Promise of Solar Energy #rsrh

From Human Events:

Well, yesterday, The Denver Post detailed the criminal investigation of Abound Solar, a defunct solar-panel manufacturer in Colorado that was run on taxpayer “investments,” for securities fraud, consumer fraud and financial misrepresentation.

Abound shuttered its Colorado plant during the summer and filed for bankruptcy, leaving “125 workers without jobs and taxpayers holding the bag for up to $60 million in defaulted loans.” (Human Events senior reporter Audrey Hudson has already detailed the efforts by the House to investigate the company.)  Here’s what Weld County prosecutors are  looking into:

The securities-fraud investigation stems from allegations that “officials at Abound Solar knew products the company was selling were defective, and then asked investors to invest in the company without telling them about the defective products,” the DA’s office said in a news release.

Similarly, the consumer-fraud allegation is that Abound knowingly sold defective panels to customers.

The third subject of investigation is that Abound allegedly misled financial institutions when the company was seeking loans.

[It’s fortunate, in a way, that the President was just blowing smoke with his promise of 1,500 jobs, because that would be another 1,375 people on the unemployment line if it had worked out. – Ed.]

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EPA study grossly overstates methane emissions from gas wells. #rsrh

Updated study: methane emissions from natural gas production are half EPA estimate

WASHINGTON, October 25, 2012 – Methane emissions from natural gas production were less than half what had been estimated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), according to an updated survey by URS prepared for The American Petroleum Institute (API) and America’s Natural Gas Alliance (ANGA).

“Industry has led efforts to reduce emissions of methane by developing new technologies and equipment, and these efforts are paying off,” said Howard Feldman, API director of regulatory and scientific affairs. “This report provides the best and most comprehensive estimate of methane emissions from U.S. natural gas production. It’s based on data from ten times as many wells as the estimates used by the EPA.”

The new emissions survey, which shows that actual methane emissions from natural gas production is 53 percent below EPA’s estimate, is based on emissions from 91,000 wells operated by 20 companies distributed over a broad geographic area. EPA’s data were derived from only 8,800 wells confined to specific areas not representative of the entire country. The report also estimates that venting of methane into the atmosphere during liquids unloading — a technique to remove water and other liquids from the wellbore to improve the flow of natural gas – is 93 percent lower than EPA’s estimates and that methane emissions from well re-fracturing are 72 percent lower.

Read more…

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Honey Badger Don’t Care (About Playing in the NFL)

http://theadvocate.com/home/4245306-125/mathieu-jefferson-among-4-former

Four former Tiger football players booked on drug counts

BY KIMBERLY VETTER
AND RYAN BROUSSARD

Advocate staff writers

October 25, 2012

0 COMMENTS

Four former LSU football players, including former Heisman trophy finalist Tyrann Mathieu, were arrested Thursday and booked into East Baton Rouge Parish Prison on several drug-related counts after 10 bags containing 18 grams of “high-grade marijuana” were found inside Mathieu’s apartment, Baton Rouge police spokesman Lt. Don Kelly said.

Mathieu, 20, 262 W. State St., and Jordan Jefferson, 22, 11959 Nicholson Drive, were booked on one count each of simple possession of marijuana, according to prison officials. Karnell Hatcher, 22, Delray Beach, Fla., was booked on one count of second-offense simple possession of marijuana and Derrick Bryant, 22, 11959 Nicholson, was booked on one count each of possession with intent to distribute marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

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Two takes on the wisdom of children. #rsrh

Take 1:

[Rolling Stone magazine] executive editor Eric Bates told Obama that he had asked his six-year-old if there was anything she wanted him to say to the president. … [S]he said, ‘Tell him: You can do it.’ Obama grinned. … ‘You know, kids have good instincts,’ Obama offered. ‘They look at the other guy and say, “Well, that’s a bullsh—er, I can tell.”’”

(Emphasis added. – Ed.)

Take 2:

“When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.” – 1 Corinthians 13:11 (KJV)

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Breakfast at Badger

Cracklins, boudin, boudin balls, andouille, fried gizzards and (WTF?) egg rolls.

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Cyber Attacks Target Oil in the Middle East

According to an article in The New York Times, on August 15 of this year a successful cyberattack struck Aramco, Saudi Arabia’s national oil company and the world’s largest oil producer. The virus-based attack wiped the hard drives of 30,000 personal computers, three-fourths of the company’s internal network, replacing data files with the image of a burning American flag. Damage was limited to the corporate communications network, which is isolated from the oil production and pipeline control systems.

