Obesity: A tale of two columnists

Ericka Stutzman of the Daily Camera: Comparing apples to oranges: Why ‘pizza’ food fight is a worthy one

meet

Vince Carrol of the Denver Post:Carroll: Americans’ obesity isn’t the potato chips’ fault

One is looking for a government solution the other says look in the mirror. The easier it is for people to point the finger away from themselves the more they will do it. It’s a self fulfilling prophecy. That’s too much common sense for a Boulderite to understand.

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“Headphones are the new wall,”

From Cubicles, Cry for Quiet Pierces Office Buzz

h/t to Glenn Reynolds.

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Glenn Reynolds: “Seriously, people like this should expect to be shot.”…

…” And in a civilized polity — which Chicagoland isn’t — they would have been.”

Here’s what he’s talking about…

Suspects wielding hammers and batons attack diners at Tinley Park restaurant

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Daily Camera: Love your ‘effing Toolbar Part II

Toolbar in middle of screen…

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IBD Cartoon: So Boulder

Michael Ramirez cartoon from Investors Business Daily.

So Boulder!
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Boulder plastic bags: Fee over ban

More feel good legislation from the People’s Republic.

Of course the City would enact a fee over a ban. Follow the money, it’s all quite simple. They are capitalists for government control and the citizenry are their lemmings. I also feel this law is discriminatory as it only effects disposable bags at food stores. Now, when I purchase a few items at Target, I WILL take the plastic bag so I can use it at the grocery store.

Furthermore, bags are not outlawed, you can still take a plastic bags to the grocery store. Me, I’m pro-choice on this issue. It seems to me if all of these “enlightened” activists and their minions acted as they spoke plastic bag use would already have declined significantly. Ahh… but it’s so much easier to speak then act.

Also, what about paper bags?

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“With the exception of those over 40 who were born on the eastern side of the Iron Curtain, no European has ever experienced such a situation.”

We’re talking Capital controls.

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California Education Budget

Darren at Right on the Left Coast responds to a frustrated teachers comment:”More cuts? When will this end?” His response…

Well, Teacher X, it will end when you quit voting for the Democrats who keep running this state down the economic drain. It will end when you stop supporting a political party that chases businesses and jobs out of the state. It will end when you stop killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. It will end when you quit voting to take from the productive and give to the unproductive out of some misplaced and misguided sense of “fairness”.

Darren also has an update on where the budget cuts will fall…

Brown says that, now that the “real” numbers are out, he’s going to have to present a revised budget featuring more of the dread “draconian cuts.” He promises that cuts will fall heavily on public education spending, prisons, state parks, and other areas that the average person considers to be basic functions of state government. Meanwhile, it will be full speed ahead on high speed rail, the Air Resources Board, the DREAM Act, six-figure pensions to 55-year olds, and welfare benefits and “free” health care to illegal aliens.

Reminds me, on a much smaller scale, how the City of Boulder always hits the public library budget first.

Posted in budget, Education, taxes | 3 Comments

Glenn Reynolds: Because ruining the lives of New Yorkers isn’t enough, I guess. Mikey Bloomberg campaigns for higher taxes in California.

Goodness gracious you can’t make this stuff up.

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Note to Daily Camera

Hate your effin’ toolbar. Just sayin…

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“Maybe when it will be called “the refuge of the smarts”, it will be time to sell.”

Jim Grant commenting on Warren Buffett’s (or possibly Charlie Munger’s) comments on Gold.

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Glenn Reynolds: “My advice to the Chinese: Pay off some environmental groups to shut this down.”

Rare earth mining starts again in the United States. No need to worry NIMBY Boulderites, we’re talking Mountain Pass California. Let us know if the Chinese are calling for you to complain!

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Frank Fleming: “If the goal is to create annoying, useless hippies, I’m pretty sure it can be done for much cheaper.”

This student loan nonsense has to end.

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Glenn Reynolds:”…any other industry that did this to its customers would be regarded as predatory in the extreme.”

And the mystery industry is?

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JP Morgan’s Jamie Diamond: “We screwed up”

No sh!t. $2 billion down the hole and counting.

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Flashback: Doomsday Scenarios

Ed Driscoll: Incidentally, it’s worth flashing back to all of the doomsday enviro-prognosticators of the 1970s, and how much they got wrong — hilariously so, in retrospect: Here’s the video…


Of course, this time the prognosticator’s are right, just like Boulderites.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, the weekend | 1 Comment

Plastic Bags: “But hey… they’re saving the world, right?”

concludes Ed Morrissey over at Hot Air.

They tried it in DC and wound up losing more than 100 jobs and realized a net drop in disposable income. They passed the same ban in San Francisco in 2007 to cut down on their plastic waste. The net result was that the city’s percentage of plastic waste went from .6 percent to .64 percent.

No wonder Boulder is looking at implementing a fee instead. Boulderites and their guilty consciences.

Posted in Boulder is stoopid, enviro wackos | 1 Comment

Paper or Plastic, pay the fee in Boulder

Boulder to consider fee on paper, plastic grocery bags rather than ban

Jamie Harkins, a business sustainability specialist with the city, said Boulder officials considered several recommendations before settling on fees, which officials hope will encourage shoppers to bring their own reusable cloth sacks to local stores. “From listening to the community, it was pretty evenly split between a ban on plastic bags and a fee on paper or a fee on both,” she said. “But overwhelmingly, people wanted to do something about this.”

(emphasis added – Ed) Well let me see, if people wanted to do something, what in the world is STOPPING them? They can already bring their own bags or any type, cloth, paper or plastic. Yet they will feel so much better when either:

  1. Their elected leaders are taking action
  2. Their will is being imposed on others by law

Just take care of your own life and set your own example. Is it really that hard?

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House of the week: missile silo home with runway

I’m not moving to the Adirondacks for the missle silo home but others might…

Nestled up in the Adirondack Mountains, this $750,000 property listed on the Saranac real estate market has more to it than meets the eye because it was once home to a nuclear missile silo. Decommissioned in 1965, the home now incorporates the missile launch control center — 35 feet underground — into part of its living space. The command center was carved out of concrete and was designed to withstand a nuclear attack, or a “strong earthquake.”

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200 Year Supply Of Oil In Green River Formation

Mark Perry at Daily Markets examines the shale oil reserves in the Green River Formation that “is located in a largely vacant region of mostly federal land on the western edge of the Rocky Mountains that includes portions of Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado”. From the GAO report to the House Subcommittee on the Energy and Environment…

“The Green River Formation—an assemblage of over 1,000 feet of sedimentary rocks that lie beneath parts of Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming—contains the world’s largest deposits of oil shale. USGS estimates that the Green River Formation contains about 3 trillion barrels of oil, and about half of this may be recoverable, depending on available technology and economic conditions. The Rand Corporation, a nonprofit research organization, estimates that 30 to 60 percent of the oil shale in the Green River Formation can be recovered. At the midpoint of this estimate, almost half of the 3 trillion barrels of oil would be recoverable. This is an amount about equal to the entire world’s proven oil reserves.”

Mike Perry comments…

But with current U.S. daily oil consumption running at about 19.5 million barrels, the staggering amount of Green River reserves would by itself supply domestic oil consumption for more than 200 years! The testimony also mentioned that industry experts estimate future development of Green River to be 15-20 years away, but it’s not clear if that’s due to federal regulatory issues or limitations of current drilling technology. Even if development is 15-20 years away, the vast untapped energy resources of Green River, the largest oil shale deposit in the world, provide additional support for the idea that “peak oil” is “peak idiocy”

h/t to Ed Driscoll, guest blogging at Instapundit.

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