Not surprisingly, all fingers point to Iran as the suspected perpetrator of the attack. Security officials theorize that the attack was initiated by an Aramco insider using nothing more sophisticated than a USB memory stick.  The  Times article further reports:

American intelligence officials blame Iran for a similar, subsequent attack on RasGas, the Qatari natural gas giant, two weeks after the Aramco attack. They also believe Iran engineered computer attacks that intermittently took America’s largest banks offline in September, and last week disrupted the online banking Web sites of Capital One and BB&T.

The attacks have implications for domestic politics, specifically a cyber-defense bill that is being pushed by the Obama administration. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta referred to the Aramco attack in an October 11 speech in New York.

Panetta Warns of Dire Threat of Cyberattack on U.S.

In August, a cybersecurity bill that had been one of the administration’s national security priorities was blocked by a group of Republicans, led by Senator John McCain of Arizona, who took the side of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and said it would be too burdensome for corporations. …

With the legislation stalled, Mr. Panetta said President Obama was weighing the option of issuing an executive order that would promote information sharing on cybersecurity between government and private industry. But Mr. Panetta made clear that he saw it as a stopgap measure and that private companies, which are typically reluctant to share internal information with the government, would cooperate fully only if required to by law.

“We’re not interested in looking at e-mail, we’re not interested in looking at information in computers, I’m not interested in violating rights or liberties of people,” Mr. Panetta told editors and reporters at The New York Times earlier on Thursday. “But if there is a code, if there’s a worm that’s being inserted, we need to know when that’s happening.”

An October 8 article in the Times told of a cyberattack on Iran’s oil producing and exporting infrastructure, including offices, oil rigs and the vital export terminal at Kharg Island. The time frame reported in the article (“over the past few weeks”) fails to clarify which attack came first. The Iranian Oil Ministry was the subject of a separate cyberattack (“Flame“) in April/May of this year that caused the Ministry to isolate its computer network from the systems that manage its oil production. The Flame virus appears to have been created by the same team that is responsible for Stuxnet, the virus responsible for crippling Iran’s uranium enrichment program.

Cross-posted at RedState.com.

 

 

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Breast Cancer Awareness Cement Mixer

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Paging Mr. Oil, Mr. Gas, Mr. Coal: Obama on Energy

Much of Tuesday night’s Presidential Townhall from Hofstra University focused on energy, and oil and gas policy in particular. Taking credit for recent increases in oil and gas production seems to be a particular obsession of President Obama’s.

As I commented in my diary on the Denver debate, Mitt Romney displays an impressive, executive level grasp of the the salient facts with respect to energy. Tuesday evening, he summed up his opponent nicely: “[President Obama] has not been Mr. Oil, or Mr. Gas, or Mr. Coal.” With a little less ideology and a little more pragmatism, Barack Obama might have forged a legacy as the Energy President. Much as Bill Clinton rode the groundswell of the 1990s internet boom, Mr. Obama might have been able to translate his good fortune into political capital.

But he didn’t.

Without further ado, let’s take a closer look at Mr. Obama’s Townhall pronouncements on energy. Continue reading

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DPRK putting on the dog for tourists. Literally. #rsrh

Model City or Tourist Trap: Hoiryeong Sparkles

“The redevelopment of downtown Hoiryeong, the North Hamkyung Province former home of Kim Jong Il’s mother that was designated a model city in 2009, has been completed, and the task of extracting foreign currency from unsuspecting Chinese tourists is well underway. …

“There are a number of new restaurants in the area. One, ‘Hoiryeonggwan’, has been decorated in the style of Pyongyang’s famous ‘Okryugwan’, something that Kim Jong Il is said to have ordered in December 2010 when he visited the construction site. Elsewhere, restaurants serving spicy marinated beef, duck, dog and Chinese food have also opened their doors.”

Speciality du maison: Barack-weiler

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RIP Alex Karras: “Mongo only pawn in game of life.” #rsrh

Alex Karras, former NFL lineman, actor, dies at 77

LOS ANGELES – Alex Karras, who gained fame in the NFL as a fearsome defensive lineman and later as an actor, has died. He was 77.

Craig Mitnick, Karras’ attorney, said Karras died at home in Los Angeles on Wednesday, surrounded by family.

Karras had been suffering from dementia. He was among the more than 3,500 NFL players suing the league regarding the treatment of head injuries.

Detroit drafted Karras, who grew up in Gary, Ind., 10th overall in 1958 out of Iowa and he was a four-time All-Pro defensive tackle over 12 seasons with the franchise.

Karras may be even better known for his work as an actor. He portrayed an adoptive dad in the 1980s sitcom “Webster,” and punched a horse in the 1974 comedy classic “Blazing Saddles.”

Not to overlook his turn as pro wrestler George Zaharias in “The Babe Didrikson Story”. Karras was also a highlighted character in George Plimpton’s Paper Lion.

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